Not just the music industry. I was a warehouse worker in the 80s and was paid well with good befits until they fired everyone and went with temps (and drove the wages down 70%). Knew guys that worked at Radio Shack and other stores in the mall (like Al Bundy working in the shoe store) and were able to support a family on that income. It's a different world now...
@williamscott8509 ай бұрын
A different world but not necessarily a better world. Is music better in 2023 than it was in 1983? There are few industries where things are better, particularly for the middle class even though technology has driven productivity to levels that couldn't have even been imagined in the 1980s.
@HabAnagarek9 ай бұрын
@@williamscott850Can't disagree, all good points
@dragostego9 ай бұрын
@@williamscott850I think the first comment also says it was worse. I don't think they are saying being unable to support a familyy on retail income is good.
@NJStew229 ай бұрын
It's so wild to even read things like this... I was born in '93 and this world is almost unimaginable to me.
@mikesmusicden9 ай бұрын
If I could, I'd go back to the 80s in a heartbeat. Medicine and technology have advanced by leaps and bounds since then, but people were more tolerant of each other, basic day-to-day life was less stressful, and (in my opinion) music was much better @@williamscott850
@espana21729 ай бұрын
great insight, I’m 73, played with Tennessee Ernie Ford when I was 19. For musicians things are worse and it makes me sick. We are losing our culture. This is not the lament of an old man, this is reality, sad but, true. Rick, more power to you, same to Tim.
@versnellingspookie9 ай бұрын
Where did you play with him? And how did that come to be? Over where i live theres still a ton of records by Tennessee Ernie Ford in the 2nd-hand shops / Op-Shops, it only shows how big of a star he must've been!
@marshalmcdonald74769 ай бұрын
Yep. One of the things I've noticed over my 43 year career is the dissolution of sincerity. As I was coming up it seemed to me that there were more musicians that played because they loved music, NOT solely so they could be successful, popular or famous. Now these players did like getting gigs and playing on stage and being successful but it seemed mostly secondary to the genuine love of music and camaraderie itself. Over the years SHOWBIZ has taken over the fundamental motivations and souls of players. Just an observation.....
@TwangTown7 ай бұрын
You are the real heroes of the MI
@joshkatsikis91382 ай бұрын
I think the most damning thing of it all is the fact that younger people just don't play instruments anymore. I'm afraid there will come a day where the thought of playing an instrument with your hands is as bygone as unsliced bread or a horse carraige.
@PeteFury2 ай бұрын
Poor you.
@lukameah8539 ай бұрын
I was a full-time NYC studio musician back in the day. I was on the B-list:- about 120 musicians who took the work the A-list musicians (about 15-20 individuals) didn't have the time to do. Really good money but the pressure was terrible. One strike, and you were OUT. The producers usually enjoyed letting you know there were 10,000 guys waiting to take your job. I got tired of the strain and became a music instructor. Not as exciting but music became fun again. Be careful what you wish for if you want to continue loving music.
@euromarquee9 ай бұрын
I hear you. Before Will Lee went to NYC and became A-List premo for decades, he'd come see me and my local acts on the Beach. He said I should go to NYC to get into that scene. I never did. He had all the connections through having his old man dean of U Miami's music dept. I was good, solid but not his caliber but he once told me I was the only bass player he thought sounded like him. Maybe, on certain things, but he covered all basses, pun intended.
@joeylodes9 ай бұрын
I used to play NYC every weekend for years. Being able to afford living in NY came to end for me and I entirely moved out of the state. It’s just fun memories now
@philmoore719 ай бұрын
tommy tedesco talks about that same concept too
@dbassman279 ай бұрын
I just read Chuck Israels' book. He talks about the studio scene in New York, amongst many other things.
@genesmith40199 ай бұрын
Exactly. I got tired of being a "sideman".
@joelshields88079 ай бұрын
The best thing about music today is that anyone with a laptop can make a record. The worst thing about music today is that anyone with a laptop can make a record.
@vracan5 ай бұрын
@@rlm4471 unless its an obvious hit
@spencergwin94545 ай бұрын
@@vracan The "obvious hit" thing is largely a myth. Only seems "obvious" in retrospect.
@mathew32674 ай бұрын
Digital music has been around for over 30 years though. The Rocky IV soundtrack is all digital so it really has nothing do with the era or technology but the individual.
@vracan4 ай бұрын
@@spencergwin9454 yes ...and no! No that if a song is mediocre no amount of push or payola can turn it into a international hit.
@american_cosmic3 ай бұрын
I think it just means we can no longer rely on being spoon-fed good music through the pop genre/industry. We can't turn on the radio and hear really good current music anymore (for the most part) or get it from MTV (a whole ''nother story). But there is TONS of great music out there! Great CURRENT music! You can find it on spotify or youtube, etc., or you can go out and hear it being played across America (around the world, really). But good music is still being made, It's just not going to be hand-delivered to us anymore like in the old days. This is why I find all the complaining about the current state of "music" to be pointless and misguided. The good music never left, it never went away... it's just that billion-dollar budgets are no longer pushing it out there to us, and we have to seek it out for ourselves. But it's out there! We just can't look to pop music to find it, generally speaking.
@Johnrack9 ай бұрын
Good episode Rick. I’m a guitarist who lived in L.A. for two decades. My wife plays B3, and as weekend warriors our blues band, and jazz band, played all over town. We were lucky to have good day jobs so we didn’t have to struggle like many other club players. We were also able to record CD’s, and made three of them over the years. We also met one of Dave Roth’s engineers who had his own studio, and through him we hired Gregg and Matt Bissonette as our studio rythym section, which was great. Long story short, our BluesTrain singer ran Andy Brauer’s cartage and rental business, and when he retired in 2005 we bought him out, and started Hollywood Studio Rentals. The cartage and rental businesses were not very profitable, but we eventually rented two 15,000 sq ft warehouses, which we stored touring band’s gear. We had Van Halen, John Fogerty, the Eagles, System of a Down, The Goo Goo Dolls, Robert Cray, Daryl Jones, and most of the A list studio guitarists like Luke, Michael Laudau, Dean Parks, Michael Thompson, and Carl Verhyen. We eventually built out a recording studio and drum tracking room for Kenny Arnoff, and rehearsal studios for the Goo Goo Dolls and John Fogerty. And few years later we bought out Drum Paradise, and got Vinnie Coliuta. At any rate in 2013 my partner bought me out and my wife and I retired to Hawaii, where we still play blues and jazz to this day.
@ArmanArmondo9 ай бұрын
Cool
@briandietrich13739 ай бұрын
Fantastic!!!
@totalguitartransformation9 ай бұрын
What a cool story. I've seen Kenny A's space, now I know the back story!
@Pete-n4t9 ай бұрын
In the 70s I was playing gigs with guys that were in their late 50s early 60s . They told me of the days when there was so much work for musicians you could work 24/7 . Every radio station, television studio , restaurant, bar, hotel lobby, theater , party , political event ie everything required live music if music was required at all.
@zanzone71339 ай бұрын
While working on a film set a while back, it was in a high school library, and I picked out at random a bio of Bing Crosby to browse through for a few minutes. Opening the book to anywhere, I came across a passage where Bing was writing to his drummer brother in Seattle and saying how that he, Bing, was in L.A. and that EVERYONE was working. Bing was telling his brother to get his ass down there to take advantage of the voluminous work. I think this was in the late 1920s. Not so many working musicians now...
@plalelal4 ай бұрын
Live music is where it's at!
@craigcoughlin18349 ай бұрын
Being a full-time art director / graphic designer for 30+ years I can fully identify with this conversation.
@jesusislukeskywalker42949 ай бұрын
you’ve done well 👍🏻 i haven’t played a serious gig since the ‘90’s … when we had poker machines allowed to go into all the pubs.. and since then mostly all the pubs are now corporate owned.. like mcdonalds. and just about as interesting.. 🙈
@drdexter339 ай бұрын
Wow..yeah man.. I worked for a design studio and started my career in the mid-eighties and used to work as a paste-up artist/graphic designer got a small shop in Pittsburgh, right around the time that the Mac came on the scene. We did everything old-school. Typesetting, stat-camera, paste-up, rapidographs for line drawings..😆 Check out a documentary called Graphic Means if you haven't seen it already. One of the funniest parts is when one of the guys in an old training video on paste-up gets his type galley caught under his Mayline. Of course it's only funny because it used to happen to me all the time...
@boldmove91299 ай бұрын
I was running around New York City in the 80's. Still a vibrant music scene. Rows of music stores on 48th street. Stores dedicated to instruments, repair, sheet music, showing off your virtuosity in the guitar room, celebrity sight seeing, and just the hang.. You'd run into BB King at Manny's picking up a new amp. Michael Brecker walking up the stairs to sax repair joint. Art Farmer checking out the trumpets at Giardenelli's. 1st and 2nd generation bebop musicians were still around. Kids out of music school would work the front desk at the music stores. All the horn players had studio work. Remember when records had horn sections? We would jazz club hop from the Village Vanguard, to the Blue NOte to Barry Harri's Workshop and see all the studio musicians checking out all the jazz greats. 48th street was more than a row of music stores. It represented the heart beat of the New York music scene. Musicians, repair men, scores of every kind. A whole industry revolved around music. Rockefellars decided to build a garage and before you knew it. It was gone. The bebop musicians started dying, the studio work started drying up, and the age of Digital technology arrived. And here we are..... where the hell are we, actually? The great unknown. A societal transition that is being reflected in the music and music business. I miss the good ole days but the one thing certain in life is change. Gotta role with the times. Whatever that might be.
@watamatafoyu9 ай бұрын
The upper crust killing art for financial prestige rings.
@chriscampbell91919 ай бұрын
In my (admittedly much smaller) metro there used to be 5-6 large music stores within a 15 mile radius. My own suburb had at least two of them. There used to be 2-3 ethnic music stores (selling Celtic and other instruments) in 2000, today there are zero. The 2000's seemed to mark the start of the general decline. Now there is only one large music instrument retailer in the metro, and a handful of smaller music instrument shops here and there, and they seem to be struggling. As for music venues, that number also nosedived. In my suburb the number went from around 15 or so in 1990 to zero today. Life is indeed change. I guess for many of us, you just feel good that you actually were around when all of the stores and venues still existed.
@BenneWill9 ай бұрын
NYC in the 80s was a lot more affordable!
@quailstudios9 ай бұрын
Someday there will be a music revolution, a comeback to music that is alive again. It will happen. The digital age has seduced us for a time but the human spirit will make a comeback and there will be part of the population that will seek out real music being played without digital intervention. Perhaps there will always be a portion of the population that will be seduced by the marvels of the digital age, but there is real LIFE in the analog sphere.
@rockcatinc.48148 ай бұрын
lol. I live in New York. Night and day when talking about affordability
@joyb.50909 ай бұрын
My dad came out of the NY jazz and big band scene of the 1940s. He was a total middle class musician his entire life. My dad did a few sessions, some TV, and he was in the background of a movie once, but mostly he made a living playing live. He played the Catskills and Vegas for awhile in the 50s and then ended up in South Florida in the heyday of the big Miami Beach hotels. He gigged usually 6 nights a week even into the late 90s, and taught lessons out of our house here and there. There were enough retirees in South Florida who wanted to keep dancing to the music of their youth that he had plenty of work. The musicians union helped us have health insurance. We were never rich but he made enough to support our family. He bragged until the day he died that he never did an honest day's work in his life, lol. He felt bad for younger musicians because people weren't hiring live bands as much over the years and there just wasn't the work available.
@jeffcharles58582 ай бұрын
And here we are again. Classic Rock bands will always be around, as long as the Boomers are still alive. I have a comfortable retirement income and play for tips, and love.
@jamesnotsmith14659 ай бұрын
I like how Tim holds a guitar during the entire interview even though he does not plan to play it. It is as if the guitar is a natural part of his wardrobe.
@donbosley20969 ай бұрын
He plays in the last 30 seconds to make sure he gets some notes in.
@lexist79 ай бұрын
0:10
@LukeMaynard9 ай бұрын
It reminds me of the official music video for Willy DeVille's "Storybook Love," the song from The Princess Bride. The song, just like the rest of the film score, was the work of only two other musicians--composer Mark Knopfler on guitar, and his frend Guy Fletcher playing synth versions of every other instrument on keyboards. All through the video, as Willy sings, the studio is full of orchestral musicians who just sit around, doing absolutely nothing. Knopfler and Fletcher are, I think, the only people seen ever playing a note while all the real horn and string players sit around looking bored. It's kind of hilarious.
@jasonfanclub42679 ай бұрын
😅
@matthewquatroche26349 ай бұрын
Yep hahaha I find myself more at ease holding a guitar, too.
@maxherron13769 ай бұрын
My first job in 1969 was being a drummer in a local cover band. We played a lot in our small Texas town and learned how to play in front of our friends and school mates. That job put me through college, helped fund our first home and everything else we needed in early marriage. Now, there may be 3-4 gigs per years. I feel so sorry for young musicians, there are no places to play, no money and that is just the players. Great video! I love these things.
@Mr.Gump57809 ай бұрын
The more I hear about these stories, the more I realize how blessed I am to be able to make a good living playing music full time these days.
@MarsGuitarOfficial9 ай бұрын
Being a full time middle class musician for almost 30 years, I feel blessed but always viewed it as 7 part time jobs lol !!! Thank you guys I appreciate you both:)
@ShinyShinyBlack9 ай бұрын
Right?! With an actual part-time job thrown in once in awhile (in my case)
@Mr.Gump57809 ай бұрын
Same here bro
@missingremote43889 ай бұрын
Part-time funny ? is still a full 8 hour shift
@FrankBriggs9 ай бұрын
Another great one. Before I make this all about me, I want to say thank you to Rick and Tim for your candidness, expertise and great spirits. I so relate to this. I’m a couple years older than both of you. I wouldn’t change the period I grew up in for anything. It was so different and wonderful in so many ways. I feel sorry for anyone trying to do music professionally these days. It’s beyond hard. I’m retired now, but I was always able to make a living. Being a drummer, I have always been middle-class at best. Had a fairly popular band in upstate New York, who got signed to a major label. Brutal story, but I paid my bills. Moved to LA. My first pro LA session was with Tim Pierce at a studio called Master Control in Burbank. I’m very proud of that. I’m sorry it never happened again. I went on tours, recorded jingles, records, wrote instructional books, produced, mixed etc. etc. which altogether enabled me to buy a house. I didn’t think that was a big deal at the time but, turns out it was. None of these things, with the exception of touring are viable ways to make money anymore. Even then, as a drummer… well, let’s just say unless you’re on the road (a lot) making decent money consistently your lifestyle won’t be great. Not sure what the answer is. The world needs the middle-class. It’s the middle-class that drives the economy in every industry and the country as a whole. OK, the old guy’s gonna sign off now. Thank you Rick and Tim. Love what you do.
@nickg24319 ай бұрын
Nice history ,glad you lived it while it was there..
@davidfleuchaus9 ай бұрын
Surprisingly, that was an encouraging comment. I guess because it validates my perceptions. Check out the movie The Legend of 1900. The end of middle class musicians began with the advent of recording.
@toothnail6059 ай бұрын
Great friend of mine took a lesson from this guy and was not happy. Not a knock or a slam, sometimes things just don't go the way one expects. "Life Happens."
@tonyjbass559 ай бұрын
Frank...hoping you are enjoying the hell out of your retirement and that you, and family, are well!
@moneybot6469 ай бұрын
Frank Briggs absolute monster drummer got the dvd and book 13 years ago still can’t begin to mess with some of those lessons
@davidwtaylor71809 ай бұрын
I love these conversations that get people to start thinking about how we can find a "happy middle ground" between the efficiencies of the digital technology revolution and the quality of life for everyone. The technological revolution came about so quickly that those at the top took advantage of its benefits while leaving everyone else behind. The giant middle class is now starting to wake up to the realization that we need to re-structure business models that were developed at the start of the technology revolution, so that we all get a fair share of the pie. We need to find a happy middle ground that maintains the efficiency gains of new technologies but isn't structured as a business so that it leaves everyone out in the cold, except those at the top. Keep this conversation topic ongoing!!
@pmscalisi9 ай бұрын
And the digital revolution isn’t over by any means.
@quailstudios9 ай бұрын
@@pmscalisi Someday there will be a music revolution, a comeback to music that is alive again. It will happen. The digital age has seduced us for a time but the human spirit will make a comeback and there will be part of the population that will seek out real music being played without digital intervention. Perhaps there will always be a portion of the population that will be seduced by the marvels of the digital age, but there is LIFE in the analog sphere.
@davidowens58988 ай бұрын
@@quailstudios I'd love to think so. But I doubt it. There are things once lost, once broken? Will never be repaired. Pop music being one of them. The spirit is dead. When was the last time you heard about someone starting up a garage band? We did it for fun. We did it for the joy of making music. It was NEVER about the $$. We did it out of love.
@halstead39628 ай бұрын
@@davidowens5898 My son is in a band that is performing about every month. I go to see him every time. They write original music and play some covers. They love it. Is it fantastic? Well, the singer needs to get better, and the song writing needs work but they love it.
@halstead39628 ай бұрын
@@davidowens5898 I'm also Quailstudios David. I just happen to be on my other channel right now.
@MarkSmallwoodWriter9 ай бұрын
Great conversation, guys. I grew up in LA area, I was 13 in 1968 so I can totally relate to Tim's comments about "heydays." Another cool thing was that at that time, it was possible to see up and coming artists at small venues--case in point, I saw Linda Ronstadt in 1971 at the San Clemente High School auditorium for $5. Saw so many bands in 1971-72 for $10 dollars a shot. Even the Troubadour in the early 70s was pretty reasonable. One thing to clarify, for any younger folks, is that rents, costs, etc., were enormously lower as a percentage of income than they are today. Wealth inequality has screwed so many. My first wife and I rented a two bedroom apartment in LA for $185 a month, which was a lot for us (we were earning a combined $950 take home pay per month). But still, it was possible to have a life.
@_left_eye9 ай бұрын
Beyond compression tricks or sophisticated harmonic analysis, this kind of in depth dive is what I enjoy the most on the channel. Thank you for sharing such life experiences
@RickBeato9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@jefftaylor58849 ай бұрын
Great stuff Rick and Tim! I had the privilege of working with Tim for a week a couple of years ago with a major artist. No headphones, sitting in a semi-circle. Tim is not just a wonderful, versatile musician, but one of the kindest most inviting folks I’ve worked with. (I’m not an L.A. guy, came in from TN). He made me so comfortable and welcome. Grateful for that experience.
@lancesabin41149 ай бұрын
I’m sure he brings a great vibe to work with
@jorgetrimboli9 ай бұрын
It's so lovely to see skilled musicians like you two chatting in front of us about things that I never imagined existed. Thank you!
@SirLoinMagroin9 ай бұрын
Tim is the quintessential session musician of our time as well as a stand-alone guitarist/talent. He does it all, plus his own unique thing. One of the most underrated artists in the guitar realm.
@lost-in-the-blue9 ай бұрын
Still some great music out there in small places...much harder to get out of those small places these days. Musicians, just keep grinding...Support local live music!
@peanutbutterisfu9 ай бұрын
There is definitely a ton of great music coming out all the time it just requires people to find it.
@cargyjohn3509 ай бұрын
I never comment on KZbin videos, but on the off chance Rick reads this - these last coupe of weeks you have done a couple of videos explaining the inner working of the music business, how contracts work, how fees work, how its good and bad, and that is all totally fascinating. I would love to have more interviews with session players and explanations of how the industry worked in the past and how it works now. Really interesting to a total outsider who just enjoys the finished product. Thank you.
@cantcoact44129 ай бұрын
👍
@BenneWill9 ай бұрын
100%!
@rudygracia55738 ай бұрын
You should check out Jared Leto's interview concerning"360 deals"nowaday's.That's pretty much where we are now.
@RamonaJan9 ай бұрын
Hi Rick: I was one of the first female recording engineers in the biz at Mediasound on W. 57th St in NYC and then at Power Station. I was trained by Bob Clearmountain and Tony Bongiovi. I worked with many artists in including Ramones, Talking Heads, Eno, Sinatra, Mick and Keith, Laura Nyro; the list goes on. Also worked with the NYC 'wrecking crew' on a weekly and sometimes daily basis. and at the same time played in the synth punk band Comateens and other new wave groups. I sang with Buster Poindexter and was a founding member of the all girI group Venus Fly Trap with Lisa Lowell and Soozie Tyrell (recently touring with Springsteen). Got lots of stories. Love your show!
@ximenadelrio9 ай бұрын
You're literally a LEGEND !!!!! I would love to hear or read or watch those stories !!!!
@NeilRaouf9 ай бұрын
c‘mon rick! we need the ladies.
@ChromaticHarp9 ай бұрын
Name Dropper DeLuxe!
@iseeu-fp9po9 ай бұрын
I just read an article about Carol Kaye and her fight to support her children while at the same time making her way in a very male-dominated music world and it really impressed me. You must have some great stories to tell!
@jerahmaya779 ай бұрын
Get her on. Tell us more! ❤
@steelframe9 ай бұрын
Our Daughter at 18 played bass in a very loud punk rock band in Seattle. We learned through her Facebook page that they were planning a West coast tour in the summer, I think it was around 2008. We were very concerned both for her safety and that they had planned to play somewhere every other night and there was almost no time budgeted for travel or rest. She managed to borrow a neighbor's old 70's Suburban and somehow they got 4 musicians and their gear to fit. I was going to put my foot down and squash the whole trip but we decided that since she had spent some of her senior year battling cancer that I wasn't going to deny her the once in a lifetime experience of rock band road trip that would take them South to El Paso the over to San Diego and back up the coast to Seattle. I was worried sick the whole time but also a little envious as I was in a band at that age but never had the balls to hit the road like that. She was in a few bands after that but like most of us has settled into a successful grown up life. Good on her and her friends for following a dream. I'm sure the memories will last forever.
@festernaecus9 ай бұрын
FYI shows in a different town each night with no time budgeted for rest is the bog-standard DIY tour experience... they weren't planning poorly, they were doing the thing the way it's done
@FLOWERSONTHEGRAVE9 ай бұрын
As a working band, this is also hits home. Doesn't matter your quality, only matters if your making someone money, and only then can you get the opportunities to move up the ladder.
@watamatafoyu9 ай бұрын
I guess join the investor class 🤔 so you can have the freetime and money to be a freelance musician?
@JLFulks9 ай бұрын
This is a great video! I’m a session player and songwriter in Nashville. I play gigs and do everything else from my home studio. I have to hustle every month but I make it work. I wish there was more for the middle class musician that Tim Pierce was talking about that would offer more stability though
@DrewBods9 ай бұрын
In the UK, I went self employed as a musician in 2008. I've done over 150 gigs a year every except 2020/1 . I play as one half of a duo called Dew Barf. I play kick drum and hihat with my feet and guitar with my hands and sing. My buddy of 37 years plays bass and sings. We are pretty unique and look like the love children of ZZ Top and The Wurzels 😂. We're not rich, we get by. We use cheap gear and laugh at each other's mistakes. We have been approached by various people to elevate us to Glastonbury etc. Our answer is that we are not main stage material because the pressure of those gigs will destroy our DILLIGAF attitude. Happy doing what we do and think it's the best job in the world.
@romaric98749 ай бұрын
You are right ! Keep the faith !
@cheery-hex9 ай бұрын
dew barf? LOL
@DrewBods9 ай бұрын
@@cheery-hex it's Cornish (ish) for Two Beards
@jeffhanson98219 ай бұрын
Iam so jealous
@SubTroppo9 ай бұрын
Did The Wurzels break America? Ha; the very thought of it!
@zippitydoodah56939 ай бұрын
I was a "middle class musician" for a decade. At one point I was playing in 5 bands at once. My main band was signed by a label for a minute and then split up shortly after. I have had 3 songs published, one recorded 4 times, and reserved twice. I've played on three albums and wrote at least half of the songs on each of those albums . . . one of those albums co-written with a Grammy Award winning writer. And today? I haven't played in public in a dozen years. My last shows were in Nashville. Young fools play out now. And they sadly have no idea what they are missing when they do. My band regularly pulled in about 50 people to any show anywhere, and weekend shows, we would pull in about a hundred or so. We made decent money. We played original music. We had fans that would follow us anywhere we played within a couple hundred miles of home base. We had roadies that helped us for free. We got them free drinks and dinner in the nicer places we played, but no guarantees. We ALL did what we did _because we loved the music_ . We loved the kinship, friendship, and fellowship of like spirits being on the same wavelength, at the same moment, on the same ride, for a few hours of escape late in the evening. {edit for paragraph} I went back recently and did not recognize the place. Those kinds of fanbases no longer exist. If video killed the Radio Star, then the Industry killed the spirituality of musical communities everywhere. Now? The core of my last community still gets together once or twice a year on a riverside, in and around a rental house where we commune the old way, writing, singing, playing, canoeing and kayaking, talking, loving . . . we live for those weeks. We even invite a handful of our hard-core fans from back in the day.
@voodoochili129 ай бұрын
Man, this is overwrought and frankly it's sad to see people agreeing with you. Just because you can't see today's vibrant and rabid fanbases across all genres of music, regardless of location or venue, doesn't mean they are not there. To suggest that "the Industry killed the spirituality of musical communities everywhere" is ridiculous. I bet if you tried, you'd find a musically gratifying performance and inspiring musicians and fans within a stone's throw of where you live.
@gp925109 ай бұрын
It's not the same...
@zippitydoodah56939 ай бұрын
@@voodoochili12 Overwrought? Did you read the title of the video? I played in the tempo and key of the original content creator's choosing. It is unfortunate if you can't follow that vibe. He is an excellent content creator. WADR - I lived in downtown Nashville for the last 12 years of my working careers. 1. I can and have found " _musically gratifying performance(s)_ " anywhere in the world. And I've lived in 6 different countries on four different continents. 2. I can and have found " _inspiring musicians_ " in all of these places. 3. I AM a fan. And of several bands whom I support in more ways than the average fan does or can. And I meet fans just like me at those places. It is THOSE fans, and THOSE musicians for whom I lamented. I hear their complaints. And, despite sounding like the cliché old man with the " _back in my day_ " stories, I tell them truth and give them a brief example of an analogous experience that they missed out on because it does not exist any longer. None of your premises supports your claim that my statement - " _the Industry killed the spirituality of musical communities everywhere_ ", is " _ridiculous_ " . If you would like to provide some evidentiary support for your *ridicule* of another person's lived experience, feel free to provide it. I appreciate your reply, despite it's ad hominem nature. Unlike you, I will not passive-aggressively insult those who agree with you simply because we differ in opinion. Best regards.
@8chohgee1359 ай бұрын
@@gp92510 Yeah.Your right. Its not the same. Probably never will be again.
@8chohgee1359 ай бұрын
@@voodoochili12 Sounds like you trying to convince yourself or something. Or you can't follow her point.
@JohnGatesIII9 ай бұрын
My dad ended up in LA in 76 with Lola Falana. He ended up being asked to stay for a new show, Van Dyke & Co (Dick Van Dyke). He immediately transferred his Union Association from Chicago (Jingle Capitol of the Midwest) to LA. 2 weeks after picking up Van Dyke & Co, he picked up the Sonny and Cher Show (yes, he worked BOTH shows at the same time). It was definitely a Different Time.
@h5mind3739 ай бұрын
So cool! How old were you at the time? Did you realise what a score it was for your Dad to do two shows like that?
@rhondawilkins_9 ай бұрын
Was he playing the Sonny & Cher show with JEFF PORCARO?
@JohnGatesIII9 ай бұрын
@@h5mind373 in 76, I was 7 years. My mom and I were still in Chicago. By the time we moved out to LA, my dad had bought a 3br house in North Hollywood for $65K (the last time it was on the market, in 2022, it sold in for over $700K). I went from Cold Chicago winters to LA with a pool in the back yard.....I was in HEAVEN. I didn't realize what a big deal it was at the time, unless I could SEE him on TV. The only time I got to see him was either when he subbed for Ed Shaunessy on the Tonight Show OR the Tony Orlando Special that I have clips of on my youtube channel.
@johnnyxmusic9 ай бұрын
Amazing! ❤
@JohnGatesIII9 ай бұрын
@@rhondawilkins_ Jeff Porcaro was with Sonny & Cher in the beginning, in 73+. Dad took over from Matt Betton (who went on tour with Jimmy Buffet which is why he gave the show up).
@MrMillipeed9 ай бұрын
Superb. Tim Pierce comes over as such a gentleman. Thank you for taking the time to share so much fascinating information.
@user-qo6vj6pf6k9 ай бұрын
Greetings from a small island - that was a fascinating interview you two! I worked in music retail for nearly 4 decades and saw exactly the same thing happen in the retailing of music as in the creation of it. And despite the 'vinyl revolution' of the past few years, I just hate the fact that we've lost a vital part of our culture in the death of small record shops by the current industry model. The thing I loved about record shops was that you could go in looking for something you knew you wanted, but, because of say what was playing or a staff recommendation, you could come out with a record that could be a cornerstone of your life for years to come. I can't begin to tell you how many copies of 'Surfing With The Alien' I shifted back in the day (courtesy of reading about Joe in Guitar Player and then sourcing the import until it got a domestic release), simply because you played it in the shop and people's jaws dropped - they had to have it! And that is all gone. We were lucky to have worked in one of the world's greatest industries at a time when it was King.
@zanzone71339 ай бұрын
My 64 year-old GF loves music. I introduced Always With Me... by Joe to her just a few months ago. She immediately loved it.
@davidsummerville3519 ай бұрын
As a low class musician I was never alive. 😎🤓 Love it when you two get together.
@leonardticsay80469 ай бұрын
Same. I could never be a hasbeen. I’m more of a never-was.
@kingcormack80049 ай бұрын
@@leonardticsay8046 I was a wouldhave been.
@Verdillac29 ай бұрын
@@kingcormack8004 That's what hurts the most - we have the chops and the heart, but we will *never* get the respect because we are not "the right people".
@ripwinkler15959 ай бұрын
@@Verdillac2 If it makes you feel any better, the right people are thieves.
@thecaptainjones9 ай бұрын
Cheers guys. I pulled out my vinyl copy of the Crowded House album and there's Tim at the top of the list of additional musicians. That LP was a really big deal when it came out here in Australia in 1986. Good job 🙂
@offshoretomorrow33469 ай бұрын
C House are sublime and timeless. ❤
@jfwillingham9 ай бұрын
One of the best records of the decade
@stevenponte66559 ай бұрын
Better be home soon was the first song I ever learnt on guitar! :)
@weaesq9 ай бұрын
I just checked iTunes and it does not show the back cover credits - only the cover art of albums. Another thing lost to streaming services.
@cambeeck9 ай бұрын
rick needs to dive into Crowded House!
@RussStillMusic9 ай бұрын
Great session! I’m still booking gigs for the same amount I did in the 80s. That’s either a sad commentary about my career or the music economy or both. 🤣
@johnnorwood33669 ай бұрын
Thank you for providing these windows into the impacts of the changing music industry. Tim recently recommended a documentary on the Wrecking Crew which shows the rise and decline of session music in LA from late 50’s to late 70’s. This interview continues that thread from late 70’s to today. Very important work you’re doing.
@DianeLee9999 ай бұрын
Thank you, both. We have lost so much COMMUNITY. As people we need a community for all of its learning, support, networking, etc. Creative people thrive and draw inspiration from being in the presence of other creatives. I think the great disconnection of people from the frequent exposure to a like-minded community is the tragedy of our time. Disconnection is the root of the mental health challenges I experience and see all around me. Rick, you are blessed with a strongly connected group of friends; a community where you always have a place. For so many, there is no such place. I fear we are allowing technology to isolate us from one another. Replacing a person, in all of his/?/her beautiful and unpredictable complexity with a predictable mechanism is a terrible trade for so many reasons. You have done a very good thing in creating your channel, Rick. Every resource for bringing people together will be necessary to survive this time of disconnection. Thank you, Rick and Tim, for this important conversation. 💜
@fredjoel81139 ай бұрын
Well put. And were on the cusp of AI. Just wait to see what happens next.
@GodzillaGoesGaga9 ай бұрын
Totally agree. It’s about having fun TOGETHER.
@roddunne9 ай бұрын
Wonderful conversation Tim & Rick... really enjoyable angles.
@Gigmeister19 ай бұрын
Great interview, guys! I've been a working pro since 1972 and agree with all of this. My Hollywood mentor, the late Pat Hicks, told me to diversify my music business before I ever set foot in GIT in April, 1983. That advice paid handsomely for me as my wife and I were able to raise four children with me teaching guitar, playing gigs and writing about it for music magazines. I've added voiceovers and my podcast. The Band of One, which continues to allow me to share my knowledge and still get paid. It can still be done in 2024, but it's a lot tougher. I agree with Tim, growing up in the 60's and 70's was a priceless musical education and blessing!
@Mattened9 ай бұрын
These chats with Tim are invaluable. Thank you!
@markybob_bassplaya14629 ай бұрын
Great Interview. Since you get paid by YT for comments, my local experience is as follows: 1. 1982, play a gig for $300-$400, free band drinks, for a 4 hour show in a town of 10,000 people that had 4 music venues. 3 days a week (Wed, Fri, Sat). You played a mix of popular covers and your original music. Did a tour of the southeast, did not make it (not good looking enough back then), but you could play anywhere. 2. 2023,, play a gig for $300-$400, no free drinks, for a 4 hour show in the same town, now 60,000 people, 2 music venues. One show week (Friday or Saturday) other days are DJ or Karaoke for a crowd 1/4 sized that are all drunks. You ONLY play covers, cause no one wants to hear original music. No way to "Tour" a region anymore, cause venues are too rare, and those that do exist don't know you, and they won't bother to check out your online content. Played all of 5 gigs in 12 months and 3 were private parties, despite being the best band in town. 3. Mid 2023: Done. Still have the desire, but at 60 year old, you can only play Sweet Home Alabama and Mustang Sally so many times before you are ready to burn your gear. I am sick of the lack of creativity in music.
@cnilecnile67489 ай бұрын
Yep, that is EXACTLY what I am talking about, as are many others.
@TomFoti3 ай бұрын
Keep cranking out the originals. What we have inside -- and I'm 65 -- is worth sharing.
@elveggoloco9 ай бұрын
This makes me feel better and better about the fact that I play music as a hobby. I'm typing this from my day-job, but my band has a gig tonight and I'm super-excited to be doing it! I get to pretend to be a rock-star without enduring the drudgery of touring, and I get to go home to my own bed. The future of the music business is all business...a few people getting rich on increasingly artificial, uninspired garbage for short attention spans, but the future of MUSIC is alive and well and safely in the hands of those of us who'll never be famous or make enough from it to even consider making our main living from it. Today's best music is being made by us amateurs, and isn't that the ultimate democratisation of music? And the best thing that EVERYBODY can do for the future of music is to go out and support the hell out of those small-time, local/regional acts! They're the true heartbeat of music! PS- Hey Rick, we're in the Atlanta area, you should come see us! :D
@NikosKatsikanis9 ай бұрын
real talk
@CollapseReport9 ай бұрын
This is reality .
@dubois2.0248 ай бұрын
I'm an amateur guitarist in Atlanta. Where do you play? I'd pop up to watch.
@elveggoloco8 ай бұрын
@@dubois2.024 We've got another one coming up! Sweetwater Bar & Grill in Duluth, March 30. I think we'll be on first of three bands. Would love to see you there!
@vinnykster14 сағат бұрын
💯
@michaelgregory22319 ай бұрын
I've been at every rung on that ladder and sometimes, like Tim, within the same week. I did sessions and tours and local live shows based in California and Nashville. I'd play on a hit record and then do a crappy jingle the next day. I'd play a stadium with 30-50K people on a Saturday and then come home and do a $100 club gig. I toured with a country artist that had 2 #1 hits, about 2 years apart. As the record climbed the charts, we'd get picked up at the airport in a van, then an SUV, then limos. The hotels and catering got better. As the record had its run and fell back down, here came the SUVs and vans again... until the next #1... I now do IT for a healthcare company and have returned to playing weekends. I'm 62 and have a great marriage and home life & am lucky to have done it big time. I live comfortably, have good healthcare coverage and am once again the big fish in the little pond I left to go to Nashville. No regrets and wouldn't trade it for anything.
@JackPeters-g5z9 ай бұрын
It's all about luck
@williamsmith95619 ай бұрын
I think the message here is we all need to change. The problem with that is there are a great number of people who are too young to retire and too old to change. Very sad to say that there is no such thing as a job for life anymore. I was forced to change track in my mid forties and it was hard. I really sympathise with all in this predicament.
@jfturner679 ай бұрын
You too? Lol
@SeanApple9 ай бұрын
I'm a visual effects artist working from home across the valley from Tim. I love watching you guys talk shop. As someone in the entertainment business on the TV/movie side, I'm seeing a lot of the same themes in my world. I love that you guys have figured out another, more productive way to pursue your love of music that's not reliant on the old crumbling system. While I too am glad that so many tools have been democratized, I do miss the romance of the old days. That said, I was at the Roxy last month and it was packed. Sunset still has some love to give. People do still leave their bedrooms!
@peaceman73219 ай бұрын
2 of my favorite people to hang out with on KZbin (plus Rhett!). Notice that Tim says somewhere near the end of”I hadn’t become one of the top musicians yet at that time”. YET! Truth!! Thx to both of you, gentlemen, for another great video!
@andrewokelley75299 ай бұрын
Tha best thing about this is: in an age of quick clips and social media isolation, you two take the time to sit down face to face and chat. Awesome! The community you’ve formed with Rhett and Keith Williams etc. is really fabulous. Thank you.
@williamadams76669 ай бұрын
Wow.. thanks for taking me back in time. I was there when the Lynndrum replaced our drummer in the studio. It was a heartbreaking eyeopener for a working band who dreamed of recording. I was fortunate to be asked to record. 1983. What an awesome interview.
@RedSparrow1499 ай бұрын
Hey Rick love your stuff! It's really sad the death of the working class musician is upon us.
@alistersutherland36889 ай бұрын
I was also born in '58. I experienced the great musical and cultural transformation Tim alludes to at the end. We grew up steeped in it. I'm very glad I was alive at that time. But as to what's happened to the music biz, once upon a time I played what we called the circuit - a bunch of bars and nightclubs spread around - almost every town had one - and in order to get patrons, that is to say throngs of young people out spending money while having a good time, these places served as venues, with real stages, lighting and often a decent PA system. They all hired bands, and they didn't get the bands unless they signed up with the musicians union. So we could go out and earn a living playing these places doing cover songs for scale at minimum. If the band was good and got to be a draw, you'd get much more than that. Sometimes we'd demand a percentage of the bar's receipts on top of scale, and get it! And there was hardly ever a cover charge to get in. The places were busy, sales were good, the owners made money. And we helped them do it. And we made a decent living too. You didn't have to work a second job just to make ends meet. You got paid to play. It was how so many of us got to be accomplished players. Doing it night after night. You got to learn a ton of songs in a variety of genres (if you, like me were a hired guitar slinger and played with a number of different bands, which many of us did). I miss those days. BTW, just want to tip the hat here; you guys are both fantastic. Tim, I love your playing and your videos, like seriously. They are so great. And Rick, well, you really have become the Grand Poo Bah of this. It's truly a fantastic career you're carved out. I love the interviews you do and the subjects you delve into. Please don't ever stop.
@jaxon_hill9 ай бұрын
Thats so foreign to me its hard to even imagine. Im over in St. Louis and the music scene is a ghost town, even the 'Popular' underground bands can't draw a crowd. I just switched all focus to online growth.
@mikevanderwolf85759 ай бұрын
“Sadder still to watch it die than never to have known it, for you the blind who once could see, the bell tolls for thee. “ from Rush, Losing It. Truth is we had some special times late 60s through mid 90s.
@williamsporing15009 ай бұрын
Born in 59…yes, the 70’s to the late 90’s were awesome to be a musician. Got to meet and open for some names that people would know. I really miss those days, but they’re gone because of greed. And my old fingers aren’t what they used to be either. I still play, and I still work in the studio, but it’s just for fun with my group of friends.
@stevejesus65259 ай бұрын
100% spot on. Nightclubs had live music played by excellent musicians for minimal cover charges. Great times for us
@davidsuprenant27829 ай бұрын
It was a hell of a ride till it disappeared!!! Man I had the time of my life.Had the privilege of playing out for over 25 years.
@contrabandjoe79749 ай бұрын
IMO this is the best and most informative video Rick has ever produced. Very interesting material. All topics discussed have been things I've been curious about for years. Well done
@JohnShumate-el4iu8 ай бұрын
Don't dream it's over, great song...
@lookx459 ай бұрын
Thanks guys, that was excellent. I worked as a music copyist in New York in the 70s. We worked on beautiful paper with fine ink and held the belief that if the parts are beautifully written, the players would play better. True. Show tunes and pop songs paid the rent.
@mikedr15499 ай бұрын
This is gold. I could listen to the two of you talk music business stuff for hours!
@TheDomRyder9 ай бұрын
I think Rick would be well pleased to see how wide is the spread of his channel … I’m a musician based in the south of France and I love what he does for Music … Merci Rick !!!!
@blewzman9 ай бұрын
“Working “ from home eliminates all the “passing by” collaboration that happened by accident. Great interview
@TheLordLeviticus9 ай бұрын
I am so thankful for all your hard work and effort Rick. You are literally creating a gold mine of the history of rock, pop and jazz. Your interviews are superb and your excitement and passion are self evident. You will leave behind a legacy of historical nuggets that will be referenced for years to come. You could give a master class in interview techniques. Thank-you so much for all you do
@angelosartore21799 ай бұрын
Love this! I worked as a freelance assistant cameraman in the film business here in Melbourne Australia for 32 + years. Eventually, I was considered 1st call for TV Commercials, working with many highly regarded Cameramen, Directors & Producers, both national & international. The way Tim describes the 'Middle Class' musician is very similar to the way I worked as a camera assistant. During the late 80's & 90's when I was making a name for myself, the budgets for TV commercials were very big compared to what is being spent these days. The degradation of the film business is very similar to the way the music business has evolved into.
@ZzzzzzzxxxzzzYZ49 ай бұрын
I worked as a freelancer doing stills - first newspapers, then magazines, then biz periodicals, then corporate mags, then annual reports, then...9/11 and the evaporation of budgets and massive layoffs in art departments. Digital further decimated what could be earned in stock image sales and the "creative reinterpretation", read: compositing, of existing images. Being a freelancer, I had no safety net of a union, pension pension payments, etc. I paid it all.
@missingremote43889 ай бұрын
Watching a 30-second commercials has gotten worse. In the States. It's a rappers and rap songs
@pmscalisi9 ай бұрын
@@missingremote4388the rap songs are easiest to produce and are far cheaper.
@angelosartore21799 ай бұрын
@@ZzzzzzzxxxzzzYZ4 I agree with on the change to digital. With film, there was a need to be schooled in lighting, exposure, emulsion manipulation & post production for your images. When digital hit the scene, monitors were widely used so the notion of "what you see is what you get" made many aspects of image capture a lot more straight forward. Plus using film required a lot more discipline onset, as well as experienced crew members because film was an expensive medium. I was fortunate to have a 'smarter than me' wife. She & our accountant, managed to invest our money wisely, while I was earning well. We always had insurance & our pension (superannuation, here in Australia) is healthy. If it wasn't for my wife, I'd probably be a fall-down drunk with $2 in my pocket & probably sleeping on couches!
@kevgamble9 ай бұрын
And the music was so much better for it. Even the formulaic stuff had a human touch, from writing to arranging to recording to the mix. All those levels of human touch added up to everything sounding like itself. DAWs make it so easy to sound like everyone else and incentivize using shortcuts (samples, autotune, etc.). It's hard to ignore what has been lost.
@cheery-hex9 ай бұрын
get your point about daws but the bigger issue is the songwriting. most of it is very lazy with little melody. very unsophisticated. compare Tears for Fears or Prince or Michael Jackson to the top 10 list. frightening!
@chrisdick23059 ай бұрын
Sorry, but DAWs are creativity neutral. If you are Finneas, you make great original content in a bedroom. The difference is the "how", not the result. The digital paradigm creates songs in vertical layers. Sure, interspersed samples can be dull and repetitive, but don't have to be. What hasn't changed? The creation and production of great songs takes real talent. That has always been rare.
@kevgamble9 ай бұрын
@@chrisdick2305 Nothing is truly creatively neutral. Every mechanism makes options more or less available, and the norms that arise from that shape practical creative possibilities. We've arrived at a time when what the market elevates requires no kind of greatness, of vision, performance, or production. Use of samples (and acceptance of it) has created a creative compromise that is unprecedented and which disrupts what had previously been living participation in musical traditions. Now we have a sort of uncanny-valley effect, where it comes across in a similar fashion to greatness but is barren underneath the surface. "Remix culture" has offered little more than distraction.
@wesboundmusic9 ай бұрын
@@kevgamble all of that and my preliminary feeling is that it's exactly because this kind of schooling in a real life environment simply isn't available any longer and much easier now to cut corners and get results quicker, _but_ at the expense of sacrificing the 'visceral' quality we all know and loved back then, because you had to really _commit_ to your aspirations, like Tim and Rick and apparently others here did as well. _That_ is what's sorely missing and it tells because one song today sounds like the next one, only names and faces (and outfit style) change....
@kevgamble9 ай бұрын
@@wesboundmusic Very well said and I agree. There's no substitute for what you describe. Even those with more modest or less successfully realized aspirations produced uniqueness, because they had no other options. Nothing was going to make a note unless they played it on an instrument. Nothing would make the note again unless they played it again. And what that music ran through in the studio was different for all of them.
@markvanslyke2949 ай бұрын
makes me so sad and reinforces what I always heard people telling me about being born too late (1988); always wanted to just be a middle class house keyboardist for somebody and/or touring and make just decent money and benefits...
@aquariumlife29299 ай бұрын
@@DRUmBEaTTS what you mean by gigs and house gigs ? You mean rents are high? Or gigs as street playing and house gigs as bar performances ? I heard rents are unbearable in florida.
@shawnandmelindaambrose95964 ай бұрын
I appreciate your discussions breaking down how the music industry worked. I notice that you mention lots of "middle class" jobs that have disappeared as technology has become better, more readily available. I notice that there were lots of payments to those middle class workers, truckers, people fixing things, repairs, setting up and tearing down equipment, moving things and moving people. Back when music was first being broadcast and first being recorded and sold, even before that when piano sheet music was sold to everybody who had access to piano, musicians were not valued financially. Composers sold their compositions and there might never be another payment, regardless of how many copies the music publisher sold. Performers got paid for each performance and if they came down with a cold and couldn't play, no payment. The only reason so many middle class jobs existed in the middle of the 20th century was because workers banded together, set up ways to support each other, set up pension funds and unions and ASCAP and BMI. Without banding together, individual musicians would have very little defenses and would be taken advantage of all the time. Now with democratization of music production--anyone with a phone can record and upload themselves performing--we are back to having very little defenses and not yet any way to band together. Now instead of dealing only with labor markets in the U.S. and developed countries with reliable electricity, everyone has access to electricity and most people have access to some form of online entertainment. There's always going to be someone somewhere who is more desperate, who is more hungry, who is willing to work for peanuts and be taken advantage of, just so they can eat, or just so they can have one viral KZbin short. I don't see any way, immediately, to build up unions again effectively. I don't see any way to prevent big businesses from pitting performers against each other, and even taking their income for themselves, as Spotify is making their own AI music tracks so they don't have to pay any performers for those streams. There's going to be more reshuffling; this can't continue as it is.
@LieutenantSandcastle8 ай бұрын
The entire music ecosystem from radio stations, music promoters/venues, labels, artists, music press has tanked from where it was in the 70s thru the 90s. It isn't coming back. This is the new normal. I love these conversations you do here even though it is fairly sobering.
@John_Doe6579 ай бұрын
I’m from Sweden. I played in a band that had been going on for like 10 years or more before i joined. We got signed to an american indie label and we played metal. We toured china among other places and each tour was the same. The tour money the label paid us was gone after half the tour, then we had to grab from our own pockets. I came back poorer after each tour. I had a full time job and kids back home and the rockstar life didn’t bring me any additional income, in fact it made me poorer. Eventually i gave up the rock star dream but it hit me that musicians are beeing ripped off by both fans and labels, nobody wants to pay for the art you create, they want it for free. Unfortunately real artists has to create weather their paid or not, it’s in our DNA.
@DaveMcleanJr9 ай бұрын
People will happily pay hundreds or thousands for something mass produced in a factory - like a smartphone - but baulk at paying for the art that they're desperate to play on that smartphone.
@winkythemagicpixie56379 ай бұрын
It's now called "content " ftw
@jorgenhallang38719 ай бұрын
Another Swede here! What's your band name??
@mikepalmer19719 ай бұрын
I have paid to see bands love many times. Now I can hardly ever afford it. So it’s more than fans not wanting to pay.
@orangesuitsme9 ай бұрын
Your comment demonstrates the exploitation, the real sadness, even insanity, which now permeates the music machine. This creates a negative emotional feedback loop and it is ubiquitously blasted from speakers worldwide. and yes, @winky, it's 'content' now so no one is taking responsibility for something going back to Ike Turner, who was conned into signing away his publishing rights and royalties; as Hendrix said, "businessmen, they drink my wine, come and dig my earth; no one will level on the line, nobody offered his worth, hey,"
@alanhirayama45929 ай бұрын
What a great discussion! The skill set a musician needs to be a full-time musician has changed a lot it seems! Thank you for sharing!
@thomasgreenan86179 ай бұрын
Love Rick & Tim together. This is their best video yet. The viewer comments are rock solid. Thank you.
@miltontorres049 ай бұрын
These videos are the best. Just listening to you and Tim tell stories about the music industry is something I could watch all day.
@ChopBassMan8 ай бұрын
This is a very informative and interesting discussion. My son (22 yrs old currently) is a really musically gifted person. I have spoken to him many times about considering a career in music, but he continues to balk. I was a professional musician (bass) in the late 80s through 2001 (I had broken my back and was unable to continue playing for about 10 years or so afterwards) and had a blast! I did however have a 'late start' with gigging much and actually playing professionally as I was a practicing alcoholic until I was 28, I got sober April 9 1990. However I continually rose through the local scene and 'ranks' in St Louis until by 1999, I was playing i in one of the few "big acts" in St Louis. My son did not bow to the inherent alcohol/drug demons as I had - so he decided to play bass (I was finally getting my chops together again) at age 15 (in 2015), coincidentally the same age I started. Within 6 months he had learned virtually everything by Led Zeppelin, RUSH, and others and was working towards getting Jaco's "A Portrait Of Tracy" up to speed and beginning to learn more than a half dozen songs by Weather Report that Jaco played on. I knew that he had/has the talent to become a pro musician, but I had been so far removed from the scene that my "glory days stories", articles, pictures, etc were of limited benefit to him. I started looking towards KZbin videos by musicians (I found a good guitarist in England with whom my daughter took about 6 months of guitar lessons from via Skype which was interesting),trying to determine exactly what is possible now for a performing musician. My son also started looking to KZbin and became rather interested in keyboards and home digital composition and recording. He started to prefer keyboard at this point and started learning rap/pop/rock, kbrd parts and also some Debussy, Liszt, and several other late 19th-early 20th century composers - by ear no less! (I was unable to show him anything other than the very basics of piano techniques - scales, finger techniques for various chord types etc). He still plays keys and continues to learn and is now composing what I would term "backing tracks" but I just don't think he sees music as a viable career option. I would be very interested to hear about other musicians experiences and the possibilities currently available as to either playing or composing careers that are currently available, including any efforts towards getting youngsters (I'm now 60 yrs old) interested in pursuing musical careers - in an environment that's literally foreign to me. Awesome video/interview and discussion Rick! Thank you 💖☕☕☕
@dougshankle79469 ай бұрын
Don't Dream its Over is such a stellar tune! Love the guitars in that song!
@Brykk9 ай бұрын
Thanks guys. This really brings back a lot of my old memories. The 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s were a glorious period in music and for a lot of people growing up in these times. If i were given a chance to go back and live in these decades again, i wouldnt hesitate to do it.
@stevewells55809 ай бұрын
I was 17 in 1970, so I can attest to how amazing it has been to witness the 'heydays' you mentioned. After many years of being a 'working musician' in the middle, I have also seen the gigs disappear. Every hotel chain had a band playing 6 nights a week, so you could work non-stop. That's gone. I think what is harder to take might be the decline of an audience or market for music with more complex melodies and interesting chord structures. Also, I will now smile a bit more when I play the guitar solo from "Don't Dream It's Over"......on piano. Thanks for all you both do.
@DavidMohr-d7z9 ай бұрын
Amen Brother
@pmscalisi9 ай бұрын
True the dumbing down of society has affected many things
@bobt57789 ай бұрын
@@dennisp3314 Young people don't seem to want to dance anymore, not very inspirational when you're on stage. They stand in groups on the dance floor with a drink putting a hand in the air occasionally and yelling woo whoo!
@Kanendd9 ай бұрын
Yes, but solo acts are still viable. Thats why i focused on fingerstyle.
@BaconFire9 ай бұрын
I love the credentials these 2 men bring to the table. Thank you for sharing your insights with us Tim and Rick. :)
@quailstudios9 ай бұрын
It's amazing reading all the comments of people who were middle class musicians. From 1975 to 1977 I played in a band in the LA area that had 4, 5 tp 6 gigs a week while working part time at UPS as a loader. That's when I became a pretty good guitarist playing 20 to 30 hours a week in front of live audiences. Living on the road never appealed to me so I never became that kind of musician. I studied music theory, piano, and voice after that and started teaching piano part time in 1982. A couple of years later I started teaching Guitar and went full-time in 1993 and made a good living teaching private students. Up until about 2016 I always had an equal number of Guitar and Piano students. Today I teach for a few guitar lessons and mostly piano. There are no bands or guitarists out there that anyone wants to emulate right now except the classic bands of yesteryear. The opportunities for playing live gigs are gone. Sad. Excellent video Rick and Tim!
@myhomeonthenet31209 ай бұрын
A great listen folks, thank you for your time. Gotta say, as a plus 50 year old I’m still living that similar style of life. Of course much is different in its aspects but it is still out there and so much of some of the greatest music out there to sound track it, being created and heard in that moment. To be transparent I am pretty broke for much of the time. Hahaha. Love it and all it’s parts though. Much love one and all, Ch’O
@Rednoi9 ай бұрын
what a great and educational conversation and, basically, a brilliant pre-exposé of a completely underrated topic. @RickBeato superb, once again.
@darinwood21839 ай бұрын
Rick, I have really loved these episodes talking about the music industry. As a small town local musician, I’ve always wondered what the music business is really like. I really enjoyed listening to you and Tim talking about this. Please do some more. 👍
@adolfoherrera65378 ай бұрын
I agree 100% Thank you so much for having this conversation!
@2GoldensTosa9 ай бұрын
What a great video! Absolutely fascinating to see “behind the curtain” to get more insight into this world. Thank you, gentlemen!
@manhattanmike69599 ай бұрын
When Tim and Rick are in a room together, I'm here for it.
@sethbecker45429 ай бұрын
When I started playing shows in 2010 full time and was able at minimum get $150 per musician in our band per show playing 4 nights a week around the north east. I was able to rent an apartment, pay loans, utilities, and save money at the time making at the low end $600 a week. Now you are lucky to get $100 a show and compound that with the sky rocketing price of living, there is no way to make a living on just live music.
@waynewells32979 ай бұрын
I too was a middle class musician, first with a full time classical chamber group, and then as a freelancer. Was able to pull it off for about 25 years, then got into teaching full time. I was so grateful for the opportunity, but man it kills me to see what has happened to the gigs.
@simondavies62709 ай бұрын
A very entertaining half hour conversation between two of my favourite people on KZbin. Thank you so very much for taking us down memory lane of what was the music industry of a generation or two ago. I think of the industry much like I do Jazz music which I love. Its dying but somehow it still exists. Perhaps it is a combination of all of the great recordings of all of the artists, icons and muscians of the past that somehow infuses the present generation that ignites that spark.
@mez55908 ай бұрын
Being a musician raised in L.A., I really enjoy these kinds of videos. Keep them up!…
@ianshepherd28619 ай бұрын
What an excellent, fascinating and down to earth interview... 🙂
@helenespaulding75629 ай бұрын
Love to hear Tim talk about this. Also love to hear Leland Sklar talk about this stuff too. Great stories.
@eoinc_Ire9 ай бұрын
Dave Fanning, an Irish Radio presenter and music oracle, once said “ Unemployment brings the guitarist out in everybody “.
@cjpritchard19 күн бұрын
Love these "amp side" chats you guys do. In person or Zoom-keep doing them, please! Fascinating stories.
@michaelmorales64709 ай бұрын
Great job summarizing the glory days of major label music, Tim and Rick - y’all are awesome. Your experiences so familiar (I saw my former mixer, Tom Lord Alge, last month). We’re all a bunch of knights sitting around talking about the glory days of the round table (at least we got castles out of it). I’m involved in what I hope will make the music industry viable for musicians/artists again. Our smart people need to do smart things. Cheers!
@kerrypotenza16799 ай бұрын
This content is priceless. Very educational. Unfortunately it indicates the music biz is broken. Thank you Tim and Rick.
@Geographer19589 ай бұрын
The music business has been broken and corrupt as far as who gets the money, for decades. Only now in different ways.
@Nothing-db1zy9 ай бұрын
"Unfortunately it indicates the music biz is broken" What do you mean by that???
@MattAngiono9 ай бұрын
Capitalism is a broken system. Music is just part of the larger whole
@fredjoel81139 ай бұрын
@@MattAngiono Actually the reason is that capitalism has become corporatism. This problem extends well beyond the music industry,
@MattAngiono9 ай бұрын
@fredjoel8113 corporatism is just a stage of capitalism. The word says it all. The point is to accumulate CAPITAL. Corporations have the ability to accumulate more capital because they aren't alive and can accumulate forever. The big fish can easily just consume the little fish. Human beings can't do that. But really, capitalism evolved into imperialism, which we can see has already occurred. There's no such thing as a capitalism that is free of this process
@risby19309 ай бұрын
My dad was a Nashville middle glass musician (steel guitar) from the 1960's into the 1980's. I remember him doing demo's for Mel Tillis in a little tiny rental house when we first came to town. I made a living in the music business through film/video and photography production in Nashville. But there is very little of the music business left in Nashville.
@kevinjoseph5179 ай бұрын
little left gosh
@brucepaxton24719 ай бұрын
Love the chemistry between you guys when you just sit down and chat about the music industry, both now and then. Enjoy the NAAM Show!
@johnnyschannel13163 ай бұрын
I always smile when I watch these two get together! Priceless. Keep the smiles coming.
@secretdecoder9 ай бұрын
All this information is GOLD and so insightful. The same thing is happening at the mid levels in TV/film production.
@notbraindead72989 ай бұрын
It is NOT gold, it's lead. It's an entire part of the music industry gone forever.
@ArmandoPrado9 ай бұрын
Wow, Being a musician from LA in the 80s and 90s, you guys just described my life on just about every level! Accurate to the T! Thank you gents!!!
@Bryan-jd7os9 ай бұрын
Mondo! 😀
@BillBraun-g3f9 ай бұрын
In the 80's I was a working guitarist an hour from Toronto. I was making more money per gig than a lot of guy's are making today. Now I.m a 2 minute walk from lake Huron...converted a double garage into a studio..had one client then covid hit...now I drink beer. Keep making these great videos.
@potterwalker48239 ай бұрын
burp!🎼burp🎼
@zz-.-9 ай бұрын
lol right on man enjoy! ✨✨
@SammyBurke9 ай бұрын
Wonderful insight Rick and Tim. I was one of those middle class guys, working in the larger studios as an assistant engineer, and running a demo studio where I would engineer, produce, and maintain the books. For me, the writing on the wall came with the ADAT machine, and my skills in setting the bias on a 24-track tape machine were no longer needed. I still play and hit the road every now and then, but all of my engineering and production work is done at home on a 12-year-old laptop.
@stevec.18029 ай бұрын
I very much appreciated this interview and interaction. 🎧 Love hearing your stories and about your experiences in the music business.
@BigWaveZoombie9 ай бұрын
This isn't just a good interview... It's priceless data for a young musician looking for work today in the industry... I came here (LA) to be a musician/songwriter in 1990... Back then the schooling was on the street... People were standing around on street corners playing eruption note for note through a pig nose amp and still not breaking in (They could sing too)... That was the biggest wake up call for me, the competition.
@joeblough2619 ай бұрын
Did you end up "making it"? I've been to Nashville a few times in recent years and I couldn't believe the level of virtuosity of these guys just grinding hard playing the honky tonk circuit on Broadway, and then just all over the place in the hotels, and places like the Bluebird, etc. Probably like the country version of what LA was back in the 80s and early 90s.
@h5mind3739 ай бұрын
Great chat and very eye-opening about the realities of pursuing a career in music.
@dwaiting8839 ай бұрын
I could listen to a whole episode of Tim going over his solos for those Rick Springfield records and stories from that time. I grew up on those records, and was little kid who would just stare at the tour booklet, and I always thought that dude with the hat playing guitar was so cool. I'm so glad I get to see that guy talk guitars and the music business. Seriously, if you're a fan of Tim's guitar playing and aren't familiar with his work on those Springfield records, you should check them. And some of the music on Rick's "Living in Oz" and "Tao" sounds like poppy early avenues to what became Nine Inch Nails. Distorted rock guitar and arpeggiated synths on top of heavy electric drums.
@philmoore719 ай бұрын
i always thought it 'funny' that RS didn't play on his USA songs... he was an Aust (skilled) star
@garthoverman9 ай бұрын
Bought my first tube amp out of the Recycler! Carvin XV212 for $275! Still got it too!
@cnilecnile67489 ай бұрын
Great amp, that's what I used for years until I got the Bedrock amps.
@TheTrombonism9 ай бұрын
This whole conversation is absolutely fascinating!
@Oliasn89 ай бұрын
Another excellent conversation filled with insight and experience. Thank you both 🙏🏻