Cover image of show It's Only Rock n Roll with hosts Phil Blizzard & Russell Mason

It's Only Rock n Roll with hosts Phil Blizzard & Russell Mason

Podcast by Phil Blizzard + Russell Mason

English

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About It's Only Rock n Roll with hosts Phil Blizzard & Russell Mason

"It's Only Rock and Roll" goes beyond the spotlight to reveal the fascinating stories of the unsung heroes who made rock's greatest moments possible. From groundbreaking concerts like Pink Floyd in Moscow during Glasnost to Wham performing at the Great Wall of China, this podcast captures a special time in music history through authentic, unfiltered conversations.Co-hosts Russell Mason and Phil Blizzard bring complementary perspectives – Russell from his years touring and promoting, Phil from interviewing countless music legends throughout his broadcasting career. Together, they're creating a relaxed, nostalgic journey through an industry populated by unforgettable characters (many known only by their colorful nicknames).Future episodes will feature tour managers, production crews, artist managers, record producers, and the legendary "liggers" (backstage gate-crashers) who defined an era. These are the people who witnessed it all – the near-disasters averted, the bizarre requests fulfilled, and the moments of brilliance that audiences never saw.

All episodes

13 episodes

episode Global Backstage: A Rock And Roll Year In Review artwork

Global Backstage: A Rock And Roll Year In Review

A season’s worth of passports, flight cases, and stories converge in a finale that refuses to fade to black. We trace the hidden arteries of live music—from a retired tour pro’s poolside idea to a globe‑spanning set of conversations with production managers, security pros, artists, superfans, and the die‑hards who kept sound and light alive in deserts, ferries, and freezing tarmacs. We start where tours truly begin: backstage. Jake Duncan’s leap from a drum shop to Bay City Rollers and Wham captures the chance encounters that bend lives, while Steve Martin drops us into the command centre of Live Aid and the pressure of delivering David Bowie’s vision when a stage design suddenly isn’t big enough. Then the energy tilts to pure rock and roll with Stan Urban, who turns hoovers into instruments, weddings into gigs, and remembers jamming with Robert Plant before Ibiza swapped poets for package flights. It’s messy, joyful, and proof that invention beats perfection when the clock hits showtime. The road stretches East as promoter Yatzek Slotala guides Pink Floyd past the Iron Curtain with a bag of rubles, a borrowed Air Force plane, and nerves of steel. He helps Tina Turner rebuild Private Dancer on Central European stages with borrowed backlines and bulletproof grace. In India, Rock Machine becomes Indus Creed as Uday Benegal explains why a name can trap you and how original songs, scrappy trains, and a sedated fox terrier named Scooby wrote their origin story. Two superfans rewind to first gigs—Genesis with Peter Gabriel’s theatre and Rory Gallagher’s raw voltage—reminding us why live music burns into memory. We swing through France on a chaotic bus of Glasgow bands—Franz Ferdinand among them—proving that if your town lacks a scene, you make one, even if chairs go overboard on the ferry. Security steps forward with rare warmth as Ronnie Franklin reflects on three decades protecting George Michael, including a holstered‑gun scare diffused with calm and kindness. Finally, we walk the Memphis Mansion in Denmark, where a Rat Pack‑serenaded piano still sings, and head to the Gulf with the “desert rats,” who fought heat, sand, and fried dimmers so the show could go on. Hit play for craft, chaos, and heart from Wham to Pink Floyd, Elvis to Indus Creed. If these stories moved you, follow the show, rate us, and share your first live gig memory—what was the song that changed everything? It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com

30 Dec 2025 - 1 h 18 min
episode Pioneers of Gulf Entertainment - Comic Nights, Gulf Lights, Desert Rats Pt 2 artwork

Pioneers of Gulf Entertainment - Comic Nights, Gulf Lights, Desert Rats Pt 2

We relive how comedy, concerts, and sheer grit brought modern live entertainment to the Gulf, from Billy Connolly and Lenny Henry to Bollywood stadium spectacles and ballet on the beach. Heat, customs, and failing gear tried to stop us; diplomacy, craft, and humour carried the day. • British comedians breaking new ground across the Gulf • Jasper Carrot’s late-career surge and Lenny Henry’s airport pranks • Cancelled shows, customs hiccups, and strict cultural lines • Bootleg tapes, censored artwork, and local media quirks • Airport systems for moving bands and gear fast • Indian and Arabic weddings with complex technical limits • The Sharjah Bollywood epic with camels, horses, and balloons • Gypsy Kings rescue plan after lighting failure • Ballet under blistering lights and DIY power solutions • Winning over electricians and hotel crews through respect • Saudi gigs, Sadiqi stories, and a narrow escape • Shout-outs to crews, mentors, and long-time colleagues Go to YouTube for the video version of this podcast. There’s a link is- https://youtu.be/e0Yjm_wJSBA and some fabulous images of the Deserts Rats in action  and more ... If you would like to have a podcast production for your organisation, get in touch with me:phillblizzardmedia@gmail.com It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com

7 Dec 2025 - 39 min
episode Desert Rats Of Rock And Roll - Dubai, Abu Dhabi and across the Gulf - Pt 1 artwork

Desert Rats Of Rock And Roll - Dubai, Abu Dhabi and across the Gulf - Pt 1

In this, the first of two parts, we trace how a small team of promoters and techs hauled second-hand gear, charmed airlines, and built a live music circuit across the Gulf in the 80s. Stories of burning dimmers, poolside plotting, cultural shows in ballrooms,  A concert scene doesn’t just appear; someone has to drag it across borders, bolt it together in the heat, and pray the dimmers don’t catch fire. We look back at how a handful of stubborn promoters and techs built a touring circuit across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Muscat, Al Ain, Bahrain and Kuwait in the 1980s, bringing Tina Turner, Duran Duran, Meat Loaf, UB40 and more to a region with almost no infrastructure. Russell is joined by lighting mastermind Graham Trudgeon and sound engineer Kevin Winder to unpack the grind behind the glamour. The stories are vivid: second-hand Tasco and Brit Row rigs arriving as “excess baggage,” lighting plans sketched from the swimming pool because the stage sat at the deep end, and follow spots that fought back with live shocks. There’s the Hyatt Ballroom turned into a three-hour Meat Loaf marathon with a smart blackout to dodge a kiss, UB40 dressing room brawls that vanished by breakfast, and Chris Rea touring with a plumber’s bag while borrowing socks from the crew. Beyond rock, the team staged cultural shows that made improbable sense: Bolshoi stars on the beach with scene changes in the wind, Swan Lake in tracksuit bottoms for Kuwait’s conservative venues, and Cossack dancers leaping off stages that were a size too small. Local heroes like Sharif, the James Brown lookalike truck driver, powered the whole effort—hauling gear up mountains, surviving electrified follow spots, and delivering hot food to remote plateaus. Promoters and hotel GMs covered pools to build stages, charmed airlines for baggage, and kept audiences coming back for more, night after night. It’s a portrait of resilience, ingenuity and mischief that laid the foundations for today’s polished Gulf live industry—air‑conditioned warehouses, reliable rigs, and arena-level shows. If you love live music, touring history, or stories of impossible projects pulled off with tape and nerve, this one hits hard. Enjoy the ride, then subscribe, rate and share so more people can discover the desert rats who made the music happen. It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com

2 Dec 2025 - 53 min
episode Elvis Presley - Memphis Mansion, his home in Denmark, built by a fan to keep the music alive artwork

Elvis Presley - Memphis Mansion, his home in Denmark, built by a fan to keep the music alive

We tour Memphis Mansion with Hendrik Knudsen and Stan Urban, tracing the stories behind Elvis’s TCB chain, the Johnny Cash exhibits, and the spirit that keeps rock and roll alive. We balance myth and memory, dig into Colonel Parker, and plan a return when July’s residency hits.  From the sparkle of the first TCB chain to the quiet authority of gold records and stage clothes, we follow the artefacts that carry stories—why they exist, what they meant to the artists, and how they still teach us what great performance looks like. We don’t dodge the complicated parts. Colonel Tom Parker’s shadow looms large, and we unpack his savvy early moves, his infamous contracts, and the instinct to turn grief into blame after Elvis’s death at 42. That nuance opens a wider conversation about how mid-century music was sold, the cost of fame, and the difference between myth and the machinery that keeps a career on the road. Hendrik shares candid memories of working with members of Elvis’s band—the Jordanaires, the Imperials, the TCB band—threading living voices into the archive. The path then turns to Johnny Cash and the second museum built during COVID, where the American recordings help reintroduce a legend with stripped-back power. Add a replica of Elvis’s Tupelo house, a small cinema screening documentaries, and a lively diner where the Stan burger is a staple, and you’ve got a full-day experience that invites you to linger rather than rush. Stan’s July residency seals the deal: this isn’t a mausoleum, it’s a stage where rock and roll still breathes. If you’re planning a visit, expect anywhere from an hour to a full day, with local hotels and clear info at MemphisMansion.com. We also tease our next on-location stop at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, the birthplace of classics like Bohemian Rhapsody. Subscribe, share with a fellow music lover, and leave a review—then tell us: which artefact would you most want to see up close? Rockfield Studios scheduled for Season 2 - early 2026 It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com

25 Nov 2025 - 47 min
episode Security to the Stars: Ronnie Franklin On Music Security artwork

Security to the Stars: Ronnie Franklin On Music Security

Fame can feel like a storm. We sit down with veteran security lead Ronnie Franklin to map the invisible work that keeps artists, crews and fans safe when the wind picks up—without turning the night into a fortress. From his baptism at London’s Rainbow Theatre to global tours with Wham and decades at George Michael’s side, Ronnie unpacks how planning and people skills beat brute force every time. We trace the birth of modern concert security: radios that cut out around corners, promoters debating headcounts, fans copying passes, and the simple fix that worked—fewer pass types, smarter briefings, and relentless clarity. Ronnie takes us into Wham‑mania, where police vans, service corridors and decoy routes replaced glamour, and into Japan’s “polite hysteria” and China’s culture shock, where flight cases met 1940s trucks and loud sound cleared a hall in seconds. There’s a hair‑raising plane turnback, a football kickabout with Rod Stewart, and the infamous Wembley moment when a guard swore “that’s not George Michael,” all handled with humour and calm. As George went solo, loyalty met scale. American management arrived, but George chose trusted UK heads for key roles, and Ronnie led security for the Faith tour with a low‑key brief: keep it safe and invisible. We talk about setting boundaries with stars, leaning on local law enforcement for rare credible threats, and training a new generation to de‑escalate first. Along the way, Ronnie paints a generous, focused portrait of George Michael—driven, kind, and precise about what he wanted—proof that the right protection lets artistry breathe. If you care about live music, touring life, or how crowds are kept safe without killing the vibe, this conversation is packed with stories and hard‑won insight. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves music history, and leave a review to tell us which story blew your mind most. It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com

18 Nov 2025 - 1 h 20 min
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