I took a walk the other day and heard some young kids playing in their garage. It was loud, distorted, their timing was off, and it was some of the best music I've heard in a while. It sounded human. They were clearly having fun. You could feel their joy.
@xxgbsxxlegacy93893 жыл бұрын
Lmao it was loud distorted and their timing was off😂😂😂😂 I love it
@gilmarriner30113 жыл бұрын
Neil Young.....the original garage band. It doesn’t get any better than just banging away on the guitar. Play cinnamon girl and you‘ll get what I mean
@gkiss20303 жыл бұрын
Later on, they became famous with the name 'Blink 182'. :)
@nickosventuras89813 жыл бұрын
And you could find it, or anything like it, nowhere near the streaming charts...
@devinslurry3653 жыл бұрын
You should have stopped in. People love that generally speaking.
@kickbiker79203 жыл бұрын
One would think Rick and Tim would come across as jaded and bitter BUT their enthusiasm comes shining through the screen. This is a perfect example of age being just a number. These guys sound like clued up twenty-somethings. I LOVE listening to Rick and whomever he brings on, a special mention for Tim Pierce. He's an exceptional person to listen to, both musically and verbally. He's superb!
@secaucuss73443 жыл бұрын
Still if Rick says the words "Billie" and "Eilish" in close proximity, a spell will be cast on the whole of his Atlanta-rooted Rivendell.
@automachinehead3 жыл бұрын
Music making is dead. It's dead. Every single page of it has already been opened and all that is coming out now are an admixture of rehashed, recycled samples from genres of the past.
@Virtual-Media3 жыл бұрын
That country song about a guy being happy down a dirt road with a little house next to a pond was performed by someone living in a three-story home with a pool and $90,000 truck parked on a concrete driveway.
@harrysachs22743 жыл бұрын
It should be pointed out that it's modern country he's talking about. Outlaw country is about pain, trains, and honky tonks.
@wd25a3 жыл бұрын
Rappers and R&B stars are full of it too, "keeping it real" "still got the love for the streets" - yeah, the streets with the mansions with electric gates and personal butlers.
@daveduffy28232 жыл бұрын
Modern country is bad 80’s music rehashed to death.
@billr553 жыл бұрын
So the moral of the story ... 1. Make music because you love to and because it's fun 2. No excuses because entry to recording [or playing] what you want is available at a low price. 3. Enjoy the process of growth because this is a multifaceted craft that gets deeper through the years 4. Don't quit your day job because there's not much to be made in the industry. Refer to point 1 to keep motivated.
@willgo78983 жыл бұрын
Well stated. Don't expect to be compensated monetarily for your music today ... that's the reality. Do it because you want to. I don't expect to make anything playing golf. Enjoy the whatever, for the love of doing it, for learning something new, for getting better, for connecting to some thing - someone.
@samxday3 жыл бұрын
Spot on 😎
@Nightwinflyer3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. The illusion of the rock star has faded...the thing MTV programmed into all us young guitar players is dead. What's left for me is how much fun it is writing songs and having the equivalent of multi-million dollar 1980's studio in my spare bedroom.
@samxday3 жыл бұрын
@@Nightwinflyer amazes me constantly. Laptop studio. Hello 16-yr old me. Laptop. Studio. 🤯
@Barbaste3 жыл бұрын
The moral is quit pop if you care about music -it's over.
@johndukeoneill3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for bringing back Tim. He has so much knowledge and always has a great attitude.
@JohnLnyc3 жыл бұрын
He does have his own YT channel. Really great with Rick though.
@bradmodd78563 жыл бұрын
Smiling assasin....certainly was the go to guy for a lot of 90s hits...I have to say that in 2021 a lot of guitar players can do what he does....but back then he was ahead of the pack...maybe we learnt all his tricks without knowing it
@thekolt5333 жыл бұрын
Best explanation of what the music industry was, has become and how it got here I've ever seen from two people I have massive respect for!!
@wildvinesmusic3 жыл бұрын
Tim makes a lot of sense. Modern vocalists are like 80's guitar shredders. Personally, I prefer the space between the vocals.
@ricardojmestre3 жыл бұрын
Great comparison
@grimooze83653 жыл бұрын
not all but yeah
@kevindennis80423 жыл бұрын
Rick I could listen to you and Tim talk for hours.
@AcidicDelusion3 жыл бұрын
For absolutely fucking hours. 🎸
@caiusmadison29963 жыл бұрын
I think we have over the year. Especially over this year. Tons of sit downs with these two posted this year, I wish Rick would compile all chats with Tim into a list. They are way better conversation than many music channels.
@gigibolani47123 жыл бұрын
indeed
@JeffRage3 жыл бұрын
Agreed!
@Swordshreader3 жыл бұрын
Same!!!
@chrispschultz3 жыл бұрын
Really appreciate the channel. The problem with the industry and you touched on it briefly is Music no longer has value to the public. People want access and convenience at little to no cost. I don’t know how to remedy this issue and convincing every musician to protest or strike wouldn’t work.
@smileneck3 жыл бұрын
The best line: A ambitious person with a laptop making tracks for a singer that wants to be a celebrity.
@Falstaff-mr8fk3 жыл бұрын
It’s amazing if you watch those singing competition shows not one of the contestants state when asked what their goal is that they want to be the best singer/artist they can be. They all say they want to be famous/ a celebrity.
@AMPProf3 жыл бұрын
got talent!
@dakotawinston76773 жыл бұрын
I liked “it’s the tail wagging the dog”!
@treetopjones7373 жыл бұрын
Those shows manipulate, like all "reality" shows, and then at least some of them even autotune the performers.
@ProdByZetro1003 жыл бұрын
In some cases the artist that wants to a celebrity is also the ambitious person with the lap
@streetwiseguitar51133 жыл бұрын
This is BY FAR the best Tim Pierce piece of video out of every video he's ever done. He is FINALLY unreserved, no holds barred and unabridged. How un-Los Angeles of you, Tim! lol ;-). BE MORE LIKE THIS - all the time!!!!! Rick, great questions and prompting! Keep 'er lit, lads!
@Joel_Powell3 жыл бұрын
He was no holds barred a couple times on their New Years Eve conversation. It was the most interesting conversation I heard on a a New Years Eve ever! (Pete Thorn was awesome too, and Tosin...).
@tomrabbani3 жыл бұрын
@@drewjohnson4794 what do you think his true opinion is, that might be called nazi?
@thesuncollective14753 жыл бұрын
I can relate..was in a 90s band and now Songwriter/Producer..resonates completely
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
Very Un-LosAngeles. And being from NY where they tell you HOW MUCH they disagree with you TO YOUR FACE, it was unnerving to see such blank stares in so many faces when I have been in L.A. It's one thing to keep your opinion to yourself..it's another to unlearn having any opinion.
@tomrabbani3 жыл бұрын
@@Nelsonisms yeah I just think when people say "get called Nazis for having an opinion" its usually an opinion that is hateful towards others, which is something, coincidentally, the Nazis were!
@Hollowsmith3 жыл бұрын
As a boomer, here are the Top 10 Reasons (in no particular order) that most (not all) pop music sucks today: #1- Quantization. When the pacing of a song has no variation at all, it takes away the swagger of subtle rises and falls of energy in a song that are actually audible and awesome to the listener. #2- Lyric quality. In a world as crazy as the one today, there's incredible opportunity for powerful messaging in lyrics. Listen the lyrical sophistication of Dylan's "It's Alright Ma" or the Beatle's "Eleanor Rigby" and compare it to today's lyrics. What a staggering dropoff. #3- Looping. Because loop stations are making it possible for a weak musician to take 100 tries to nail just 4 measures, then 100 more takes to nail another layer on those 4 measures and so on, there's fewer and fewer musicians being raised on equipment where they're thinking of sound as a long-form, non-repeating compositioon. Making for some extremely repetitive song structures. #4- The death of live recording. When you listen to some of the great 60's and 70's tracks, what you're hearing is a band in a room playing a song with analog mics. There might be a little mixing and mastering thrown in afterwards and maybe a layer here or there snipped out or in, but it's not 1-instrument-at-a-time recording the way most digital home studios are, and that change is killing the audible energy of musicians interacting with each other in real time. #5- Increased industry profit-sophistication. It used to be, a DJ (even on major radio stations!) actually had large freedom to play what he/she wanted, including entire albums, experimental tracks, 20 minute tracks, etc. But then the industry slowly became profit-sophisticated enough to own the entire listener experience (Clear Channel, etc), and optimize their stations/stores/market spend to whatever would appeal to the most profitable demo, which often is whatever would most appeal to the mind of a minimally thoughtful suburban teen with dad's credit card. #6- The death of mystery. In today's 24/7 digitally connected culture, most signed artists are encouraged to maximize their exposure on Instagram, Twitter, podcasts, promos, fan connections, etc. But what made limited connection amazing in the 70's and 80's is that there was a real underground. There were bands that you had to work within music circles to learn about, and even then, the info on them was sketchy and filled with myth. It's hard to be attracted to the enigma of a band when their members are taking photos of what they had for breakfast each morning on your social media feed. #7- The death of genre culture. A lot of punk musicians in the 70's and 80's were the real deal. They were actually living out of a van nearly broke and playing concerts in dangerous slum bars then getting in fights and trashed after the show. A lot of bands like Traffic and Zeppelin and Captain Beefheart were actually holing up in a remote house in the country and capturing the pastoral, drug-infused vibes for 6 months. A lot of delta blues musicians were playing the reality of their downtrodden lives on a Mississippi front porch at night. Authenticity can be heard. And it's hard to sound authentic in an increasingly homogeneous America where 95% of young people are being raised in a similar boilerplate digital upbringing with Iphones and TikTok videos in a warm safe space house, where voice coaches and talent contests instruct them on how to sound. #8- Production overtaking live musicianship. I mentioned looping and quantization which are sub-categories of this, but more generally, the easier and easier it gets for technologies to airbrush away live musicianship capacity (auto tune, unlimited takes in a bedroom studio, splicing and editing away mistakes, looping and quantization etc), the less and less motivation there is to become incredible first-pass-amazing musicians. Additionally, the more live equipment can aid musicians in this way, the motivation then becomes even less. There's something amazing about a basic microphone, a basic guitar, a basic bass, and a basic set of drums, with no elaborate pedal boards and no team of sound engineers off stage patching together production tricks, and STILL sounding amazing. There's something special about musicians so talented that they don't need any bells and whistles to sound great. #9- Low expectations of the audience. This is sort of a chicken or egg question: "Did musicians dumb down audience expectation, or did audience expectation dumb down musicians?" Regardless, we're at a point now where even IF a musician has a Bohemian Rhapsody or Paranoid Android or Stairway To Heaven in their head, they have to weigh the money and effort in recording something like that, with knowing that's running polar opposite of the simple structures of music selling right now. If you're a financially struggling millennial, you're more inclined to put your effort into something that might become a huge pop hit to make you some money, than something you personally respect more. #10- Less conducive practice spaces for young people. I don't hear enough about this last one. With the price of homes sky-rocketing, especially in bastions of artistic culture along the coasts in America, there's fewer and fewer 19 year olds that can afford to all split the rent of a large urban practice space where they play or live. And there's greater and greater police oversight on things like noise disturbances. On top of this, there's later and later helicopter-parenting into adulthood, where a lot of 18 and 19 year olds move back in with mommy and daddy in semesters between college or out of highschool, instead of all sharing rent in a rural house and getting amazingly right as a band. Generally speaking, the more difficult it becomes for young people to gather away from parental influence, and finance their own sub-cultures in independent young-adult scenes of their own, the less and less likely anything powerful will be captured in their music. Now for the hard part...solutions in how to reverse these trends!
@FlamesAt1000ft3 жыл бұрын
WP SN!!..”The 10!”..👏🏾🎈🎉🎊🏆✨ya hit the mark period!..imo!..(as well) I’m a Elderly Musician now,..a Boomer if you will,..and it’s saddening to know that Music will most likely NEVER get back to the “Human Element” of understanding just why it “touched” so many wide ranges of hearts back thru the years (any genre) than what it does and or how it fits into the lives of folks today.😭😓😰..newer generations will never get it...and we ALL can see why & get there by reading..YOUR “10”‼️ b(‘ _< !)
@krusher743 жыл бұрын
Things need to be hard for the talented ones to rise to the top. Things well never be hard again unless computers are wiped out.
@Oesterreicher943 жыл бұрын
I am a millenial (born in '94) and I totally get all of these points and recognizing them as truth makes me rather sad and angry. I grew up with great music and I am still discovering great "new to me" artists every few months. Music is new to me when I'm discovering it, no matter when it was recorded or produced. And I like music if it sounds original, human, authentic, fun and interesting. Music has to breathe, touch, tell a story or just rock, swing - lift you up, make you think, etc.. But most of these Spotify top-ten "hits" sound so unoriginal, dumb and put together with little to no heart. How can you pick out singers by their voices, if they are trained to sound like a "typical pop singer", being pitch corrected, quantized and 50 takes get spliced together in order to sound flawless? I actually enjoy hearing live performances with mistakes, voice-cracks or slight tempo issues, if the overall vibe just feels good or honestly captivating. I love listening to honest, natural voices and musicians expressing themselves by becoming one with their instruments no matter what genre or era. I love some music composed in the middle ages as well as original music from the 2010s. Jazz, Folk, Metal, Disco, Prog-Rock, excellent "Pop", Classical, Doo-Wop, Blues, you name it. What's really saddening is that many talented and soulful artists who write their own stuff and perform honest and remarkable renditions of songs live also sound fabricated, overly compressed, quantized and pitch corrected on their records. Prime example: Lady Gaga. I absolutely feel reason number 10: I feel like I should have learned an instrument and how to sing well from a young age on, but never really did, although I love singing, drumming away for fun, but my keyboard and guitar are just collecting dust, because I'm busy making a living working in a rather distressing office job and consuming KZbin videos in my free time... the irony is not lost here ;). Crazy times we are living in - I often think about how it must have been growing up in the 50s to mid 90s when people were mostly free of digital media and more kids actually took their time to become great at playing a musical instrument and used those skills to later express their honest innermost feelings coming from their souls and make great art. It's never too late I guess and there's still awesome music and other art being made and you can still choose how to spend your time, but i order to be able to really do this, having rich parents sure helps more than it did 40 years ago - to come back to one of the conversation's points. While writing and editing this so much more comes to my mind as to how I feel about that whole situation - It comes down to being grateful for being able to enjoy so much great music while it's still available, having the opportunity to watch the greats from the past and present performing live and being able create your own art with tools which can really compliment your skills when not being overused.
@KevinPlaysGuitar3 жыл бұрын
Great stuff! Thanks for sharing! Music has changed these days.
@Oesterreicher943 жыл бұрын
@@KevinPlaysGuitar For sure it has, I honestly didn't expect anyone to see or even read this clunky stream of thoughts buried in the sub-comments that fast! But you might as well rather answered to the original post, though. :)
@hortyist13 жыл бұрын
Man... hearing Tim explain it so plain, it makes total sense ...it's fun to listen to people who really know what they're talking about
@BrickWilliamsGuitar3 жыл бұрын
Tim is speaking too much truth for one interview here. He absolutely nailed it.
@mightyV4443 жыл бұрын
And he's always fun to listen to :-)
@daveduffy28232 жыл бұрын
While plugging a Floyd Rose guitar no less.
@artheriford2 жыл бұрын
Tim knows how the business works and knows where things are right now Pro Tools etc have not made this better
@DavidB-rx3km2 жыл бұрын
I love rock music in general and I'm glad it's around, but I'm not into bad rock music at all (like Nickleback, etc), but I would rather have that over really bad laptop celebrity music of today - but it's hard as I'm a 46 year old who had his time and can not change a thing and now it's the next generation's turn and what was good to me in 'my day' wasn't neccessarily good to my parents or their peers compared to what they listened to. I saw two teenage girls in Guitar Centre in Manhattan playing guitars and it was just such a nice thing to see, and we're probably over-tarring everyone with the same brush. A lot of people still like rock music and good, well-written music in general. It's just not currently as profit-making at the moment as laptop celebrity music, and it's all about making quick money for those who are only interested in making money. I'm not worried as there's tonnes of good music still coming out and stuff I haven't even heard yet! Sorry for the long text. 😀
@Evie1703 жыл бұрын
Rock music has made a big comeback in Australia in the past few years. Especially bands from Sydney like DMA's, Ocean Alley and Lime Cordiale. (Also, Spacey Jane, from Fremantle, WA.) They all released successful albums last year and are touring Australia this year. Just saw a Lime Cordiale gig in Melbourne last night. It was incredible, they played to a sold-out venue, and their set was nothing but bangers. 🙆♀️😊 Radio station Triple J has really helped promote rock bands here.
@ojrmusic3 жыл бұрын
Love DMA's!
@ottomattix863 жыл бұрын
DONT FORGET THE CHATS. Now I'm on smoko. SO LEAVE ME ALONE.
@purgie3 жыл бұрын
I know King Gizzard from AUS, there are very good !!
@brianasciak16683 жыл бұрын
i Love, Voyager, 12 Foot Ninja, & Toehider from Australis. been great experience liiving working there. Great nature people food & rock music.
@spb78833 жыл бұрын
“Is today’s music just a laptop and a celebrity?” Replace “music” with “culture” and now you’re talking. This is far beyond a problem for music. This is the culture now.
@adamslawson3 жыл бұрын
Nothing wrong with that
@spb78833 жыл бұрын
@@adamslawson Nothing wrong with celebrating mediocrity?
@spb78833 жыл бұрын
@@ericl6460 I do. What I’m suggesting is that computers have had a fundamentally negative affect on all music.
@geoffnelson45303 жыл бұрын
‘Economics are the driver of the whole thing’ If you want your stuff out there, it’s either YT monetized or Music Industry. Otherwise just play for yourself, friends, family.
@39MercFlathead3 жыл бұрын
What ever happened to that Hilton girl? 🤔 Did she stop being famous for being famous?
@UriKleinman3 жыл бұрын
This conversation is very important to young listeners who are interested about music history. Back in the day, you wanted to be famous with your music but now the PROFESSION is being a celebrity and the songs are the “jingle”, the “advertisement”, the “Commercial” for what your profession which is being a CELEBRITY.
@jaydenhoward86703 жыл бұрын
Yes
@christopher91523 жыл бұрын
Over many decades we have gradually moved from a culture in which you had to actually DO something in some field that enough people thought was excellent to be famous to a culture completely based on surfaces that celebrates what people APPEAR to be.
@robertamcnair51313 жыл бұрын
This is the second episode I've seen with Tim Pierce as Rick's guest, and while I love how Rick takes songs apart to show how they're "great," these episodes are about CREATING music. My brother is a songwriter in Toronto, and my nephew composes and arranges music for films down in LA, after earning a Master's in Composition and Film Scoring from USC. They've both written and arranged for their respective bands, with a strong emphasis on vocals. I grew up with a contralto mother trained in voice at the Boston Conservatory of Music and a father with a mostly untrained but very rich bass-baritone, cultivated in the San Francisco Boys' Chorus. They both sang in the San Francisco Opera Chorus for a number of years, until we demanded too much of their time. My brother and I were exposed to opera, musical theater, classical music, and theater, though my brother and I applied our musical skills to figuring out popular and esoteric music from childhood onward--him on the guitar and in many bands over the years, and me accompanying myself on the piano, performing in bars and coffeehouses. I've always understood music performance, but Rick's conversations with Tim have provided me with a greater understanding of how music has been produced for the last--what?--50 years than I think I could have found anywhere else. I see there are more episodes with Tim Pierce, and you can be sure I'll be watching each one closely. Thanks for all of this, Rick!
@jimijimi42073 жыл бұрын
I'm 27 now, I fell in love with music somehow at the age of 12 and it was American rap, I come from Poland. Mainly rap from the turn of the 80's and 90's. Then, only because of the essay which I was about to do on the Viennese classics, I fell in love with classical music. Then I got to know rock music and now I listen to everything. I have been learning guitar for a year and I love music of all genres.
@hawedehre3 жыл бұрын
That sounds encouraging to me. I play music since 36 years. Started playing Keyboard in a Big Band. So mainly I played this and Jazz Standards, Country Evergreen songs in a Combo of 3 to 5. I had some piano lessons for some years in classical music. I played in a classic rock band, which was great fun but we had only a and full of gigs a year. Then I played in a cover band with 12 people in weddings, beer tents and ball room. So stay interested in music and don't be narrow minded. There is always something to learn and to have fun.
@jimijimi42073 жыл бұрын
@@hawedehre At my age it is difficult to start learning to play a musical instrument, but I still enjoy it. Nowadays I'm mainly interested in rock from the 60's and 70's but I don't close myself to what I used to like
@tonyfondacaro19803 жыл бұрын
Rap from the 80s and 90s sound like classical music compared to the mumble rap of today.
@SzopTuptus3 жыл бұрын
Nice to see someone else from Poland kurwaxd metal head here
@LillyMarz7773 жыл бұрын
(c)rap is not music.
@oldcarya3 жыл бұрын
Wow......the most spot-on analysis of the current music industry. As an independent songwriter I fully agree with your evaluation of today's country music output from Nashville. I may never get a single song recorded or played on the air, but every song I have ever written is from the heart and (in some way or another) from life experience. Regardless, I will continue to create my art even if only for friends and family around the campfire.
@sagnikpaul2333 жыл бұрын
@@ElmanAuthement that "engineer" guy seems to be a genius.
@johnbeamon3 жыл бұрын
This was one of the smartest music conversations I've heard in a while. That ending was tough to absorb, though. Songs compiled of only the hooks, seconds at a time, paid for in millipennies to dozens of people crafting at home around their day jobs.
@bleepblabloop3 жыл бұрын
What Tim is describing about the lyrics in Nashville is similar to what happened with corporate rock/metal in the 80's. people were only able to tolerate "get loaded/get laid" lyrics for so long before everything started to sound contrived and like a caricature of itself. Much of the country music out today has a similar quality.
@deltab97683 жыл бұрын
That gives hope. When most all of country's mainstream lyrics are "I have a pickup truck a bottle of JD and a dog," when most all the mainstream rap /hip-hop says "i'm getting loaded, getting laid, and getting rich quick," and most of the pop (well, most of the rap too) is using all the same sounds as accompaniment, in the same chord progressions of the same notes, then, we will be excited when something new turns up. Streaming might need to go through another drastic change, though, to make that happen.
@caiusmadison29963 жыл бұрын
Especially the bro country movement. So ridiculous. Its comical to me people are serious about that junk. It actually comes off as comedy to me,like they meant it to be funny, but it gets stupid old fast.
@urbangorilla333 жыл бұрын
@John Eric Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings, first and foremost. Add in Townes Van Zandt.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
@John Eric The post war economy ,for many,was quite good.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
@John Eric Luckily, people are allowed to to easily forget all the others. There was alot of crap,too! (and also genius).
@ColorfieldMedia3 жыл бұрын
I'm an artist on Spotify that was not only was signed by the creators of Woodstock as their first indie artist (and written about in one of their books) but had Shelly Yakus (John Lennon, U2) produce my albums as well. Currently working a construction gig and shooting videos as a living lol The old model of music is def dead. This was a very interesting topic....and pretty close to home.
@theonlyredspecial3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating and sad I’m sorry to hear that. Thanks for sharing.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
I agree, def dead. The only silver lining I can find is something John Waite said "The art is now back in charge". I guess it is. It isn't monetized. But it IS art for art's sake.
@doublek3213 жыл бұрын
Do what both Rick and Tim do. Start a channel like Rick where you discuss music topics (in particular your experiences, which people will likely be very interested in) and build up an audience. Then have a 2nd channel where you sell a music training system of some sort.
@lebarbosa97783 жыл бұрын
@@doublek321 oh the music training bubble... ppl learning music to teach music to someone who will learn music to teach music and so on. Those who want to learn guitar as a hobby don't even have to pay for lessons since there are tons of free content online.
@toppepp3 жыл бұрын
No rules need to be obeyed! Make it compelling and people will not be able to resist it. If it draws them in emotionally you’ve done the job.
@anthonyschultz68013 жыл бұрын
this was the MOST INTERESTING conversation ive heard all year!!
@hopehigh36583 жыл бұрын
The year was only seven days old!
@nataliatc13 жыл бұрын
this year i've only showered a few times.
@dougrobinson86023 жыл бұрын
Tim is a gem. He understands the music industry, accepts that he can't change it, and works within the new model. It's so fun to hear him tell stories about some of the artists he's worked with.
@ottovangogh9477 Жыл бұрын
FYI: Rock and Roll is about rebellion, not "accepting" the abhorrent existing norms.
@tom803 жыл бұрын
The comment about endless vocals is what I hate about today's music. I hate the endless runs and voice tricks which are probably auto-tuned anyways.
@blak1lyte3 жыл бұрын
I ABSOLUTELY HATE THAT CRAP TOO!SOOOO FRIGGN FAKE!
@everettewell61673 жыл бұрын
THIS effort to make it sound perfect is ridiculous!Music is an art form. It's not about perfection it's about expression!
@t.sewell15133 жыл бұрын
@@everettewell6167 also character and texture!
@everettewell61673 жыл бұрын
@Dustin Punks. Absolutely!
@dankuchar68213 жыл бұрын
Not probably auto-tuned. All of it is auto-tuned! All of it! It's annoying.
@catchingup63593 жыл бұрын
Easily the best, most thoughtful, conversation about the history and current state of pop music I've heard in a very long time. Bravo!
@johnfrei90573 жыл бұрын
“Music was better when it was not so calculated”. Nailed it!
@jimt8283 жыл бұрын
This is what happens when art becomes a business instead of art for arts sake. Look at other "Artists" Like Dale Chihuly, or Thomas Kinkade or "Authors" like Danielle Steel or Stephen King. All hugely popular, all huge selling and rich. Hell, Chihuly hasn't blown a piece of glass since the 1970's but he still takes full credit and payment for his students work. All produce cold, calculated pablum for the masses. Designed to be cranked out as fast as possible with total disregard to "art" and total regard to money.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
@@jimt828 And it doesn't have to be this way. currently, the audience pay for this mediocrity.
@TheChadPad3 жыл бұрын
Amen. It's happened with movies as well. Too much of a "formula" going on
@alexgarza95483 жыл бұрын
There is non calculated music right now, you just have to support it
@dougrobinson86023 жыл бұрын
@@TheChadPad Your analogy is perfect. Not only are movies rehashing or remaking classic stories and themes, but CGI has ripped the soul right out of movies. Pro Tools and beat detective have done exactly the same thing to music. I am fully prepared to face the "OK, Boomer" I earned with that comment!
@rkress93493 жыл бұрын
Love Rick's programs. Often, like this one, it is just having a person who knows their stuff, are gifted at communication, and sit down and start speaking. You feel like you are at an LA cocktail party and just walking by, stop and luck into this incredible discussion.There is an actual conversation with substance and an exchange of ideas. Here I am just standing there soaking it in. But great thing is you don't have to strain to keep up, or if you don't know a phrase they use, you can stop and go look it up on the internet. You can back up and listen again. OK with this COVID debacle, you have to make your own drink, but when you leave to 'freshened it up' and come back, you have not missed a damn thing. Wonderful party! Thanks, Rick.
@shiva17423 жыл бұрын
I am not a musician. Just a huge fan, but I find this conversation quite fascinating.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
Then I welcome you to what I am doing...music and lyrics for the above average listener.
@Henry-uv9xu3 жыл бұрын
I love hearing Tim Pierce speak. He’s down to earth, knowledgeable, experienced, and, most importantly, agrees with my opinions! 😄
@jacobwilson60183 жыл бұрын
I remember in the 90’s the worst thing you could say about a band was calling them sell-outs. Musicians wanted the music to speak for itself. With how my favorite musicians make money now; they have to sell-out, they have to chase sponsors, and they have to protect their brand. And as such, they can’t be controversial, or breakthrough mold, or anger the algorithm.
@Nocatsmusic3 жыл бұрын
yep, say something meaningful and you get cancelled.
@JoshCaryAudio3 жыл бұрын
They can't be controversial? Did you sleep through 2020?! A song called "Wet Ass Pussy" was named to the top 10 of a ton of critics song of the year lists and no one over the age of 35 could shut the fuck up about how "controversial" it was for months on end.
@jacobwilson60183 жыл бұрын
WAP and all the controversy that followed was a calculated move, and it was right on-brand for her
@JoshCaryAudio3 жыл бұрын
@@jacobwilson6018 yeah, but this directly refutes your statement above. Artists can be as controversial as they want. Case in point, Lil Nas X's latest video. Many people are up in arms because of the imagery in the video. But it isn't going to harm him at all.
@vr-virtualreality88753 жыл бұрын
I love when people talk about these kind of things that often get overlooked!
@MrShimwood3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I was sad when it ended because I wanted to hear more!
@thesuncollective14753 жыл бұрын
I think about it alot...you get 40k streams and earn $20..if it was the 90s it would have been $20k
@vr-virtualreality88753 жыл бұрын
@@thesuncollective1475 Yes I know that some people think about it. What I was saying was that it generally gets overlooked, not that every individual ignores it.
@JonnyZye3 жыл бұрын
*Loved the explanation on why and how the "Classic Rock" sound moved to Nashville. I've been trying to explain this to my older rock friends for years, and they can't seem to accept this fact!*
@TheTerrypcurtin3 жыл бұрын
As an 80s rocker your show is so great. Your enthusiasm is catching. Makes me want to play again. I was with Chrysalis near the end. Too much coke. Labels destroyed 20 bands to the one that made it through the chaos. Love Disturbed. Sound of silence maybe the best production and video I have heard in 30 years
@kato643 жыл бұрын
I looked you up. Were you in a band called Wild Blue? From what I read Chrysalis basically destroyed your band, and you ended up on the short end of the stick.
@ralelunar3 жыл бұрын
Tim is a soothsayer of musical truth! He's honest but not in a demeaning way.
@OhioCruffler3 жыл бұрын
He was pretty demeaning when he did the "country music people act country, but really they are smart". Honest country people are smart too.
@michaelgilpin61803 жыл бұрын
He's making too much sense.
@highstreetjackmusic3 жыл бұрын
I have a real job that feeds my stomach, but I write music to feed my soul. I have made some micro pennies on streaming services, but I only put songs out there as a way to share them. For me, making music is something I just need to do. I totally agree with Tim's comments regarding country lyrics. It seems like they have a requirement for a cliche in every single line. It's so bogus that I just can't identify with it.
@judenihal3 жыл бұрын
nobody will work for free
@alswearingen3233 жыл бұрын
True that! But some stories told by especially classic country artists will touch the soul. No, I don't need any more songs about fishin' or driving a pickup truck. Loved Paisley's "This is Country Music", though.
@craigwillms613 жыл бұрын
I'm in the same boat. Music is love. It would be nice to kissed back once and a while.
@BenDowdy3 жыл бұрын
@@judenihal Some work for the good of the soul. It ain't always about money.
@judenihal3 жыл бұрын
@@BenDowdy That's playing music. When you are actually working on a piece of music and editing a song, then it becomes more of a chore, and ultimately you will end up hiring other people to work on the track which costs money.
@alonzotheballadoftheblueco86093 жыл бұрын
When i used to write the pop songs for winners from the “Canadian Idol” tv show. We were writing the album not knowing if it was going to be for a girl or boy, so we wrote open ended lyrically. The producers all used lap tops. The none of the big mixers or tape machines were used. I was amazed at how it was all done in a laptop. Greetings from Canada.
@RC32Smiths013 жыл бұрын
Rick and Tim in a video is going to be such a great one. So much wisdom from you both!
@jeanmikael_12653 жыл бұрын
This was a bit depressing, guys. But I love the way you, Tim, explain the development (or the opposite), and we've seen the same in Sweden (from where some of these "kids with a laptop" comes from). They are closing down all main studios. Abba's studio is a gym since 15 years, Roxette's studio (the studio you nowadays see in Dirty Loop's videos) will soon make way for new apartment buildings - and on it goes. There are a few new studios where you still can record more than a singer or a single guitar. Where you can fit strings, choirs, record grand pianos, or full rock groups with drum iso booths and all. ABBA-Benny (Andersson) has a great new studio, mainly for his more folk/ethno type of music he does. But the business for acousticly recorded music is probably - and I'm guessing now - down to under 10 % of all distributed music. The rest is created on Macbooks. Then the pandemic came and took away live acts... 😢
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
Lets be hopeful..it may come back. Many years ago..warehouses became studios, in the beginning. Those building are just a place..those walls don't make the art...the artists do.
@rennhoalohaloren62113 жыл бұрын
It's the haze, ambiguity, imperfection, and mystery where music really lives and shines. Perfection is unnatural and quite dull. There is a character in imperfection. There is humanness in rough raw edges. And while there is room for some perfection in music: when every recording is perfect, and the goal is making money over of making great songs and creativity, music becomes a faceless, lifeless, dead zone.
@Panicagq23 жыл бұрын
Exactly! I love Jimmy Page and Keith Richards and Tony Iommi (among many others) /because/ they have their own ragged edge to their playing, like they're chasing an ideal phrase and sometimes they stumble a bit. The image of Page laying down 3 takes of a guitar solo and just picking the one that he likes best, even if he slurred or flubbed a phrase makes me smile...
@jsauce3113 жыл бұрын
Just looked at Tim's discography. Wow.. he's done some amazing work over the years
@shovelheadseven3 жыл бұрын
When you were a kid spending all your money on records who would have believed it if someone would have said one day you won't need to buy records you will have a device like Spocks Tricorder that fits in your pocket where you press a button and practically every record ever to exist will be available to you. Only price to pay is it ruins the music business and ushers in the demise of all things to do with it.
@abracadabra15503 жыл бұрын
Yeah, too bad for the filthy rich label backmen who took most of the money anyway 🤘
@zenobardot3 жыл бұрын
"Every record ever to exist" is a key part of it. Even if we had no internet, no cell phones, We have this amazing 70 year backlog of hi-fidelity music, lots of which serious music fans feel they have to get a grasp on to be musically literate. Houses of the Holy is still an amazing record to discover as a 14 year old learning about rock, and it's, what, 47 years old now? Any rock band today has to fight for that kid's attention against Led Zeppelin, The Cars, R.E.M., The Pixies, Nirvana, Radiohead, not to mention all the metal, soul, hip hop, and other stuff that has 30-50 backlog of classic albums. It's a blessing for music fans to have such a surfeit of masterpieces to discover...you just never run out of high-quality stuff from the past if you keep poking around. For young artists, the bar is so high. Duke Ellington once said late in his life that his biggest competition was "some old guy named Ellington"--his own back catalog got in the way of people experiencing his newer music.
@stuponfucious73 жыл бұрын
I love the insights that both of these amazing individuals bring to the conversation.
@LoKioss3 жыл бұрын
When they are talking about "Music" i think they are talking about Pop/Radio station music. But there are a lot o good music today, but it needs to be searched now because its not main stream
@soarornor3 жыл бұрын
Totally true. Look at all the great stuff on bandcamp. What’s missing today is interesting radio stations. They do exist online but there’s so many to sift through to find the gold, but it’s there.
@mistertwister48623 жыл бұрын
Spot on. Internet offers unlimited access to new, interesting and sincere music creators from all over the world. Income enablers have increased from a select few radio/TV/stations/movie theaters/live venues to multitudes of cable programming,/streaming services/video games/internet radio. IMO it's out there for listening and hustle.
@ripwinkler15953 жыл бұрын
@@eggjoe122 As you get older, you hear so many things that sound pretty similar to things you have already heard, often many years in the past. So instead of getting big feelings from things you hear that are new, you have to appreciate that they are being done in a new context, often merely intellectually- in the end, you gravitate towards what gave you the big feeling the first time around. Music is a lot like romance in that way.
@klauswassermann80543 жыл бұрын
True, but I think their point is making a living out of being a musician. Loads of excellent music being produced for charity, basically.
@richardcarr73453 жыл бұрын
I am a guitar player/rock lover. But, Finneas O’Connel and Billie Eilish created/produced their first 2 albums in his bedroom, on a laptop. It’s actually freakin good. The difference is they write great songs and she was never interested in celebrity. If you see them live, just Finneas and her on a guitar and a microphone, they are just as talented. I would also add their was some pretty crappy “organic music” created over the history of rock (80’s hair bands, for instance). I think at the core one could argue that great melodies and great songwriting transmit in any genre.
@stevenrussi5973 Жыл бұрын
truth is spoken here--called intrinsic motivation by humanistic psychologists--you do it for the love and artistry of the genre and hope for the best--Van Gogh just had to paint!
@danielpacek97853 жыл бұрын
I think the other casualty of celebrity and technology is the demise of the concept of a "band". Real collaboration, and real instrumentation creates much of the magic of truly great song writing and incredible performances. Synths and samples are great tools for prototyping a song, but real musicians make a song come a live. Lastly, a multi-member band is too expensive to pay and too much of a wildcard for talent agencies to manage. I'd love to see Rick do a piece on the fall of "bands" .
@BeatsbyBlanch3 жыл бұрын
It’s always a lottery when starting a band. It only takes 1 person to fuck the whole thing up
@tomhuitema2068 Жыл бұрын
Bands are still the norm in metal and rock tho
@kumoyuki3 жыл бұрын
"One likes to believe in the freedom of music/But glittering prizes and endless compromises/Shatter the illusion of integrity..."
@BenDowdy3 жыл бұрын
Damn, Rush nailed it.
@georgebarry86403 жыл бұрын
@@BenDowdy Rush was/is a great band..but I think Neil and crew knew that it actually isn't that simple.Hell, if people want to accept an award..fine. You can still make great music..just don't drink THAT Kool-aid.
@nobrainsnoheadache24343 жыл бұрын
sis you know that the next couple of lines are a take on Sounds Of Silence by Simon & Garfunkel?
@jonathanwright88023 жыл бұрын
catch the spit
@kumoyuki3 жыл бұрын
@@nobrainsnoheadache2434 Dayum! how did I miss that for all these years? Well spotted
@rm93083 жыл бұрын
He's right, Rock lost the battle for my attention in the late 2000s. I tried to keep listening to rock stations and finally walked away into EDM. I actually called a few Rock stations to request fresh tracks but they would never play anything but Creed, Nickelback, and "Crazy Train" on repeat. It was programmed for corporate tattoo shops and oil change drive-thrus.
@dri1811ya3 жыл бұрын
I lol'ed so hard at Crazy Train.
@mah389003 жыл бұрын
I've also noticed how the vocal line dominates above ll else in today's hits, meaning that the songs use phrasing and melody that leaves little to no space. Basically just enough for a singer to take a breathe (and sometimes less than that). I felt that this is more due to the blues having less and less influence as time passes and now is virtually gone. The type of "call and response" that was ubiquitous between the voice and instruments is no longer present at all.
@mattjns3 жыл бұрын
.....and then you find out Tim played on “I’d Do Anything For Love.....” as well. Sweet Jesus this man is a phenomenon.
@tcm67563 жыл бұрын
Right?
@BaronVonQuiply3 жыл бұрын
I'm reasonably certain he's played on half on my songs, too, and I've never met the guy or had anyone else play on my songs.
@motomike713 жыл бұрын
He talks about music being too calculated, but then was on some of the most calculated pop records of the past three decades. Goo Goo Dolls? Hell, Jim Steinman’s stuff is great, but it’s as calculated as all get out of Hell.
@TheLocalFuzz3 жыл бұрын
Check out his playing on the Welcome to the Neighborhood album too!
@pthomas363 жыл бұрын
But he doesn't really name drop, he's humble and human about it! The man does impress.
@MarkVictor53 жыл бұрын
Tim Pierce is such a boss. Super skilled, talented and a super nice guy.
@DaveTaste2 жыл бұрын
Why is everything super?
@twtobin9413 жыл бұрын
Thanks Rick and Tim.. excellent insight to today's music industry. Yes, depressing for creative people just getting started, even established ones. How do we ensure truly innovative non-mainstream artists have a way for us to hear their stuff that pays them equitably? Streaming services are just like the worst of the old record contracts where artists end up being taking advantage of, aren't paid enough, and can't survive in the industry. If the big music companies continue to have control over exposing only the artists they feel will pay off the biggest, we will continue to get a mass of diluted, homogenized, uninteresting schlock being produced that's all about image instead of emotion, and young listeners simply expecting that is what the scope of today's music is. I feel fortunate to have grown up at a time when there was so much variety, and so many record companies backing what would today be considered crazy risks. Those risks turned out to be the some of the best bands the world has ever seen.
@jannashesgbcnemophilafan43173 жыл бұрын
Would love your reactions to Band Maid. These japanese women keep rock music alive. My favorite band in decades. Kanami plays PRS customs, has Carlos Santana, Larry Carlton, EVH as her influences. She gave a beautiful tribute tweet to Eddie. Their instrumental live song Onset, is in my top 10 songs of all time. Kanamis tapping runs play as a chorus to the song. Misa is one of best bassits today. She has numerous bass solos, would love a reaction to that song. Jimmy Page caught a live show of them while in tokyo in 16, he did a photo with drummer Akane, calling her one of the best drummers since Bonham. Music is universal, most songs are in japanese, but no band besides nightwish, moves me like they do. The dragon cries they sing in english. Its very Led Zepplinish. Miku, The rythum guitarist worked in a Maid cafe in tokyo, while she was in school. She loved rock music, and thought what if, we wore maid outfits, and rocked. " the gap" its called. So she created the whole image. Kanami, the lead guitarist writes the songs, and Puzzle she has more guitar riffs in one song, bands could write numerous songs out of. Rock music has been alive, its just in Europe and Japan. Kanami, like Toumas Holopenien of Nightwish, are two of most incredible song writers today. Im 49, grew up on classic rock, and lost faith in rock during the 90's. But Band Maid, and Nightwish ate my listening now. The transitions, build ups, lead ups, solos, bridges, outro so.os, bass- guitar trade off solos these bands do are so incredible.
@fvdvet13 жыл бұрын
Musicians on musicians and music. You're two of a kind! Wonderful moment, thank you both. To me Nashville seems to become more and more a place where real musicians and music have a place to express themselves without being forced into the classic country music genre. So no surprise to see players like Robben Ford are finding a way to melt in there. Country/pop crossover artists like Keith Urban are also really inspiring me with their creativity and fresh approach. Promising to see from a place far far away from Nashville :-)
@tomruth94873 жыл бұрын
Yes, I also found it interesting that Robben made the move, there must be a reason. The few musicians I've met from Nashville were all pretty amazing as players and people.
@Ann-bx5tq3 жыл бұрын
Please a part two. I loved the conversation! I am sure you guys have a lot more to share.
@TheFeelButton3 жыл бұрын
Guitar is the only role I'm looking to play! Cheers Rick and Tim!!
@themobseat3 жыл бұрын
A person with a $500 laptop, mic, and recording program can make a Hip Hop record on their own. A record company has to sign one person. A Rock band requires several musicians with thousands of dollars of gear each, and PA, lights, and a truck or van to haul it. A record company has to deal with and pay the 4 or 5 rock guys. That's the financial reality.
@jazzyjay32833 жыл бұрын
It’s always a loan tho
@mattmckeon16883 жыл бұрын
Tim is box office quality for anyone who's been a working or session musician at any point. Like Rick, they're all listening, nodding furiously and occasionally bursting out laughing because he calls it absolutely spot on. Love these interviews!
@Razzlyn3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting conversation. We need a part II.
@CallMeChato3 жыл бұрын
Shredding killed the guitar. I was just jogging listening to Cream and every lead break was tasty as hell, genius. And the lyrics were that whacky, groovy stuff that made no sense but placed it in the 60s. I’m stopping now. Good show.
@triver75933 жыл бұрын
It also helps that cream is one of the best bands ever. I listened to them an hour straight doing yard work yesterday.
@SixStringHarmonies3 жыл бұрын
@Hudson Donald They have a few great songs, but overall.....meh. Clapton, I can appreciate.
@SixStringHarmonies3 жыл бұрын
Modern metal shredding. Perhaps. Though it can have a place. Van Halen was a "shredder", as well and he broke new ground. "Shredding" is a relative concept.
@thewatcher86393 жыл бұрын
Not really. Nirvana killed shredding before the guitar faded out from its vaunted position as “the” instrument for cool kids.
@gabrielegagliardi39563 жыл бұрын
The amount of great bands from the 60s is insane: the kinks, the zombies, hendrix, velvet underground, ccr, zappa, the doors, captain beefheart (ny favorite) etcetcetc.
@RA2Music3 жыл бұрын
I can’t get my students to jam with other players. When I started in the 80’s, I just assumed that was what you were supposed to do. Now young players look at KZbin drummers (sorry, that’s the instrument I play/teach) and think that is the be all end all of what success looks like. No matter how many times I try to explain the sheer joy of playing with other musicians, they don’t seem to understand. The organic nature of musical creation, so ubiquitous in the past, is now a foreign concept. Thanks as always for the insight.
@buffridge70073 жыл бұрын
Have you tried showing them videos of drummers playing live in stadiums and stuff thats what made me want to play music
@wurm873 жыл бұрын
Great observation, completely agree
@josh345783 жыл бұрын
I think they're afraid of playing the wrong thing. To jam is to put yourself out there, antithetical to keeping your head down and repeating the right answers like you're taking a school test.
@gentrywhite40353 жыл бұрын
That's pretty sad, that's the thing about drummers that I always admired. If you played drums (no matter you skill level)
@gentrywhite40353 жыл бұрын
... you could always find someone to play with.
@dougevans51583 жыл бұрын
Thanks for breaking these tunes down Rick...It’s refreshing to hear such fair commentary about each song
@mr50393 жыл бұрын
This sounds similar to what technology did to manufacturing. The “skilled labor” need is diminished
@everettewell61673 жыл бұрын
Today's pop music is like those headphones you buy that just play beats It's a computer program!
@larrycanepa3 жыл бұрын
I love when you and Tim talk. You both have so much history and experience to share. Thanks for the vid, Rick!
@jeffholliday83043 жыл бұрын
I miss the 60s and 70s there were one or two classic albums coming out every week and most of them were guitar-based it was just magical
@scottpenner49723 жыл бұрын
Yeah.
@scottpenner49723 жыл бұрын
Also, I was first if this comment gets a lot of likes
@von04103 жыл бұрын
Yeah 😢
@nimrodrozenberg31363 жыл бұрын
70s especially!
@JustKnifeThings3 жыл бұрын
"Creed and Nickelback and 800 bands that sounded just like Creed and Nickelback". HA! My literal exact thought for years! It was a wasteland of generic blended-down headache noise that oozed out of the rubble of crumbled radio formats of yesteryear as a homogenized paste. Didn't matter what the band was. And it went on for years. Get in car, check radio, that stuff is on, nope, plug in phone.
@comajoebuck9993 жыл бұрын
Or CD.
@jimmycampbell783 жыл бұрын
Well, in 2013 Tim Pierce played on 'Proof of Life' by Scott Stapp, along with Phil X too. I guess he's not averse to working with former members of Creed when there's a pay check? Or maybe he's not being as snobby about bands like Creed and Nickelback as you think he is.
@xducer133 жыл бұрын
The Best of Creed was Alter Bridge!
@IamQuintin3 жыл бұрын
I still think Creed was a good band, the first two albums were incredible. I mean they were big even in Asia, especially here in Malaysia.
@ImpostorModanica3 жыл бұрын
@@IamQuintin Basically he was saying that everybody was sound LIKE Creed and Nickelback, not that they were bad
@Optomisma3 жыл бұрын
Tim gets every point bang on , he articulates what lots of us have thought ,extremely well.
@Jacksabbath443 жыл бұрын
my god you and Tim should do a series on just random topics related to music, the gold you both say! man!
@TheRetroham3 жыл бұрын
The commentary at around the 14:00 minute-mark concerning rich parents vs. the record-labels made me picture the music-industry returning to the pre-industrial days of the 17th and 18th Centuries. Like a Bach, a Vivaldi, a Mozart, without a rich patron, no "real" music gets made.
@stevensass39333 жыл бұрын
Wow. You guys articulate the weirdness of this situation so well. The candidness was refreshing.
@shorty61363 жыл бұрын
Todays super mega ultra pop music: Pre pre chorus, pre chorus, chorus, post chorus, post mortem chorus.
@grimooze83653 жыл бұрын
it's has been this for years
@TenThumbsProductions3 жыл бұрын
Marty Schwartz put him up on Tim, he is a legend. If you had any doubts just look at Rick's face when Tim talks. Great stuff.
@sixofone3 жыл бұрын
Love this conversation... so honest and right on the mark without sounding mean or anything. Very interesting perspective.
@jaredwren93043 жыл бұрын
Tim's critique of country music around the 7 min mark is spot on.
@frankgreco3 жыл бұрын
After watching this and listening to other musicians lament the state of the music industry, it seems the incentive for music creators is becoming almost nil. If you are a really good musician but not a good merch person, or just not a good teacher or a not-so-good gear-demo person, or can't go on month-long tours, your chances of making a normal income are practically non-existent. Yes, you can hit a home run in the world series or score in the world cup by writing a commercial jingle, but that's for a tiny minority. Back in the 90's and 2000's, it was thought the Internet with iTunes, Spotify, Pandora, etc would eliminate the stranglehold the old-school record labels had and there would be a new dawn for musicians. But the opposite happened. First, Napster and Shawn Fanning made the illegal legal (Metallica's Lars was 100% correct). Then the big streaming companies became the stranglehold (btw, the CEO of Spotify Daniel Ek is worth $4.5B). And more sophisticated algorithms that deeply understand human behavior started created music as Rick and Tim point out ("don't bore us and get to the chorus") and as Swedish pop factories know all too well. And of course, social media has reduced the attention span of the human race to mere seconds which further trains future music consumers. At one point, I thought it might be possible to have a movement to bring back quality to the music and allow music content creators to at least make a living from creating content. But perhaps only musicians, ie, a small fraction of the world, care about this. We all recall those gigs that just sounded like crap, the amps sounded like mud, the PA system had no life, the lyrics were mangled, you foobared a couple of solos... and after the gig, people in the audience came up to you and said: "you guys sounded amazing... that was awesome!". Depressing, ain't it?
@mrodin123 жыл бұрын
As a musician myself, yea this is totally spot on. Don’t get me wrong, there are some really good bands out there and over time if you’re really committed you “might” be able to get “somewhere” but the chances are way slimmer of getting anywhere now than they used to be and it’s not like it was easy for artists back in the 60s and 70’s either. In my experience, building a fanbase now is very difficult in itself- let alone trying to make a living. Yes anyone can theoretically make and share their own stuff, but just imagine the somewhat reclusive and odd artists (the syd Barrett’s, Frank Zappas, kurt cobain’s) there could be who are not good at self promotion so go unheard yet are super talented. It’s practically impossible to even get demos to labels now, let alone get signed... A pandemic makes all this even more difficult cuz now literally all gigs are gone too.
@romeod75493 жыл бұрын
@@mrodin12 Yeah.... Cobain is overrated.
@TaiChiBeMe3 жыл бұрын
When I clicked on this video I hadn't realized that I had already seen this before... then I noticed that I commented on this video 4 months ago. I am now 69 and although I studied music I made my living in photography. I retired 6 years ago and now only shoot film and print in a darkroom. I don't use computers nor inkjet printers to make "photographs" anymore. I did that the last 10 - 15 years when I was still in business. When you view a digital captured print verses a photograph made in a darkroom from film there is a world of difference. When you know how to print properly and the photograph absolutely "sings," then that difference is immense. In a way an analogue print has a great advantage over an analogue recording in that your eyes cannot be fooled. But when listening to a recording... many ears can be "fooled." I mean, many can't even discern when auto tuning has been used.
@Servantofthegenerous3 жыл бұрын
He’s spot on about everything.
@Roddo7313 жыл бұрын
Wow this video should have a like from every guitar player in the planet. So true, so insightful
@sebprovision3 жыл бұрын
Great conversations you guys have. Good on-camera chemistry between you two. Good stuff Rick and Tim
@shawnbell63923 жыл бұрын
Whatever "the industry" evolves to it always has and always will be tainted and limiting and there are still people on their own doing it for the love of music who are a pleasure to listen to. Worth digging for them on the internet. Support them if they offer that option but at least join their audience.
@Icebergwallst3 жыл бұрын
Funny I forgot that early in my military career in Germany you could sign out various vintage Fender guitars to play. Then at some point in the mid to late eighties they were all gone so you had to buy your own instrument to play. Then the amps disappeared.
@devinslurry3653 жыл бұрын
Your respect and reverence for this guy is notable. I do not know who he is, but you did a really great interview here, by just letting him speak and directing the conversation. Totally pro!
@Buckeye4193 жыл бұрын
In the music business, we went from hundreds of people making millions of dollars to millions of people making hundreds of dollars.
@ruffalo093 жыл бұрын
Luv that more people are actually attempting to make their own music: Rather than just be passive consumers of someone else's product.
@gregwilson27213 жыл бұрын
haha love it. well i,m not gonna cut my ear off
@BeGoodNow53 жыл бұрын
This is partially true. The big corporations are still around and have the controlling interest behind the scenes. If they weren't still making the money, they wouldn't be around.
@shlomorabenovets47093 жыл бұрын
Kinda like the 80/20 principle reverse engineered. 80% of the people create music content and 20% Spectate?Consume. Hell even my Mother in Law makes "beats "
@postmodernmarxistnihilist42823 жыл бұрын
That was true before, it is true now. You think people weren't having failed music careers back then?
@garanceadrosehn96913 жыл бұрын
"The reason they just got hired" ➡️ It wouldn't surprise me if that person answering the phones was hired *BECAUSE* that employee will have no idea what's going on. The label doesn't want to pay the talent. If they wanted to pay the talent, it would get done.
@petertaysum89473 жыл бұрын
The curse of the intern. Nowadays so many interns are subsidised by their parents, as part of a trajectory for their children's career, rather than a way for recruiting ambitious young blood that is genuinely interested in the business.
@CatFish1073 жыл бұрын
I'm at 20min19s in, and these fellas are talking about how their experience effects the way they hear music, and their great appreciation of how a song is put together. Here I am, at the other end of the spectrum, an almost pure listener, with zero experience, training, or practice in making or writing music. I appreciate being able to listen in on the perspective of a couple seasoned pros. It helps me crack open the curtain hanging on the cave entrance, so I might begin to appreciate the vastness of what remains for me to explore.
@isologuitar9963 жыл бұрын
Just when I think I can no longer be surprised by Tim Pierce, I find out he did Bat Out of Hell II. Bonkers!
@trevorhunton75263 жыл бұрын
Tim Shaw is an excellent guitarist but Bat out of Hell 2 is awful, ranks up there with that absolutely awful live album from G&R.
@TheReubenKincaid3 жыл бұрын
Been listening to Tim for years and didn’t even know....let’s see, bought Bon Jovi’s first in 84, heard tons of Rick Springfield 83-84, Played out the first Crowded House Record in 87, and couldn’t escape Iris in 98. Tim played on songs on those records......
@HamptonGuitars3 жыл бұрын
Even though I agree about the unrealistic mythology in country music, as someone who has lived on a dirt road 3 miles off pavement in the least populated county in Arkansas, it IS indeed a true source of happiness.
@tkugsify3 жыл бұрын
These city slickers will never understand. And that's ok.
@siriusfun3 жыл бұрын
I bet. But not everyone's aspiration, nor should it be.
@guitardude47003 жыл бұрын
Until it rains on that dirt road
@manuelsaenz46313 жыл бұрын
@@guitardude4700 I grew up on a ranch in Texas with a pickup truck, dirt road, chickens in the backyard... I don't miss that crap.
@tomasneel19803 жыл бұрын
You know rick, when you teach us how ALL the PROS , made every aspect of each artist music, In Every genre , the business, theories, history, everything, but when you teach nitty gritty of all the notes , perfectly........ they maybe artists, your a master ! I’m 64 and very hard to plz, Gosh Rick, I was suppose to be you in this life!
@MisHapMusic3 жыл бұрын
25:11 "The thing is you could get away with breaking all the rules and busting out of the envelope in music history, not so much anymore though it's like everything has to be OBEYED, the formula has to be OBEYED" So True, So Depressing....
@unperson57133 жыл бұрын
"The lyrics are an affectation." Ding, ding, ding. Give that man a cigar.
@scovell73 жыл бұрын
right along with that twangy vocal inflection they all do
@cautiousoptimist19263 жыл бұрын
@@scovell7 I find that fake accent unbearable. It's such an obvious affectation.
@scovell73 жыл бұрын
@@cautiousoptimist1926 me too!
@garyjones7833 жыл бұрын
Fabulous nostalgia from two masters!!! Thanks for sharing Tim Pierce
@FrisellFan013 жыл бұрын
Hearing these 2 men......guys that are truly valued as people in the music biz.... talking about the most hidden secrets about music......has such value.......its a shame that so few people that listen to music.... understand any of it.....and it still makes me mad ...about watching the old music biz I remember......disappear.
@Falstaff-mr8fk3 жыл бұрын
The thing is, we are all to blame for this. This whole chorus after chorus in a song where everything is the chorus or hook is because we live in a world that not just wants, but demands instant gratification. We won’t wait through 2 verses for that chorus hook. So they start the song with the hook. Then hit us with it again and again and again until we are satiated and want the next course please...as in NOW!!!
@phillipbarnes40913 жыл бұрын
I listen to Pink Floyd quite a bit and my kids groan at how long the songs are. 🙄
@freq99393 жыл бұрын
Yup. We are all conditioned to be stimulated consistently
@5piecekit3 жыл бұрын
@@bobve7ezi370 Or junk food. Lots of salt and sugar.
@kickbiker79203 жыл бұрын
Thank heavens, these guys have the foresight to record these interviews. Listening to their enthusiasm (their abilities goes without saying ... Which is why I don't feel the need to mention it) whatever about the demise of the music business per se ... People will always want to make music. People like Tim Pierce are the benchmark. Rick's skill at explaining theory and his music abilities keeps me hopeful!
@JARonin3 жыл бұрын
Rick’s interview with Robben Ford “the cell phone has just about killed everything culturally”
@donnieman1233 жыл бұрын
thanks ill ahve to check that one out. and mando i agree with that !
@pm58583 жыл бұрын
@@HeadbangoO Yeah, all the music that was made before smartphones were invented.
@EclecticHillbilly3 жыл бұрын
@@HeadbangoO Some of us are able to live a perfectly content life without owning a smartphone. I really don't see the need for the world to be able to know where I am, 24/7.
@thewatcher86393 жыл бұрын
Dating too. Now you have to pay money to some Zionist’s who run tinder if you want to date. All these algorithms are black boxes and they’re probably manipulated so versions factions “get theirs” and the rest of us are just left with nothing. The old life gone. The new life being locked in a house.
@t.sewell15133 жыл бұрын
@@thewatcher8639 ugggggggg!
@GC-bk1mv3 жыл бұрын
I keep hearing the phrase "following this formula"; my question is, "who" decides when this formula changes? "Who" decides what is cool/not cool? I'm also speaking as an artist myself. Art is subjective. What I think is really awesome, some may not and vice versa. My whole perspective on it has been, i'll create the music that I would want to listen to because there's ALWAYS going to be a group out there who enjoys the same style as me and will buy it. There's a shirt for every body but not every body wears the same shirt.
@atech90203 жыл бұрын
I agree with this sentiment. There are some groups and styles of music that as far as I am concerned is just actually a bunch of random noise and crappy singing, but the band has a label behind it. There isn't one formula, there are formulas to pander to different genre's. Metal has a formula that isn't the same as pop or indie. While pop music is the #1 in terms of streams, downloads, and $ generation, there is still always a #1 in broad genres. For indie that might be Tame Impala, for pop that may be Katy Perry, and for metal it might be Periphery, or whatever. Metal and indie may never ever be in the top 40, but it still has an audience. And as we all know, if there is money to be made the music industry will find some way to gilp it out of some hungry musicians.
@regmurphy97593 жыл бұрын
Hi Rick. My favorite topic of conversation and my lifelong love is music. I believe that basically everyone likes and appreciates a job well done. Whatever that may be. The more work involved the better. Music becomes better the longer and more a person applies themselves the more enjoyment can be had. Our generation likes tools and toys. I know I do. I am not so versed in new technology as I am in old stuff. That may be a part of it too, music made by a group of people working together to create something new is the best music. No music made today could hold up to Tumbleweed Connection by Elton John. In a nutshell.
@RobertoPavan3 жыл бұрын
"There were always artists that just wanted to be famous, but now it's really the whole game." So true.