Uncovering the Cover

Vogue, the Song that Covered a Culture and Soundtracked The Devil Wears Prada

47 min · 29. Apr. 2026
Episode Vogue, the Song that Covered a Culture and Soundtracked The Devil Wears Prada Cover

Beschreibung

In 1990, Madonna released a song that wasn’t supposed to be a single. It was a B-side throwaway, recorded in a basement studio in Manhattan with a $5,000 budget and a vocal booth converted from a closet. It became one of the best-selling singles of the year, hit number one in over 30 countries, and 35 years later, it still soundtracks the most iconic fashion moments on screen — from Andy Sachs’ Paris montage in The Devil Wears Prada to the teaser trailer of its 2026 sequel. But Vogue isn’t just a Madonna song. It’s the story of a culture. Voguing was invented in Harlem in the 1970s and 1980s by Black and Latino LGBTQ+ kids who had been thrown out of their homes, building chosen families called Houses, competing in underground ballroom competitions, and turning fashion poses into a dance language. Names you may not know — Crystal LaBeija, Willi Ninja, Hector Xtravaganza, Jose Gutierez, Luis Camacho — built the entire visual world that Madonna would later put on MTV. In this episode of Uncovering the Cover, we trace Vogue’s journey from the ballroom floor to the global pop charts, into Paris Is Burning, onto the Blond Ambition Tour, through Pose, and onto the runway of The Devil Wears Prada 2. We ask the question that has followed the song for three and a half decades: was Madonna an ambassador, or was she an extractor? And we tell the story of the people who built the dance she would make immortal.📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover:Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover]TikTok: [@uncoveringcover.podcast]Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW:If you enjoyed this episode:✅ Subscribe to the show✅ Leave a 5-star review✅ Share with a friend✅ Follow us on social mediaDISCLAIMER:The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

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26 Folgen

Episode The Sound of Women’s Football: How the Sport’s Greatest Cultural Revolution Was Shaped Cover

The Sound of Women’s Football: How the Sport’s Greatest Cultural Revolution Was Shaped

This is the third episode of a three-part series exploring the music that has put soccer or football at the center of world pop culture, in the lead up to the FIFA World Cup 2026. * Episode 1: The World Cup Songs: https://pinzondiego.com/work/world-cup-songs-full-story/ [https://pinzondiego.com/work/world-cup-songs-full-story/] * Episode 2: The fan chants borrowed from pop music: https://pinzondiego.com/work/songs-football-fans-sing-anthem-chants/ [https://pinzondiego.com/work/songs-football-fans-sing-anthem-chants/] * Episode 3: The songs of the women's game The men’s FIFA World Cup has had an official song since 1962. The Women’s World Cup didn’t get its first official anthem until 2023 — sixty-one years later. That gap, that silence, is the story. In the climactic episode of Uncovering the Cover’s World Cup music trilogy, host Diego Pinzón traces how women’s football built its own soundtrack from scratch — in the spaces the music industry left empty. From the 1972 passage of Title IX in the United States (which took American girls’ high school soccer participation from 700 players to over 400,000), through Brandi Chastain’s 1999 World Cup celebration at the Rose Bowl (where a 30-year-old Jennifer Lopez performed "Let’s Get Loud" as her own breakthrough moment), through the chants of "EQUAL PAY!" at the 2019 final that helped force a landmark settlement with U.S. Soccer, through the haunting sixth-minute silent protest of October 2021 that stopped every NWSL match in solidarity with abused players, through the Lionesses’ unforgettable Euro 2022 Sweet Caroline moment with Chloe Kelly, through Spain’s 2023 World Cup victory — and the "Se Acabó" movement that engulfed it after a federation president’s non-consensual kiss — to the first-ever official Women’s World Cup song. This is a story about Title IX, about equal pay, about the National Women’s Soccer League and its reckoning, about Marta, about the Matildas’ obsession with a 2001 Australian pop song, and about how women’s football, denied the official soundtrack of the men’s game for sixty-one years, built one of the most authentic music cultures in modern sport. It is the story of the songs women made along the way, when nobody made the songs for them. 📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover: Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover] TikTok: [@pinzondiego] Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW: If you enjoyed this episode: ✅ Subscribe to the show ✅ Leave a 5-star review ✅ Share with a friend ✅ Follow us on social media DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

4. Juni 20261 h 7 min
Episode The Songs of Soccer! How Football Fans Transformed Pop's Biggest Anthems Cover

The Songs of Soccer! How Football Fans Transformed Pop's Biggest Anthems

This is the second episode of a three-part series exploring the music that has put soccer or football at the center of world pop culture, in the lead up to the FIFA World Cup 2026. * Episode 1: The World Cup Songs * Episode 2: The fan chants borrowed from pop music * Episode 3: The songs of the women's game This is the story about how football fans stole the world’s best pop songs, and made them their own. If the official World Cup songs covered in Part 1 of this series were top-down, this episode is bottom-up. This is the story of football fans — the hinchadas of South America and the terraces of the UK — who built the most important pop-music tradition almost nobody talks about: the cover song that nobody released. The chant. Uncovering the Cover host Diego Pinzón traces the hidden lives of some of football’s greatest anthems. A 1918 Broadway show tune that became West Ham’s 100-year-old anthem. A 1945 Rodgers & Hammerstein song — written about a widow grieving her dead husband — that became the soundtrack of Liverpool Football Club. A 1969 Creedence Clearwater Revival single called "Bad Moon Rising" that became Argentina’s defining chant at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil — and, on the other side of the world, Manchester United’s "Stretford End Arising." A 1985 Italian disco track that traveled across five countries before becoming Liverpool’s "Allez Allez Allez." A 1996 dance song by an Italian singer named Gala that, in 2016, became the most viral football chant of the modern internet era. This is a story about borrowed melodies, working-class memory, hinchadas in Buenos Aires and torcidas in South America, and terraces in England. It is the story of how fans became the most important cover artists in modern pop music, and how the songs they stole built the global culture of football itself. 📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover: Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover] TikTok: [@pinzondiego] Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW: If you enjoyed this episode: ✅ Subscribe to the show ✅ Leave a 5-star review ✅ Share with a friend ✅ Follow us on social media DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

28. Mai 20261 h 16 min
Episode The Best World Cup Songs: how Shakira and Luciano Pavarotti covered an entire culture Cover

The Best World Cup Songs: how Shakira and Luciano Pavarotti covered an entire culture

This is the first episode of a three-part series exploring the music that has put soccer or football at the center of world pop culture. * Episode 1: The World Cup Songs * Episode 2: The fan chants borrowed from pop music * Episode 3: The songs of the women's game On May 14, 2026, just weeks before the FIFA World Cup kicked off across the United States, Canada, and Mexico — Shakira and Burna Boy released "Dai Dai," the official anthem of the largest World Cup in history. It was Shakira’s fourth World Cup song. It was also the latest chapter in one of pop music’s strangest, richest, and most under-examined stories: how a sporting event became a global music phenomenon, and how the songs of the World Cup quietly "covered" an entire international culture. In this episode of Uncovering the Cover, host Diego Pinzón traces the full arc of World Cup music — from a 1986 Cameroonian military satire that became the most-streamed FIFA song in history, to Luciano Pavarotti turning a 1924 Puccini aria into a 1990 pop hit, to Ricky Martin’s 1998 performance that single-handedly cracked open the Latin Explosion, to an Argentine schoolteacher rewriting an old breakup song that ended up being sung by Lionel Messi himself as Argentina lifted the trophy in Qatar. This is a story about borrowed melodies, contested authorship, corporate anthems, fan-made revolutions, and how music has done what almost nothing else in the modern world can do: unite billions of people across language, geography, and politics. If "Vogue" covered fashion, World Cup songs covered international football. Welcome to soccer’s greatest cover job. 📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover: Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover] TikTok: [@pinzondiego] Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW: If you enjoyed this episode: ✅ Subscribe to the show ✅ Leave a 5-star review ✅ Share with a friend ✅ Follow us on social media DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

21. Mai 20261 h 4 min
Episode RE-UPLOAD | Walk This Way: The song that changed everything Cover

RE-UPLOAD | Walk This Way: The song that changed everything

Back in 1975 Aerosmith created a song out of luck, and it became a Billboard Top 10 hit. The beat and the guitar riff was heavily used years later in underground rap parties in the Bronx, and Run-DMC had actually already rapped over the song before without realizing it was an Aerosmith's song, or even who the rock band was. The story behind this cover is so unique because at first, the rap group did not want to record it for considering the lyrics "hillbilly gibberish", but when released it became an instant hit and it even peaked higher than the original version. It also catapulted Aerosmith again to mainstream at a time the band wasn't having their best time.Listen to the full episode above and let us know yout thoughts behind this incredible cover. 📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover: Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover] TikTok: [@pinzondiego] Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW: If you enjoyed this episode: ✅ Subscribe to the show ✅ Leave a 5-star review ✅ Share with a friend ✅ Follow us on social media DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

13. Mai 202649 min
Episode Vogue, the Song that Covered a Culture and Soundtracked The Devil Wears Prada Cover

Vogue, the Song that Covered a Culture and Soundtracked The Devil Wears Prada

In 1990, Madonna released a song that wasn’t supposed to be a single. It was a B-side throwaway, recorded in a basement studio in Manhattan with a $5,000 budget and a vocal booth converted from a closet. It became one of the best-selling singles of the year, hit number one in over 30 countries, and 35 years later, it still soundtracks the most iconic fashion moments on screen — from Andy Sachs’ Paris montage in The Devil Wears Prada to the teaser trailer of its 2026 sequel. But Vogue isn’t just a Madonna song. It’s the story of a culture. Voguing was invented in Harlem in the 1970s and 1980s by Black and Latino LGBTQ+ kids who had been thrown out of their homes, building chosen families called Houses, competing in underground ballroom competitions, and turning fashion poses into a dance language. Names you may not know — Crystal LaBeija, Willi Ninja, Hector Xtravaganza, Jose Gutierez, Luis Camacho — built the entire visual world that Madonna would later put on MTV. In this episode of Uncovering the Cover, we trace Vogue’s journey from the ballroom floor to the global pop charts, into Paris Is Burning, onto the Blond Ambition Tour, through Pose, and onto the runway of The Devil Wears Prada 2. We ask the question that has followed the song for three and a half decades: was Madonna an ambassador, or was she an extractor? And we tell the story of the people who built the dance she would make immortal.📱 Follow Uncovering the Cover:Instagram: [@uncoveringthecover]TikTok: [@uncoveringcover.podcast]Website: [pinzondiego.com/podcast] CREDITS: Host, Producer, Editor: Diego Pinzón SUPPORT THE SHOW:If you enjoyed this episode:✅ Subscribe to the show✅ Leave a 5-star review✅ Share with a friend✅ Follow us on social mediaDISCLAIMER:The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any artist, label, or organization mentioned. All music samples are used for educational and commentary purposes under fair use doctrine.

29. Apr. 202647 min