PODCAST · music
Vinyl Riffs with Sean Gaillard
by Sean Gaillard
Vinyl Riffs with Sean Gaillard is a weekly podcast about music as companion. Each episode connects albums, songs, and grooves to the stories we carry and the seasons we move through. This is a space for listening deeply, slowing down, and finding meaning in the music that stays with us.Some weeks feature reflections on a single record. Other weeks invite conversations with artists, listeners, and storytellers. Vinyl Riffs is not about rankings or hot takes. It is about honesty, memory, and connection.If music has ever helped you feel less alone, you belong here.New episodes weekly.
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Record Store Day Riffs: Vince Guaraldi and the Music That Stays
There are records that you spin.There are records that stay with you.This week on Vinyl Riffs with Sean Gaillard, I share a special Record Store Day find that immediately found its way into both.I am diving into the limited release of "It’s Arbor Day, Charlie Brown! and Charlie Brown’s All Stars!," two snapshots of the enduring brilliance of Vince Guaraldi.This release is more than a collector’s piece. It is a reminder of the care, collaboration, and humanity behind the music that shaped so many of our lives.I reflect on:The story behind Guaraldi’s final television scoreThe artistry of the Mendelson family in preserving this legacyThe musicians who brought these sessions to lifeThe quiet emotional power that still resonates decades laterThis episode is about more than vinyl.It is about memory, craft, and the kind of music that meets us where we are.Press play. Take a breath. Let it spin.Check out more about this release and other Vince Guaradli releases from Lee Mendelson Film Productions here: https://www.mendelsonproductions.com/index.html
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The Revolver Effect: The Day Everything Changed
On April 6, 1966, The Beatles walked into Abbey Road Studios and began work on Revolver. There was no announcement or blueprint. There was simply a decision to move forward into something unknown.In this episode of Vinyl Riffs, I reflect on that moment and what it means for us as leaders and creators today. Revolver was not about perfection. It was about experimentation, craft, expanding perspective, and the courage to let go of what no longer fits.I introduce what I am calling The Revolver Effect, built on four riffs:Believe in the courage to experiment.Believe in the craft.Believe in expanding your voice.Believe in reinvention through letting go.This is not just about an album. It is about what happens when we choose to evolve.Keep listening, keep grooving, and keep spinning. Your riffs matter.
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Failing Forward with "Band on the Run"
In this episode of #VinylRiffs, Sean Gaillard drops the needle on one of the most triumphant albums ever made: Band on the Run by Paul McCartney and Wings.On the surface, the album feels like pure joy. The melodies soar. The arrangements sparkle. The songs move with a sense of freedom that still feels fresh more than fifty years later.However, the story behind the record tells a different tale.Before Band on the Run, Wings was struggling. Critics were dismissive. The band lineup was unstable. The recording sessions in Lagos, Nigeria began with theft, uncertainty, and very little support.Many artists might have folded under those circumstances.Instead, McCartney and Wings created something timeless.In this episode, Sean reflects on the album as both a listening experience and a leadership lesson. Band on the Run reminds us that some of the most meaningful breakthroughs arrive after disappointment, doubt, and moments when things feel like they are falling apart.Failure is not glamorous. It rarely feels inspiring in the moment. It simply hurts.However, if we keep moving forward, failure can become the soil where resilience grows.Sometimes the record that saves you is the one that almost never happened.So drop the needle and come along for the ride as we explore the music, the story, and the reminder that even when things fall apart, we can still find a way to run toward something better.
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Leaving Space: A Vinyl Riff on Vince Guaraldi and Bola Sete
In this episode of Vinyl Riffs, Sean Gaillard explores From All Sides by Vince Guaraldi and Bola Sete, recently reissued by Craft Recordings.This collaboration between piano and Brazilian guitar is a study in listening, restraint, and shared creative space.What can leaders learn from two musicians who choose conversation over competition?Sometimes the most powerful move is not playing louder, but leaving room for someone else to be heard.Order the album here: https://craftrecordings.com/products/vince-guaraldi-bola-sete-from-all-sides-original-jazz-classics-series-180g-lp
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Nostalgia, Warmth, & Joy in "The A's, The B's, and The Monkees"
This episode of Vinyl Riffs is a gentle return to what first made music feel like home. I am spinning The A’s, The B’s, and The Monkees, a lovingly assembled collection that brings together the songs that carried us through long afternoons, car ride sing alongs, and that quiet inner space where joy lives.From the big familiar hits to the deeper album cuts, this record radiates warmth and ease. These songs feel playful and sincere at the same time. They remind me of a moment when harmony meant connection and music did not have to try too hard to make you smile.This episode is really about nostalgia, warmth, and joy. It is about remembering why these songs mattered then and why they still matter now. I come back to this record when I need to slow down, take a breath, and reconnect with the simple pleasure of letting a great collection of songs unfold.If you would like to order a copy of the album and spin along, you can find it here:https://monkeesstore.warnermusic.com/products/the-as-the-bs-the-monkees-2lpPour a cup of coffee, let the needle drop, and come sit with me for a while.
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Miles Davis’ In a Silent Way: A Quiet Turning Point | Vinyl Riffs
In this episode of Vinyl Riffs, Sean Gaillard sits with In a Silent Way by Miles Davis, one of the most quietly influential albums in jazz history and a turning point in modern music.Released in 1969, In a Silent Way captures Miles Davis at a crossroads, moving from acoustic jazz toward electric experimentation and jazz fusion. With a legendary ensemble featuring Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Joe Zawinul, John McLaughlin, Dave Holland, and Tony Williams, this album is built on trust, space, and deep listening. It is music that breathes, unfolds slowly, and invites the listener to slow down with it.Rather than a traditional album review, this episode explores why In a Silent Way remains so meaningful decades later. Sean reflects on the album’s use of silence as an instrument, the role of producer Teo Macero in shaping the music through studio editing, and how this record became a bridge between jazz, ambient music, and what would later become fusion.Drawing connections to Miles Davis’ mindset during this era, including insights from Miles: The Autobiography, this episode looks at In a Silent Way not as a loud revolution, but as a quiet turning point. It is an album about restraint, curiosity, and the courage to trust the unknown.If you are searching for deeper context on In a Silent Way, the evolution of Miles Davis, or why this album sounds as relevant today as it did in 1969, this episode offers a reflective, vinyl-centered listening experience.Vinyl Riffs is a podcast about albums that meet us where we are and stay with us. This episode is an invitation to listen closely.
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Do The Thing
In this opening episode of Vinyl Riffs, Sean Gaillard introduces the heart of the podcast and the choice to stop waiting and start creating. This is a raw and reflective conversation about building the space you need when no one is coming to tap you on the shoulder.Drawing inspiration from Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska, Sean reflects on the courage it takes to trust the quiet version of yourself and hit record before everything feels ready. This episode is not about polish or performance. It is about honesty, presence, and choosing to begin.Vinyl Riffs is a space for music as companion, for stories that sit with us, and for grooves that carry meaning through different seasons of life.If music has ever helped you feel less alone, you belong here.New episodes weekly.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Vinyl Riffs with Sean Gaillard is a weekly podcast about music as companion. Each episode connects albums, songs, and grooves to the stories we carry and the seasons we move through. This is a space for listening deeply, slowing down, and finding meaning in the music that stays with us.Some weeks feature reflections on a single record. Other weeks invite conversations with artists, listeners, and storytellers. Vinyl Riffs is not about rankings or hot takes. It is about honesty, memory, and connection.If music has ever helped you feel less alone, you belong here.New episodes weekly.
HOSTED BY
Sean Gaillard
CATEGORIES
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