
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Ever wonder why 80s glam metal still packs out tribute nights and sparks passionate debates decades later? This week on Dig Me Out, we’re throwing on the leather, cranking the Aquanet, and diving into the wild, hook-filled world of 80s Glam Metal—the scene that turned the Sunset Strip into rock’s most outrageous runway and gave us anthems for every party, heartbreak, and hair-flip in between.
From the genre’s glitter-soaked roots to its neon-tinted MTV heyday and eventual fall from grace, our roundtable takes on the big questions: What truly defines glam metal? Why did it explode—and then burn out—in such spectacular fashion? And which albums still deserve a spot in your rotation, even if you’ve sworn off spandex for good? With special guests James Barber (curator of the definitive “Young & Wild: A Decade of American Glam Metal” box set) and Alex Williams (outlaw country artist reimagining 80s metal classics), we dig deep into the music, the image, and the legacy of a genre that’s as much about attitude as it is about riffs.
If you love the infectious hooks of Poison, the streetwise grit of Cinderella, or the genre-bending spirit of bands like Mother Love Bone and Faster Pussycat—or if you’ve ever debated whether “hair metal” is a badge of honor or a press-invented slur—this episode is for you. We connect the dots from glam’s 70s origins to its 80s explosion, and even trace its DNA into modern pop country and arena rock. Think of it as a crash course in everything that made—and unmade—one of rock’s most colorful eras.
Episode Highlights
0:00 – [Intro] – The glam metal mission statement: why this scene still matters
5:12 – [Meet the Guests] – James Barber on assembling the “Young & Wild” box set; Alex Williams on turning glam anthems into outlaw country
21:00 – [Defining the Sound] – What separates glam metal from hard rock and thrash? Big hooks, big hair, and even bigger choruses
40:39 – [Essential Albums] – Panel picks: Cinderella’s Night Songs, Faster Pussycat’s debut, Poison’s Open Up and Say… Ahh!, and more
51:05 – [Party Rock Vibes] – Why glam metal shows felt like the ultimate communal party—and how that vanished in the 90s
57:02 – [The Downfall] – Power ballads, industry formulas, and the grunge wave: what really killed glam metal?
1:06:10 – [Deep Cuts & Hidden Gems] – The records and songs that still surprise, from Electric Angels to Junkyard
1:20:00 – [Modern Legacy] – Where does glam metal live on today? From Ghost’s arena theatrics to pop country’s party anthems
1:35:11 – [Outro & Plugs] – James and Alex share their latest projects, and the hosts reflect on glam’s enduring influence
Ready to relive the excess, the anthems, and the eyeliner?Subscribe to Dig Me Out for more deep-dive episodes, bonus content, and a community of fellow rock obsessives. Drop your hot takes, suggest your favorite under-the-radar glam album, and join the conversation at digmeoutpodcast.com and dmounion.com.Let’s settle the debate—was glam metal ever just about the hair, or was there always something deeper under all that glitter?
5
1212 ratings
Ever wonder why 80s glam metal still packs out tribute nights and sparks passionate debates decades later? This week on Dig Me Out, we’re throwing on the leather, cranking the Aquanet, and diving into the wild, hook-filled world of 80s Glam Metal—the scene that turned the Sunset Strip into rock’s most outrageous runway and gave us anthems for every party, heartbreak, and hair-flip in between.
From the genre’s glitter-soaked roots to its neon-tinted MTV heyday and eventual fall from grace, our roundtable takes on the big questions: What truly defines glam metal? Why did it explode—and then burn out—in such spectacular fashion? And which albums still deserve a spot in your rotation, even if you’ve sworn off spandex for good? With special guests James Barber (curator of the definitive “Young & Wild: A Decade of American Glam Metal” box set) and Alex Williams (outlaw country artist reimagining 80s metal classics), we dig deep into the music, the image, and the legacy of a genre that’s as much about attitude as it is about riffs.
If you love the infectious hooks of Poison, the streetwise grit of Cinderella, or the genre-bending spirit of bands like Mother Love Bone and Faster Pussycat—or if you’ve ever debated whether “hair metal” is a badge of honor or a press-invented slur—this episode is for you. We connect the dots from glam’s 70s origins to its 80s explosion, and even trace its DNA into modern pop country and arena rock. Think of it as a crash course in everything that made—and unmade—one of rock’s most colorful eras.
Episode Highlights
0:00 – [Intro] – The glam metal mission statement: why this scene still matters
5:12 – [Meet the Guests] – James Barber on assembling the “Young & Wild” box set; Alex Williams on turning glam anthems into outlaw country
21:00 – [Defining the Sound] – What separates glam metal from hard rock and thrash? Big hooks, big hair, and even bigger choruses
40:39 – [Essential Albums] – Panel picks: Cinderella’s Night Songs, Faster Pussycat’s debut, Poison’s Open Up and Say… Ahh!, and more
51:05 – [Party Rock Vibes] – Why glam metal shows felt like the ultimate communal party—and how that vanished in the 90s
57:02 – [The Downfall] – Power ballads, industry formulas, and the grunge wave: what really killed glam metal?
1:06:10 – [Deep Cuts & Hidden Gems] – The records and songs that still surprise, from Electric Angels to Junkyard
1:20:00 – [Modern Legacy] – Where does glam metal live on today? From Ghost’s arena theatrics to pop country’s party anthems
1:35:11 – [Outro & Plugs] – James and Alex share their latest projects, and the hosts reflect on glam’s enduring influence
Ready to relive the excess, the anthems, and the eyeliner?Subscribe to Dig Me Out for more deep-dive episodes, bonus content, and a community of fellow rock obsessives. Drop your hot takes, suggest your favorite under-the-radar glam album, and join the conversation at digmeoutpodcast.com and dmounion.com.Let’s settle the debate—was glam metal ever just about the hair, or was there always something deeper under all that glitter?
29,504 Listeners
1,373 Listeners
132 Listeners
1,015 Listeners
514 Listeners
102 Listeners
4,105 Listeners
435 Listeners
319 Listeners
36 Listeners
693 Listeners
834 Listeners
301 Listeners
201 Listeners
576 Listeners