meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
History on Fire

EPISODE 11 Caravaggio (Part 1): Light and Darkness

History on Fire

Daniele Bolelli

Society & Culture

4.75.9K Ratings

🗓️ 18 August 2016

⏱️ 116 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

During a visit to a church in Sicily, a priest offered Caravaggio “holy water”. Caravaggio asked the old priest what it was for. “It will cancel your venial sins, my son,” replied the priest. “Then it’s no use—Caravaggio commented—My sins are all mortal.” Giles Lambert about Caravaggio and his friends “They provoked the Papal police, hung around with the many Roman women of easy virtue, drank excessively and frightened the bourgeoisie.” He was the greatest artist of his age, and also an outlaw whose passion for hookers was only second to his propensity for ending up in jail. Caravaggio was equally talented with paint and canvas as he was with the sword and with the art of breaking out prison. With the same hand with which he painted the most amazing masterpieces of the Renaissance, he stabbed pimps and bludgeoned cops. His art was as scandalous as his life: he brought a lowbrow brand of violent realism and sexuality to the traditional religious subjects that were commissioned by the Church: imagine Quentin Tarantino painting scenes from the Bible. But the more the elite hated him, the more the common people adored him. No painter of his day—and probably ever—was able to have such a magnetic effect on masses of people. This first part of the tale features a plague killing most of Caravaggio’s family, attempts at theocracy in the Milan of the late 1500s, the Italian Robin Hood Marco di Sciarra, street life in Rome, “no hope-no fear”, the Cenci execution, and Caravaggio becoming a superstar of the Roman art scene. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Whether you like history or not, if you care about bravery, wisdom, passion, larger than

0:06.9

life characters, and some of the most emotionally intense moments in human experience, you've

0:11.4

come to the right place.

0:12.7

Dan Yellibul-Melli is a university history professor, writer, and martial artist, and he

0:17.2

shall be your guide in a journey to the place where history and epic collide.

0:30.0

Dan Yellibul-Melli is a university history professor, writer, and art.

0:40.0

Dan Yellibul-Melli is a university history professor, writer, and art.

0:48.0

Let's go say history on fire.

1:06.6

There's a popular baseball legend that holds the Beberuth in the 15th-ing of Game 3 of the

1:13.0

1932 World Series, pointed to word of bleachers, and right after this he hit a homerun in that

1:19.6

exact same direction, giving a rise to the story that he had called his own shot, essentially

1:26.0

promising a homerun before he actually delivered it.

1:29.3

There's quite a bit of controversy over this, whether this was actually what Rose

1:34.3

was doing when just during word of bleachers, but whether this story is historically accurate

1:41.0

or not, it sure is a beautiful tale.

1:45.0

There's some wonderful romantic quality to the idea of a player having this over-the-top

1:50.4

level of confidence as to cool his own shot before he does.

1:57.8

Why am I telling you this?

2:00.0

Because in a moment of temporary insanity, Iran cooled in my own shot.

2:05.6

Some episodes are clearly better than others.

2:08.5

There's a natural ebony flow to the quality of one's work.

2:12.1

Here I'm going on a limb and calling a homerun on this series before we even start.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Daniele Bolelli, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Daniele Bolelli and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.