PODCAST · history
The American Music History Podcast
by James Duhamel
Join me as I dive deep into the stories, sounds, and cultural forces that shaped American music.
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Sonic sunshine: The Story of Cali Reggae
Cali reggae has become the soundtrack of beach towns, ski bars, festivals, and "good vibes" playlists — but where did it come from? In this episode, we trace the genre's evolution from Jamaican reggae and Bob Marley's global influence to Sublime's genre-blending Southern California sound. We explore how punk, surf, skate, and lifestyle culture shaped Cali reggae, why its grooves feel so effortlessly comforting, and how debates around authenticity and "white boy reggae" fit into music's long history of fusion. A deeper look at the sound of sonic sunshine.
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3
Flow States: Skiing & the Grateful Dead
Why do ski towns and Grateful Dead music seem to orbit the same cultural universe? In this episode, we explore the surprising — and perhaps inevitable — connection between skiing, improvisational music, and the elusive experience known as the flow state. From powder days to long-form jams and collective "group mind," the parallels run deeper than shared playlists at mountain bars. What does it feel like when effort dissolves into instinct? Why do both skiers and Deadheads chase moments that are impossible to manufacture but unforgettable when they arrive? And how do movement, risk, rhythm, and awareness intertwine on both the mountain and the stage? This is a conversation about presence, freedom, ego, and the strange state where performance becomes participation. Whether you love skiing, the Dead, or simply the psychology of being "in the zone," this episode dives into the space where sport, music, and consciousness meet. Links: https://www.skimag.com/adventure/ode/why-skiers-love-grateful-dead/ https://www.amazon.com/Golf-Kingdom-Michael-Murphy/dp/0140195491
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The Death and Rebirth of Bluegrass: How Jam Bands Carried It Back to the Masses
In this episode of The American Music History Podcast, we explore how bluegrass went from a driving, modern force in American music to a genre pushed into the margins — and how it quietly found its way back through jam bands, jamgrass, and a new generation of listeners. We look at the rise of bluegrass, its decline during the rock era, the accidental bridges built by bands like Old & In The Way, and how artists like Billy Strings helped reframe bluegrass as a living, improvisational, and psychedelic-friendly music once again. This is the story of how a genre that was supposed to fade away instead evolved — and why bluegrass never really died at all.
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Dancing, Control, Freedom — and the Steel Guitar: How America Lost the Dance Floor… and Found It Again
In this episode, we follow the pedal steel guitar back through American history—into Western swing dance halls, the rise of rock and roll, and how it influenced the birth of the psychedelic revolution of the 1960s. Along the way, we explore how dancing moved from being ordinary, to being feared and controlled, to finally re-emerging as a symbol of freedom and community. From Prohibition to jam bands, this is the story of how American music never stopped asking one question: will you move?
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