Episode Details
Back to EpisodesEpisode 20: Amused by Music’s Muses | The Women Behind Classic Rock’s Greatest Songs
Description
With Valentine’s Day around the corner, this episode explores the real women who lived inside some of the most enduring songs ever written.
Not metaphors.
Not mythology.
Real relationships that shaped melody, lyric, and legacy.
From Pattie Boyd, the quiet center of George Harrison’s “Something” and the storm behind Eric Clapton’s “Bell Bottom Blues” and “Layla,” to Edie Sedgwick’s fragile glamour hovering over Bob Dylan’s “Just Like a Woman.”
From Jane Asher’s domestic partnership with Paul McCartney during the writing of “Here, There and Everywhere,” and the tension beneath “We Can Work It Out,” to Marianne Faithfull’s presence in the wreckage surrounding The Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” “Wild Horses,” and “Sister Morphine.”
And finally, Rosanna Arquette, whose name became the polished centerpiece of Toto’s Grammy-winning “Rosanna,” where longing no longer unraveled but arrived perfectly mixed and mastered.
These songs chart more than romance.
They capture emotional posture.
Tonight’s featured cocktail is The Muse, a refined cognac cocktail layered with Cointreau, fresh lemon juice, honey syrup, and orange bitters. Structured. Reflective. Just sweet enough to remember why it mattered.
Because a muse is never passive.
She is catalytic.
And long after the relationship changes, the melody remains.
Who Ordered the Pie? a music history podcast with custom cocktail pairings.
Show notes, recipes, and extras: WhoOrderedThePie.com
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