DiscoverPhilosophically Sound
Philosophically Sound
Claim Ownership

Philosophically Sound

Author: Philosophically Sound

Subscribed: 0Played: 0
Share

Description

We explore the music people like—and learn to love the music and people we explore. Listen to Gus Domenick and Tony Domenick (real life brothers who share passions for music, teaching, and being cooperative people) discuss music we like, how to like more things, the implied "for me" of preferential statements, and ultimately how to foster more cooperation and understanding for all humans. We get deep into harmonic and rhythmic analysis, singing styles, economics, and behavioral philosophy—what should we do, and why?
33 Episodes
Reverse
In which Tony awards song & record of the year based on his rubric and concludes this multi-part monstrosity of an episode. Stay tuned to keep exploring the music people like, and learning to love the people and music we explore.Listen to the ⁠⁠playlist⁠⁠.After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Worship, up for record of the year at the 2023 Grammys.Listen to the ⁠⁠playlist⁠⁠.After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Vampire, up for song & record of the year at the 2023 Grammys.Listen to the ⁠⁠playlist⁠⁠.After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Flowers, up for song & record of the year at the 2023 Grammys.Listen to the ⁠⁠playlist⁠⁠.After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠.
In which Tony analyzes A&W, up for song of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the ⁠playlist⁠. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠Patreon⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Kill Bill, up for song & record of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the ⁠playlist⁠. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠Patreon⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Anti-Hero, up for song & record of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the ⁠playlist⁠. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through ⁠Patreon⁠.
In which Tony analyzes Butterfly, up for song of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the playlist. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
In which Tony analyzes Not Strong Enough, up for record of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the playlist. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
In which Tony analyzes What Was I Made For, up for song of the year and record of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the playlist. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
In which Tony analyzes On My Mama, up for record of the year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the playlist. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
In which Tony analyzes Dance the Night, up for Song of the Year at the 2023 Grammys. Listen to the playlist. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
In part 3 of this mega-sode, Tony introduces his rubric for evaluating Songs & Records of the Year. Over the next 11 mini-sodes, he analyzes each song for your listening pleasure. Listen along with the playlist. Check out the rubric. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon.
The conversation continues, diving into a few listener questions about sexism & racism and other biases that affect the Grammys (as these philosophies affect ALL of our thinking). After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend some money on our show through Patreon. Articles & Cool Stuff to Check Out: Numbers of new Recording Academy Voters Paramore's Comments the hideous persistence of the "women in rock" issue by jes skolnik Analysis of former Grammy president's lame comments about women musicians by Courtney Smith Will Smith & Jazzy Jeff Grammy boycott Brilliant thoughts from Moses Sumney The Best Artists elevate the discourse adrienne maree brown's thoughts on divergence & unity Artists for Ceasefire
Tony and Gus talk about the Grammys: what does it mean to get one? How does nominating and voting work? How do you become a voting member of the Recording Academy? How do you pick between high quality music without a rubric? In 3 parts, this episode goes deep into the future of the Implied For Me and our show itself. After spending money on a small-business-musician local to you, spend money on our show through Patreon. Articles & Cool Stuff to Check Out Quote from 3rd Grammy Awards about "sheer artistry" Grammy Awards Rules & Guidelines (should link to p.51, rules for the general field categories) Genres at the Grammys over time 49 Types of Rock Britannica on Rock Music
Gus, Tony, & special guest Joe deploy vocal meanderings on Zappa, satire, cleverness, how words can cause real harm, and the juxtaposition of complex music with silly or crude lyrics. Give money to the show on patreon. Cool shit to check out: Video of Zappa testifying before congress about labeling music based on lyrical content. Thought provoking discussion of satire as it relates to the power of groups being satirized from Philosophy Talk.
Gus and Tony dive deep into a style of singing known as Crooning, the book "How to Be an Antiracist," by Ibram X. Kendi, and two prolific crooners: Sammy Davis Jr. & Frank Sinatra. Gus learns to croon, terms are defined, and styles of singing are compared. Playlist for this episode Pay us through Patreon Email us: PhilosophicallySoundPodcast@gmail.com Special thanks to Renee, who researched for this episode. Stuff to check out: Ibram X. Kendi's antiracism center Video of Sammy Davis Jr. singing & dancing in the Will Mastin Trio Article about Sinatra & Davis Jr. integrating Vegas. Yes I Can, Sammy Davis Jr.'s autobiography (or check it out from your local library) A production of Tonic Dominant Music, LLC
Gus & Tony talk about Socrates' wisdom in Plato's "The Apology," spreading money around to more than just the top artists of the Billboard Music awards, how we would spend money if you donate on Patreon, the temptation to dismiss all pop music as garbage, and musical details of this year's Billboard Music Awards winners. We Sinatrify SZA's "Kill Bill." Email us: PhilosophicallySoundPodcast@gmail.com Donate to the show: Patreon Stuff to check out: The "bubblegum garbage" article. This years BBMA winners.
Gus leads us through a discussion about one of his influences as a teenager: Bullet for my Valentine. We analyze & Sinatra-fy Tears Don't Fall, talk about scream-singing technique, get some updates on Logic blowing Tony's mind, and much more. If you dig the show, give us a little (or a lot) of cash through Patreon. Cool shit to check out: "4 Words to Choke Upon" meaning: https://bfmv.fandom.com/wiki/4_Words_(To_Choke_Upon) History of Moshing: https://consequence.net/2021/08/moshing-history-essay/3/ History of Double Bass Drum: https://drummagazine.com/double-bass-legends-a-short-history/ Full video by Chris Liepe of the scream-singing exercise we try: https://youtu.be/jKZaS1dnzK8?si=KH_lyZvBhoWCP3mo Matthew Tuck interview about losing his voice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFZ78P3V1NM
Gus & Tony talk about their primordial musical influence: Weird Al. Tony bought the tape (!) of Running with Scissors after a friend played some songs in elementary school for show & tell. Tony theorizes that listening to Weird Al albums encouraged in him a preference for lots of genre change on the album—something that most pop artists obviously don't provide (though this discussion is far shorter than the sheer geek out session and sing throughs of Weird Al songs). Playlist of original songs & Weird Al parodies. Playlist of Polka Power songs. If the show makes you smile, give us some dollars or cents on Patreon. Interesting shit to check out: FAQ on Al’s site https://www.weirdal.com/archives/faq/ Blog analyzing Al’s lyrical brilliance: https://www.greatwriterssteal.com/2013/01/09/what-can-we-steal-from-weird-al-yankovics-you-dont-love-me-anymore/ On Queen Ida, Zydeco legned: https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1986/12/03/the-queen-of-zydeco/91409f76-fb4c-489d-abe3-bd4fd28ad0c9/ On the word Hermaphrodite: https://isna.org/node/16/ The LA times interview Tony (mis)quotes from memory at the end of the show: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2022-10-26/weird-al-yankovic-story-movie-roku-daniel-radcliffe “He still plays “Albuquerque,” an 11-minute-plus shaggy-dog story-song in the George Thorogood tradition, but he pauses midway through to contextualize his use of the word “hermaphrodite,” affirming that language is supposed to evolve, that certain words that seemed funny in 1999 aren’t funny anymore — unlike the word “Albuquerque,” which will always be funny.” Technical note: An earlier version of this episode didn't deepen Gus's voice for "microscopic bacteria." My bad! Now you can hear Gus in all his edited bassiness.
loading
Comments