Tag: Permanent Waves
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Episode 1914: Road Trip to Suburbs Fest 2024: Part 1
We begin our Suburbs Fest episodes with an audio journey from Northern Virginia to Dayton, Ohio. Mike and Julie Snider are on board, along with (navigator) Bill Mulligan, Mike Wagner and Patrick. Let’s hit the road!
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Episode 1449: The First Record I Bought With My Own Money: Kevin & Dave
Our recurring series is back with two new tales of going to the record store with your own hard earned dollars clutched tightly in your hand. In this episode, Kevin Clement and Dave from Kenosha tell us about their exploits.
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Episode 1321: Radio Songs – Rush, Paul Collins Beat, Blasters, Ex Hex
Meet today’s Rockin’ the Suburbs Radio DJs – Carl Anfenson, Bob Peterson, Nick Scalera and Erik Didriksen. And they all radio songs too.
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Episode 1271: TV/Radio Songs
Tim Hoffman fills in for Jim & Patrick and talks about songs that reference TV or radio.
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Episode 1104: ‘Freaks and Geeks’
Nick Scalera, a patron of the pod, gets to pick the topic. We talk about the music of 1999-2000 TV show “Freaks and Geeks.”
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Listen to Neil Peart’s Greatest Moments Behind the Kit
Drummer and Friend of Suburbs Pod Bobby Padavick offers this tribute to Rush’s Neil Peart, who died of brain cancer on Jan. 7, 2020 at age 67.
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Episode 373: Fan Mail – Rush, Part 2
Harris writes about friends made at a Rush show. Jo Fleischer tells us about a memorable show with 10,000 Marines. And Gerald Chyzenski offers some new insight into “The Spirit of Radio.”
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Episode 342: Rush – ‘Permanent Waves’
If you choose not to listen to this podcast, you still have made a choice. Rockin’ the Suburbs tackles Rush’s 1980 album “Permanent Waves,” with guests Bobby Padavick and Charles Andrews of D.C. band Night Streets. As Rush Week continues.
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Episode 340: Rush – ‘Moving Pictures’
Prepare to be Rushified on Rockin’ the Suburbs this week. We invite a couple of big fans — Bobby Padavick and Charles Andrews of Washington D.C. band Night Streets — to talk about some of the albums of Rush. We start with the Canadian trio’s best-selling record, 1981’s “Moving Pictures.”