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Political Beats Podcast

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8.6K - 14.4K listeners Female/Male 4.8 rating 576 reviews 147 episodes USA
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Scot Bertram and Jeff Blehar discuss ask guests from the world of politics about their musical passions.

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Recent Hosts, Guests & Topics

Here's a quick summary of the last 2 episodes on Political Beats.

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Jeff Pojanowski is a professor at Notre Dame Law School, where he teaches and writes about philosophy of law and legal interpretation. He also writes occasional columns for The Pillar. He has been living in Northern Indiana for 15 years after leaving Washington, D.C. and is a fan of the band Turnpike Troubadours.
Andrew Stuttaford is the editor of National Review's Capital Matters. He has been a prominent voice in political commentary and analysis, contributing to discussions on various topics including culture and music. Stuttaford is known for his deep appreciation of music, particularly from the 1970s, and has been a fan of Brian Eno since the early days of Roxy Music. His insights into the intersection of politics and music make him a valuable guest on the podcast.

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National Review
@nationalreview

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Subscribers: 91,200
Total Videos: 1,995
Total Views: 27,536,637
Joined: Mar 2, 2010
Location: United States

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National Review is the leading conservative magazine and website covering news, politics, and culture with detailed analysis and commentary.

"It stands athwart history, yelling Stop, at a time when no one is inclined to do so, or to have much patience with those who so urge it." — William F. Buckley Jr.

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Episodes

Here's the recent few episodes on Political Beats.

0:00 2:38:04

Episode 146: Jeff Pojanowski / Turnpike Troubadours

Hosts
Scot Bertram Jeff Blehar
Guests
Jeff Pojanowski
Keywords
politics music Red Dirt country Turnpike Troubadours storytelling instrumentation authenticity

Introducing the Band:
Your hosts Scot Bertram (@ScotBertram) and Jeff Blehar (@EsotericCD) are joined by guest Jeff Pojanowski. Jeff is a professor at Notre Dame Law School, where he teaches and writes about philosophy of law and legal interpretation. He also writes occasional columns for The Pillar. He has been living happily in Northern Indiana after escaping Washington, D.C., 15 years ago.

Jeff’s Music Pick: Turnpike Troubadours
This is a rarity for Political Beats, in which we present a show driven largely by our guest’s preferences. Jeff Pojanowski joined us previously for Pavement and Crowded House and by now we trust his musical judgement. For quite a while, he’s been selling us hard on taking up the career of Turnpike Troubadours for an episode. With the recent release of a new album, and additional endorsements of the band from others in our sphere, it seemed a good time to take him up on the offer.

We’re awfully glad we did.

The Turnpike Troubadours, hailing from Oklahoma, have become one of the leading purveyors of Red Dirt country music, featuring songs that are masterclasses in storytelling, instrumentation, and authenticity. Look, if you don’t like fiddle, you might be in the wrong place. 

Formed in 2005 by frontman Evan Felker and bassist R. C. Edwards, the band’s early years were shaped by relentless touring. The first album, Bossier City, is almost more a collection of demos. The group wasn’t quite fully formed yet. But on Diamonds & Gasoline (2010), everything began to click into place. As the band matured, their songwriting deepened without losing its raw immediacy. Albums like Goodbye Normal Street (2012) and The Turnpike Troubadours (2015) would be highlights of any band’s career. 

Felker’s songwriting stands out not just for its precision (though occasional lyrical duplicity can leave the listener wondering exactly what a song is about), but for its ability to evoke vivid rural landscapes. These are songs about places and towns that many Americans easily can picture in their mind. Musically, Kyle Nix’s fiddle and Ryan Engleman’s guitar work offered a dynamic counterpoint that always serves the song first.

The band’s career wasn’t without turbulence, of course. After the 2017 release of A Long Way from Your Heart, the band entered a hiatus amid Felker’s battle with alcoholism. Fans cheered the band’s 2022 comeback, marked by the release of the Shooter Jennings-produced A Cat in the Rain. It’s impossible to listen to songs on the record without putting them in the context of Felker’s troubles. It’s an album that likely had to be made, however, to bring the band to 2025’s The Price of Admission, a release that all three of your hosts come to praise.

There’s probably still a lot of music left in the tank for Turnpike Troubadours, and there’s no better time than now to jump on board to discover what you might have been missing.

0:00 3:21:35

Episode 145: Andrew Stuttaford / Brian Eno

Hosts
Scot Bertram Jeff Blehar
Guests
Andrew Stuttaford
Keywords
Andrew Stuttaford Brian Eno music Roxy Music ambient music producer songwriter conceptualist

Introducing the Band:
Your hosts Scot Bertram (@ScotBertram) and Jeff Blehar (@EsotericCD) are joined by Andrew Stuttaford. Andrew needs little introduction as the editor of NR's Capital Matters. Find him online right here at National Review or at @AStuttaford on Twitter/X.

Andrew’s Music Pick: Brian Eno
Here he comes, the boy who tried to vanish to the future or the past. Yes, it's time for Political Beats to celebrate one of the most influential musicians in the history of modern recorded sound -- a man who, ironically enough, is at pains to characterize himself as a non-musician. Children of the Eighties and Nineties may primarily understand Brian Eno as the producer who took U2 to megastardom, but his work as a producer is properly only a footnote to his work as a songwriter and (most importantly of all) a conceptualist. Eno first achieved fame with Roxy Music as their "noise man," providing outrageous sounds alongside "treatments" -- electronic reprocessing -- of the rest of the group's instruments. But Roxy Music was ultimately pianist/vocalist Bryan Ferry's baby, and so Eno soon struck out on his own, for a solo career that would bring him into collaboration with some of the best and most innovative musicians of the Seventies as he put out a sequence of four "lyrical" albums which bent the definition of "popular music" well past its breaking point and into the avant-garde. At the same time, Eno was creating an entirely new genre of recorded sound: so-called "ambient" music, written and recorded in such a way as to (per his maxim) "reward your attention without demanding it."

This, of course, is only the tip of the iceberg in a career that also includes brilliant songwriting collaborations with Robert Fripp, David Bowie, and Talking Heads among others. All of this and much more are discussed on a episode Political Beats has been waiting to do for eight years: Brian Eno played an enormous role in inventing the sonic world we still live in, and also made some of the most unexpectedly profound and beautiful music while doing so. We are lucky to be joined by NR's own Andrew Stuttaford for this episode, who lends particular credibility to the discussion as a fan from all the way back in 1972, during the Roxy years. Enjoy stepping into another (green) world.

Ratings

Global:
4.8 rating 576 reviews

USA

4.8 ratings 525 reviews

Canada

4.4 ratings 22 reviews

UK

4.8 ratings 13 reviews

Australia

4.9 ratings 13 reviews

New Zealand

4.0 ratings 2 reviews

Ireland

5.0 ratings 1 reviews

Singapore

0.0 ratings 0 reviews

South Africa

0.0 ratings 0 reviews