1992 studio album by Sugar
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On today's episode, I talk to musician Bob Mould. Originally from Malone, New York, Bob attended college in Saint Paul, Minnesota where he formed Hüsker Dü in 1979 with Grant Hart and Greg Norton. One of the most well-known bands of the hardcore punk era, Hüsker Dü released six albums, mostly on SST and then on Warner Bros. before breaking up in 1988. After this, Bob began performing under his own name, and then formed Sugar in 1992. While Sugar was only together for three short years, they released two albums, an EP and a B-sides collection, and their first album Copper Blue, was a big hit. Since Sugar's dissolution, Bob has kept quite busy, releasing over a dozen albums on labels like Anti- and Merge, and his latest album Here We Go Crazy was just released on Granary Music/BMG Records, and folks, it's a delight! This is the website for Beginnings, subscribe on Apple Podcasts, follow me on Twitter. Check out my free philosophy Substack where I write essays every couple months here and my old casiopop band's lost album here! And the comedy podcast I do with my wife Naomi Couples Therapy can be found here! Theme song by the fantastic Savoir Adore! Second theme by the brilliant Mike Pace! Closing theme by the delightful Gregory Brothers! Podcast art by the inimitable Beano Gee!
Episode 94 features Larry, Keith, and Scott taking turns drafting and discussing the greatest songs of 1992. Link to Spotify playlist for this episode: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1BJAe28QKFMdktIv08fQwt?si=c00a1f541f5b4ade Link to Spotify honorable mentions playlist for this episode: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6QkhYpKWPMBEDmIKxYgLP3?si=a248d79b2c2d4643 Link to Spotify playlist that includes all of our song draft picks so far: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5TwJXXESiyIPNy0Vdg7OR4?si=a169a297c91a491f Link to Scott's ebook Greatest Songs Of The 1960s: https://www.amazon.com/Greatest-Songs-1960s-Scott-Floman-ebook/dp/B0DJCQ8Q2H/ Link to Scott's ebook Greatest Songs Of The 1970s: https://www.amazon.com/Greatest-Songs-1970s-Scott-Floman-ebook/dp/B0DJCRT77X Link to Scott's guest appearance on the Discord and Rhyme podcast about Sugar's Copper Blue: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1KrhiI212iM7zYMC4ni468?si=2ff14491813d40f0
Bob Mould is the founding member of Husker Du, one of the most influential guitar bands of the 80's. Husker Du's wall-of-sound guitar approach was as influential as REM in creating alternative rock, and created an environment which allowed Nirvana, The Pixies and The Foo Fighters to succeed. In the early-90's, Sugar, Bob's next band, built on that with a thrash/melodic collection of songs, particularly on “Copper Blue”. Since then, Bob's kept the flame alive for guitar-based rock with a solo career that is still giving us marvellous albums like 2012's “Silver Age” and 2020's “Blue Hearts”. Mick saw Mould in Sydney on his Copper Blue 20th Anniversary tour, and it still ranks as one of the best he's seen. Our “Album you Must Hear before you Die” is Joan Armatrading's self-titled 1976 gem. Unusually, both Mick and Jeff love this album. In “Knockin' on Heaven's Door”, the boys salute Melanie Safka, who has passed away after a career that stretched from being one of only 3 female acts at Woodstock to duetting with Miley Cyrus (it's great!). They also wonder why “Death by Shooting” is a major category of death for rappers!? The playlist is pretty damn good, too!! Enjoy. Episode playlist Dead RappersBob Mould; What's In My BagMelanie Live Netherlands
Christopher & Jobst im Gespräch mit Jule. Wir reden über einen Tag bei Harry Styles, immer eine Meinung haben, aber man den Kopp zu machen sollte, die Existenzberechtigung von bestimmten Fußballvereinen, Sommerhaus der Stars, Sartre bei Kerzenschein, das coolste Mädchen an der Schule, "Kommsch hald mal mit ins S.P.A.S.S.-Haus", evtl. The Accüsed, Kulturschock tiefstes Schwabenland, Spießbraten, während einer Schießerei im Käfer auf dem Boden, andere Lebensrealitäten erleben, den Leuten zuhören, "Check Deine Privilegien", ein bißchen Nahost-Thematik, peruanische Zipfelmützen, die 15-jährige Metal-Maus und ein Universum-Walkman mit zwei Kopfhörereingängen, das Monsters of Rock, Cola-Rotwein-Mischung im Kanister, Locke und sein vollgekotzer Gipsarm, den Hang zum Exzess ausleben, mit Punkrock-Regeln fremdeln, Aushandlungsprozesse, die coolen Weiber an der Schule, die Frage nach Punk & Advent, die liebsten Weihnachtsplätzchen, zwei "Briefe von Hörer:innen", die Pflicht von Podcastern, geklaute Autoradios, der erste Proberaum in der Südanlage, die Dynamik auf Tour, hinzunehmen dass Leute sind wie sie sind, wer singt wir die ganze Zeit angeguckt, fake it till you make it, Attention!Rookies & Peel, ätzende Erlebnisse auf der Kirmes, die großartigen Muffs, Beppo der Listengott, der einzig gute Song auf Sugars "Copper Blue"-Album, warum man Liz Phair hören sollte, Streit um einige Positionen auf Jules Top 100 Liste, mit Naked Raygun nicht warm werden können, eine Zumutung lohnarbeiten zu müssen, grundlegenede Informationen zum Thema Gemeinnützigkeit, das äußere Bild entfernt sich vom inneren, das ganze Jahr n angenehmes Klima, sich eigentlich ganz okay finden, gern allein in Urlaub fahren, "Der wunderbare Massenselbstmord", neue halb spontane Regeln für die Empfehlungsplaylist, uvm. Neu auf der Empfehlungsplaylist: Liz Phair - Fuck & Run Meryl Streek - Death to the Landlord Joseph Boys - Liebe Du Schwein
"Gone but forgotten" is an album (sometimes an artist) that was either denied classic status on release or has fallen completely out of the conversation. Alongside The Pixies and Sonic Youth, Bob Mould's 80's act, Hüsker Dü were one of the holy trinity that formed American alternative rock music and especially grunge - his follow up three piece, Sugar, had a fair crack of making some of Grunge's best music. They were certainly acclaimed at the time, but now revisionism of the era tends to bring in acts like Stone Temple Pilots or Alice in Chains - but I barely hear Sugar mentioned, despite Copper Blue being up there with Nevermind, Siamese Dream and Ten as one of the best albums of that first rush, and one that I have always gone back to.
Heute ging es brisant zu im Stammtisch. Nach den unnötigen Niederlagen gegen Anaheim und St. Louis. Neben Nurse und Bouchard werden auch Ken Holland, Jay Woodcroft und die gesamte Coaching Staff. Was denkt ihr über die aktuelle Situation der Oilers?Alle Infos zur Reise: https://de.oilersnation.com/news/nation-vacation-2023-edmonton-wir-kommen-wiederInspirationen für Aktivitäten vor Ort: https://de.oilersnation.com/news/off-the-ice-in-western-albertaBei Interesse an der Reise schreibt gerne eine Mail an oilers-reise@protonmail.com -- Watch live at https://www.twitch.tv/oilersnation_de Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Bob Mould is an under appreciated genius. RIP Christine McVie RIP Keith Levene Recommended Listening: Beaster https://open.spotify.com/album/1Lj1hDF4hcyKGUiw0k7iC3?si=cafC_z4cQGaI1Tc4GWgXFQ Bob Mould Workbook https://open.spotify.com/album/3VhSB8ozURez6qOSptLb15?si=WuoPoZdtRRS0ugB-fAB0Ig Black Sheets of Rain https://open.spotify.com/album/6X7wrpHgbgBB3u2eMBFNuN?si=GtSFSJepTNev5HhRoRBkGg Body of Song https://open.spotify.com/album/48JZpYBLsQUd4O1d0wful4?si=-ZFfKW7aTU6TPy4WqX9nzA Book Bob Mould: "See A Little Light: The Trail of Rage and Melody" https://www.amazon.com/See-Little-Light-Trail-Melody/dp/031604508X huntsmanhill.com huntsmanhillpodcast@gmail.com instagram.com/huntsmanhill https://twitter.com/HuntsmanHill Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/user/1298220429/playlist/4gy1wWwypkoFS2lUztvZ44?si=waSq07DBQlq3x9G1_nK0pg HHPP Amazon Affiliates Store https://huntsmanhill.com/2022/06/09/hhpp-store/ Our Music manhuntsman: https://open.spotify.com/artist/7tFBWn0UFkdOEMf67TRD6W?si=vzllkbDwSEmfZFlj02GLRw Academy O.C: https://academyoc.bandcamp.com/album/academy-o-c Omertà 68: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6dfiCa0qTlbPQUrqtIkStS?si=6SCjNtXbSO2xRBDuBKJelQ
Neste episódio, falamos dos 30 anos do disco de estreia da banda Sugar, do então já veterano Bob Mould: Copper Blue. E para isso, contamos com a participação especial de Daniel Rezende, do perfil AltRock Brasil do instagram. E nas palavras do próprio Daniel, Copper Blue, maior sucesso comercial da carreira de Mould, o reinseriu na cena que ajudara a criar e ainda conseguia acrescentar algo novo, fruto de seu prodigioso talento para compor ganchos e riffs de guitarra. Com melodias irresistíveis e guitarras barulhentas, mas nunca fora de prumo, Copper Blue é um dos melhores discos do começo de uma década onde tantos ótimos discos de rock foram lançados.
When this week's guest, singer/songwriter Elizabeth McCullough (Alpha Cat), heard the song 'Hoover Dam' by the band Sugar, she broke her 3-song rule (making sure an album has at least 3 good songs before purchasing it) and ran out and bought their 1992 debut 'Copper Blue'. She was not disappointed. The record by Bob Mould's new band, released five years after the dissolution of his previous band - beloved punk titans Hüsker Dü - is an emotionally visceral, sonically fierce collection of songs that sound as fresh today as when they first appeared. Stone. Cold. Classic. Songs featured in this episode: If I Can't Change Your Mind - Tre Dabney/The Salt Flats/The Decemberists; Venus Smile, Orbit - Alpha Cat; Friend, You've Got To Fall, Celebrated Summer - Hüsker Dü; See A Little Light - Bob Mould; Never Again - Zulus; The Act We Act, A Good Idea - Sugar; Debaser - Pixies; Changes, Helpless - Sugar; Hoover Dam - Bob Mould (Live, acoustic); Hoover Dam, The Slim - Sugar; Glad To Be Gay - Tom Robinson Band; If I Can't Change Your Mind, Fortune Teller - Sugar; Come In Alone - My Bloody Valentine; In Bloom - Nirvana; Slick, Man On The Moon - Sugar; Wichita - Alpha Cat; If I Can't Change Your Mind - The Decemberists (Live acoustic, A.V. Club)
Email: audioofftheshelf@gmail.com. Instagram: @audioofftheshelf Twitter: @AOTS204 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/audioofftheshelf Sugar. “If I Can't Change Your Mind.” Copper Blue. Rykodisk, September 4, 1992. CD. LP. Screaming Trees. “Nearly Lost You.” Sweet Oblivion. Epic Records, September 8, 1992. Cassette. LP. Public Enemy. “Air Hoodlum.” Greatest Misses. Def Jam Recordings, September 15, 1992. Cannibal Corpse. “Beyond the Cemetery.” Tomb of the Mutilated. Metal Blade Records, September 22, 1992. Cassette. LP. Stone Temple Pilots. “Plush.” Core. Atlantic Records, September 29, 1992. CD. LP. Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.
On this week's show, we... spend quality time with the superlative new record from The Mountain Goats celebrate 30 years of Sugar's Copper Blue feature 4 albums that - in our humble opinion - represent the artistic sweet spot of 4 very distinctive singer/songwriters. All this & much, much less! Debts No Honest Man Can Pay is over 2 rock-solid hours of musical eclectica & other noodle stories. The show started in 2003 at WHFR-FM (Dearborn, MI), moved to WGWG-FM (Boiling Springs, NC) in 2006 & Plaza Midwood Community Radio (Charlotte, NC) in 2012, with a brief pit-stop at WLFM-FM (Appleton, WI) in 2004.
Hey! Remember us? We're back! Happy 30th birthday to "Copper Blue". Tune in and listen as we talk about our thought on this massive release and also pin down a date to post our next episode that is within the same month as this one! Can you believe that? Well, you better!
Dan Gedman might be the smartest dude I've ever had a sit-down conversation with, and he certainly has the deepest voice of any I can recall, which is a batshit combo if you're in to running metrics on how stupid you think you might be.Whew.What a chat, though. I've never gone into an interview thinking I'll be less prepared than my guest, but never did I imagine feeling dumber and less knowledgable than a guest who didn't prepare at all! Yyyikes.Anyway, Dan is a really awesome dude. He just is. I hate to distill it down to that, but -- if we're being honest -- that's all any guy wants...is to be known and remembered as an awesome dude.Now, I'm obviously not married to Dan, and I'm not his business partner, but he has always been the nicest guy I run across. He's an A+ host with fine-tuned hospitality skills. He's a funny fellow, and -- well -- goddamn it if he doesn't know the shit out of his music.Christ.Dan's a son and a brother and a husband and a father to three and a business partner and a music-savvy cat, but he's also just...he's doing it right. I think. You know...from the outsider standpoint. He runs this thing called Liquid9. I'm still not sure what they do. They might traffic Russian mail-order brides (Note: Joke! It's a joke! Take it easy...), but I think they produce music videos, among other sleek, industry kinds of things.Regardless, Dan's for sure a have-back.I felt humbled having him on, and -- while we covered a few records -- there're for sure more where that came from, and I'm legit' excited about what our next visit might look like. The ones we touched on today include the following:Blood on the Tracks, Bob Dylan (1975)Outlandos d'Amour, The Police (1978)Tim, The Replacements (1985)Copper Blue, Sugar (1992)Midnight Marauders, A Tribe Called Quest (1993)Illmatic, Nas (1994)Heartbreaker, Ryan Adams (2000)Is This It, The Strokes (2001)I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning, Bright Eyes (2003)Black Sheep Boy, Okkervil River (2005)I'd be pleased as punch if you gave this conversation a listen. They don't get much better.One final note: I fuck up a lot on this thing.A lot.It's hard to focus on the questions and listen to the answers and keep the thing moving and be aware of the time and of every thing you have said on every other episode.Point being, I used to scoff like a little punk at podcasters for such things. And to hopefully make up for that, I want to point out my mistakes when I become aware of them. In this case, Dan wasn't the first guest with biological parents that're both still alive and together. Jason (episode #1) was, but...that was six months ago, and I'm an aging human.I'm far from perfect. Really far. If you know that and listen anyway, praise be to ye.Blessings.copyright disclaimer: I do not own the rights to the intro/outro audio samples. They are both clips from "Next to You," by Poolside, off of their 2012 release called, Pacific Standard Time (c/o themselves).
John and Scotto, continue their Pride month, Bob Mould trilogy with their review of Copper Blue by Sugar. Stream Downloadhttp://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/thehearingsugar/thehearingsugar.mp3 Copper Blue on Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/album/4CWgGsxF6Xgiv2W1WwZSsI?si=5hMg8A3zTOW7IZVrNA9CmwCopper Blue on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lJTHiNwBB0OO16SJjLYvLKJPv-Kc4A-pk Lava La Rue – Hi-Fidelity Ft. Biig Piig (Official Video)https://youtu.be/ZUu5unXsPL8Duvet (ScummV Remix)https://youtu.be/5hMUup7_ViEJohn’s Album Playlisthttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNmd2iRLeWOQDnMcV-0CKE-OZ8qp1JkdN PlaylistsJohn’s Best of The Hearing Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/6hWWxJqHZNu0MY6kS35dRlScotto’s Best of The Hearing Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/user/1232945495/playlist/2DHpKN5k4T7M7nDFl9aXaeThe Playlist of Unoriginalityhttps://open.spotify.com/user/1232945495/playlist/4nVqHVlBVgSVass55VwPxM
Bob has released 20+ albums since the early '80s. We discuss "Forecast of Rain" from Blue Hearts (2020), "I Don't Know You Anymore" from Beauty & Ruin (2014), "JC Auto" by Sugar from Beaster (1993), and "In A Free Land" by Hüsker Dü, 1982 singe remixed for Savage Young Du (2017). End song: the title track to his new acoustic EP, The Ocean. Intro: "If I Can't Change Your Mind" by Sugar from Copper Blue (1992). For more see bobmould.com. Hear more Nakedly Examined Music. Like our Facebook page. Support us on Patreon. Sponsors: Upgrade your showering at nebia.com/nem (code NEM). Get 15% off at at MasterClass.com/examined.
Bob has released 20+ albums since the early '80s. We discuss "Forecast of Rain" from Blue Hearts (2020), "I Don't Know You Anymore" from Beauty & Ruin (2014), "JC Auto" by Sugar from Beaster (1993), and "In A Free Land" by Hüsker Dü, 1982 singe remixed for Savage Young Du (2017). End song: the title track to his new acoustic EP, The Ocean. Intro: "If I Can't Change Your Mind" by Sugar from Copper Blue (1992). For more see bobmould.com. Hear more Nakedly Examined Music. Like our Facebook page. Support us on Patreon. Sponsors: Upgrade your showering at nebia.com/nem (code NEM). Get 15% off at at MasterClass.com/examined.
Spinning Out (another music podcast) We talk to artists about their favorite albums and go on wild tangents. Today we're talking with Tom Sheehan of Axe to Grind Podcast and of the bands Indecision, Most Precious Blood and most recently Colossus. We talked about Sugar's debut 1992 album, "Copper Blue," as well as the hardcore / alt divide, WCW, Bob Mould's book, "See a Little Light" and so much more. Tom's newest project, Colossus recently released an EP on Triple B Records. Pick up a copy today on their webstore and check it out on streaming. https://bbbrecords.bandcamp.com/album/demo-2021
Episode 47 continues our tournament to determine the greatest rock song from the 1990s. This episode contains the following matchups: Mazzy Star "Fade Into You" (3) vs. The Beta Band "Dry The Rain" (30) (matchup starts at 8:35) The Verve "Bitter Sweet Symphony" (14) vs. Alice In Chains "Nutshell" (19) (matchup starts at 25:43) Modest Mouse "Trailer Trash" (6) vs. Guns n' Roses "Estranged" (27) (matchup starts at 38:46) Pearl Jam "Black" (11) vs. The La's "There She Goes" (22) (matchup starts at 1:00:15) Episode recap starts at 1:12:28 Outro song starts at 1:13:33 Notes: Scott's book on amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Story-Rock-Soul-Music-Reviews-ebook/dp/B071JQ27WC Discord & Rhyme episode of Sugar's Copper Blue: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1KrhiI212iM7zYMC4ni468?si=NWXzLvkzR_iVeOcB-wNLsA Flavorwire article about "The 20 Most Overused Songs in Movies and TV": https://www.flavorwire.com/418541/the-20-most-overused-songs-in-movies-and-tv
Today, Louis spreads the sugary word, as alternative rock legend and overlooked gay icon Bob Mould's 90's band Sugar gets a sweet moment in the podcasting spotlight. An album that Louis feels is deeply forgotton and overlooked, Sugar arrived in the aftermath of the split of Husker Du and after the musical landscape was irrevocably changed by some trio from Seattle called Nirvana, you may have heard of them somwhere. He also really zeroes in on some godawful puns this week, like a mediocre comedian from a third-rate panel show. The management would also like to wish its LGBT audience a continual, joyous pride. All are welcome, and we would love you to stay for brunch! linktr.ee/louistsangarides INSTAGRAM @l.a.tsang TWITTER @l_a_tsang Music: Anxious Darlin by Tinmouth. Used under Creative Commons license
Episode 25 concludes our NCAA Tournament to determine the greatest rock album of all time. This episode includes the Final Four and Final. It also includes some other sections which are outlined below. First Final Four matchup ('60s vs. '80s): (7) Van Morrison "Astral Weeks" vs. (7) U2 "The Joshua Tree" Second Final Four matchup ('70s vs. '90s): (3) Pink Floyd "The Wall" vs. (1) Radiohead "OK Computer" (matchup begins at 16:50) Honorable mention albums (section starts at 32:30) Matt's picks (section starts at 1:09:15) Final matchup (section starts at 1:11:20) Notes for this episode: The 3 Wire albums Keith mentioned are Pink Flag (1977), Chairs Missing (1978), and 154 (1979). The 3 Can albums Keith alluded to were Tago Mago (1971), Ege Bamyasi (1973), and Future Days (1973). Tago Mago was the third Can album but the first with singer Damo Suzuki. Link to Spotify playlist for this episode: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/09PsIqyCJE85C6sflcQmCP?si=OuHXF9UcSgKg1UeTrAnX8w Link to Discord & Rhyme podcast episode for Sugar's Copper Blue: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1KrhiI212iM7zYMC4ni468?si=WdT1WAb6S1KSM8Kf0Tstng
Queen had just released “Bohemian Rhapsody” in 1976, with a ground-breaking film clip, and the question was, “Can they play the clip live?”. Well, they not only did it, but they blew everyone's socks off! Mick and the Phatman were there and recall one of the best concerts ever seen in Australia. From Freddy Mercury appearing in silhouette, to a leap straight into a perfect recreation of the "rock" part of the song they showed 5,000 awestruck Aussies how it was done! References: Queen, Bohemian Rhapsody, Sugar, Copper Blue, Bob Mould, Husker Du, ABBA, Toto, Frenzal Rhomb and a show with Bo Diddley, Sherbet and Cold Chisel all on the one bill. Recommended Listeninghttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/1SgQ8O8iKIHe7YsrxPf7EH?si=kHe8R9zWTXu8lYGYit6npw_______________________________________________________________________________________We'd love to know what you think of the podcast, what you'd like to hear us talk about, ask questions, or even let us know if we got something wrong!!Contact us:https://www.facebook.com/Mick-and-the-Phatman-Talking-Music-104246385065739mickandthephatman@gmail.com
Can you hear those towering walls of amped-up guitars in our latest episode, accompanied by aching lyrics you can barely hear? That’s because we’ve loaded it with Sugar! After pioneering alternative rock in the hardcore punk band Hüsker Dü, frontman and guitarist Bob Mould briefly went solo, then formed a new power trio named after a stray packet of sugar that caught his eye while eating at a Waffle House. (This naming convention would not be repeated until the 2000 Hootie & the Blowfish covers album Scattered, Smothered and Covered.) Sugar’s high-decibel, disarmingly sincere brand of power pop has always made the band Will’s preferred branch of the Mouldverse, and this week he’s joined by Ben, Will, and special guest Scott Floman to discuss their 1992 masterpiece Copper Blue. Cohosts: Chris Willie Williams, Rich Bunnell, Ben Marlin, Scott Floman Complete show notes: https://discordpod.com/listen/065-sugar-copper-blue-1992 Support the podcast! https://www.patreon.com/discordpod
1. "Jack and Jawbreaker" by Rough Dreams (from Rough Dreams; https://bit.ly/2IdvyQU) 2. "Willa" by Fresh (from Withdraw; https://bit.ly/2TWPsS7) 3. "Sage" by Bad Sleep (from Bad Sleep; https://bit.ly/2U47bLC) 4. "A New England" by Billy Bragg (live from Roundhouse, London Oct. 26, 2006; https://bit.ly/2HNUcbc) 5. "Redemption Song" by Johnny Cash & Joe Strummer (from Unearthed; https://spoti.fi/2uxuWgT) 6. "Freaks" by Dead Bars (from Regular; https://bit.ly/2VoGv5C) 7. "Sunshine Rock" by Bob Mould (from Sunshine Rock; https://bit.ly/2WPyNSB) 8. "If I Can't Change Your Mind" by Sugar (from Copper Blue; https://amzn.to/2TYzmrc) 9. "I Apologize" by Husker Du (from New Day Rising; https://amzn.to/2YRf32v) 10. "Deepender" by The Beatless (from Deepender; https://bit.ly/2uKVjzN) 11. "Reunion" by Drop Acid (from Making God Smile) 12. "Did We Do It Wrong?" by Kevin Seconds (from Did We Do It Wrong? [Songs For Years 2019], #28; https://bit.ly/2KlP40j) 13. "Never Gonna Die" by Aree & the Pure Heart (from Never Gonna Die; https://bit.ly/2U4spsP) 14. "Typical" by Dag Nasty (from Field Day) 15. "August" by AVAIL (from Over the James; https://bit.ly/2UxXOnG) 16. "I Wanna Keep Yr Dog" by illuminati hotties (from I Wanna Keep Yr Dog; https://bit.ly/2G0lOHU) 17. "True" by U137 (from Chapter Two; https://bit.ly/2CZhrer)
Renegade Thinkers Unite: #2 Podcast for CMOs & B2B Marketers
If you took every tech company logo and stacked them by color, here's what you'd see: some red, some shades of black, grey, and white, some green. But all those stacks would be in the shadow of one color: blue. Samsung, Facebook, Lenovo, PayPal, hp, Dell—the list of blue logos goes on and on. So what did Morgan Norman, CMO of Copper (née ProsperWorks)? He went pink. With a dash of creative and a spritz of data analysis, Morgan went bold and rebranded in a major way. But—a rebrand isn't just a name and a color. The new mentality has to fill up every nook and cranny of the company, employees need to buy in, users need to be kept informed. On this episode of Renegade Thinkers Unite, Drew Neisser talks with Morgan Norman about the keys to a full rebrand, some common hurdles, and more about B2B marketing. Join in to hear lots of inspirational conversation and more on this company name change! Subscribe on Apple Podcasts- Stitcher - or Podsearch What You’ll Learn Why a company name change? Before its company name change, Copper was a very successful business. It was not looking for a different name to boost sales or to pull itself out of a slump. However, there were still various reasons to change its name. ProsperWorks was a hard name for people to remember. It was even harder for people to say. Prior to its name change, it was in 110 countries, and the name ProsperWorks was hard to translate. Studies were also showing that customers were consistently misspelling its name. All of these reasons culminated in a desire to explore new company names. Just a coat of paint, or a complete overhaul? When ProsperWorks changed its company name to Copper, it did not just change its name - it changed its entire brand. Morgan explains that every bit of product was overhauled, from customer interactions and existing content, to its brand and the company’s roadmap of where it wanted to go. He said that with the new name, the brand changed to revolve around relationships. How Copper used a relaunch to generate interest in its brand Copper used its relaunch to help generate interest in its brand in several different ways: They launched a new advertising campaign: CRM Minus the Bad Stuff. Their ads were enough to make the public curious enough to finish the story by finding out more information on the product. Copper utilized billboard ads. They ran 2 at a time in San Francisco near the airport. This captured the audience of people flying in. They also put a human face to CRM. They produced massive amounts of content about the company and its new name. The name change was surrounded by information on the company. Timeline [2:30] Who is Morgan Norman? [5:52] Why ProsperWorks changed its name to Copper [7:31] Which came first: the name change or the URL [12:24] Why the name Copper instead of Copper CRM [15:43] Why Copper chose pink in branding [17:46] A complete overhaul: from name to product [21:34] Internal involvement before a name change [27:25] The launch of Copper’s new name [30:18] How to use a relaunch to generate interest in your brand [35:22] Top lessons from name changing [38:47] Key metrics that matter in marketing Connect With Guest: Morgan’s Bio on Copper’s Website Connect with Morgan on LinkedIn Follow Morgan on Twitter Resources & People Mentioned Book: Subscribed by Tien Tzuo Campaign: CRM, Minus the Bad Stuff Connect with Drew http://renegade.com/ On LinkedIn On Twitter On Facebook On Instagram
With just 31 days left of 2018, Steve and Remfry delve into albums released over the past 11 months that they missed first time around. In the first part of this two part round-up, the boys look at albums by The Armed, itoldyouiwouldeatyou, Louise Lemón, Ovlov, Kississippi, Ólafur Arnalds and Twenty One Pilots.Elsewhere, Remfry sat down with current Vennart/ex-Oceansize main man Mike Vennart to discuss his top five Iron Maiden songs. Remfry stuck around to review the show as well as shows from Pijn, Mogwai, Earthtone9 and Pitchshifter, whilst Steve went to see Therapy?. Plus, this week’s trade-off is The Smashing Pumpkins’ 2011 Oceania for Sugar’s Copper Blue. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Seth and Rob are joined on the phone by Patterson Hood and they discuss, among other things, Drive-By Truckers' history, their politically-charged latest album, "American Band" and their unique songwriting process. Then Patterson talks glowingly about David Barbe to set the table for the interview Seth and Rob traveled to the University of Georgia to conduct. They discuss that school's Music Business Program, which we learn has grown to attract top notch academic candidates who discover and/or nurture their areas of industry interest. The program also features guest lecturers from across the industry including Jason Isbell's manager Tracey Thomas, Deerhunter and Atlas Sound front man Bradford Cox and Hood himself. Rob and Seth also explore Barbe's musical career, and we learn of the ups and downs of Mercyland, and how perfectly timed his professional liaison with Bob Mould was. Their band, Sugar would produce one of the greatest records of the 80s, "Copper Blue." wTnS is Produced by Rob Turner and Engineered by Josh Thane of Wonder Dog Sounds (wonderdogsounds.com) Inside Out w/ Turner and Seth: insideoutwtns.com Twitter: @InsideoutWTNS Instagram: www.instagram.com/insideoutwtns Facebook: www.facebook.com/insideoutwTnS See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In our inaugural episode we tackle the monster 1992 debut album by Bob Mould's band Sugar, "Copper Blue". So good!
Michael joins the guys yet again, this time for an incisive 3-minute discussion of 2 pioneering post-hardcore albums and an hour and a half of rambling nonsense. Join us, won’t you? You might just lose a few unsightly inches from your waist. New Day Rising Copper Blue
Michael joins the guys yet again, this time for an incisive 3-minute discussion of 2 pioneering post-hardcore albums and an hour and a half of rambling nonsense. Join us, won’t you? You might just lose a few unsightly inches from your waist. New Day Rising Copper Blue
We're taking a break from our run of listener suggestions to check out one of the classic albums of the '90s alternative music - 1992's Copper Blue by Sugar. Bob Mould has a new solo album out, so we thought it would be the perfect time to revisit his short-lived run with with this post-Husker Du power trio, especially since it's recently been re-released and remastered with bonus material thanks to Merge Records. Joining us to talk about Copper Blue is Andy Derer from the The Andy Derer Show, who's hosted a wide array of interesting guests on his podcast that include Cris Kirkwood of the Meat Puppets, Craig Wedren of Shudder to Think and Bob Nastanovich of Pavement, just to name a few. Be sure to check out the start of the new season of The Andy Derer Show starting on September 8th, and follow Andy on Twitter and Facebook. Songs in this Episode: Intro - Helpless 7:45 - History of the Band 17:49 - A Good Idea 20:23 - Changes 23:04 - If I Can't Change You Mind 27:33 - The Act We Act 37:36 - Hoover Dam 41:18 - Man On The Moon Outro - The Slim Follow on Twitter / Facebook Support the Podcast : Donate / Merchandise
We're taking a break from our run of listener suggestions to check out one of the classic albums of the '90s alternative music - 1992's Copper Blue by Sugar. Bob Mould has a new solo album out, so we thought it would be the perfect time to revisit his short-lived run with with this post-Husker Du power trio, especially since it's recently been re-released and remastered with bonus material thanks to Merge Records. Joining us to talk about Copper Blue is Andy Derer from the The Andy Derer Show, who's hosted a wide array of interesting guests on his podcast that include Cris Kirkwood of the Meat Puppets, Craig Wedren of Shudder to Think and Bob Nastanovich of Pavement, just to name a few. Be sure to check out the start of the new season of The Andy Derer Show starting on September 8th, and follow Andy on Twitter and Facebook. Songs in this Episode: Intro - Helpless 7:45 - History of the Band 17:49 - A Good Idea 20:23 - Changes 23:04 - If I Can't Change You Mind 27:33 - The Act We Act 37:36 - Hoover Dam 41:18 - Man On The Moon Outro - The Slim Follow on Twitter / Facebook Support the Podcast : Donate / Merchandise
Part 1 of my conversation with special guests Nick Lorenzen and Mike Piantigini as we discuss the death of rock radio. I've also got the Bonehead of the Week and music from Bob Mould, Hallelujah the Hills, Zeus and The White Stripes. Show notes: - Boston alternative rock station WFNX was sold to Clear Channel recently - Rock radio has been on life support for quite some time - Too much radio programming and formats - WFNX was pioneer of the alternative format - Nick: Knew of WFNX more by reputation as a kid - Mike: College radio introduced me to a world beyond classic rock and metal - Jay: R.E.M. and U2 were first so-called alternative bands I got into - WBCN was revolutionary back in late '60s and '70s, playing free-form rock - Eventually became formatted like all the rest - WBCN switched to alternative format in mid-'90s to compete with FNX - Eventually, BCN went to more talk: Stern, Opie & Anthony - FNX went downhill for a while with nu metal - Nick: FNX had rebounded in last few years - We old guys don't get newer bands like Mumford and Sons - FNX wasn't going after geezers like us anymore - Many more options for listeners now: iPod, streaming audio, Pandora - The "Mike FM" stations just regurgitate '90s alternacrap - The much-bigger WBCN went off air in '09, turned into a sports talk station - The market for rock music has diminished; kids are listening to more hip hop and pop - Plenty of new rock bands coming out all the time - Nick: Hard rock is used more in sports arenas and commercials - To be continued next week - Bonehead of the WeekMusic:Bob Mould - The Act We Act (live) Hallelujah the Hills - Get Me in a Room Zeus - Anything You Want, Dear The White Stripes - Jimmy the Exploder Completely Conspicuous is available through the iTunes podcast directory. Subscribe and write a review! The Bob Mould song is from Live at Bottom of the Hill, a free EP of three Sugar songs from the album Copper Blue performed live on Feb. 24 in San Francisco. Download the EP for free (in exchange for your email address) at New.Official.Fm.The Hallelujah the Hills song is on the album No One Knows What Happens Next on Discrete Pageantry. Download the song for free from IODA Promonet. The Zeus song is on the album Busting Visions on Arts and Crafts. Download the song for free from IODA Promonet. The White Stripes song is from the band's self-titled album on Sympathy for the Record Industry. Download the song for free from Epitonic. The opening and closing theme of Completely Conspicuous is "Theme to Big F'in Pants" by Jay Breitling. Find out more about Senor Breitling at his fine music blog Clicky Clicky. Voiceover work is courtesy of James Gralian; check out his site PodGeek.
Can copper pipes be made hard again after they have been overheated then cooled? Why do new tyres sometimes leave a blue mark on the ground? Do sports compression shorts work?
Can copper pipes be made hard again after they have been overheated then cooled? Why do new tyres sometimes leave a blue mark on the ground? Do sports compression shorts work?