Music and Revolution: Songs That Changed the World

Diana Ross, I’m Coming Out

51 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Diana Ross, I’m Coming Out

Descripción

Some songs top the charts. Some songs quietly rewrite who gets to feel seen. Diana Ross’s “I’m Coming Out” is now an undeniable Pride anthem—blaring from parade floats, drag shows, and dance floors every June. But it started as something far stranger: a Chic‑produced disco track written for a straight Black superstar who’d spent most of her career inside Motown’s carefully apolitical, crossover machine. In this episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar traces how Berry Gordy’s Black‑owned hit factory tried to “beat the system from within,” why Motown mostly stayed away from explicit protest music, and how Ross became its most polished, tightly controlled icon. Then we follow Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards from the Sesame Street tour to Studio 54, through the “Disco Demolition Night” backlash, and into a New York gay club bathroom where Nile suddenly realized that Diana Ross was already a queer icon—at least to the queens in sequins and big hair singing her songs back at him. Out of that moment came the idea for “I’m Coming Out”: a song that could double as Ross’s declaration of independence from Motown and as a liberation anthem for LGBTQ listeners who heard their own lives in that phrase long before pop radio did. Along the way, we hear how the Diana album was almost shelved, how Chic had to fight to get it released, and why “I’m Coming Out” may be the protest song Motown never intended to let Diana Ross have. If you’ve ever belted this chorus at Pride without knowing the bizarre, beautiful story behind it, this one’s for you. In this episode, you’ll hear: * How Motown’s crossover strategy shaped Diana Ross’s early career and kept most overt protest lyrics off her records. * The rise of Chic: Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards’ journey from the Sesame Street tour to Studio 54 and the sound of “high‑end” disco. * The story of Sister Sledge’s “We Are Family” and how Chic’s songwriting became a soundtrack for chosen family and queer community. * What really happened at “Disco Demolition Night” and why Nile Rodgers saw it as a racist, fanatical attack that crippled Chic’s chart run. * How Diana Ross, looking to reinvent herself after Motown, teamed up with Nile and Bernard to make the Diana album. * The night Nile walked into a gay club bathroom full of Diana Ross impersonators and got the idea for a song called “I’m Coming Out.” * How Rodgers and Edwards built “I’m Coming Out” out of interviews with Ross, turning her life story into a dance‑floor self‑portrait. * Why “I’m Coming Out” works on multiple levels at once: a break from Berry Gordy’s control, a queer anthem, and a broader declaration of self‑definition. * The label panic over disco, the legal fights around releasing Diana, and how the record became the biggest‑selling album of Ross’s career anyway. Keywords: * Diana Ross * I’m Coming Out * Motown Records * Berry Gordy * The Supremes * Nile Rodgers * Bernard Edwards * Chic * We Are Family * Disco Demolition Night * Studio 54 * Pride anthem * Queer music history * Black capitalism * Protest music * LGBTQ+ * 1970s disco * 1980s pop * Music and Revolution

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16 episodios

Portada del episodio Florence Reece, Which Side Are You On?

Florence Reece, Which Side Are You On?

In this episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar dives into Florence Reece’s legendary 1931 labor anthem, “Which Side Are You On?” What started in the bloody coalfields of Harlan County, Kentucky, has become one of the most enduring moral litmus tests in music history. We trace the song's origin story in Depression-era coal wars to its journey northward through folklorists and young folk singers like Pete Seeger. From the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) rewriting it in Jim Crow-era Mississippi jail cells, to Dick Gaughan adapting it for the 1984 British miners' strike, to modern iterations addressing climate disasters, anti-war protests, and the political emergencies of 2026—this song remains a living, breathing weapon of solidarity. In this episode you’ll find: * The Harlan County War (1931-1939): A look at the company-town architecture of the Kentucky coalfields, where mine owners owned the houses, the stores, and the local deputy sheriffs. * The Story of the Song: The harrowing night Sheriff J.H. Blair's thugs ransacked Florence Reece's kitchen looking for her husband, ending with her writing these lyrics on the only paper the thugs left in the house--the back of her kitchen calendar. * The Use of the Song Over the Decades: A musical tour of the song’s genre-spanning history, including Dick Gaughan’s fierce take on Margaret Thatcher's UK, Ani DiFranco's post-Katrina version, and Panopticon's brilliant fusion of black metal and bluegrass. * The Class Wars of 2026: A close reading of current, urgent 2026 rewrites from artists like Ben Grosscup at a Smith College divestment rally, Dan Dowell's anti-fascist critique of ICE, and Raphael Graves' immigration-oriented take. Keywords * Florence Reece * Which Side Are You On * Harlan County USA * Harlan County War * labor unions * coal mining history * United Mine Workers * National Miners' Union * Pete Seeger * SNCC * Freedom Singers * Barbara Kopple * Anne Lewis * UT Austin * Dick Gaughan * British Miners' Strike * Ani DiFranco * Panopticon * Ben Grosscup * Dan Dowell * Protest music * Working-class history * Music and Revolution

Ayer57 min
Portada del episodio Nina Simone, Mississippi Goddam

Nina Simone, Mississippi Goddam

Some protest songs hide their anger behind metaphor. This one forces you to laugh at a show tune, right before it breaks your heart with the truth. In this episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar breaks down Nina Simone’s ferocious 1964 civil rights masterpiece, “Mississippi Goddam”. What sounds at first like a bouncy, quick-stepping Broadway tune is actually an uncompromised act of artistic retaliation, written in under an hour following the assassination of Medgar Evers and the white supremacist terrorist bombing of four young girls at Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church. We follow Nina’s trajectory from an impoverished classical piano prodigy facing deep institutional racism to a roaring voice of the movement who refused to let America "go slow" on basic human equality. We trace the song's immediate, controversial fallout—including Southern radio stations literally snapping promotional copies in half—and dissect the brilliant, modular architecture of the track. Rolf explores how Simone intentionally built the song as a living archive designed to hold updated names of systemic injustice over the decades, a legacy carried forward by modern artists like Janelle Monáe and AhSa-Ti Nu. Finally, Rolf shares a personal memory of sitting in an Austin, Texas classroom where this exact song completely reframed how he understood the power of music as historical testimony. If you’ve ever tapped your foot to that show-tune intro without feeling the raw fury behind the lyrics, this episode is for you. In this episode you’ll find: * A harrowing look into the dark reality of 1963 America, from the murder of Medgar Evers to the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in "Bombingham". * Nina Simone's origin story as a classical prodigy in the Jim Crow South, her sting of rejection from the Curtis Institute, and her eventual transformation in an Atlantic City nightclub. * The garage origin story of "Mississippi Goddam," written as the musical equivalent of firing ten bullets back at systemic terrorism. * A lyrical close reading of the "Go Slow" verse, unpacking how Simone masterfully mocked the paralyzing rhetoric of moderate white leaders and politicians. * An exploration of the song's structural afterlives, tracing how Nina updated the lyrics live in 1991 and how it laid the groundwork for Janelle Monáe’s "Hell You Talmbout". * Modern musical reinterpretations and generic transformations of the track spanning the work of Kelsey Waldon, Dee Dee Bridgewater, and AhSa-Ti Nu's "Carolina Goddam". Keywords * Nina Simone * Mississippi Goddam * Civil Rights Movement * Medgar Evers * Birmingham Church Bombing * 1963 history * Protest music * Curtis Institute of Music * Janelle Monáe * AhSa-Ti Nu * Black Lives Matter * Political songwriting * Public humanities * Music and Revolution

8 de jul de 202659 min
Portada del episodio Bruce Springsteen, Born in the U.S.A.

Bruce Springsteen, Born in the U.S.A.

When you hear the explosive snare hit and driving synth line of Bruce Springsteen’s 1984 masterpiece “Born in the U.S.A.,” it’s easy to understand why it became a stadium-packing anthem. But underneath the celebratory, red-white-and-blue image constructed by mainstream culture lies a devastatingly bleak critique of American foreign policy and the abandonment of the working class. In this episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar treats “Born in the U.S.A.” as a vital primary source for understanding the complex reality of post-Vietnam America. We look past the hyper-patriotic misinterpretations, most famously weaponized during Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign, to unpack the song's true narrative: a story of a working-class kid shipped off to a foreign war, only to return home to closed factories, systemic economic neglect, and a government that considered his life disposable. Rolf breaks down the musical tension Springsteen built into the track, contrasting a grim, desperate lyrical narrative with a triumphant, major-key stadium melody. Finally, we examine the song's complex political afterlives, tracing how a deeply critical protest anthem was aggressively co-opted, commercialized, and flattened into uncomplicated patriotism, raising profound questions about cultural memory and how we remember the costs of war. If you’ve ever pumped your fist to that chorus without knowing the profound tragedy behind it, this episode is for you. In this episode you’ll find: * A deep dive into the socio-economic landscape of 1980s working-class America, deindustrialization, and the reality of the Rust Belt. * The landscape of post-Vietnam veteran experiences, exploring the social isolation, unemployment, and institutional abandonment faced by those returning from the war. * A close reading of the political weaponization of pop culture, detailing Ronald Reagan's 1984 campaign co-optation of the track and Springsteen’s pushback. * A lyrical and structural breakdown of "Born in the U.S.A.", analyzing the sharp juxtaposition between its tragic lyrics and its triumphant, major-key stadium production. * A personal reflection connecting the "small-town trap" narrative to the broader historical reality of class inequality and military enlistment. * The multi-decade evolution of the song through its various re-recordings, including Springsteen’s haunting acoustic versions and modern roots-rock reinterpretations. Keywords * Bruce Springsteen * Born in the U.S.A. * Vietnam War veterans * Reagan Era politics * 1980s music history * Deindustrialization * Rust Belt history * Political co-optation * Protest music * Stadium rock * American cultural memory * Working-class history * Media literacy * Max Weinberg * E Street Band * Music and Revolution

1 de jul de 202647 min
Portada del episodio Bronski Beat, Smalltown Boy

Bronski Beat, Smalltown Boy

Some songs top the charts. And some songs change the world. In this final Pride Month episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar dives into Bronski Beat’s groundbreaking 1984 debut masterpiece, "Smalltown Boy." At a time when queer narratives in pop music were largely masked by theatrical camp or hidden behind closed closet doors , three openly gay working-class runaways did something completely revolutionary: they told a literal, autobiographical story of a young gay man fleeing provincial violence for the sanctuary of the big city. We travel back to the hostile legal and social climate of 1980s Britain, from the discriminatory age of consent laws and Margaret Thatcher’s looming Section 28 legislation, to the moral panic stoked around the emerging AIDS epidemic. Yet, out of this oppressive atmosphere, Bronski Beat infused raw punk defiance into a lean, minimalist electronic dance pulse, creating an unfiltered map for survival that gave thousands of isolated kids their first time ever hearing their own lives validated on the radio. We break down the track’s masterclass in emotional counterpoint, from its quiet small-town tragedies and the siren call of Jimmy Somerville’s falsetto, to the band’s explicitly political debut album, The Age of Consent, which printed gay crisis hotlines right inside the vinyl sleeve. Finally, we follow the song's incredibly diverse afterlives, exploring how its story of queer exile remains a timeless anthem through radical reinterpretations by Orville Peck, Dido, José González, and beyond. If you’ve ever danced to that pulsing arpeggio without knowing the profound political courage behind it, this episode is for you. In this episode you’ll find: * A deep dive into the hostile 1980s British cultural climate, Section 28, and state-sanctioned institutional shame. * The landscape of 80s queer pop, exploring the visual subversions of Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Culture Club, and Divine alongside the coded realities of the closet. * The radical origins of Bronski Beat, emerging from London’s leftist political spaces and a synth-pop style built out of a Sex Pistols chord progression. * A lyrical close reading of "Smalltown Boy," analyzing its emotional armor, its depiction of family misunderstanding, and the falsetto as a channel for survival. * The legacy of The Age of Consent album as a physical protest tool that weaponized gatefold liner notes to connect isolated youth to chosen families. * A personal radio station reflection on how small-town migration stories are, in hindsight, frequently queer stories of survival. * The multi-decade evolution of the song through Jimmy Somerville's modern reflections and generic boundary-pushing covers spanning country, metal, and indie-folk. Keywords * Bronski Beat * Smalltown Boy * Jimmy Somerville * Synth-pop history * 1980s Britain * Section 28 * Margaret Thatcher * Age of Consent * Queer exile * Frankie Goes to Hollywood * Divine * Dusty Springfield * Orville Peck * Queer survival * Pride Month * Music and Revolution

24 de jun de 202651 min
Portada del episodio Sylvester, You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)

Sylvester, You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)

Some protest songs change the world with slogans. This one does it by teaching you how to live inside your own body. In this Pride‑month episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar dives into Sylvester’s 1978 disco classic “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)”—a song that sounds like pure dance‑floor bliss but works underneath as a theology of queer embodiment. We follow Sylvester from a strict Pentecostal childhood in Watts, through San Francisco’s psychedelic drag troupe the Cockettes, to the queer, Black, and Latinx club scene that turned his falsetto into a kind of gospel for the disco floor. From early underground spaces like the Loft and Paradise Garage to the mainstream “Disco Sucks” backlash, this episode traces how disco became both refuge and target—and how “Mighty Real” emerged as an anthem for people whose bodies and desires were treated as problems everywhere else. Rolf breaks down the song’s church‑service structure, its mantra‑like “I feel real” refrains, and the way Sylvester, Two Tons O’ Fun, and producer Patrick Cowley built a sound that points directly toward Hi‑NRG, house, and modern club music. We end by following the song’s afterlives—from Jimmy Somerville and Byron Stingily to Adam Lambert & Sigala’s Pride in London version—and by revisiting a roller‑rink memory where “Mighty Real” was just great skating music, long before its history of queer liberation came into focus. If you’ve ever shouted along to that chorus without knowing who Sylvester was, this episode is for you. In this episode you’ll find: * A sensorial tour of 1970s underground discos as queer, Black, and Latinx refuges in the wake of Stonewall. * Sylvester’s journey from Pentecostal prodigy in Watts to San Francisco drag theatre with the Cockettes. * How Sylvester, Two Tons O’ Fun, and the Hot Band fused gospel vocals with four‑on‑the‑floor disco on Step II. * A close reading of “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)”—its verses, the “I feel real” mantra, and its church‑like build. * Discussion of disco’s mainstream peak and the racist, homophobic “Disco Sucks” backlash and Disco Demolition Night. * A personal roller‑skating‑rink story that reframes the song from background fun to queer lifeline. * The song’s legacy through covers by Jimmy Somerville, Byron Stingily, Adam Lambert & Sigala, and more. * A look at how “Mighty Real” connects disco to later Hi‑NRG, house, and contemporary Pride anthems. Keywords * Sylvester * You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real) * Disco history * Queer nightlife * Black and Latinx club culture * Cockettes * Two Tons O’ Fun * Weather Girls * Patrick Cowley * Paradise Garage * Loft / Gallery * Disco Sucks * Disco Demolition Night * Hi‑NRG * House music * Queer embodiment * Pride Month * Music and Revolution

17 de jun de 202645 min