2 episodes

The albums of yesterday, discussed today. Created and hosted by Carly Jordan and Carrie Courogen. 77musicclub.com

77 Music Club 77 Music Club

    • Music
    • 4.4 • 29 Ratings

The albums of yesterday, discussed today. Created and hosted by Carly Jordan and Carrie Courogen. 77musicclub.com

    3.6: Jobriath

    3.6: Jobriath

    Bowie. Bolan. The Dolls. These are the names that we have hallowed through the decades as bastions of glam rock, the genre that defined the early ‘70s urban rock scene. Simultaneously swirling around the glam galaxy was a soft-spoken, fair-featured piano prodigy who called himself Jobriath, and though he is less featured in the annals of music history, his influence is no less felt by generations of flamboyant, theatrical rock performers who came after him.

    Often cited as the first openly gay rock star, Jobriath rocketed from musical theatre actor and folk songwriter to full-on glam star in seemingly no time at all, thanks to aggressive marketing strategies from his Svengali-like manager, Jerry Brandt. Jobriath burned hot and bright for a few years, but his star fell just as quickly as it rose, and he spent the remainder of his days living out of the pyramid apartment on the roof of the Chelsea Hotel before his premature death in 1983.

    In this episode, we unpack the many ways Jobriath’s story — though shorter than his glam peers — has volumes to teaches us about the genre, changing social norms between the last decades of the 20th century and now, gender and sexuality, and why in the h*ck someone would even want to be famous in the first place.

    • 1 hr 18 min
    3.5: Raw Like Sushi

    3.5: Raw Like Sushi

    By 1989, 25-year-old Neneh Cherry had already lived multiple vibrant lives. The child of bohemians (her mother, artist Moki Cherry, and her step-father, jazz musician Don Cherry). The 14-year-old high school dropout-turned-downtown-club-kid. The 16-year-old touring the UK with The Slits. The lead singer of post-punk band Rip Rig + Panic. Wife and mother. Divorced single mother, lover, and collaborator. All of these eclectic experiences and identities shape the 10 tracks of Cherry’s debut solo album Raw Like Sushi. Like Cherry, the album is impossible to pin down as one thing; it’s feisty and assertive, using a melting pot of influences from rap to funk to dance pop to convey a young woman’s truths without waiting for permission to do so.

    Though the album is nearly 30 years old, it’s one we have found ourselves listening to often in recent months, marveling at its prescience and continued relevancy. Not only do we hear 2018 ring in its girl power-inspiring anthems, assertions of female sexuality, or rebuking of Men Behaving Badly. We hear its decade-defining production reflected in current artists attempting to recreate specific dated sounds of the past — and use this album as a reminder that we need to understand where we have been to know where we are going.

    In this episode, we unpack the layers of this album’s lasting sonic influence, discuss and debate the ways its topics remain relevant in today’s cultural and political climate, and salute Neneh Cherry’s prolific unfuckwithable baddiness.

    • 1 hr 1 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
29 Ratings

29 Ratings

SDM1979 ,

the kind of podcast I like

I like this show a lot! It’s just getting to sit in on a really fun conversation about music between people who love music.

Dominic Hendryx ,

Re: millennial idiocy

Christ Jesus. Millennials are, no question, the worthless generation. If being orally tortured is your thing, look no further as you have arrived at the pinnacle of self-mutilation. I humbly present the two most annoying, MOST GRATING women ever to create a podcast. Of particular note, check out their stale and positively idiotic comments regarding Neneh Cherry’s album. Down to their sandpaper voices, this is pretentious musical hell personified.

Doug Spiro ,

Lover of music

The 77 music club and hosts Carrie and Carley are the best thing going in podcast land!!! The breath of thier knowledge is incrediable and the energy of their passion is contagious. Carrie and Carley LOVE music and it shows. They care about the songs ...they listen to words...and the connections to make to songs of the past is amazing!! I thought i knew everyting about of bands, music and artists of my youth but I learn somehting every time I listen. Even thier Episode notes are unbelievable.. like a masters thesis . I just got of a long hospital stay and listening to the '77 Music Club saved me as much as any Dr or Nurse. Thanks Carrie and Carley!!!!!

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