Music and Revolution: Songs That Changed the World
In this episode of Music and Revolution, Rolf Straubhaar digs into George Michael’s “Freedom! ’90” as more than a catchy breakup letter to MTV. We trace how a former Wham! heartthrob went from neon shorts and “Choose Life” shirts to a leather‑jacket sex symbol—and why, by 1990, he was desperate to torch that image in public while still closeted in the middle of the AIDS crisis. Along the way, we step inside the 80s pop landscape of queer subtext and coded anthems—from Soft Cell and Pet Shop Boys to Erasure, k.d. lang, and R.E.M.—and hear how George’s own catalog (“Careless Whisper,” “Faith,” “Father Figure,” “Monkey”) mapped out a closet in real time. Then we go line‑by‑line through “Freedom! ’90”: the James Brown “Funky Drummer” loop, the gospel choir, and those verses about pictures in frames, clothes that “do not make the man,” and “someone deep inside of me, someone I forgot to be.” We unpack the David Fincher video that destroys the Faith‑era props on camera, and we follow the song’s afterlives—from Robbie Williams and Dua Lipa to Pride choirs and a cappella mash‑ups—as each new cover turns one gay man’s fight for self‑definition into a reusable language of reinvention. If “Freedom! ’90” has ever just been a great 90s hook to you, this episode invites you to hear it as something riskier: the sound of a man getting ready to stop being the face everyone else needed, and start being the person he actually was. In this episode you’ll find: * The story of how George Michael went from Wham!’s sun‑drenched teen fantasy to the hyper‑masculine Faith persona. * A tour of 80s queer pop context: Soft Cell, Pet Shop Boys, Queen, Erasure, k.d. lang, R.E.M., Melissa Etheridge, and more. * How songs like “Everything She Wants,” “Careless Whisper,” “Faith,” “I Want Your Sex,” “Monkey,” and “Father Figure” reveal the pressures of the closet. * A close reading of “Freedom! ’90” verse by verse, from “every little hungry schoolgirl’s pride and joy” to “there’s someone I forgot to be.” * The role of James Brown’s “Funky Drummer” loop and a gospel‑style choir in turning a private crisis into a public anthem. * Why George refused to appear in the “Freedom! ’90” video and chose instead to blow up his own Faith‑era iconography. * Personal reflections on first encountering “I Want Your Sex” as a kid and “Freedom! ’90” as a college musician. * A survey of key covers—from Robbie Williams and Dua Lipa to Marc Martel, Emma Hunton & Josh Pence, Milk n’Blues, TV’s Duets, and the Vancouver Pride Choir—and what each one emphasizes about the song’s meaning. * A look at how “Freedom! ’90” sits between George Michael’s closeted 80s and his unapologetically out, post‑“Outside” years. Keywords * George Michael * Freedom! ’90 * Wham! * Faith (album) * I Want Your Sex * Father Figure * 1980s pop * Queer pop history * AIDS crisis * Closet and coming out * Pet Shop Boys * Erasure * Soft Cell * k.d. lang * R.E.M. * Melissa Etheridge * Funky Drummer * David Fincher * Music video history * Protest music * Identity and fame * Music and Revolution
16 episodios
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