Blake Wyland & Scott Marquart
Tape Spaghetti
Welcome to Tape Spaghetti—where music history gets tangled. Hosts Blake Wyland and Scott Marquart dive into the wildest, weirdest, and most unexpected stories from the music industry. From legendary feuds to bizarre scandals, insane characters… and even murder! On this show we unravel the chaos behind the songs you love, the musicians you know, and stories that you need to hear.
Author
Blake Wyland & Scott Marquart
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 8, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
How Fake Music Is Bleeding Real Artists Dry 08.07.2026 53:18
For better or worse, streaming changed the music business forever. But it also created an entirely new kind of crime. Or actually, a whole bunch of new kinds of crimes. This week on Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake pull back the curtain on the shadowy underground industry of fake streams, click farms, bot networks, AI-generated music, and digital fraud. The guys also explore how streaming royalties...
How Country Music Tried to Destroy the *Dixie* Chicks 30.06.2026 55:27
Before they became the most controversial band in country music, the Dixie Chicks were absolutely unstoppable. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake unpack the extraordinary story of the Dixie Chicks, whose meteoric rise was matched only by the speed of their catastrophic public downfall. (Or maybe not???) Long before headlines and controversy, the band had already rewritten the rules...
The $36 Song That Terrified the FBI (Mike Mitchell of The Kingsmen) 28.06.2026 32:59
Before punk rock, before arena rock, and before garage rock was a thing, there was "Louie Louie." In this special episode of Tape Spaghetti, Blake shares his remarkable conversation with Kingsmen guitarist Mike Mitchell, whose band accidentally changed history. Recorded in a single take for less than the cost of a decent dinner, Louie Louie's famously garbled lyrics sparked a national panic when s...
Chuck Berry, Dick Clark & Rock ’n’ Roll’s Payola Scandal 16.06.2026 1:10:21
Paranoid about the algorithm? Totally understandable. But, if you're yearning for the good ol' days when records zipped to the top of the charts on the strength of catchy tunes and the cultural zeitgeist... we've got some bad news for you. In the 1950s, well before playlists and trending were a thing, it was DJs that had the power to make or break a pop artist's career. And in this episode of Tape...
Sugar Ray, Smash Mouth, and the One-Hit Wonders That Weren’t 10.06.2026 1:16:28
Pop music simply wouldn't be the same without one-hit wonders, those flash in a pan artists who capture the listening public's imagination... for about 5 minutes. But, what about those musicians who are labeled one-hit wonders and then absolutely refuse to go away? In this episode, Scott & Blake explore the curious cases of bands that scored a massive breakthrough hit, got written off by critics a...
Jim Sullivan Drove Into the Desert and Disappeared 02.06.2026 1:16:27
A struggling musician drives into the New Mexico desert with a guitar, a trunk full of records, and dreams of making it in Nashville. He is never seen again. This week on Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake dive into the bizarre true story of Jim Sullivan, a gifted songwriter whose cult-classic album U.F.O. became even more intriguing after he seemingly vanished off the face of the Earth in 1975. Alon...
The FBI vs. The Fugs 29.05.2026 1:06:20
How obscene does your band need to be for the FBI to get involved? In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake dig into the band that found out the hard way: The Fugs. A chaotic 1960s underground band comprised of poets, pranksters, activists, and, well, absolute weirdos, The Fugs tackled topics such as sex, politics, drugs, and social rebellion in songs with titles so outrageous they got t...
Gram Parsons’ Friends Stole His Body and Burned It 19.05.2026 1:16:52
There are a good many outlaw country artists. But Gram Parsons might be the only one whose outlaw status followed him to the grave...and then back out of it. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake dig up the unbelievable life and afterlife of Gram Parsons, a country-rock visionary who pushed musical boundaries while battling self-destructive habits exacerbated by the intensity of fame. P...
The Beach Boys Made a Rap Song… And That’s Not the Worst Part 12.05.2026 1:11:03
The Beach Boys undoubtedly changed pop music forever. But they also cut an album so strange that it's basically been erased from music history. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake take a look at Summer in Paradise, the Beach Boys' bizarre attempt at reclaiming their throne with a "modern" summer soundtrack. With Brian Wilson out of the picture, the Mike Love-led Beach Boys wanted to s...
Waylon Jennings, Cocaine, and a DEA Raid Gone Wrong 06.05.2026 1:05:30
Waylon Jennings didn't just sing songs about being an outlaw. He genuinely became one. In this week's Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake discuss the life and legend of Waylon Jennings, who went from small-town disc-jockey to Buddy Holly's bandmate to one of country's greatest rebels. Back when Nashville was a highly polished music machine, Jennings forged his own gritty sound... and even grittier lifes...
Neil Young Got SUED for Not Sounding Like… Himself? 29.04.2026 1:07:58
A big ol' multi-million-dollar record deal, a rebel artist, a major corporate label, and "total creative freedom." What could possibly go wrong? In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake unravel the chaotic 1980s era of Neil Young. When Young let his artistic spirit soar into downright experimental territory, his own label, Geffen, sued him for not being “Neil Young enough.” While the alb...
The Dark Secret of Portland’s Roseland Theater 21.04.2026 1:01:39
As a native Pacific-Northwesterner with roots in the music scene, our very own Blake Wyland is verifiably Portland-proud. But this week he delves into one of the city's darkest stories...with shocking ties to a beloved rock venue. This episode of Tape Spaghetti takes you inside the history of Portland’s Roseland Theater, previously known as the Starry Night nightclub—where the town's vibrant music...
Keanu Reeves Has a Band… and So Do These Actors 14.04.2026 1:10:48
What do Joe Pesci, Oscar Isaac, and Keanu Reeves all have in common? No, this isn't the weirdest casting call of all time (though, we'd totally watch that movie) – it's MUSIC. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake dive into the unexpected world of actors who were (or still are) legit musicians. This Hollywood crossover occurs in some seriously surprising places, and the actors in ques...
John Carpenter: The Man Who Scored Your Nightmares 07.04.2026 1:03:50
Before his name became synonymous with nightmares and jumpscares, John Carpenter was a humble film student with an extremely limited budget. So, what did this industrious director do when he couldn't afford to hire a composer? He became one. This week on Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake look at Carpenter's lesser-known brilliance as a music-maker and how what started as a workaround became a legacy o...
The Langley Schools Music Project: A Choir From Another Dimension? 31.03.2026 1:01:47
A burned out music teacher with no plan. A room full of kids. And a record that sounds like nothing else on earth. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott, Blake, and guest Nate Catanzarite discuss the Langley Schools Music Project, which started out as a classroom experiment and ended up as a captivating cult classic. Frustrated with traditional lessons, teacher Hans Fenger let students choose s...
“Africa” Wasn’t Supposed to Happen (The Toto Story) 24.03.2026 1:15:38
Imagine a world where the best session musicians in Los Angeles have a revolutionary idea: "....Hey... why don't we just BE the band??" In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake unravel the surprisingly unlikely rise of Toto, a cadre of hyper-skilled studio players who went from backing name-brand artists to dominating the charts on their own. Featured in hits ranging from yacht-rock to Thr...
How Hollywood Fakes Rock Legends (JD Simo on Springsteen & Elvis) 17.03.2026 1:05:05
What happens when a world-class guitarist gets dropped into a zillion dollar Hollywood film production? In this special episode of Tape Spaghetti, JD Simo pulls back the curtain on how musical authenticity is crafted on the big screen. From Elvis to Springsteen, JD has played a key role in powering the musical engines of some MAJOR movies. Whether it's recording sessions, ensuring that meticulous...
Franz Liszt Was The First Rockstar 10.03.2026 59:39
Long before Elvis shook his hips or the Beatles sparked screaming crowds, there was Franz Liszt. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake dive into the wild story of the 19th-century Hungarian pianist who unknowingly invented the archetype of the modern rock star. Liszt wasn’t just a virtuoso — he was a phenomenon. Concertgoers fainted. Women fought over his discarded cigarette butts. Ne...
Chumbawamba, Tubthumping, & Total Anarchy 03.03.2026 1:12:55
You already know the chorus. In fact, you've probably scream-sung it at a bar. But, what do you know about the band behind Tubthumping? What if we told you that the biggest pub anthem of the '90s was written by militant anarchic agitators who supported striking miners, clashed with fascists, and called a crumbling Victorian mansion home? Yep, Chumbawamba is probably a LOT more interesting than you...
Oasis, Metallica & The War That Crushed Music 25.02.2026 1:24:25
Ever wonder why older albums feel warm and dynamic while some late-’90s and 2000s records sound like a stark wall of noise? In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake remember the Loudness Wars—an era when mastering engineers pushed music to its absolute sonic limits. The guys track the constraints of analog vinyl to the digital “look-ahead” limiters that could mathematically crush peaks i...
Rust, Soul, and Static: Brittany Howard Before the Fame 17.02.2026 58:23
Before she was a household name, before the Grammys, before the headlining tours, Brittany Howard was dragging herself to rehearsals after 12-hour shifts as a mail carrier. Before that, she grew up in a trailer in a junkyard in rural Alabama, enduring poverty, prejudice, and the tragic loss of her sister. This episode of Tape Spaghetti tells the story of Howard’s meteoric rise—and the grit that p...
Rolling Stones: The Road To Altamont (Part 2) 11.02.2026 1:18:56
Last week Scott & Blake dove into the birth of the Rolling Stones' touring empire. In Part II, they find out what it cost. After reinventing the modern mega-tour in 1969, the Stones faced backlash from a counterculture that suddenly saw them as corporate villains. Their response, a massive free concert celebration in Northern California, was meant to be an olive-branch. Instead, the Altamont Speed...
Rolling Stones: The Road To Altamont (Part 1) 03.02.2026 1:05:32
In the 1960s the Rolling Stones were already rock royalty. In 1969, they became an empire. In this week's Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake hone in on the year the Stones built the model by which all future mega-tours would function. For the first time, rock shows became carefully choreographed spectacles, with the band providing total oversight to sound engineering, lighting, transitions, tempos, mer...
George Clinton, Bootsy Collins & Parliament Funkadelic: How P-Funk Tore The Roof Off 27.01.2026 1:06:00
Welcome aboard the Mothership. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake are joined by special guest Richard Oliver (Wampler Pedals, Chasing Tone, Amplify Creative) who shares his personal history and expertise in a deep, joyful, and occasionally unhinged journey through the universe of Parliament-Funkadelic. P-Funk’s unexpected evolution from 1960s doo-wop into a genre-shattering collage o...
No Practice Allowed: Ya Ho Wha 13 & The Hang-Glider Finale 20.01.2026 1:05:48
Welcome to The Source – a buzzy Sunset Strip health-food restaurant... that also happens to be the intersection of kale, celebrities, and the cosmic control of a self-proclaimed deity calling himself Father Yod. Sound weird? That's because it is weird. And why is this the subject of this week's Tape Spaghetti? Because in the cult of The Source, music is mandatory – but sounding good is forbidden....
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