
Join us for a first of seveal special episodes of OLD School Vinyl as we celebrate the music, mythology, and enduring legacy of the Grateful Dead in anticipation of Maplewoodstock 2026 (July 11 & 12).Our special guest is Lee Navlen, co-host of the Lee & Ian Podcast, who joins us for a wide-ranging conversation about one of the most influential bands in rock history. Together, we explore the Dead's evolution from The Warlocks, the lasting impact of Pigpen, the poetic genius of Robert Hunter, the influence of Neal Cassady and the Merry Pranksters, and why Jerry Garcia deserves to be considered among the greatest guitarists of all time.Along the way, we also talk about Maplewoodstock, the vibrant New Jersey music festival that celebrates live music and community, and why events like it continue the spirit of discovery, improvisation, and musical connection that made the Grateful Dead so unique.Whether you're a lifelong Deadhead or just curious about what all the excitement is about, this episode is packed with great stories, lively debate, and plenty of reasons to take another listen to one of America's most remarkable bands.So grab your headphones, turn it up, and come along for the ride.
Jul 2
27 min

Old School Vinyl drops the needle on Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere—where raw energy meets something deeper and more dangerous.This episode zeroes in on two defining tracks: Cinnamon Girl and Down by the River. One hits fast and direct—tight, punchy, unforgettable. The other stretches out into a dark, hypnotic journey, where repetition becomes emotion and the guitar does the talking.With Neil Young and Crazy Horse, this is where grit becomes style and imperfection becomes power. It’s loose, it’s loud, and it’s completely unapologetic.Two songs. Two very different rides.Same destination: something real.
Mar 30
9 min

Old School Vinyl goes completely off-script—Olympic Curling, cheating scandals, and Cowgirl in the Sand all collide in one gloriously unhinged ride.What starts as a look at Olympic curling somehow spirals into debates about integrity, gamesmanship, and where the line between strategy and cheating really sits. And just when you think you’ve got a handle on it, Neil Young crashes through with Cowgirl in the Sand—raw, distorted, and emotionally wide open.This is Old School Vinyl at its loosest and funniest—sharp takes, unexpected turns, and the kind of conversation that only makes sense once you’re fully inside it. Sports, ethics, and blistering guitar all tied together in a way nobody planned… and somehow completely works.Come for the curling. Stay for the chaos.
Mar 23
10 min

Listen to a sample of the Knuckle Heads discussing some of the least known facts about Bruce Springsteen's epic 1975 album, Born to Run!
Mar 23
1 min

Listen to OSV's Knuckle Heads talk about Bruce Springsteen & the making of Born to Run!
Mar 16
1 min

Old School Vinyl – Short Episode: Bruce Springsteen’s “10th Avenue Freeze-Out”In this short video episode of Old School Vinyl, we take a closer look at one of the most beloved songs in the Bruce Springsteen catalog — “10th Avenue Freeze-Out.”Released on Born to Run in 1975, the song tells the mythic story of how Bruce and the E Street Band came together. But behind the swagger and humor of the lyrics lies something deeper: a turning point in Springsteen’s career and the moment when the E Street Band truly found its identity.We explore the real story behind the song, including the arrival of saxophonist Clarence Clemons, the musical influences that shaped the track, and how its loose, soulful groove draws from classic R&B traditions while helping define the sound of Jersey Shore rock.With archival images and commentary, this episode looks at how “10th Avenue Freeze-Out” transformed from a studio track into one of Springsteen’s most joyful and enduring live performances.If you love classic rock history, the Born to Run era, and the stories behind legendary songs, this is an episode you won’t want to miss.
Mar 9
3 min

In this episode of Old School Vinyl, the record gets set straight.After Joe Lap caught wind of our previous discussion in Episodes 11 &12— where Dan and Joe C may have suggested he wasn’t exactly a Bruce guy — he asked for the floor. And tonight, he takes it.This is Joe Lap’s passionate defense of his deep admiration (and respect) for Bruce Springsteen — not just the hits, but the heart, the writing, the grit, and the mythos of The Boss. From storytelling and working-class poetry to the emotional architecture of the albums themselves, Joe lays out why Springsteen matters — and why the earlier narrative needed correcting.Call it a rebuttal.Call it a reckoning.Call it three friends arguing about rock history the way it was meant to be argued.Either way, this one’s for the faithful.
Mar 2
12 min

Old School Vinyl fires up a Bonus Episode for The Rover—one of the most underrated statements on Physical Graffiti.Built on a massive riff and a restless groove, The Rover captures Led Zeppelin at their most searching. It’s a song about movement without arrival, confidence without certainty—powerful, unresolved, and slightly off balance in the best way.In this bonus episode, OSV digs into why The Rover feels different: the tension between swagger and doubt, the sense that the song is always pushing forward but never quite landing. It’s Zeppelin stretching past blues and bombast into something more psychological and modern.Not a hit. Not a single. Just a statement hiding in plain sight.This is The Rover—loud, wandering, and endlessly compelling.
Feb 23
1 min

Old School Vinyl drops the needle on Side Two of Born to Run—where the promises of escape meet the cost of staying.This episode picks up where Side One left off, diving into the darker, deeper stretch of the record: Born to Run, She’s the One, Meeting Across the River, and Jungleland. The stakes are higher, the emotions heavier, and the stories more complicated.Here, Bruce Springsteen slows the engine just enough to let the consequences set in—love tested, dreams bruised, friendships strained, and hope hanging by a thread. It’s cinematic, tragic, romantic, and fearless, culminating in one of the most ambitious album closers in rock history.This is Side Two—the reckoning, the reflection, and the reason Born to Run endures.If Side One was the dream, this is what it costs to chase it.
Feb 16
27 min

Old School Vinyl drifts into the quiet, unsettling calm of Down by the Seaside from Physical Graffiti.Often overlooked, this track is one of Led Zeppelin’s most deceptive moments—gentle on the surface, uneasy underneath. What begins as pastoral and reflective slowly reveals a deeper tension: conformity, isolation, and the quiet pressure to fall in line.This short video leans into that duality. The visuals and pacing mirror the song’s shift from calm to disquiet, letting the beauty linger while the discomfort creeps in. It’s not about spectacle—it’s about atmosphere, restraint, and the unease that comes when escape feels close but never quite reachable.Down by the Seaside isn’t just a breather on Physical Graffiti—it’s a warning whispered softly.Headphones on. Let it wash over you.
Feb 9
1 min
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