Episodes
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In episode forty-nine of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive into Moisturizer, the second album from Wet Leg. Released in 2025, Moisturiser finds Wet Leg expanding their sonic palette whilst balancing an irreverent charm that made their debut such a phenomenon. The album swings between jangly guitars, punchy rhythms, synth‑flecked detours, and lyrics that oscillate between absurdity, vulnerability, and razor‑sharp observation.
From its punchy openers to its unexpectedly tender moments, Rob & Mike unpack how the band balances silliness with sincerity, and how this album has cemented them as one of the most prolific new voices in modern indie rock. Whether you’ve been quoting Wet Leg lyrics since their debut or you’re stepping into their world of chaos and charm for the first time, this episode explores why Moisturizer has been such a critical and commercial success.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s blend of humour, anxiety, and indie‑pop precisionA deep dive into key tracks, their lyrical quirks, and the emotional threads hiding beneath the punchlinesA look at Wet Leg’s evolving sound and how Moisturizer builds on their debutPlus, a surprisingly deep detour about class stagnation, the British music industry, and BeybladesStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that made you laugh, scream, dance, or spiral? Send it our way and Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty-eight of Skip’d, Rob & Mike descend into Welcome to My Nightmare, the twisted, theatrical, and wildly imaginative concept album from Alice Cooper. Released in 1975, Welcome to My Nightmare marks Cooper’s first solo outing, and follows a young boy named Steven as he navigates a dreamscape filled with monsters, shadows, temptations, and psychological unease. It’s a concept that allows Cooper to stretch his theatrical instincts to their fullest, creating a record that feels like a haunted house you can listen to.
From its spine‑tingling openers to its dramatic finale, Rob & Mike unpack how Welcome to My Nightmare stands as one of Alice Cooper’s most iconic and influential works. Whether you grew up with Alice Cooper’s shock‑rock legacy or you’re stepping into Steven’s nightmare for the first time, this episode explores why Welcome to My Nightmare remains a defining moment in rock storytelling.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s narrative arc and the dream‑logic world Cooper constructsA deep dive into key tracks, their emotional undercurrents, and the theatrical flourishes that make them unforgettableA look at the album’s production, arrangements, and the musicians who helped bring Cooper’s nightmare to lifePlus, Mike goes full critic and explores the many screen adaptations of the album.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that scared you, shaped you, or dragged you into a world you didn’t expect — send it our way. Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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Missing episodes?
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In episode forty‑eight of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive headfirst into Plastic Hearts, the bold, glam‑rock‑infused reinvention from Miley Cyrus. Released in 2020, Plastic Hearts finds Cyrus stepping confidently into a sound she’d been circling for years: a fusion of rock, synth‑pop, punk energy, and smoky, late‑night vulnerability. Across its tracklist, she explores heartbreak, self‑destruction, desire, and the strange clarity that comes after everything falls apart.
From its explosive openers to its reflective closing moments, . Rob & Mike unpack how she crafted a sound that feels both timeless and freshly charged, and why this album marks a turning point not just in her career, but in her artistic identity. Whether you’ve followed Miley Cyrus through every era or you’re stepping into her world through this record, this episode explores why Plastic Hearts remains a standout moment of reinvention, resilience, and rock‑star confidence.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s glam‑rock revival, from its production choices to its 80s‑inspired texturesA deep dive into key tracks, their emotional undercurrents, and the storytelling behind Cyrus’s reinventionA look at the album’s collaborators and how their presence shapes the record’s sonic identityPlus, an unsettling amount of Dog Of Wisdom impressions.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that marked a turning point, lit a fire under you, or helped you rebuild? Send it our way. Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty‑seven of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive into Me Myself I, the bold, self‑assured, and irresistibly melodic 1980 album from Joan Armatrading. Released at the dawn of a new decade, Me Myself I is an album that balances strength with softness, swagger with sincerity, and pop‑rock immediacy with the introspective songwriting that has always defined Armatrading’s work. From its confident openers to its reflective closing moments, Me Myself I stands as one of Armatrading’s most accessible yet emotionally layered works.
Rob & Mike then unpack how she crafted an album that’s both radio‑ready and quietly radical, and why its themes still resonate so strongly today. Whether you’ve lived with Joan Armatrading’s music for decades or you’re discovering her catalogue through this album, this episode explores why Me Myself I remains a defining statement from one of Britain’s most singular songwriters.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s themes — independence, desire, self‑reflection, and the emotional complexity behind choosing your own pathA deep dive into key tracks and the musical versatility Armatrading brings to each oneA look at the album’s production and how it sharpened her sound without losing her signature intimacyPlus, Mike starts an unexpected tangent about The BeanoStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that shaped who you became, helped you stand on your own two feet, or taught you something about yourself? Send it our way, and Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty‑six of Skip’d, Rob & Mike plug into Ride the Lightning, the blistering, era‑defining second album from Metallica. Released in 1984, Ride the Lightning captures a young band already pushing against the limits of speed and aggression, weaving in themes of fate, fear, injustice, and existential dread. From themse of state‑sanctioned execution to war, madness, and personal reckoning, to fast riffs, more intricate songwriting, and tighter performances than anything on their debut, there is undoubtably a raw electricity running through Ride the Lightning.
The album is a reminder of how thrilling it is to hear a band on the cusp of greatness, fully locked in and unafraid to take risks. Whether Metallica has been the soundtrack to your teenage bedroom walls or you’re stepping into Ride the Lightning for the first time, this episode explores why it remains one of the most essential metal albums ever recorded.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s themes, from mortality and morality to fear, fate, and rebellionA deep dive into key tracks, their structures, and the musical leaps Metallica made between albumsA look at the band’s evolving musicianship and how Ride the Lightning shaped the future of thrashPlus, way too much talk about anvils.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that melted your face, saved your sanity, or rewired your taste forever? Send it our way. Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty-four of Skip’d, Rob & Mike step into Making Mirrors, the third album from Gotye. Released in 2011, Making Mirrors is an album built on contrasts: joy and melancholy, nostalgia and reinvention, intimacy and widescreen ambition. Beneath its colourful palette lies a set of songs wrestling with identity, connection, and the strange ways we change.
From bold stylistic swings to its quietly devastating moments, Making Mirrors stands as one of the most distinctive pop albums of its era. Rob & Mike unpack how Gotye crafted something so eclectic yet cohesive, and why its emotional resonance still hits long after its chart‑topping moment. Whether you lived through the global takeover of “Somebody That I Used to Know” or you’re discovering the deeper cuts for the first time, this episode explores why Making Mirrors remains a singular, endlessly fascinating piece of modern pop artistry.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s patchwork ensemble, from vintage sampling to rich multi‑layered arrangementsA deep dive into key tracks, their emotional themes, and the production quirks that make them stand outA look at Gotye’s musicianship and how Making Mirrors balances experimentation with accessibilityPlus, Mike tries to be a good little fanboy while Rob hits a physical barrier for his enjoyment.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix.
Got an album that cracked your heart open, reshaped your taste, or soundtracked a turning point in your life — send it our way. Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty‑three of Skip’d, Rob & Mike step into the shadowy, genre‑blurring world of Sleep Token’s Even In Arcadia. Following their steady rise from cult anonymity to one of the most talked‑about modern acts, Even In Arcadia captures Sleep Token at their most expansive and self‑assured. Blending elements of alternative metal, R&B, ambient pop, and post‑rock, the album drifts between quiet vulnerability and explosive catharsis, anchored by Vessel’s unmistakable voice that is equal parts fragile one moment and overwhelming the next.
From the atmospheric build and emotional release of its standout moments to the subtler, slow‑burn tracks that creep up on you over time, Even In Arcadia is about atmosphere, tension, and payoff. It’s a bold, uncompromising statement from a band that thrives in ambiguity, inviting listeners to interpret, project, and lose themselves in the process. Whether you’ve been following Sleep Token’s ascent from the beginning or you’re stepping into their world for the first time, Even In Arcadia offers a listening experience that sticks long after the final note fades.
What’s inside:
A deep dive into the album’s biggest moments, from its hauntingly delicate passages to its full‑scale, emotionally charged crescendosA discussion on Sleep Token’s evolving sound, and how Even In Arcadia pushes their boundary‑less approach even furtherReflections on the band’s mystique, anonymity, and how it shapes the way listeners connect with the musicPlus, Mike gets to finally achieve his glazing final form as Rob challenges his weeks-long admiration for the bandStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that soundtracked your commute, your heartbreak, or that one moment you can’t quite shake? Send it our way, Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty‑two of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive into Undun, the ambitious and deeply introspective concept album from The Roots. Released in 2011, Undun follows the life and death of its fictional protagonist Redford Stephens, tracing his path backwards from tragedy to the moments that shaped him. It’s a bold narrative choice that gives the album a haunting sense of inevitability, pulling you deeper with each track as the bigger picture slowly comes into focus.
Anchored by Questlove’s meticulous percussion and Black Thought’s commanding, razor-sharp delivery, the album weaves together live instrumentation and cinematic transitions. Themes of environment, choice, consequence, and lost potential run throughout, making it a record that rewards close listening while still hitting with immediate impact. Whether you’ve long considered The Roots one of the genre’s defining acts or you’re coming to Undun for the first time, this episode explores if it stands as one of their most compelling and complete works.
What’s inside:
A discussion around the album’s reverse narrative structure and how it can alter your perception depending on if you’re aware of the themeA deep dive into key tracks, lyrical themes, and the emotional weight behind Black Thought’s performanceA look at The Roots’ musicianship and how Undun blends hip‑hop with live instrumentation and orchestral elementsPlus, the boys use on the reverse chronology of the record and discuss why this album took several listens to 'get it'Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that soundtracked your commute, your heartbreak, or that one moment you can’t quite shake? Send it our way – Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty-one of Skip'd, Rob & Mike dive head‑first into the high‑energy, breakdown‑stacked, pop‑punk‑meets‑metalcore chaos of Chunk! No, Captain Chunk!’s Something for Nothing: The 2010 debut that helped define the easycore explosion. Equal parts sugary hooks and drop‑tuned mayhem, this record didn’t just blend genres, it smashed them together with a grin, a two‑step, and a perfectly‑timed pick‑slide.
Released at the height of MySpace‑era scene culture, Something for Nothing became a cult favourite for its whiplash transitions, gang‑chant choruses, and the band’s signature happy‑hardcore energy. From the anthemic lift of “In Friends We Trust” to the mosh‑pit‑ready breakdowns of “Captain Blood,” the album is bright and melodic whilst detonating into metalcore aggression without warning. It’s chaotic, joyful, and surprisingly tight for a debut, proving why CNC Chunk became one of the most recognisable names in the easycore wave.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s defining moments, including the explosive opener “Born for Adversity,” the infectious hooks of “In Friends We Trust,” and the title track’s perfect balance of melody and muscleA look at how Something for Nothing helped cement the easycore blueprint by blending polished pop‑punk songwriting with hardcore riffs, double‑kicks, and breakdowns built for sweaty club showsReflections on the album’s legacy, its influence on bands that followed, and why its mix of optimism and aggression still hits like a caffeine‑fuelled nostalgia bombPlus, the boys wander into tangents about 90's children's TV, for seemingly no reason#Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that shaped a scene, broke the rules, or simply makes you want to two‑step in your kitchen? Send it our way, and Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode forty of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive headfirst into the lavish, theatrical, genre‑obliterating spectacle that is Queen’s A Night at the Opera. A record so audacious, it flung the bar into the stratosphere and dared everyone else to catch up. Operatic, whimsical, ferocious, and technically groundbreaking, this 1975 masterpiece is less an album and more a maximalist statement of intent from a band determined to sound like no one but themselves.
Built on the combined brilliance of Mercury, May, Taylor, and Deacon, A Night at the Opera fuses hard rock, British music hall, prog, folk, vaudeville, and full‑blown operetta into a kaleidoscopic experience. From the delicate melancholy of “Love of My Life” to the ragtime swagger of “Seaside Rendezvous,” and of course the multi‑layered, reality‑bending epic that is “Bohemian Rhapsody,” this is Queen at their most fearless, most inventive, and most gloriously over‑the‑top. It’s the soundtrack for theatrical air‑guitar sessions, late‑night singalongs, and that moment you realise a band can turn pure imagination into something you can actually hear.
What’s inside:
A deep breakdown of the album’s most iconic moments, including the stacked‑to‑the‑ceiling vocal harmonies of “Bohemian Rhapsody,” Brian May’s blistering guitar heroics on “The Prophet’s Song,” and the playful genre‑hopping that makes the record feel like a musical funhouseAn exploration of Queen’s evolution, how the band channelled ambition, humour, virtuosity, and a touch of chaos into an album that redefined what “rock” could encompassReflections on the album’s cultural legacy, its pioneering production techniques, its enduring influence on artists across genres, and the way it continues to captivate new listeners half a century laterPlus, Rob's return to the show comes with a horrific story of dodgy cabinetry and eye impalement.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that shattered expectations, rewrote the rules, or simply demands to be played at full volume? Send it our way — Rob & Mike will dig in and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑nine of Skip’d, Mike is once again down a Rob, this time replaced by his lifelong friend Darren. Stepping into the storm, the two fire up the motorbike, crank the amps and tear headlong into Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell: One of the most bombastic, theatrical and improbably successful albums ever committed to tape. Released in 1977, this Jim Steinman‑penned rock opera is excess in its purest form. It's too long, too loud, too emotional, but absolutely unstoppable.
From the revving engines and adolescent adrenaline of the title track, to the beautifully deranged romantic panic of “You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth,” the slow‑burn devotion of “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad,” and the eight‑minute emotional car crash that is “Paradise by the Dashboard Light,” this album is all big feelings, big hooks, and the kind of hyper‑sincere rock theatre that simply does not get made anymore.
What’s inside:
A deep dive into the album’s ridiculous, irresistible highlights, including the full‑throttle chaos of the title track and why “Paradise by the Dashboard Light” feels like a musical, a porn parody and a failing marriage all at onceAn exploration of the Steinman/Meat Loaf creative partnership, and how theatrical excess became a feature not a flawReflections on Bat Out of Hell’s unbelievable cultural footprint, its decades‑long chart life and why sincerity at this scale still hits as hard as it doesPlus, the view of a Travelodge orgy from the hotel cuck chair that you will laugh at, but wish you could forgetStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that’s too big to ignore, too emotional to mock, and too committed to ever be anything less than iconic? Send it our way, and the boys will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑eight of Skip’d, Mike is flying slightly off‑format. Rob is absent this week following what can only be described as an “avoidable incident” involving an IKEA shelving unit and a level of confidence no one asked for. HR has stepped in. In Rob’s place is a special guest co‑host and steady hand in Mike’s wife, Caroline!
Together, Mike and Caroline unpack Lily Allen’s 2025 return‑to‑form album, West End Girl. Released nearly two decades after Allen first crashed into pop culture, West End Girl centres on the fallout of the singers marriage to actor David Harbour, whilst revisiting the themes of class, image, hypocrisy, and social performance. Gone is the wide‑eyed novelty of her early work; in its place is something leaner, wiser, and far more intentional.
The album observes betrayal, privilege, fame, motherhood, aging, and public scrutiny with the same plain‑spoken delivery but now the sarcasm cuts deeper, as the album lands as both a cultural touch point and a personal reinvention— a reminder of how rare it is for pop artists to approach reinvention from the point of everything having been burned down in the public eye.
What’s inside:
A deep dive into West End Girl as an album — its sonic palette, lyrical themes, and how it reframes Allen’s early worldview through a 2025 lensA discussion of Lily Allen’s career arc, public perception, and how five years fell down into an intense 10 day recordingReflections on pop longevity, honesty over reinvention, and why this record feels radical in the social media eraPlus, Caroline stepping effortlessly into co‑host mode while Mike interrogates her unskippable starting point.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that feels like an artist finally saying exactly what they think? Send it our way — Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑seven of Skip’d, Rob & Mike rewind to the early‑2000s with Maroon 5’s Songs About Jane; An album of breakups, bruised egos and late‑night regrets, and melodies that simply refused to leave your head.
Released in 2002, Songs About Jane is a snapshot of a band still figuring itself out . From the jittery urgency of “Harder to Breathe” to the slow‑burn heartbreak of “This Love,” the sun‑soaked ease of “Sunday Morning,” and the eternal late‑night plea of “She Will Be Loved,” Songs About Jane is an album built on break‑up music disguised as feel‑good pop. Whether you were there when it ruled the airwaves or you’re rediscovering it without the baggage, Songs About Jane remains a remarkably honest and confident debut.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s biggest moments, including the restless groove of “Harder to Breathe,” the undeniable pull of “This Love,” and why “She Will Be Loved” became a generational slow‑dance stapleA look at Maroon 5’s early identity and evolution, discussing how their funk‑inflected pop sound that stood out in a guitar‑obsessed eraReflections on the album’s long shelf life, its radio dominance throughout the mid‑2000s, and why its laid‑back sincerity still resonates todayPlus, Mike has a full-on menty B about the album's production and lyricism.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that soundtracked your commute, your heartbreak, or that one summer that still lives rent‑free in your head? Send it our way, Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑six of Skip’d, Rob & Mike jack into the sprawling, Afrofuturist universe of Janelle Monáe’s The ArchAndroid. A bold, visionary double album that redefines what pop, R&B, and science‑fiction storytelling can accomplish together. Part space opera, part social manifesto, part dance‑floor liberation.
Framed as chapters two and three in Monáe’s ongoing Metropolis saga, The ArchAndroid follows the mythic android messiah Cindi Mayweather as a lens through which Monáe explores identity, freedom, race, rebellion, love, and the cost of non‑conformity. The ArchAndroid plays like a movie for your ears and an album that rewards close listening and invites repeat exploration.
What’s inside:
A deep dive into the album’s signature moments, including the kinetic pulse of “Tightrope,” the psychedelic bliss of “Wondaland,” and the cathartic release of “57821”An exploration of Janelle Monáe’s Afrofuturist vision and how sci‑fi storytelling becomes a powerful vehicle for examining oppression, self‑expression, and liberationReflections on The ArchAndroid’s cultural impact, its genre‑defying influence, and how it helped carve out space for a more expansive and inclusive idea of pop stardomPlus, the moment Rob completely loses the plot trying to map the Metropolis timeline, while Mike attempts to explain android theologyStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix.
Got an album that builds worlds, challenges the status quo, or proves that pop can still be revolutionary? Send it our way and Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty five of SKiP’D, Mike & Rob present a WORLD FIRST descent into the haunted and theatrical realm of My Chemical Romance’s unreleased fifth album, 'The Paper Kingdom': A project shrouded in mystery, grief, and creative reinvention, this phantom record sits at the crossroads of what MCR were, and what they might have become. The Paper Kingdom is less an album than a ghost story, told through the ashes of a band on the brink of transformation.
Conceived as a dark fairy tale about parents navigating the aftermath of losing their children, the album was poised to blend the band’s signature theatricality with a more atmospheric, grief-ridden palette. It was a world of fantasy forests and emotional devastation, a universe Gerard Way once described as “a fever dream of grief and hope.” Though the finished record never materialised, the work print provided to the show by an anonymous listener reveals a band wrestling with burnout, ambition, and the weight of their own mythology. It’s the sound of MCR standing at the edge of a new era and choosing to walk away.
What’s inside:
• A deep dive into the album’s concept: The grieving parents, the lost children, the fictional magical forest, and the emotional stakes that made The Paper Kingdom one of MCR’s most intriguing unrealised visions
• A look at the band’s creative evolution post‑Danger Days, including the shift toward moodier textures, electronic elements, and a return to narrative world‑building that pushed them put of their comfort zone, both in and out of the music
• Reflections on the cultural aura surrounding “the album that never was,” how its absence shaped the band’s legacy, and why fans obsessed over the scraps more than a decade later
• Plus, Mike spirals into a full‑blown existential crisis discussing how the work print was obtained and how it ended up in our email inbox
Stream SKiP’D on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that never saw the light of day, changed the course of a band, or exists only in the imaginations of devoted fans? Send it our way — Rob & Mike will dig into the lore and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
Music by Shane Ivers (excluding SKiP'D Theme) - https://www.silvermansound.com
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In episode thirty‑four of Skip’d, Rob & Mike journey into the cosmic, philosophical, genre‑bending masterpiece that is Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon. An album so iconic it practically transcends the idea of “classic rock” and enters its own gravitational orbit. Meditative, psychedelic, sonically pristine, and thematically ambitious, this 1973 landmark is less a collection of songs and more a seamless 43‑minute experience that changed what an album could be.
Crafted by the legendary lineup of Waters, Gilmour, Wright, and Mason, and impeccably shaped by engineer Alan Parsons, Dark Side blends progressive rock, experimental sound design, jazz‑tinged instrumentation, and lyrical explorations of time, greed, madness, and the human condition. From the heartbeat‑to‑heartbeat sweep of “Speak to Me/Breathe” to the gravitational pull of “Time,” and the emotional catharsis of “The Great Gig in the Sky,” this is Pink Floyd at their most focused, most collaborative, and most timeless. It’s the soundtrack for late‑night introspection, long drives under star‑drenched skies, and that moment you realise an album can shift your entire perspective.
What’s inside:
A deep breakdown of the album’s signature moments, including the iconic clocks of “Time,” Clare Torry’s transcendent vocal solo on “The Great Gig in the Sky,” and the psychedelic groove that made “Money” a chart‑bending hitAn exploration of Pink Floyd’s evolution — how the band channelled grief, tension, and philosophical curiosity into a cohesive concept album that set the standard for immersive storytelling in musicReflections on the album’s cultural footprint, its record‑breaking chart run, its audiophile legacy, and the way it continues to inspire new listeners over 50 years laterPlus, Mike has to calm Rob down after he goes into a brief psychosis after the soundscapes become a little too much for himStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that reshaped a genre, expanded minds, or simply sounds best in the dark with good headphones? Send it our way, Rob & Mike will dive deep and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑three of Skip’d, Rob & Mike step into the dreamlike, otherworldly debut that announced one of the most singular voices in music history: Kate Bush’s The Kick Inside. Ethereal, theatrical, emotionally fearless, and bursting with imagination, this 1978 masterpiece introduced the world to an artist who seemed to float above genres entirely. A storyteller, a visionary, and a once‑in‑a‑generation creative force.
Produced by Andrew Powell with an unmistakably art‑rock elegance, the album blends piano‑driven drama, folk‑tinged mysticism, and vocal performances that bend rules as effortlessly as they break hearts. From the literary swirl of “Wuthering Heights” to the intimate ache of “The Man with the Child in His Eyes", The Kick Inside is Kate Bush at her most youthful, most instinctive, and already impossibly unique. It’s the soundtrack for day dreamers, moon‑gazers, and anyone who’s ever felt the urge to follow their imagination wherever it leads.
What’s inside:
A spotlight on standout moments, including the cultural significance of “Wuthering Heights,” the tender confession of “The Man with the Child in His Eyes,” and the cinematic tension of “James and the Cold Gun”A deep dive into Kate Bush’s early evolution and how her teenage songwriting, theatrical training, and fearless experimentation shaped one of the most influential debuts in art‑pop historyReflections on the album’s impact, its critical legacy, its myth‑making aura, and how Bush set a new blueprint for creative autonomy and artistic daringPlus, Rob finally discovers what the lyrics to "Wuthering Heights" actually are, and Mike hyper-fixates on a Cliff Richard musical from the 90'sStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that feels magical, mysterious, or from a world entirely its own? Send it our way! Rob & Mike will explore the wonder and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑two of SKIP’D, Rob & Mike dive headfirst into the snarling, debauched, whiskey‑soaked beast that is Guns N’ Roses’ Appetite for Destruction: The record that detonated across the late‑80s rock landscape and dragged stadium‑sized hard rock back into the mainstream with teeth bared. Raw, rebellious, and ferociously alive, Appetite is an era‑defining blast of sleaze‑rock swagger, blistering guitar heroics, and Axl Rose’s razor‑edged wail that sounded like nothing else on the Sunset Strip.
Produced by Mike Clink, the album channels the band’s volatile chemistry into laser‑focused chaos: Slash’s serpentine riffs, Duff’s punchy low‑end, Adler’s loose‑limbed groove, and a frontman whose voice could shift from a hiss to a hurricane in a heartbeat. From street‑level grit to stadium‑sized anthems, Appetite for Destruction captures a band on the brink: hungry, dangerous, and ready to take over the world.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s iconic tracks — from the evergreen eruption of “Welcome to the Jungle”, to the decadent rocker “Nightrain”, to the skyscraper‑high emotional lift of “Sweet Child O’ Mine”.A deep dive into how Appetite reshaped rock in the late ’80s, cutting through glam-metal theatre with something more vicious, more authentic, and far more combustible.Reflections on the album’s seismic legacy, why its themes still resonate in 2026, and how its rough‑edged storytelling continues to influence new generations of guitar‑driven bands.Plus, an unexpected deviation about a character called Pissy Jeff.Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that blindsided a genre, rewrote the rulebook, or still makes you want to air‑guitar like nobody’s watching? Send it our way, Rob & Mike will break it down and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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In episode thirty‑one of Skip’d, Rob & Mike charge straight into the explosive pop‑punk hurricane that is Paramore’s Riot! - the album that catapulted the Tennessee band from Warped Tour favourites to global emo‑rock superstars. Fuelled by Hayley Williams’ powerhouse vocals, punchy guitar hooks, and enough emotional urgency to power a small city, Riot! is a 2000s anthem factory that still hits like a caffeinated adrenaline shot.
Produced by David Bendeth, the record trades the rawness of Paramore’s debut for sharper songwriting, massive choruses, and anthems that defined a generation of bedroom scream‑singers. From the scene‑shaping blast of “Misery Business” to the soaring resilience of “That’s What You Get,” Riot! captures a band stepping boldly into their identity. Louder, tighter, and bursting with unfiltered feeling.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of key tracks, including the breakout firestorm “Misery Business", the pop‑rock perfection of “That’s What You Get", and the underrated emotional gut‑punch “Crushcrushcrush”A deep dive into Paramore’s evolution — how Riot! sharpened their melodic instincts, expanded their sonic palette, and positioned them as one of the defining bands of the late‑2000s alternative sceneReflections on the album’s impact, its turbulent legacy, its role in the MySpace‑era emo explosion, and how its themes hit differently in 2026Plus, Rob & Mike play virtue-signal tennis whilst trying to name as many women-fronted rock bands as possible!Stream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that defined a scene, shaped an era, or made your teenage heart beat a little too fast? Send it our way — Rob & Mike will break it down and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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Find all the links you need at https://linktr.ee/skipdpod
In episode thirty of Skip’d, Rob & Mike dive headfirst into the raw, relentless, culture‑shaking force that is Eminem’s The Marshall Mathers LP. A record that didn’t just dominate the charts but detonated the boundaries of mainstream hip‑hop. Dark, provocative, satirical, and startlingly vulnerable, this is the album that transformed Eminem from rising star to full‑blown phenomenon.
Produced heavily by Dr. Dre and the legendary Aftermath camp, the record pairs razor‑edged lyricism with shadowy beats, shock‑comedy storytelling, and the kind of confessional honesty that only Eminem can deliver. From the venomous theatrics of “The Real Slim Shady” to the chilling narrative scope of “Stan,” this is Marshall Mathers at his most controversial, most creative, and most culturally unavoidable. It’s the soundtrack for confronting your inner chaos, questioning the world around you, and witnessing an artist burn his way into history.
What’s inside:
A breakdown of the album’s defining moments, like the icy storytelling masterclass “Stan,” and the gut-wrenching hysterics of “Kim”A deep look at Eminem’s artistic evolution - how Emimen used The Marshall Mathers LP to sharpen his “Slim Shady” persona, expand on his satire satire, while redefining what a mainstream rap album could beReflections on the album’s massive impact, its controversies, its critical acclaim, and its place in the early‑2000s cultural landscapePlus, Rob & Mike revisit their own teenage memories of the album’s wildfire popularity and talk all things social responsibility and censorshipStream Skip’d on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your audio fix. Got an album that shocked, shifted the culture, or split opinions right down the middle? Send it our way — Rob & Mike will dissect the chaos and decide if it’s truly unskippable.
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