#470 - Tesla THIS MIGHT BLOW YOUR MIND - Strange Details about MTV episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 31, 2026 · 20 MIN

#470 - Tesla THIS MIGHT BLOW YOUR MIND - Strange Details about MTV

from Audiomover - Moving the Past into the Awesome! · host AudioMover

Robert John Hadfield dives into a fascinating piece of rock history pulled straight from a 1987 Hit Parader magazine—uncovering the unlikely connections between MTV’s early days and Tesla’s debut album Mechanical Resonance. What starts as a simple trivia question quickly turns into a deeper exploration of timing, identity, and how one band carved out a unique space in a crowded 1980s rock scene. Along the way, Robert breaks down Tesla’s origins as City Kidd, their early struggles, and the surprising moment that helped define their sound and success. From opening for Eddie Money to being encouraged by Geffen Records to not chase trends, this episode highlights how Tesla’s authenticity—and perfect timing—set them apart. Plus, there’s a wild connection involving one of MTV’s earliest videos that ties directly back to Mechanical Resonance in a way most fans have never noticed. ⏱️ Timestamps 0:00 – MTV launch trivia: the hidden Tesla connection 0:21 – Three Tesla trivia questions for fans 0:55 – Flipping through a 1987 Hit Parader 1:12 – Jeff Keith… why does he look 14?! 2:20 – “Heavy Metal Cowboys” article breakdown 2:39 – First impressions of Modern Day Cowboy 3:36 – What “heavy metal” meant in 1987 4:31 – Was Tesla just lucky… or perfectly timed? 5:13 – Tesla’s influences: Zeppelin, Queen, and beyond 6:08 – Why Tesla sounded “new” in the mid-80s 6:48 – The hair metal era they pushed against 7:45 – Blue jeans vs. glam: Tesla’s visual identity 8:21 – Geffen Records lets them be themselves 9:04 – Trivia answer: City Kidd origins 9:23 – Opening for Eddie Money (before Tesla name) 10:04 – Chasing hits vs. finding their real sound 10:52 – Why labels wanted Tesla unchanged 11:34 – Cliff Burnstein & Q Prime connection 12:32 – Writing spree that built the debut album 12:45 – The struggle to find a band name 13:26 – Why “Tesla” almost didn’t work 13:48 – Are “rock band names” inherently cheesy? 14:34 – Kick Axe vs. Def Leppard: name perception 16:18 – The power (and risk) of a band name 16:40 – Who was Nikola Tesla—and why it matters 17:47 – How metal fans accidentally got educated 18:25 – Rock and roll… and electricity 18:51 – The big reveal: MTV’s 5th video 19:12 – “Little Suzi” is NOT a Tesla original 19:29 – The HD connection explained 19:53 – The full-circle MTV/Tesla connection 🔥 Hashtags #TeslaBand #MechanicalResonance #MTVHistory #80sRock #ClassicRock #HitParader #RockTrivia #HeavyMetal #Audiomover #RobertJohnHadfield

Robert John Hadfield dives into a fascinating piece of rock history pulled straight from a 1987 Hit Parader magazine—uncovering the unlikely connections between MTV’s early days and Tesla’s debut album Mechanical Resonance. What starts as a simple trivia question quickly turns into a deeper exploration of timing, identity, and how one band carved out a unique space in a crowded 1980s rock scene. Along the way, Robert breaks down Tesla’s origins as City Kidd, their early struggles, and the surprising moment that helped define their sound and success. From opening for Eddie Money to being encouraged by Geffen Records to not chase trends, this episode highlights how Tesla’s authenticity—and perfect timing—set them apart. Plus, there’s a wild connection involving one of MTV’s earliest videos that ties directly back to Mechanical Resonance in a way most fans have never noticed. ⏱️ Timestamps 0:00 – MTV launch trivia: the hidden Tesla connection 0:21 – Three Tesla trivia questions for fans 0:55 – Flipping through a 1987 Hit Parader 1:12 – Jeff Keith… why does he look 14?! 2:20 – “Heavy Metal Cowboys” article breakdown 2:39 – First impressions of Modern Day Cowboy 3:36 – What “heavy metal” meant in 1987 4:31 – Was Tesla just lucky… or perfectly timed? 5:13 – Tesla’s influences: Zeppelin, Queen, and beyond 6:08 – Why Tesla sounded “new” in the mid-80s 6:48 – The hair metal era they pushed against 7:45 – Blue jeans vs. glam: Tesla’s visual identity 8:21 – Geffen Records lets them be themselves 9:04 – Trivia answer: City Kidd origins 9:23 – Opening for Eddie Money (before Tesla name) 10:04 – Chasing hits vs. finding their real sound 10:52 – Why labels wanted Tesla unchanged 11:34 – Cliff Burnstein & Q Prime connection 12:32 – Writing spree that built the debut album 12:45 – The struggle to find a band name 13:26 – Why “Tesla” almost didn’t work 13:48 – Are “rock band names” inherently cheesy? 14:34 – Kick Axe vs. Def Leppard: name perception 16:18 – The power (and risk) of a band name 16:40 – Who was Nikola Tesla—and why it matters 17:47 – How metal fans accidentally got educated 18:25 – Rock and roll… and electricity 18:51 – The big reveal: MTV’s 5th video 19:12 – “Little Suzi” is NOT a Tesla original 19:29 – The HD connection explained 19:53 – The full-circle MTV/Tesla connection 🔥 Hashtags #TeslaBand #MechanicalResonance #MTVHistory #80sRock #ClassicRock #HitParader #RockTrivia #HeavyMetal #Audiomover #RobertJohnHadfield

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#470 - Tesla THIS MIGHT BLOW YOUR MIND - Strange Details about MTV

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This episode was published on March 31, 2026.

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Robert John Hadfield dives into a fascinating piece of rock history pulled straight from a 1987 Hit Parader magazine—uncovering the unlikely connections between MTV’s early days and Tesla’s debut album Mechanical Resonance. What starts as a simple...

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