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Pressed Wax

Pressed Wax

De : Maya and Terrence
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Every song you've ever loved has a secret history. A bedroom producer who broke open a piggy bank to pay for studio time. A DJ who spent thirty years in underground clubs before the biggest pop star alive finally called. A beat that sat on a shelf for eight years waiting for its moment. The stories are always there — pressed into the groove, underneath the hook, behind the credits. Most of them never get told.


Pressed Wax goes deep. Each episode, hosts Maya and Terrence take one song, one album, or one artist and trace every thread: who made it, what it cost them, what was happening in the world when it landed, and why it still matters. Production forensics. Biographical deep cuts. Cultural criticism that reframes what you thought you knew. No genre limits. No era restrictions. Just the stories that change how you hear the music.


New episodes weekly. Full season arcs on landmark albums. For the people who read liner notes before they press play.

Stories pressed into the groove.

© 2026 Pressed Wax
Épisodes
  • The Portal — Beyoncé's Renaissance, Tracks 1–3. Pressed Wax – Episode 1
    Feb 23 2026

    In 2022, Beyoncé broke six years of silence with an album cover, a disco-ball horse, and a 62-minute argument about the soul of dance music. Renaissance wasn't a comeback — it was a correction. And it starts with three tracks that lay the entire blueprint.

    "I'm That Girl" opens with the voice of Princess Loko — a Memphis rapper who recorded her first verses at fourteen, ran with Tommy Wright III's crew in the mid-nineties, and passed away in 2020 with barely a headline written about her. Two years later, her voice opens the most anticipated album of the decade. We trace the sample back to its source: bedroom four-tracks, RadioShack microphones, a piggy bank broken open to pay for studio time, and a local tape economy that accidentally invented a genre.

    "Cozy" brings us to Honey Dijon — a Black trans woman who grew up on Chicago's South Side sneaking into the clubs where house music was being born. She carried that culture through thirty years of being marginalized within the very scene she helped build. When Beyoncé's team called, she had to pick her jaw up off the ground. Alongside her, TS Madison — a trans activist whose raw YouTube monologue became a rallying cry — lands a top 40 hit. Together, they make Billboard history.

    "Alien Superstar" is the coronation. Twenty-four credited writers. A sample from a deep house DJ who operated in New Jersey's four-in-the-morning club circuit. A Right Said Fred interpolation that nobody saw coming. And a cultural debate about what songwriting even means when the biggest pop star alive builds music like a film director marshaling a cast.

    Three tracks. Three origin stories. The portal is open.

    Tags

    Beyoncé, Renaissance, Princess Loko, Tommy Wright III, Memphis rap, Honey Dijon, Chicago house, TS Madison, Foremost Poets, Right Said Fred, Kelman Duran, music history, deep dive

    Chapter Markers

    • 00:00 — Cold Open: The album cover and the mission
    • 01:30 — Theme
    • 02:00 — "I'm That Girl": Princess Loko and the Memphis underground
    • 15:00 — Call-In: The sample as resurrection
    • 18:00 — "Cozy": Honey Dijon, TS Madison, and who built the dance floor
    • 25:00 — Call-In: What representation looks like with real money behind it
    • 28:00 — "Alien Superstar": Twenty-four writers and the Diane Warren debate
    • 34:00 — Call-In / Coda: The portal as thesis statement
    • 38:00 — Sign-Off
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    34 min
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