A Short Walk through Our Long History

132 - The Birth of Rock 'n Roll

35 min · 22 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio 132 - The Birth of Rock 'n Roll

Descripción

Episode 132 - The Birth of Rock ’n’ Roll Yes, that intro was the song Subdivisions, by Rush.  My normal intro music is an acoustic clip of that same song.  One of my all time favorite rock 'n roll songs.     How in the world can I do one podcast episode on the history of rock 'n roll?  There’s just no way.  So I’ve decided to do split it into two reasonably short episodes, and try to work in some of the actual music that I’m talking about, because where’s the fun in talking about rock 'n roll, if you can’t play some of the music?   Also, in this episode, I’m going to talk more about the birth of rock 'n roll, and next episode, talk a bit more about its cultural impact.  (Which, just as a bit of foreshadowing, is going to be huge)

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de A Short Walk through Our Long History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

132 episodios

episode 132 - The Birth of Rock 'n Roll artwork

132 - The Birth of Rock 'n Roll

Episode 132 - The Birth of Rock ’n’ Roll Yes, that intro was the song Subdivisions, by Rush.  My normal intro music is an acoustic clip of that same song.  One of my all time favorite rock 'n roll songs.     How in the world can I do one podcast episode on the history of rock 'n roll?  There’s just no way.  So I’ve decided to do split it into two reasonably short episodes, and try to work in some of the actual music that I’m talking about, because where’s the fun in talking about rock 'n roll, if you can’t play some of the music?   Also, in this episode, I’m going to talk more about the birth of rock 'n roll, and next episode, talk a bit more about its cultural impact.  (Which, just as a bit of foreshadowing, is going to be huge)

22 de abr de 202635 min
episode 131 - The Cold War, Part 2 artwork

131 - The Cold War, Part 2

Ok, yes, I know, I’ve already talked about the Cold War, just a few episodes ago, but I feel like I need to spend another episode talking about all the important things that happen in the late 1950’s and 1960’s as a part of the cold war, that I didn’t get to talk about in the previous episode.  A lot of things are about to happen, and they are all important to our modern world, and they are all related to the ongoing cold war between the west and the communists.  In fact, the polarization of the world between the communists and the west is going to be the dominant factor in all that happens in the 1950s, 60s, 70, and 80s.  Everything that we’re going to talk about that happens in these 40 years will be happening against the backdrop of this ongoing cold war.

7 de mar de 202623 min
episode 130 - Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian Revolution artwork

130 - Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian Revolution

We talked last episode about the Communist Revolution in China, and apparently there was a two for one special on revolutions, because this episode also has a revolution, but this one is VERY different than what happened in China.   Part of the reason that the revolutions were so different was that what is about to happen in India is not a communist revolution.  Communist revolutions are usually destructive, as the old order of things is being aggressively done away with, and so communism is expecting to do away with the old order by using force and violence.   The Indian revolution is going to be done exactly the opposite, using peace and non-violence.  And that is largely due to the person who is going to lead the revolution in India - Mohandas Gandhi.

6 de mar de 202617 min
episode 129 - The Chinese Communist Revolution and the Korean War artwork

129 - The Chinese Communist Revolution and the Korean War

We were talking last episode about how the western allies tried to contain the spread of communism in Europe, but I mentioned that Communism was spreading in Asia as well.  This is about to be a problem in China, which, on the face of it, seems an unlikely hotbed for communism.   Back in 1912, before both world wars, the last Chinese dynasty, the Qing dynasty, collapsed.  The Qing had ruled China since the 1600’s, but the dynasty had fallen into disarray, and China was really being ruled by a loose system of sort of feudal warlords.  When the dynasty collapsed in 1912, it was replaced by the Chinese Republic, but the republic’s hold on power wasn’t very strong, and in many places, the warlords still ruled.   In 1921, the Chinese Communist party was created, and in 1927, a civil war broke out between the communists and the nationalists, who were strongly anti-communists.

10 de feb de 202625 min