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History in Music
Coldbow Productions
28 episodes
1 month ago
It's simple, we find songs that have historical context within the lyrics and then dissect those lyrics on the show. Whether it's a song about a ship that sank in the Great Lakes or an ancient folk song about Mongolian sky gods, we will explore it's historical context. But more importantly, we will dig into what the songwriter was trying to communicate and why.
Show more...
Music Commentary
Music,
History
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All content for History in Music is the property of Coldbow Productions and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
It's simple, we find songs that have historical context within the lyrics and then dissect those lyrics on the show. Whether it's a song about a ship that sank in the Great Lakes or an ancient folk song about Mongolian sky gods, we will explore it's historical context. But more importantly, we will dig into what the songwriter was trying to communicate and why.
Show more...
Music Commentary
Music,
History
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Episode 10: Wir sind des Geyers schwarzer Haufen (Scott, Sean, & New Mexico Supremacist)
History in Music
1 hour 13 minutes 11 seconds
2 years ago
Episode 10: Wir sind des Geyers schwarzer Haufen (Scott, Sean, & New Mexico Supremacist)

New Mexico stan, history buff, and fluent German-speaker New Mexico Supremacist joins us in third chair for another German folk song. Wir sind des Geyers schwarzer Haufen (We are Geyer's Black Company). The song, while written in the early 1920's, details the struggles of the common man in the German Peasants' War of 1524-1525 and specifically the only heavy calvalry unit to fight on the side of the peasants during the conflict: Florian Geyer's Black Company. The ballad is strongly anti-cleric and anti-noble and has been used by various groups in Germany to rally youth to their cause... oh the German Peasant's War? Yeah it's pretty obscure, you probably haven't heard of it. Spoiler alert: everybody dies.

Link to the song (this is the version we used for the episode, there are many others out there):
https://youtu.be/Pg8GlYeCWuM

Follow New Mexico Supremacist on Twitter (and learn German!):
@NMisBestMexico

Follow Scott and Sean on Twitter:
Scott - @dotGiff
Sean - @Hashtag_Hey_Bro

Do you like any songs with historical context that you'd want to learn more about or discuss on the show? Send us a DM or an email.
HistoryInMusicPodcast@gmail.com

History in Music
It's simple, we find songs that have historical context within the lyrics and then dissect those lyrics on the show. Whether it's a song about a ship that sank in the Great Lakes or an ancient folk song about Mongolian sky gods, we will explore it's historical context. But more importantly, we will dig into what the songwriter was trying to communicate and why.