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The Music Podcast

The Music Podcast

Written by: Real Brave Inc
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Real Brave Live: Two musicians in a room talking music news, bands, bests, worsts and interesting interviews with amazing great & up and coming artists.Copyright 2023 All rights reserved. Music
Episodes
  • Christmas Music | You Either Love Or Hate It
    Nov 26 2025
    Learn how to play an instrument at Real Brave Every year, as soon as the holiday season approaches, the world is taken over by Christmas music. But behind the wall of Christmas songs, Christmas music playlists, and Christmas music radio stations is a massive industry built on nostalgia, strategy, and—yes—profit. In this episode of Real Brave Live, we unpack why Christmas music streaming has transformed older catalog tracks into modern chart giants, and why the same Christmas songs appear on every Christmas songs list year after year. At Real Brave, where our focus is helping students through every music lesson, we know how powerful a song can be. So today we’re breaking down the power behind the biggest holiday songs ever recorded. There is no better place to start than with Mariah Carey, whose catalog dominates Christmas music searches each year. “All I Want for Christmas Is You” isn’t just another song. It is the gravitational center of all Christmas music. Millions search for “all i want for christmas is you mariah carey,” “all i want for christmas is you lyrics,” and “mariah carey songs” every December. Real Brave teachers often hear their students bringing this song into their music lesson, asking how such a simple melody became one of the most successful Christmas songs of all time. The track has become a cultural anchor, influencing everything from Christmas music streaming algorithms to Christmas music radio station rotations. This episode looks at how Christmas music—traditional Christmas songs, classic Christmas songs, kids Christmas songs, instrumental Christmas music, Christmas carols, and even jazz-infused holiday songs—became a multi-platform phenomenon. Real Brave has seen firsthand how students pull inspiration from these songs in a music lesson, whether they’re learning old Christmas songs or exploring famous Christmas songs for the first time. We break down why certain classic Christmas music tracks never disappear, why Christmas song lyrics shape emotional connection, and why a single Christmas music playlist can drive millions of streams. The Christmas ecosystem is bigger than people realize. Search trends spike for “christmas songs,” “top christmas songs,” “best christmas songs,” “christmas songs list,” “christmas song lyrics,” and “most popular christmas songs” every year. At Real Brave, we often get parents asking for a music lesson centered on holiday songs because their kids want to play what they hear on Christmas music radio. The same top 20 Christmas songs and top 10 Christmas songs appear again and again, partly because algorithms reward familiarity and partly because listeners want the comfort of the classics. We explore how Christmas music streaming revived songs that were once forgotten. Tracks categorized as “christmas songs popular,” “traditional christmas songs,” “classic christmas music,” and “holiday songs” suddenly find new life each December. Whether someone searches for “christmas music radio,” “christmas music playlist,” “play christmas music,” “christmas carol songs,” “list of christmas songs,” or even “free christmas music,” the same recurring catalog returns to the surface. Real Brave instructors often see these songs reappearing in music lesson requests, even from students who rarely listen to holiday tracks outside December. The episode also dives into how labels craft Christmas music songs for modern audiences. We discuss how certain artists try to break into lists like “best christmas songs of all time,” “100 best christmas songs list,” and “top christmas music,” and why most fail. Real Brave’s unique perspective as a music lesson studio helps us understand how structure, melody, and arrangement determine whether a Christmas song becomes a holiday standard or disappears after a single release. We compare classic Christmas songs with newer holiday music, analyzing why some tracks—like “mariah carey all i want for christmas is you”—reach legendary status while others vanish from Christmas songs lists. Real Brave’s musicians also weigh in on how Christmas radio station formatting, top Christmas songs rotations, and Christmas music station programming influence what the world hears. When a student walks into a music lesson at Real Brave wanting to learn a Christmas song, chances are it’s the same handful of hits driven by these systems. From Christmas music streaming patterns to Christmas music radio station dominance, from Christmas playlist behavior to the strange seasonal resurgence of “xmas songs,” this episode of Real Brave Live pulls back the curtain on how the industry shapes holiday listening. If you’ve ever wondered why “all i want for christmas” appears everywhere in December, why “mariah carey christmas songs” dominate search trends, or why every Christmas music station plays the same songs, this...
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    32 mins
  • The Golden Record | Music Podcasts
    Nov 20 2025

    Visit RealBraveAudio.com for more about learning music online.

    This episode takes you deep into the story of Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the legendary Golden Record created under the guidance of Carl Sagan for NASA. When NASA sent Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 into space in 1977, the mission wasn’t just about studying planets. It was also about creating a message for aliens—real aliens, hypothetical aliens, curious aliens, and the kind of aliens that make people ask, “Will aliens eat us?” The Golden Record was designed as a cosmic handshake, or maybe a cosmic warning, depending on your take on the whole “will aliens eat us?” question. But to Carl Sagan, the Golden Record aboard Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 was the purest expression of human hope ever launched by NASA.

    In this episode, we explore why NASA believed Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the Golden Record mattered. We look at how Carl Sagan gathered musicians, linguists, scientists, and dreamers to decide what aliens should hear first if aliens ever found Voyager 1 or Voyager 2 drifting through interstellar space. Should aliens hear Chuck Berry? Should aliens hear Beethoven? Should aliens hear a mother’s heartbeat? And again, because humans can’t help themselves, Carl Sagan faced the playful but persistent joke: “Will aliens eat us?” If aliens ever read the Golden Record, will they understand the intention, or will they wonder why NASA spent time pressing whale songs onto a copper disc?

    As Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 moved beyond the planets, the meaning of the Golden Record changed. It was no longer just a message; it was a monument. NASA had launched two probes that would outlast every building, every language, and possibly the entire human species. Carl Sagan said the Golden Record aboard Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 was a way of saying we were here and that we tried—tried to communicate, tried to imagine aliens, tried to hope the answer to “will aliens eat us?” is no, or at least “not immediately.” The Golden Record has greetings in 55 languages telling any aliens who find Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 that we come in peace, and please, ideally, don’t eat us.

    In this episode, we break down the creation of the Golden Record, from Carl Sagan’s initial pitch to NASA, to the nights when Sagan, Ann Druyan, and the team debated what messages would last billions of years. Every sound on the Golden Record had meaning. Every sound was a bet placed on the idea that the universe might respond. The fact that Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 still carry the Golden Record today, still powered by fading RTGs, still sailing beyond the solar system, asks us to reconsider humanity’s place. We ask whether aliens might find Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the Golden Record, and if they do, whether those aliens will understand our music or misinterpret our diagrams and start wondering, “Are these creatures worth contacting?” or “Will aliens eat us? Maybe we should get to them first.”

    Millions of years from now, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 will still be moving through the galaxy. The Golden Record will still carry the voice of Earth, still carrying the creative optimism of NASA, still echoing the philosophy of Carl Sagan, and still making us laugh nervously about the question: “Will aliens eat us?” With Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the Golden Record, NASA sent not only science but soul into space. Whether aliens ever find it—or whether aliens decide listening is a sign of good faith or an appetizer—we can’t know. But we do know this: Carl Sagan believed in the best version of us, and the Golden Record aboard Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 is the evidence. And if aliens one day examine it and ask themselves “will aliens eat us?”—well, that part is on them.

    This episode invites you to think about why NASA trusted Voyager 1, Voyager 2, Carl Sagan, and the Golden Record to represent humanity, how aliens might interpret it, and whether our first communication with aliens will be a greeting, a misunderstanding, or a cosmic dinner bell. The Golden Record forces the universe to ask not only who we are, but also why we keep asking, “Will aliens eat us?” And maybe, thanks to Carl Sagan, NASA, Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the Golden Record, the universe will eventually answer.

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    27 mins
  • Will Disney Ruin The Beatles Anthology? | The Music Podcasts
    Nov 12 2025

    To learn your fave Beatles songs check out realbraveaudio.com After decades of anticipation, The Beatles Anthology 4 arrives with mixed emotions. While the first three volumes reshaped how we hear studio outtakes, this new double-disc set recycles a surprising amount of material already available on deluxe editions of Revolver, Abbey Road, and Let It Be. Only 12 tracks are new — and even those raise questions about how much unreleased material truly remains.

    Still, Anthology 4 isn’t without its gems. With Peter Jackson’s MAL technology, the cleaned-up vocals and piano tracks of John Lennon breathe new life into “Free as a Bird” and “Real Love,” matching the sonic clarity of the 2023 single “Now and Then.” But the omissions—like the Decca audition tapes, Christmas fan club recordings, and the mythical “Carnival of Light”—are hard to ignore.

    So, have we reached the end of the Beatles’ archive era, or is there still something magical left to discover?

    “Beatles or Beetles?” – The Trivia Game

    Can you tell the difference between rock legends and real insects? We challenge each other with questions like:

    • Which one played a concert so loud no one could hear the music?

    • Which one can shoot boiling chemicals from their rear end?

    • Who glows in the dark to attract mates?

    • Who recorded an entire song backward?

    This segment blends humor, music history, and bizarre biology for an episode that’s part quiz show, part music documentary.

    Why You’ll Love This Episode
    • Perfect for Beatles superfans, music trivia buffs, and anyone who loves weird facts.

    • Includes exclusive commentary on Disney+’s new Beatles Anthology edition.

    • Smart, funny, and a little chaotic — just the way a Beatles conversation should be.

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    25 mins
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