Global Backstage: A Rock And Roll Year In Review
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A season’s worth of passports, flight cases, and stories converge in a finale that refuses to fade to black. We trace the hidden arteries of live music—from a retired tour pro’s poolside idea to a globe‑spanning set of conversations with production managers, security pros, artists, superfans, and the die‑hards who kept sound and light alive in deserts, ferries, and freezing tarmacs.
We start where tours truly begin: backstage. Jake Duncan’s leap from a drum shop to Bay City Rollers and Wham captures the chance encounters that bend lives, while Steve Martin drops us into the command centre of Live Aid and the pressure of delivering David Bowie’s vision when a stage design suddenly isn’t big enough. Then the energy tilts to pure rock and roll with Stan Urban, who turns hoovers into instruments, weddings into gigs, and remembers jamming with Robert Plant before Ibiza swapped poets for package flights. It’s messy, joyful, and proof that invention beats perfection when the clock hits showtime.
The road stretches East as promoter Yatzek Slotala guides Pink Floyd past the Iron Curtain with a bag of rubles, a borrowed Air Force plane, and nerves of steel. He helps Tina Turner rebuild Private Dancer on Central European stages with borrowed backlines and bulletproof grace. In India, Rock Machine becomes Indus Creed as Uday Benegal explains why a name can trap you and how original songs, scrappy trains, and a sedated fox terrier named Scooby wrote their origin story. Two superfans rewind to first gigs—Genesis with Peter Gabriel’s theatre and Rory Gallagher’s raw voltage—reminding us why live music burns into memory.
We swing through France on a chaotic bus of Glasgow bands—Franz Ferdinand among them—proving that if your town lacks a scene, you make one, even if chairs go overboard on the ferry. Security steps forward with rare warmth as Ronnie Franklin reflects on three decades protecting George Michael, including a holstered‑gun scare diffused with calm and kindness. Finally, we walk the Memphis Mansion in Denmark, where a Rat Pack‑serenaded piano still sings, and head to the Gulf with the “desert rats,” who fought heat, sand, and fried dimmers so the show could go on.
Hit play for craft, chaos, and heart from Wham to Pink Floyd, Elvis to Indus Creed. If these stories moved you, follow the show, rate us, and share your first live gig memory—what was the song that changed everything?
It's Only Rock and Roll is a Phil Blizzard Radio Production - for your production email philblizzardmedia@gmail.com