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Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon

Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon

By: Sean Dillon | Beyond the Mic
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I believe every person has value. Behind every headline, hustle, hard-earned moment, and family tales there’s a story worth sharing. That’s why I built Beyond the Mic. I talk with artists, athletes, authors, icons and people you need to know. I don’t do puff pieces. I ask questions that get to the real stuff: the doubts, wins, detours, and moments that shaped them. The stories that you normally don't get to hear. Some stories make you laugh. Some hit you in the gut. All of them remind you: people matter, you matter. I’m not here to be famous. I’m here helping others be heard. I want curiosity to run free, connect communities, and make something that sticks with you long after the mic is off. Because in a world full of noise, real stories still cut through. That's my mission. Let's go #BeyondTheMic. New Episodes Weekly! This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp© 2025 SM 2025 Dog Drool Holdings LLC All rights reserved Art Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Kenny Wayne Shepherd on Going Back to the Beginning — and What Thirty Years Actually Changes
    Jun 8 2026
    "Nobody pushed me to become the musician I am. I did it because I loved it." — Kenny Wayne ShepherdKenny Wayne Shepherd recorded his debut album at seventeen, drove to Memphis on weekends to track it, and went platinum before he could legally drink. Thirty years later, he went back in with the same guitars, the same amps, and a band that's spent three decades living inside these songs.Ledbetter Heights: The 30th Anniversary Sessions is the result — not a reissue, not a recreation, but a natural evolution of the record that launched one of blues rock's most enduring careers.In this episode, Kenny talks about why he recorded it again (there's a business reason and a real reason — he gives you both), what it was like to finally hear Noah Hunt sing songs Hunt had never recorded before, and how a seven-year-old standing on an amp case in Shreveport watching Stevie Ray Vaughan became the whole story.He also gets into the long creative partnership with Noah Hunt, what it actually takes to keep a band together for nearly thirty years, and why he thinks blues is experiencing another surge right now — and why that surge always happens the same way.Plus: Bobby Rush at ninety-two, Bob Dylan's catering, and the daughter who just graduated valedictorian while her dad was busy making records at her age.Ledbetter Heights: The 30th Anniversary Sessions is out now. Find Kenny Wayne Shepherd at kennywayneShepherd.com .Welcome Kenny Wayne Shepherd:We’re joined on the Starline by a blues-rock guitarist who recorded his debut album at 17, drove to Memphis on weekends to track it, and went Platinum before he could legally drink. Thirty years later he's back with the same songs, same mission, but a different man. “Ledbetter Heights: The 30th Anniversary Sessions” is out now. We welcome Kenny Wayne Shepherd.Kenny, let’s go Beyond the Mic. You went back to your original 1995 rig for these sessions, same guitar, same gear you used to cut the first version. What did it feel like to plug in and be back in that sound after 30 years?This record already existed. It went Platinum. You didn't have to do this. So what's the real reason you re-recorded it? Not the business reason, the one that actually made you go through with it?Noah Hunt has been with you for almost 30 years, and now he's on this record singing songs he never sang before. When you finally heard him on these tracks was there a moment where it just locked in and felt right, or was it more gradual than that?The Rockin' 8: “Ledbetter Heights: The 30th Anniversary Sessions” is the album and Kenny Wayne Shepherd joins us Beyond the Mic for the Rockin’ 8, 8 random questions, just trust your first instinct. There is no Pressure. 1. Your dad had a radio station and backstage access to everything. Is there a show you saw as a kid, before you were playing yourself, that you still think about? (SRV Double Trouble)2. At 13 you got up onstage with Bryan Lee in New Orleans and stayed up there until 4 A.M.. What did you eat after that or did you pass out?3. You graduated from Caddo Magnet High School in Shreveport. While you also were recording a debut album and driving to Memphis on weekends to track it. What's the course you could have studied harder back then? (none of that matter, math is never fun) loved art class4. Your wedding was performed entirely in Latin. Do you actually speak Latin?5. You've toured with Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, Van Halen, Lynyrd Skynyrd. Which one of those bands had the most insane backstage setup? Bob Dylan had the best catering6. You've said your mission since your first deal was to spread the word about blues musicians who inspired you. Name one who doesn't get nearly enough credit. (bobby rush)7. You spent 10 days going door-to-door recording blues legends in their homes, juke joints, front porches. What's the smell you still associate with one of those sessions? Exhaust from the bus8. Which of your six kids is the best guitarist? (doesn’t know)The Back Half:I think about what it meant for your dad to hand you access to that world, and now you're on the other side of it. When one of your kids picks up an instrument, or doesn't, what goes through your head?You didn't have a lead singer, you had Corey Sterling, and then you didn't. Then you found Noah Hunt and he's been with you nearly 30 years. What does it actually take for two people to stay in a creative partnership that long without it going sideways?The blues has always lived at the margins of mainstream culture. You've spent your career pulling it toward the center. Do you think you've actually moved the needle or does it keep sliding back? Your daughter just graduated valedictorian. You were in Memphis cutting a record at her age. When you watch her step into that special moment, does any part of you wonder what direction your life might have gone if you'd taken a different road?One Big Question:You were seven years old. Your dad promoted a festival, and ...
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    15 mins
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