
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


My generation, like most generations, had their own music. As a child of the '60s and '70s, I had no idea that rock and roll was following the well-established patterns that had been established for decades. I was thoroughly unaware that popular music had a 3½ minute barrier based on the recording medium of the day, 45 RPM records. When The Doors created their extended version of Light My Fire, it exploded a limitation whose ripples still affect my thinking today.
Show your appreciation for our free weekly Podcast and our free daily Here's a Thought… with a donation Thanks!
By Brooks Jensen4.6
439439 ratings
My generation, like most generations, had their own music. As a child of the '60s and '70s, I had no idea that rock and roll was following the well-established patterns that had been established for decades. I was thoroughly unaware that popular music had a 3½ minute barrier based on the recording medium of the day, 45 RPM records. When The Doors created their extended version of Light My Fire, it exploded a limitation whose ripples still affect my thinking today.
Show your appreciation for our free weekly Podcast and our free daily Here's a Thought… with a donation Thanks!

664 Listeners

264 Listeners

2,018 Listeners

9,746 Listeners

2,012 Listeners

58 Listeners

55 Listeners

295 Listeners

39 Listeners

124 Listeners

115 Listeners

12 Listeners

101 Listeners

5,651 Listeners

141 Listeners