Blind Skeleton's Three Tune Tuesday

Blind Skeleton's Three Tune Tuesday@boneapart

0 followers
Follow

2025 episodes (49)

New Years

New Years

New Year’s has a funny way of sneaking up on us. This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we slip into the quiet spaces between resolutions and reminiscence with three early recordings that circle home, goodbyes, and the people we carry forward with us. From ivy-clad nostalgia, to a polite-but-suggestive farewell at the window, to a solemn solo take on Auld Lang Syne, this 45-minute episode skips the noise and leans into reflection. No countdown. No fireworks. Just a moment to look back—before stepping ahead.

Yule

Yule

This week Boneapart and Yulia discuss Yule, it's origins, and it's place in society. Oh, and they play songs to celebrate it, too.

Hanukkah

Hanukkah

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we explore Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of Lights, through early 20th-century recordings preserved by the Library of Congress. Rather than modern holiday songs, this episode listens to the prayers and sacred music that would have surrounded Hanukkah a hundred years ago — voices of continuity, resilience, and quiet faith. Along the way, we talk history, pronunciation, and even count out the Hanukkah candles, letting the music and conversation illuminate what the holiday has meant across generations. It’s a reflective episode about persistence, memory, and light that endures longer than expected.

Kwanzaa

Kwanzaa

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, Boneapart has a birthday with a lighthearted nod to the passage of time before shifting into a thoughtful, Kwanzaa-season exploration of two remarkable early spiritual recordings. After the celebratory 1911 Birthday Serenade, the episode moves into Marian Anderson’s 1923 performance of Deep River, a piece whose themes of faith, unity, and shared purpose resonate with several principles of Kwanzaa. The journey continues with the 1902 Dinwiddie Colored Quartet rendition of Steal Away, an intimate and historically rich glimpse into the spiritual tradition’s roots. Together, the selections form a quietly powerful reflection on resilience, community, and the ways music carries meaning across generations.

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving

It's Thanksgiving in December! Come join Yulia and Boneapart as they spend this episode talking turkey!

Mythology

Mythology

In this week’s episode of Three Tune Tuesday, we dive into the realm of myth—where gods, spirits, and mortals blur together in music that’s anything but ordinary. Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld turns divine tragedy into biting satire, poking fun at power and pretension through a Parisian can-can. Schubert’s Erlkönig pulls us into the dark woods of folklore, where whispers in the wind may be more than they seem. And Wagner’s Magic Fire Scene ignites the heavens themselves, capturing the moment a god’s compassion reshapes destiny. Three visions of myth—comic, tragic, and cosmic—each revealing a different truth about what it means to be human.

The Universe

The Universe

This week on Three Tune Tuesday we go a little cosmic with “The Universe,” tracing a quiet arc from wonder to reach to trust. We open with “Underneath the Stars” (1915), a secular nocturne that lingers on night air and distant light—humankind gazing up and asking big questions. Then we lift off with “Come, Josephine, in My Flying Machine” (1910/11), the giddy early-aviation fantasy where romance and technology climb skyward together. We land with “Whispering Hope,” the enduring parlor hymn that softens the room and lets us place a little faith in the order of things. Three sides, one journey—from looking at the stars, to reaching for them, to listening for their answer.

Halloween Special

Halloween Special

This week we celebrate Halloween with a guest! Cousin Gustav Femur joins Boneapart for a celebration of all things spooky.

Bravery

Bravery

Dedicated to the #nokings movement. Bravery.

Songs of Protest - Let Freedom Ring

Songs of Protest - Let Freedom Ring

In this week’s Three Tune Tuesday, we explore the thin line between patriotism and protest — those moments when loyalty to one’s country means daring to question it. Long before protest songs filled coffeehouses and picket lines, defiance lived in the guise of anthems and ballads. From The Battle Cry of Freedom’s rally for liberty, to The Minstrel Boy’s quiet defiance through art, to My Country ’Tis of Thee, a hymn reclaimed again and again by voices demanding America live up to its promise, these recordings remind us that resistance doesn’t always shout. Sometimes, it sings in harmony.

Moonlight

Moonlight

This week, Blind Skeleton lifts a glass to the full moon—and to love that’s weathered a few of them. On this Supermoon evening, we trace how the moonlight wove itself into the music of the early 1900s: from the dreamy hush of Neil Moret’s “Moonlight Serenade” to the warm harmonies of “By the Light of the Silvery Moon”, and finally to the joyous barn-dance energy of Arthur Pryor’s “Shine On, Harvest Moon”.

Renaissance

Renaissance

This week’s Three Tune Tuesday takes its cue from a day that began at the Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire, detoured through a kilted stroll, and ended with an Oktoberfest stein. Our theme follows that same arc: we open with a Renaissance court dance, the Gagliarda, brought to life by Toscanini and La Scala; we leap to Scotland with Jules Levy’s sparkling cornet solo on The Blue Bells of Scotland, a nod to the tartan I wore; and we close with Geraldine Farrar’s 1912 recording of Wonnevoller Mai, o komm herbei, a German song that toasts both springtime joy and beer-hall cheer. From Renaissance leaps to Scottish brass to German song, it’s a journey across time, place, and pint glasses.

Justice in the Court of Song

Justice in the Court of Song

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we step into the witness box for “Justice in the Court of Song.” From Vernon Dalhart’s mournful The Prisoner’s Song to Billy Murray’s cheeky Prohibition jab How Are You Goin’ to Wet Your Whistle?, and Fred Hillebrand’s sly social satire Ain’t We Got Fun, these records remind us that music has always doubled as testimony, protest, and cross-examination. Join Boneapart and Yulia as they explore how early 1920s hits laughed at the law, mourned its judgments, and poked holes in society’s supposed order.

Boneaparts Favourites

Boneaparts Favourites

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, Boneapart shares three of his all-time favorite records: the exotic fox trot “Egyptland” by the Six Brown Brothers, the barnyard mayhem of “Livery Stable Blues” by the Original Dixieland Jass Band, and the thunderous “Anvil Chorus” from Verdi’s Il Trovatore, performed by the New York Light Opera Company. Somehow, Suzanne and Boneapart spin a full hour of stories, history, and banter out of just these three tracks—proof that even the smallest playlist can open the door to big conversations about the birth of jazz, the rise of the saxophone, and opera’s unlikely place on early 78s.

Labour Day

Labour Day

To mark Labour Day, we trace a line from quiet graft to collective thunder: Stanley Kirkby’s “The Farmer’s Boy” (1912, Beka-Grand-Record) opens with rural work ethic and upward hope; Alan Turner’s “The Village Blacksmith” (Victor) hammers out craft pride and debtless independence; and Chaliapin’s “Dubinushka” (HMV DA 621, 1924) lifts a hauling chant into a rallying cry. In our unscripted meander we dip into the holiday’s origins, swap label lore (Beka’s Berlin–London pipeline, Victor quirks, HMV’s red-label sheen), and let three sides carry the week from sweat and skill to solidarity.

International Relations

International Relations

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we’re taking a trip across borders with an “International Relations” theme — but not the kind fought with guns and flags. Instead, we follow how early 20th-century popular music imagined, borrowed, and sometimes outright distorted the sounds of “foreign” places. From the faux-exotic fox-trot of Hindustan (1918), to the heartfelt Latin American cry of Ay, Ay, Ay (1920), to the global journey of La Paloma (1902) — one of the first true international pop songs — we explore how music both connected cultures and flattened them into stereotypes. It’s a story of whitewashing, longing, and cross-cultural love, told through three spins of the shellac.

Music we Learned from Cartoons

Music we Learned from Cartoons

This week’s Three Tune Tuesday isn’t about concert halls or high culture. It’s about the tunes we first met through Bugs Bunny in drag, Elmer Fudd in a horned helmet, and Daffy Duck pounding a piano. Music we learned from cartoons.

Non Sousa Marches

Non Sousa Marches

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we’re marching to a different beat — and it’s definitely not Sousa’s. We’ve lined up three bold, cheeky, and slightly irreverent marches that trade rigid patriotism for a wink and a grin. From the circus-crazed chaos of Entry of the Gladiators, to the clapping, stomping revelry of Radetzky March, and finally the sly, end-of-the-parade strut of The Gladiator’s Farewell, these tunes prove that a march doesn’t have to salute the regime — sometimes it can just laugh in time to the music.

Sousa Marches

Sousa Marches

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we dive into the world of Sousa marches — not just as music, but as cultural artifacts. From the bold nationalism of The Stars and Stripes Forever to the disciplined dignity of Semper Fidelis, and finally to the unexpectedly comedic afterlife of The Liberty Bell, we explore what marches were meant to do, who they were meant to move, and how their meanings have shifted over time. It's a journey through patriotism, power, and the strange ways symbols evolve — all in three tunes.

Disobedient Women

Disobedient Women

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we tip our hats (and rattle some cages) with a theme that’s long overdue: Disobedient Women. From flappers and vaudeville queens to blues legends who lived out loud, we spin three songs that chart a quiet revolution—women stepping out, speaking up, and refusing to be small. You’ll hear about Rebecca, who came back from Mecca with a scandalous new spirit; Eva Tanguay, who just flat-out didn’t care; and Ma Rainey, who shattered every mold with a song too bold for her time. It’s satire, song, and side-eye for the patriarchy—and we’re not sorry.

Outsiders

Outsiders

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we turn our ear to the outsiders — the wanderers, the exiled, and the forgotten. From a lonesome American drifter to a Siberian prisoner and a mother mourning her lost son, these early recordings echo with the voices of those who don’t quite belong. Whether cast out, worn down, or simply left behind, each song carries the weight of life on the margins. Join us for three vintage tracks that ask: who gets to belong, and who gets left out in the cold?

Rebellious Laughter

Rebellious Laughter

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we celebrate Rebellious Laughter — the kind that exposes ego, hypocrisy, and the absurdity of social masks. Our three tunes come from the early 1900s, but their targets feel timeless. First up, “I Love Me (I’m Wild About Myself)” is a vanity-fueled romp that skewers self-obsession with a wink and a waltz. Then, Bert Williams delivers “Nobody”, a quietly brilliant satire about being forgotten, ignored, and expected to keep smiling — a song as relevant now as it was in 1906. We close with “He Goes to Church on Sunday”, Billy Murray’s cheerful takedown of moral hypocrisy, where showing up in a pew is enough to excuse a week of bad behavior. Together, these songs remind us that joy can be a form of resistance — especially when it calls out the nonsense with a grin.

Workers Songs

Workers Songs

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we’re rolling up our sleeves and diving into songs of sweat, steel, and solidarity. From the pounding drills of Irish railroad workers, to the rousing toasts of weary students, to the thunderous celebration at the forge, these tunes remind us that hard work is a universal rhythm. Whether it’s toil for wages or the shared struggles of daily life, today’s set spans borders and centuries—but every song rings with the sounds of labor and perseverance.

Freedom, eh?

Freedom, eh?

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we celebrate freedom with three pre-1925 gems. “The Canadian Guns” brings a blast of patriotic pride, echoing Canada’s military legacy. “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” captures everyday liberty through baseball’s simple joy. And “Canadian Capers,” a jaunty foxtrot, dances us into the upbeat spirit of postwar freedom. From marching bands to jazz bands, it's a brisk stroll through North American liberty in sound.

June 24 Songs that were Co opted

June 24 Songs that were Co opted

In this episode of Three Tune Tuesday, we dive into songs that didn’t mean the way we mean them today. Each tune started with a clear intent—mockery, freedom, defiance—and then history took the wheel. “Yankee Doodle” was a British joke that became an American anthem. “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” was a coded cry for liberation, now sung in sports arenas. And “The Battle Cry of Freedom” was a Union rallying song, rewritten by Confederates with the same melody. Through these three tracks, we explore how music travels—across time, across causes, and sometimes across the line of its original meaning.

June 17 Father Figures

June 17 Father Figures

We're celebrating Father's Day this week! Boneapart and Yulia spend the week talking about dads, fathers, father figures, and, of course, music!

DEI - Blind Skeleton Style

DEI - Blind Skeleton Style

In response to the U.S. Navy’s recent decision to rename ships originally honoring figures like Harriet Tubman and Harvey Milk, this episode of Three Tune Tuesday—“Erased but Not Forgotten”—features three pre-1925 records that speak louder than silence. With non-English and racially coded titles, La Paloma, The French Trot, and Darktown Strutters’ Ball serve as melodic rebukes to a whitewashed vision of history. These songs, recorded by Mexican, multicultural, and Black artists, reflect the true roots of American music and the deep legacy of diversity that no government directive can erase.

Billy Murray

Billy Murray

We're celebrating Billy Murray's birthday this week! We have three songs, ranging from Patriotic for Memorial Day, to Americana, and just plain old fun.

Opera

Opera

UntitledThis week on Three Tune Tuesday, we raise the curtain on a genre often dismissed as dusty and elitist — but trust us, opera’s got bite. We're diving into arias that hit like pop ballads, thrill like thrillers, and joke like vaudeville.You’ll hear:John McCormack’s tender take on Puccini’s La Bohème — a poet’s love story set in bohemian Paris.Enrico Caruso’s swaggering rendition of La donna è mobile — a courtly banger full of charm and cynicism.Titta Ruffo’s show-stopping Largo al factotum — the operatic equivalent of shotgunning an espresso and winking at the camera.These recordings are over 100 years old, but the drama, flair, and emotion still ring out loud and clear. So whether you're new to opera or just like your tenors vintage, come join us for a little love, a little betrayal, and a lot of vibrato.

Holy Troublemakers

Holy Troublemakers

A cranky farmer, a striking worker, and a gospel quartet walk into the 20th century—and come out swinging.From labor unions to hymnbooks, we're marching to the beat of righteous resistance.

Celebration

Celebration

It's time to celebrate! There was global pushback this week against the rising tide of extremism and fascism, and we are here to celebrate!

Stoicism as Revolution

Stoicism as Revolution

UntitMarcus Aurelius turns 1,904 this week, and we’re celebrating with three pre‑1925 shellac gems that trace a Stoic hero’s journey—from public revolt, through reflective calm, to unbreakable inner resolve.led

The Quiet Rebellion of Holding On: Hope and Perseverance

The Quiet Rebellion of Holding On: Hope and Perseverance

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we step gently into the long, slow resistance of endurance. Against a backdrop of political erosion and cultural fatigue, we turn to three early 20th-century recordings that whisper instead of roar — songs that offer spiritual grounding, forward momentum, and the healing power of shared memory. From a parlor hymn of self-realignment to a Highland traveler's ballad, and finally to a balm born of Black spiritual resilience, this episode is for anyone who’s felt like giving up… and decided to sing instead. Featuring Olive Kline & Elsie Baker’s 1922 duet of “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing”, Robert Murray’s 1924 journey along “The Road to the Isles” (Aco Records), and the 1914 recording of “There Is a Balm in Gilead” by the Fisk Jubilee Quartet.

Defiance as the American Pulse

Defiance as the American Pulse

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we crank up the victrola and tune into the timeless spirit of defiance—not just as a reaction, but as a rhythm pulsing through American history. From the railroad tracks to the dance halls, from the front lines of war to the backrooms of resistance, defiance has always had a soundtrack—and tonight, we’re dropping the needle on three of its most unforgettable grooves.

Barking Mad! Jazz Jesters and Barkin' Blues

Barking Mad! Jazz Jesters and Barkin' Blues

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we slip on banana peels and land squarely in the middle of a jazz-fueled circus. From barking blues to piano-pounding hijinks, these three tunes capture the wonderfully unhinged spirit of early jazz and novelty records that laughed their way through the phonograph horn.You’ll hear:A musical riot from the Six Brown Brothers, where Aunt Dinah’s daughter Hannah unleashes absolute piano pandemonium.A howlin’, growlin’ romp courtesy of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band in “Bow Wow Blues.”And the clarinet chaos of Wilbur Sweatman, who gleefully sidesteps the doggone blues with a grin and a toot.So take off your serious face and put on your dancing shoes—this one’s for the jesters, the jazzers, and anyone who’s ever tapped their toe to a barking saxophone.

Fuck Tyranny: A Vintage Howl

Fuck Tyranny: A Vintage Howl

Three songs from before 1925, stitched into a fierce, unflinching reflection on power, resistance, and the long memory of music.️ Warning: Tramp! Tramp! Tramp!️ Exposure: Old Hundredth Action: La MarseillaiseTyrants always forget: the people sing.We sang in chains.We sang in revolutions.We’re still singing now.

Harriet Tubman

Harriet Tubman

Last week was Harriet Tubman Day in the United States. Harriet Tubman was a former slave who led dozens of other slaves to freedom using the Underground Railroad. In this episode we talk about some of the songs they used both as hidden messages as well as songs of hope.

International Women's Day

International Women's Day

We're celebrating International Women's Day with three songs from some great female composers. We’ve got a vaudeville siren, a Nordic mystic, and a Parisian virtuoso. Tune in and listen!

Family

Family

A recent death in the family inspired this week's theme of family. Join Boneapart and Yulia as they discuss the issues, share some songs of love and sorrow and, ultimately, end on a humourous note.

Ragtime

Ragtime

Black History Month continues at Blind Skeleton with a discussion of ragtime music, it's origins, and it's influence on the upcoming music style known as "jazz."

Early Blues Women

Early Blues Women

It's Black History Month! Boneapart and Yulia begin to celebrate by sharing and discussing some very early Blues by black women, including the first ever recording of a blues some by a black woman!

Cats

Cats

Celebrating a feline loss, Boneapart and Yulia talk about the history of "cats" and share some cat-inspired pre-1925 music.

Civic Duty

Civic Duty

Boneapart and Yulia conclude their monthlong examination of Rights and Responsibilities with a discussion around Civic Duty as seen through the lens of 100+ year old songs.

Universal Suffrage

Universal Suffrage

Boneapart and Yulia continue their reflections on rights and obligations with a discuss of Women's and Universal Suffrage as seen through the lens of three songs over 100 years old.

Rights

Rights

Join Boneapart and Yulia this week as they play, and discuss, three songs based on the concept of rights and human rights.

American History

American History

Boneapart and Yulia ring in the New Year with an American History inspired Three Tune Tuesday. Come listen, laugh, learn, and enjoy some old music with them.

New Years Eve

New Years Eve

It was New Years Eve! Boneapart and Yulia had a live show. This is it!