
For the final episode of season one, we look back at the preeminent ‘80s trash rock band, Pussy Galore, and their long out-of-print final LP, Historia de la Musica Rock. We talk to Pussy Galore founder Jon Spencer, as well as longtime drummer/metal pounder Bob Bert and the record’s recording engineer Peter Arsenault. Because the band split for good before the record’s release, they were unable to tour behind it, and it has been subsequently overlooked and forgotten. When Matador remastered and re-released the Pussy Galore catalogue in the late ‘90s, they left Historia behind. The record has never been re-issued. In the interest of shedding light on this hidden gem in their catalogue, we bring you the history of Historia, on Revolution Come and Gone.Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull.
Nov 4, 2025
41 min

One of the most distinctive and exciting bands of the alternative era was Come. A band as likely to be seen playing the clubs of Central Square in Cambridge as opening for the 120 Minutes titans of the day, like Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., and Sonic Youth. In this episode, we follow Thalia Zedek’s journey through seminal bands Dangerous Birds, Uzi, and Live Skull to finally arrive at Come, the genre-defying band she formed with her musical soulmate Chris Brokaw. We speak with Thalia, Chris, and WMBR DJ Jon Bernhardt.Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull
Oct 28, 2025
34 min

In this episode, we uncover the story of a little-known but influential new wave artist from 1980’s Boston; a Jayne Mansfield-obsessed eccentric with a thick Boston accent, a frontman who combined the weird charm of Pee-Wee Herman with the punk attitude of the New York Dolls; an impresario who made himself the star of his own DIY variety shows. We are talking, of course, about the great Lou Miami. We speak with Toby Ingalls (Lou Miami and the Kozmetix), Thalia Zedek (Come, Live Skull), and Clint Conley (Mission of Burma).Hosted by Dylan Metrano & Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull.
Oct 21, 2025
27 min

In this episode, we speak with DIY stalwarts Jenny Toomey and Kristin Thomson, founders of the influential Simple Machines label and the band Tsunami. We discuss running your own indie label, wearing shorts in the DC hardcore scene, Sassy magazine, and knowing when it’s time to let it all go.Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull.
Oct 14, 2025
37 min

For part three in our Boston series, we take a look at the scene in its pre-internet era, when radio played a key role in exposing bands to new listeners, fanzines and flyers were legitimate marketing tools, and musicians were lining up to play the shadiest bars in town. Promoter Billy Ruane was a larger than life figure in the Boston music community. He was instantly recognizable as the man in the suit jacket with a drink in hand, dancing with reckless abandon at the front of the stage. Despite his chaotic appearance, Ruane was an integral part of Boston’s musical history. And we speak with WMBR DJ Jon Bernhardt about the days when pitching songs to college radio was sometimes the only way to get your music on the airwaves. This episode also features Claudia Gonson (Magnetic Fields), Dean Wareham (Galaxie 500, Luna), Byron Coley (Forced Exposure magazine), Clint Conley (Mission of Burma), Damon Krukowski (Galaxie 500, Damon & Naomi), and Dana Hatch (Cheater Slicks).Hosted By Dylan Metrano & Gregory Moss.Episode artwork (Billy Ruane) by Alan Bull.
Oct 7, 2025
27 min

In this episode, we revisit the glory days of The Rat, Boston’s answer to CBGB’s; and remember an unlikely fixture of the club, Ed’s Redeeming Qualities- a ragtag folk group of artists who were a true punk band, even though they may not have looked like or sounded the part. We speak with Toby Ingalls (Lou Miami and the Kozmetix, Magic 12), Jon Bernhardt (WMBR DJ), Tanya Donnely (Throwing Muses, Belly), Clint Conley (Mission of Burma), Claudia Gonsen (Magnetic Fields), Dana Hatch (Cheater Slicks), Dean Wareham (Galaxie 500, Luna), Guy Capecelatro III (Bob and Guy), Kurt Davis (Bullet Lavolta), Tom Johnston (manager Galaxie 500), and Ray Halliday (The Buckets, Ed’s Redeeming Qualities manager).Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull.
Sep 30, 2025
33 min

Boston in the ‘80s and early ‘90s hosted a little-known and mostly undocumented underground music scene of incredible diversity, talent and vitality. In this first episode in our examination of the Boston underground, we talk with proto-punk pioneer Clint Conley about the early days of Mission of Burma; we discover the alluring power of Peter Dayton and La Peste; and we speak to garage revivalist Dana Hatch about his long-running trio Cheater Slicks. In this episode we also hear from Michael Cudahy (Christmas), Tanya Donelly (Throwing Muses, Belly), Tom Johnston (manager for Galaxie 500), and Kurt Davis (Bullet Lavolta).Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork (Peter Dayton) by Alan Bull.
Sep 23, 2025
29 min

In our second installment of our discussion with David Pajo, he talks about playing Misfits covers in front of Glenn Danzig, why he changed his band names so often, and just how he ended up playing in Billy Corgan’s band Zwan.For the first part of this conversation, listen to Revolution Come and Gone episode 5.Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork by Alan Bull.
Sep 16, 2025
24 min

In this episode, we speak with the great David Pajo, who has played with a staggering list of seminal bands - Slint, Palace Brothers, Royal Trux, Tortoise, Stereolab, Gang of Four, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Zwan, Interpol, and many others. He’s released his own music as M, Papa M, Aerial M, M is the 13th Letter, and Pajo. He’s a virtuosic guitarist who seems to be able play anything with anyone at any time. The story begins while he was still a teenager, and formed one of the most influential indie bands of all time… Hosted by Dylan Metrano & Gregory Moss.Episode artwork (Slint's "Spiderland" papercutting) by Dylan Metrano.
Sep 9, 2025
30 min

This is the story of the rise and fall of the greatest club in America: Chicago’s Lounge Ax, and the club’s iconoclastic house band, the Coctails. We speak with Lounge Ax owners Julia Adams and Susan Miller Tweedy and the Coctails’ Mark Greenberg about the city of Chicago, creeping gentrification, drawing monkeys on envelopes with Fred Armisen, unaired Coke commercials, and much more.Hosted by Dylan Metrano and Gregory Moss.Episode artwork (The Coctails) by Alan Bull.
Sep 2, 2025
34 min
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