The Real Reason Why Todays Music Is Starting To Sound The Same

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Freaking Out With Billy Hume

Freaking Out With Billy Hume

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 500
@ListeningIsEmptiness
@ListeningIsEmptiness 12 күн бұрын
I like that you base your presentation on facts and not just “analog/hardware is better” or “things were better back in the day” attitudes. Great job.
@erin4now
@erin4now 11 күн бұрын
​@@StatetrooperBillyBill nah I'm gonna be real with you for every Aerosmith there was 200 Warrants and even Aerosmith flopped hard sometimes. music isn't necessarily better or worse now because every era has it's share of iconic records and shitbrick bargain bin nobodies
@PrimusSucks5000
@PrimusSucks5000 11 күн бұрын
@@erin4nowsince the 30’s writers at Tin Pan Alley were churning out “my baby loves me” type songs, the industry has always been a cash grab
@tone9930
@tone9930 11 күн бұрын
Totally agree!
@ksager123
@ksager123 11 күн бұрын
But it had nothing to do with analog. The producers were just better​@@StatetrooperBillyBill
@ksager123
@ksager123 11 күн бұрын
​@@erin4nowyou're delusional
@vento182
@vento182 9 күн бұрын
You know what ? You've got nothing to sell, no books, no formation, no t-shirt and it's the reason why your channel is so different. Thanks!
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 6 күн бұрын
oh damn.... I need Merch! But seriously I have been getting requests for courses and such but had not thought much about it.
@JuliosStudio
@JuliosStudio 2 күн бұрын
@@FreakingOutWithBillyHume😂 yeah asap.
@rkk578
@rkk578 Күн бұрын
@@FreakingOutWithBillyHume May I suggest T-shirts with "Watch the video until the end" on them?
@levinpugsley9256
@levinpugsley9256 Күн бұрын
Amen to that! The big sales pitching of books and whatnot can be very irritating and off putting, but I guess everyone needs to make a buck
@avd987
@avd987 8 күн бұрын
Thanks! I'm a 24 old year producer from Spain and I really appreciate content coming from experienced people like you!
@4lssis468
@4lssis468 5 күн бұрын
Same but from Argentina
@yvancarbuccia6596
@yvancarbuccia6596 Күн бұрын
Same from Dominican Republic. Hello Hispanohablantes!
@avd987
@avd987 22 сағат бұрын
A las buenas buenas!! No creéis que deberíamos hacer piña internacional para poder hacer trabajos conjuntos??
@yvancarbuccia6596
@yvancarbuccia6596 19 сағат бұрын
@ estoy de acuerdo.
@undercrackers56
@undercrackers56 7 күн бұрын
Long ago, artists focussed on making music and hoped that they made money. Today artists focus on making money and hope that they make music.
@cherrystarscollide
@cherrystarscollide 6 күн бұрын
except there is no money in music anymore...
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 6 күн бұрын
oh damn.... never thought of it quite like that.
@antiquityart
@antiquityart 6 күн бұрын
This quote should be sung and framed and placed upon the walls of the internet so that everyone shall read it. Or, oh the irony, be sampled by AI and earn you a ton of money 😂
@jensenraylight8011
@jensenraylight8011 5 күн бұрын
everyone said the same thing, upload 1 song every week. and hope your stale music will be able to fool some drunk dude, and hope that he'll save your mediocre song into his playlist and with AI, the problem become worse exponentially, now all the Normie and their mom can throw their junks into spotify and youtube, hoping to make some quick cash some AI Normies even pick a fight with a real producers on the internet, thinking that with AI now they're above everyone else
@MagicM2024
@MagicM2024 5 күн бұрын
@@jensenraylight8011 instrument is instrument, when synths are born with all knobs than presets no one consinder it real instruments just like samplers.. Sampling generated sounds from stolen tracks, and now making new generated sound from not copyrighted samples with knowlage in sound design, music theory and producing is better than old sampling.. remember Korg M1!!? ; or Mellotron from 1963, which used loops of audio tape to play back the sounds... Every one can make something even in stone age.. Stay creative and be curious
@UserNameWasCensored
@UserNameWasCensored 5 күн бұрын
Listening to BH is like a breath of fresh air. Not only does all modern pop music sound the same, all young KZbinrs use the same droning voice (usually with a so-called Vocal Fry end to each sentence). BH's voice has character and reminds me of my childhood!
@Aerie-Music-Official
@Aerie-Music-Official 2 күн бұрын
Yes it is.....except he left the autotune on for a lot of the video apparently, the 'but' at 16:32 got me laughing.
@martinperryer9324
@martinperryer9324 12 күн бұрын
your are so right, I'm 70 years old, everything is perfect today but real life is not, not just music, photography and all art forms i don't comment much on KZbin but this deserves a comment as you have nail everything.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
@KimboH55
@KimboH55 12 күн бұрын
Absolutely spot on. Also the melody lines are all one note with a few minor note movements at the end of major sections - Just listen to Taylor Swift - why do people like the songs? because it is not singing up and down scales or a dynamic range of notes. Another reason why Hip Hop is so popular - same beat, one tempo, no vocal dynamics. Cheers, Kim Australia
@davidhornbeckmusic7487
@davidhornbeckmusic7487 11 күн бұрын
@@FreakingOutWithBillyHumeLOL, back in my day in 84’/85’, I did literally carry my Seymour Duncan Convertible 100 combo in my arms with me to my high school (down the street about a quarter mile) many a day to play in our jazz band and pop band ensembles. Luckily I grew up in Vegas so flat and no snow involved lol. I must’ve had a good back because I’d laugh at trying that these days lol 😂
@x_x_6__
@x_x_6__ 11 күн бұрын
@@KimboH55 you saying hip-hop is same beat, one tempo, no vocal dynamics confirm that you really don't listen to rap. If you did, your opinion would be different. It's totally okay not to like something, but your reasoning is off.
@KimboH55
@KimboH55 11 күн бұрын
@ yeah matey I help produce hip hop tracks. Compared to the older music as was the topic here it is as flat as it comes
@davidlincolnbrooks
@davidlincolnbrooks 11 күн бұрын
I've often said that one thing you no longer get, is "player fatigue". Used to, in pop/rock, you could hear the musicians and singers fatigue slightly towards the end, and that affected their playing. The listener could feel that excitement. Think of a great record like, "Baby, It's You" by Smith (1969). Or anything by Janis Joplin. Now you don't get that natural expenditure of human energy.
@Guitar_Wolf
@Guitar_Wolf 7 күн бұрын
Great observation and one I've not considered before. It's the life force that translates through the music, and new productions are missing much or all of that
@concretew
@concretew 6 күн бұрын
Apparently Chino Moreno deliberately recorded vocals for the entire Deftones album Gore in one go so that he would get more and more fatigued through the record and that would come through in his performance. There's a lot of debate about the mixing of that record (so this might not have come off as good as it could have). But that dropped in 2016 so not old old. There are still people doing interesting things if you look hard enough. Especially in underground scenes.
@RevisionSeventeen
@RevisionSeventeen 5 күн бұрын
Some virtual instruments emulate this. For example, ML Sound Lab's drum plugins has various adjustments for player fatigue/tiredness.
@4lssis468
@4lssis468 5 күн бұрын
@@RevisionSeventeen thats pretty sick
@MysteriousCastle
@MysteriousCastle Күн бұрын
Yea! John Lennon recording Twist and Shout at 10.30pm after a full day recording and a totally hoarse voice.....and it sounded great!
@illyareid66
@illyareid66 10 күн бұрын
Really like the tuning notes part how being slightly off actually made it bigger
@TomatoFettuccini
@TomatoFettuccini 9 күн бұрын
This is exactly how pianos work. Only the strings in the very lowest part of the soundboard are single strings; everything from about C3 upwards has at least two strings, each slightly out-of-tune with each other but centered on the perfect pitch, and everything from about C5 up uses 3 strings, with the middle string perfectly on-pitch, with the other two being slightly detuned or over-tuned, which gives pianos their rich tones. It's also why 12-string guitars were invented and why instruments like mandolins have doubled strings.
@gregf1299
@gregf1299 9 күн бұрын
Yes, in fact the two defining aspects of choral, or even double tracking, is that the pitches vary against each other due to independent rate of vibrato in each. in a big choir, like gospel, you also hear the actual breathing sounds as a separate effect. You won't get this if you digitally duplicate vocal elements.
@luksjfernandes
@luksjfernandes 6 күн бұрын
This is one the aspects I like the most of rock bands that are very piano-centered, like The Rolling Stones. I've always found it difficult to express in words, but the little pitch variations make it sound like the band is on the edge of a cliff, a little mistake and everything will fall, but, like a miracle, everything works.
@nuberiffic
@nuberiffic 5 күн бұрын
literally how pianos work lol
@PowerRedBullTypology
@PowerRedBullTypology 13 сағат бұрын
What is the biggest problem are the few different 4 chord progressions most songs use from start to end and the overly simplististic melodies, like it is all made for kids I think this is a bigger problem than the sounds sounding more or less different Pop music is containing less and less different chord progressions has also been measured each following 10 years the amount of progressions decreased as well as tge complexity of the chords. This is much more important than the "details"in this video in my opinion at least
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 4 сағат бұрын
Yes. I had planned on talking about that but the video was getting long. Thought I would stick with what I know best.
@imjulesgabriel
@imjulesgabriel 8 күн бұрын
This is the best breakdown ever. I always tell people “get your own toolbox, dont use what everyone else uses”.
@ItsFinished
@ItsFinished 12 күн бұрын
It's like food... It is not fresh, but completely over processed and flat.
@jesusislukeskywalker4294
@jesusislukeskywalker4294 12 күн бұрын
yes youre right, mcpop , mcpunk , mcrocknroll 😬
@biggSHNDO
@biggSHNDO 10 күн бұрын
Very good analogy. I agree
@peterfuzz3887
@peterfuzz3887 10 күн бұрын
no it's not "like food"... there're huge variations with what is called food
@biggSHNDO
@biggSHNDO 10 күн бұрын
@ i think you misunderstood him. He’s comparing over-processed homogenous beats to mcdonalds. Whereas live-room mic recorded instruments and stuff like that would be, idk, like, a home-cooked meal
@grahamjarman
@grahamjarman 9 күн бұрын
​@@jesusislukeskywalker4294i think mcrocknroll went bankrupt in the 2000s
@Mandoslicer
@Mandoslicer 11 күн бұрын
Man I am so honored to have worked with you at Tree Sound in the late 90s. With so many sessions since, picking on panic stands out to this day. I know I was green but I noticed. Much love to you.
@Mandoslicer
@Mandoslicer 11 күн бұрын
Ps. You are totally speaking my mind in this vidja. Also. Why do you care if folks who see this video of absolute truth don’t agree? This is confusing to me. You are a singular ear at the console. One day, very soon, the industry will switch to people who are artists humbly and boisterously making hand made crafted actual music. I understand acknowledging automation and stacking and cut and pasting. That’s All in an analytic app now. Just short of AI. Perfection is not perfect. The last record I did we drew in some vocal points. Other than that, it was pretty much exactly how I remember you doing things at Tree. You know there’s gonna come a day where people recognize six fingers on a hand musically and it’s not going to illicit the same emotional response as some people, standing on a tight rope. I firmly believe whether it’s retro progressive or old new stuff whatever you wanna call it. The human artist and the spirit conjured Will have no imitators.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 6 күн бұрын
Hey! That was a good record!
@helldotsin
@helldotsin 11 күн бұрын
Awesome video! I've made it a habit for 15 years to record all of my own stuff from scratch, not use stock or bought presets, or sounds. My creativity and control of the complexity is through the roof! I push myself each day to not sound like everyone else.
@gavinnorthcroft5217
@gavinnorthcroft5217 10 күн бұрын
You rock! Go hard!
@SchweinchenHorst
@SchweinchenHorst 9 күн бұрын
And? Do you have a golden Record?
@karlsmith2451
@karlsmith2451 9 күн бұрын
That's how we rocked in the old days. Music sounds to robotic with no soul today.
@Babsmeme
@Babsmeme 6 күн бұрын
@@karlsmith2451 Because making it in music is basically just marketing. You don't earn money from streams, it's from everything else around it.
@NIGHTSMOKEBEATS
@NIGHTSMOKEBEATS Күн бұрын
THIS MAN BROKE IT DOWN BETTER THAN ANYONE POSSIBLY EVER iM 8 MINUTES IN AND BRO IS SPITTIN NOTHING BUT FACTS.
@NotFound-ll5kc
@NotFound-ll5kc 7 күн бұрын
0:10 Man, I remember positively drooling over the Soundcraft Ghost in like 1996. I would read the full-color brochure over and over and dream about how I'd set it up. Now you can find them for pennies on the dollar. 🤷‍♂
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 7 күн бұрын
Isn't that crazy? I have friends who have bought way bigger and more expensive boards for a few hundred bucks. If you want some old analog gear now is the time to buy.
@willb1157
@willb1157 7 күн бұрын
Roger that, I had a Soundcraft Spirit when they came out, a Fostex E16. And Tascam 8 track. I loved that little desk. King of the hill I was.
@NotFound-ll5kc
@NotFound-ll5kc 2 күн бұрын
@@FreakingOutWithBillyHume By the way, what is that console you're sitting at now? I know I know it but I can't place it. It's driving me crazy! 😂
@Bikewithlove
@Bikewithlove 12 күн бұрын
I’ve recorded guitar tracks with mic’ed amps in open fields and on city rooftops in the summer sun. You can very much hear it, and it makes a huge difference.
@Bristolcentaurus
@Bristolcentaurus 9 күн бұрын
not to mention the airplane flying overhead or the phone ringing or the back chatter in the park all of which adds texture
@4lssis468
@4lssis468 5 күн бұрын
@@Bristolcentaurus wanna hear your music
@Bristolcentaurus
@Bristolcentaurus 5 күн бұрын
@@4lssis468 The air plane reference is to Led Zeppelins Black Country Woman plus the engineers chatter that goes with it (the track was recorded outside), the telephones are in the "The Ocean" on Houses of the Holy at about 2.30 into the track, there is more engineers (or band) chatter in Out On the Tiles at about 1.30 ("Stop") there are probably more that i haven't picked up - there's also the notorious bass drum pedal squeak on a few of there tracks
@mauriziomauricone
@mauriziomauricone 11 күн бұрын
The other reason you did not mention is that many of those kids just want to be famous and earn money by copying what’s been successful in the past. Those kids are not artist but just cloud chasers. Edit: and don’t forget the publishers and record labels; they are pushing only the sound that is (in their eyes) ‘current’ and solely dictated by money. And let’s not forget many of the audiences don’t care about ‘good’ music.
@dtango3531
@dtango3531 5 күн бұрын
They don’t copy the the successful people from back then, cause then mainstream music would be good. What happens is the music industry finds people with talent and personality and signs them to a label that forces them to copy what else is popular today making all the music super boring and sound the same
@nuberiffic
@nuberiffic 5 күн бұрын
Yep. This is why "artists" like JoJo Siwa cop so much hate. It's clear that she's not actually interested in being a musician. She isn't creating music because it's her passion. She is just aware that she can sing, and that she already has PR connections.
@Phil_529
@Phil_529 2 күн бұрын
Clout not cloud.
@dtango3531
@dtango3531 Күн бұрын
@@Phil_529 what else would they be trying to say??? 💀💀💀💀
@Phil_529
@Phil_529 Күн бұрын
@@dtango3531 Uh, nothing? I was merely helping them. 💀💀💀💀
@boogybass
@boogybass 12 күн бұрын
Bang on! I don't know how many times I've mentioned the word dynamics to artists; it feels so redundant on my behalf. And what about fermatas? Where have those gone? Listen to the fermata in the Pointer Sister's version of Fire. I love how after the bridge everything slows right down and gets quiet before they sing, "Romeo and Julliet" to come back into the last verse. I also love the dead air between the riffs in the intro of Fire. Ah... a moment of silence before each one gets played again, and not "let's fill it all up with some sound from some loop or keyboard pad". And what about bridges, why have those disappeared? And it's so rare that we hear great solos, too. Is it because they take up too much time and songs must be 3:00 minutes or less? Great video that I recommend people pay attention to.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! I shouldv'e mention the disappearance of bridges. Also, "Fire" is FIRE!
@RVNSoundz
@RVNSoundz 6 күн бұрын
Daaamn, what channel did I just found. Keep it up
@WilliamBoyce-lt2ox
@WilliamBoyce-lt2ox 5 күн бұрын
" find" not found
@keithmooney.6949
@keithmooney.6949 7 күн бұрын
19y.o. analog enthusiast here, thanks alot for this masterpiece of a video! it objectively answers to some of my questions to what I didn't find answers before, instead of just shitting on modern music without being able to argument the point. I've also tried to understand my natural preference to the older music, to find more objective arguments for the "the music was better before" thesis from the audio engineering perspective (and not promotional/songwriting one). Highly appreciate the hard work and passion put into the creation of this video!
@fredleg600
@fredleg600 12 күн бұрын
As a 22 year old producer/engineer, I can agree with all of this. I think your videos are hitting really close to home for me, especially with how I see the industry moving. I personally feel that a lot of engineers/producers from my generation are quite misinformed about a lot of these things, as well as under the impression that these things are necessary for success. In hip hop producers are producing directly into not 1, but 2 clippers, and sending that to the artist/mixer. I feel that a lot of younger musicians are not only scared to step outside of “perfection”, but under the impression that it’s necessary to be “perfect” to succeed. I have told plenty of people that we don’t have to master to -5LuFS (yes, that loud) and they still do it, purely because they’re scared that the audience won’t listen to a dynamic master. Anyways. I’m grateful you are making these videos so that I can send them to my friends and beg them to step outside of “perfect.”
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! When artists are not be scared of imperfections they discover real beauty.
@bigboss-qv7pe
@bigboss-qv7pe 12 күн бұрын
What do you mean by 2 clippers?
@pigknickers2975
@pigknickers2975 12 күн бұрын
-5LuFS! Integrated or short? Wowsers.
@whatilearnttoday5295
@whatilearnttoday5295 11 күн бұрын
Throw away Ableton.Throw away the grid. Do linear tape. Play all parts. For the entire track. Add emphasis and dynamics all through, the entire track. Be a human.
@mttlsa686
@mttlsa686 11 күн бұрын
A lot of "type beats" here on YT are unlistenable, and I think it's just for the reason you said about mixing into 2 clipper. It's all kick hi hat and snare smacked in your face. They have a really unnatural image and balance...
@W4TSKY
@W4TSKY 11 күн бұрын
One thing to also consider is that most people aren’t making money off music like they used to, especially thanks to streaming. So for a lot of people, especially younger artists, producers, engineers, etc. it’s getting harder and harder to justify investing in these analog pieces of gear they will likely see little to no return on any time soon.
@jonathansaunders6697
@jonathansaunders6697 11 күн бұрын
cant afford the investment of time either...everything old school doesn't just take more money, it takes more time...people will prioritize efficiency and ease of use over feel and experience,..cause they cant afford to spend the same amount of time making music as before
@Cody404_
@Cody404_ 11 күн бұрын
It's a different grind for sure, I find as a producer in 2024 there's a lot of weird pressures to be a lot more than a producer, and I think for me where I struggle is with social media, that doesn't mean I roll over and accept my fate as a hobbyist, but I don't really feel the need or want to be like in the forefront of public consciousness. It's literally the only thing that keeps me tied to smart technology in general is the fact that there's this element of necessity to be this influencer, like bro I just wanna sell beats, do sessions. Y'know?
@pablolachmann7044
@pablolachmann7044 11 күн бұрын
I think the main difference is with playing real/miked instruments, whole songs/jams, not correcting everything to death. This costs no extra cent and add a lot of individuality. I think it's hard for young artist with no band background to realize how much fun it is to work on stuff with other people even if it's not all perfect.
@Slyndan
@Slyndan 11 күн бұрын
Not to mention the cost of hiring a studio to record in. Even the ”lower quality” ones where i live cost a hefty amount for half a day. I’ve instead invested in alot of modest equipment at home, and the digital stuff is updating and getting better every year. In the long term, its better for me and my band.
@kingkrollinvention
@kingkrollinvention 11 күн бұрын
you dont have to go broke getting equipment. there's plenty of options of gear. its what you do with it .
@JohnyLondon
@JohnyLondon 11 күн бұрын
The "sensationalist" title belies the depth of this very comprehensive video. So stick with it kids, it's spot on.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 11 күн бұрын
I guess it is a bit of a sensationalist title..... but hopefully people will get my points. Thanks for watching and commenting!!!
@morbidmanmusic
@morbidmanmusic 11 күн бұрын
Not compared to most KZbin click bait titles. His is more forgiving
@kenroy916
@kenroy916 11 күн бұрын
@@morbidmanmusic Yeah my thoughts exactly. That is not sensationalist at all. It's exactly what the video is about.
@krusher74
@krusher74 10 күн бұрын
Its interesting that its the evolution of youtube channels, like on a lot of car channels I watch as they get big with bigger budgets they become more boring as they chase bigger projects. I then go back to a newer channels a the early struggle is more real and details. this channel is like getting a Rick Beato3. its back to a fresher start.
@myuncle2
@myuncle2 7 күн бұрын
But he's still confusing music with music industry, two separate things. Obviously the record industry started its descent from the end of the 80s, with machines replacing real musicians. And the final blow was later coming from Napster.
@neilk4862
@neilk4862 Күн бұрын
Awesome vid - thanks for sharing your experience and insight. I'm sure this will influence a few folk (fingers crossed!).
@GiveUsMusic
@GiveUsMusic 8 сағат бұрын
Great video Billy, you laid out a very complex happening in very easy to understand terms. “Sameness” is immediately noticeable when recording most of your tracks in a native environment and (guilty as charged) copying and pasting most to all verse or chorus instruments, even lead vocal! I also think there is a lot of emotion, excitement and magical chemistry that works its way into a live recording with tangible instruments that just cannot be emulated in a DAW or layering tracks one at a time!
@GDawg2K2
@GDawg2K2 11 күн бұрын
I too am 70. Started engineering in the early 70s on an old API. Ended in NYC through the 90s on an SSL. Burnt through thousands of 2” & 1/2” reels of 456! So many Studios & Music Stores bk around 42nd - 54th street & 7th.. It was a real community! Anyway, just wanted to give props on a master class look at the industry. The compressor / limiter demo was great! FYI: one of the better, higher tech studios in NYC circa 1980s was actually named “Unique Recording”.
@rickeyjoyce7904
@rickeyjoyce7904 3 күн бұрын
Duke Bootee invited to a session at Unique studios. Chris Lord -Agee was one of the engineers on his session. The good old days
@Tipisbored
@Tipisbored 2 күн бұрын
In the mid 80's my band recorded at Unique on two occasions, always an overnight 8 hr session. One session we had to start 2hrs late as Chaka Kahn was tracking her vocal parts on Windwoods Higher Love. She came out and apologized. Good times!
@alkaponememphis
@alkaponememphis 12 күн бұрын
Makes sense why most songs sound the same. Well said Billy!
@soysos.tuffsound
@soysos.tuffsound 12 күн бұрын
Yes to getting out of the box! So many fun, easy and cheap ways to add a unique sonic signature to your sound. Yes, please do make that video.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! Will do!
@MichaelMackertMusic
@MichaelMackertMusic 14 сағат бұрын
Spot on 100%. Being unique is the way to go. I just recorded a new solo album with a few different guitars, a couple different amp set ups and effects for diversity and sounds refreshing every time. Recording live is definitely the way to go. A lot of musicians feel that they have to use the same amp plug in or same guitar for the whole record ( to me I think that's boring cause there is no excitement to it) Back in the day musicians were messing around with multiple guitars, amps & effects. One thing I feel that is missing in todays music is musicians stepping outside the box expanding on dissonant melodies and chords. Some musicians do it, but most don't. I love music. It is a never ending journey. Throw a odd time signature here and there. It adds excitement, but not many artists do that too.
@ElijahBerg0011
@ElijahBerg0011 6 күн бұрын
Providing a small correction: You’re right about the fact that most people in pop and rap music arent really making their own sounds on synths. But in music like House, Dubstep, Glitch, Electronic Ambient, and even certain subsets of Drum and Bass people program and design their own sounds ALL OF THE TIME.
@tkelong3569
@tkelong3569 12 күн бұрын
I think that the biggest difference between ‘then’ and ‘now’ Is the fact that back then if you wanted to make a song you either had to know how to play an instrument or get in touch with some people who knew. No musician? No song. Now, aNyone can ‘produce’ a song with just a bunch of loops and samples. Not knocking it, I use them heavily in my sound but mostly rhythmic and percussive aspects of the song. I’m not a good keyboardist but I’m pretty good. I can play exactly what I want on keys, bass, strings, etc. I also play guitar so I put my own guitar tracks, along with whatever samples or guitar VSTs I choose to add to the mix. So I’m not pulling melodies from some very common source that thousands and thousands of people have access to and use many times on a daily basis. That’s part of the ‘sameness’ that we’re hearing. People are using great sample libraries like Splice for instance, because a lot of those hooks sound really really good. I don’t blame people for using them, but they get used over and over and over. It’s still a great idea to learn how to actually play an instrument or two. No one can copy what’s in your head. Not yet anyway.
@bigboss-qv7pe
@bigboss-qv7pe 12 күн бұрын
It's not about the process of making the music. It mostly boils down to the ease of access for the average listener. The average listener isn't curious anymore.
@Spamton123
@Spamton123 11 күн бұрын
one solution to using samples is, i suppose, to do a bit of a daft punk thing. get funky with it!
@AshElectric
@AshElectric 11 күн бұрын
It really ends with how people use the tools they have in my eyes. When you see competitions where people HAVE to all use the same loops, you start seeing how absolutely insane people can get with limitations like that. I just don't put the blame on anything, it's really easy to find music you've never heard before, but you gotta put yourself in a situation where you're always seeking out new music ;) Splice vocals though yeah I find it funny when like 3 people use the same hook in the same scene lmao
@zyzyx4157
@zyzyx4157 5 күн бұрын
Splice is really useful for drum samples, anything else I avoid because I’d rather express myself through my own instrument playing. I don’t own a drum kit but I usually play virtual drums in logic on a drum pad and quantize them about 50% so they maintain that messy human quality. I also add distortion and slight reverb so it sounds different than the stock sound.
@JakeStrange66
@JakeStrange66 11 күн бұрын
I listen to a lot of punk & metal...a few months ago i took my step daughter's truck to the shop. Her radio was on a metal station. I literally couldn't tell the difference between the bands. Every guitar sounded like it was recorded on the same amp, in the same room, with the same microphones in the exact same positions (if they were recorded with real amps or mics at all.) The vocals were basically the same. It was absolutely ridiculous. & yeah, I listen to new bands I like...but man, that stuff on the radio was ridiculous.
@blulacez4421
@blulacez4421 9 күн бұрын
BeCuz the radio can only play certain types of production or cater to a certain demonstrating, so If you want your work to be included in their playlist thats the requirement sadly.
@JakeStrange66
@JakeStrange66 9 күн бұрын
@blulacez4421 yeah. I've noticed it elsewhere too though. There are a couple KZbin channels about recording music that I've watched (I'd rather not say who.) & literally everything they record sounds the same. I understand for a certain individual or band that's fine. But even when he records different bands on the show, they mostly sound the same too. I have learned a few things from their videos, which is cool, but dang, to me that gets old real quick.
@BattleAngelSound
@BattleAngelSound 11 күн бұрын
You forgot to say that today anything that doesn't sound EXACTLY the same (literally) like 'top10' of a matching genre playlist/record label, your song will be rejected. I'm talking about things like "this hihat has more reverb than tracks in our playlist" - real life example. We really reached this level of nonsense. There's no point to even release music these days, especially when we want to do something different. It's better to make music for ourselves, eventually some friends. As making music is a type of self-therapy, it's beneficial to us, even when not released. Much better than dealing with money-hungry, music-hating leeches that took over the music industry. Nice video by the way. I can't listen to modern music anymore myself. It makes me feel tired because everything is pushed 'in your face' and there's no dynamics anymore. But my friends love it and they cannot imagine making music without brickwalling everything.
@ralphhathaway-coley5460
@ralphhathaway-coley5460 11 күн бұрын
Yep, although that has sort of always been the case, there was possibly a bit more variety from mainstream labels in the 60s and early 70s as there were more labels, and independents as well, and as nobody knew where 'contemporary' music was going labels took more risks, rather than risk being left behind/missing out on the next big thing. The best and well known example of this (not knowing where the market was going) was Decca turning down the Beatles as "guitar groups are on the way out." I would also suggest that back then the people working for the labels were genuinely interested in the music rather than being run by 'accountants' and the bottom line being the 'be all and end all'.
@zvonimirsarcevic7928
@zvonimirsarcevic7928 11 күн бұрын
why wouldn't you release ?... You can have day job, and have music as a hobby. Frankly, not many friends will listen your song anyway :)
@BattleAngelSound
@BattleAngelSound 11 күн бұрын
@@zvonimirsarcevic7928 I released music in the past and these are the reasons why I gave up on releasing music: - record labels are not doing proper marketing and they don't invest in artists anymore, instead they're starting to ask artists to pay for it, which renders record labels completely useless - dealing with playlist curators etc. is nothing than horrible experience - hundreds of thousands tracks is published every day - to get listeners you have to spend tons of your time and money on marketing and promotion and: - to do that today you must put yourself and your image above your music I wrote it with the most nice words I could find because if I wrote what I really think about the current music industry my post would be removed by YT ;) I'm not gonna waste any more of my lifetime on any of that c**p. I have better things to do.
@BattleAngelSound
@BattleAngelSound 11 күн бұрын
@@ralphhathaway-coley5460 these days, labels are asking artists to fund marketing & PR :D So it's literally paying labels so they can take copyrights of your music. This industry is becoming more and more ridiculous with each year. Recently I read about touring and even this is apparently becoming a bigger and bigger scam (I'm not talking about the classic "play a gig for free in our pub and be thankful for the exposure" ;)
@shan5445
@shan5445 11 күн бұрын
The heart or feeling is just not there...I try to correct it when making music not perfect vocals. Changing dynamics to not being overly loud sounding. Whatever works if it's recognised or not what can I do but be myself.
@incognitomuziq5763
@incognitomuziq5763 7 күн бұрын
Man, you are telling the truth. This music today has become so copy paste copy paste I can’t stand it. 4:04
@mrpossibilities
@mrpossibilities 6 күн бұрын
Dude you are amazing. I susbscribed immediately after this video.
@markgormel3741
@markgormel3741 4 күн бұрын
Yep! Me, too!!
@Bass734
@Bass734 11 күн бұрын
I totally agree with everything you said! I recorded using Pro Tools and HDX plugins for years and enjoyed every bit of the convenience and sound. Then I tracked an album with an old school Americana artist who insisted I did everything using hardware(Neve, 1176, mic cabs, different rooms, external FX, etc.) and he didn't want me to do any corrections at all! Once we finished tracking and mixing I was blown away at how amazing the album sounded. I dig your vids (nice and clear and understandable for us bass players :) I would love to see more of your techniques.
@johnhamers4571
@johnhamers4571 12 күн бұрын
I was trapped in my bad productions. You've saved me and think this is the most important lesson for me in the last 10 years. You're a master in analyzing stuff. Thanks from the bottom of my heart man 🙏🏼✌🏼
@gustersongusterson4120
@gustersongusterson4120 12 күн бұрын
As a live engineer I'm constantly trying to simulate the acoustic properties of air since I'm always close micing.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
How so?
@tellysense
@tellysense 12 күн бұрын
As an in the box musician (a side from vocals and simple percussion) I am always trying to get some distance and air that is quite different from what most reverb plugins -- I do use reverb for a bit of sparkle, stereo enhancement and 3Dness but even with it I always feel like my ITB software instrument based compositions feel right on top of you. Best thing I've found to approximate the "air" described in this vid is a plugin from Airwindows called Distance ("Distance is specifically set up to mimic through-air high frequency attenuation"). You might like it and find it useful. I put one instance on my mix bus to set a basic depth for the whole composition and then use it here and there on individual instruments, pushing and pulling them until it sounds pretty close to a real band playing. Airwindows ToTape8 and his CreamCoat reverb are pretty mind blowingly good and useful as well. Let me know if the Distance plugin helps you out as I am curious what you think
@whatilearnttoday5295
@whatilearnttoday5295 11 күн бұрын
Sometimes a "Sound reinforcement" approach works. Even if it's not 4 violins on stage but 4 heavy metal dudes.
@multoc
@multoc 11 күн бұрын
@@FreakingOutWithBillyHumelive mixing is its own beast no isolation, PA coming back into the mics etc
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 4 күн бұрын
I mixed live sound for a few months and ran away as fast as I could. it's sooo hard. Good live mixing engineers are heroes.
@josesalinas7970
@josesalinas7970 15 сағат бұрын
Am a 20 year old music prodigy. And I can tell you, I feel the emotion on the waves, the bad thing is, acoustic instruments are expensive
@ahmetsisman1677
@ahmetsisman1677 Күн бұрын
So much experience, knowledge and fundamental facts in this video. Rarely commenting YT videos, but this is gold.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 4 сағат бұрын
Well thanks so much for commenting! Glad you liked it!
@cantstopplayingmusic
@cantstopplayingmusic 12 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing, didn't skip any part of the video😁. I enjoyed hearing your opinion!
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
THank you!!!!
@claudianreyn4529
@claudianreyn4529 4 күн бұрын
Most ppl don't create, they just regurgitate the music that already exists.
@W0RSTWASSA
@W0RSTWASSA 5 күн бұрын
sad but true. - be unique is a heartful reminder that YOU make something and not the THINGS are made of you. // Thanks for that great video.
@danyelnicholas
@danyelnicholas Күн бұрын
8:15 as a musician growing up with African(ised) music, I find notes that are exactly on the beat are not perfect but primitive, musically without flavour. Listen to authentic Gnawa, Ethiopian Music, Sidney Bechet or Miles Davis: how many notes are actually flat on the beat, and where exactly are they if not? Those microrhythms are exactly where groove happens.
@schmui
@schmui 2 сағат бұрын
Absolutely 100% agree.
@tanerremzi
@tanerremzi 8 күн бұрын
This is why I use a digital 8 track away from the computer, only use it to upload the WAV when finished and mastered. So no copy and paste of anything when I'm recording! Thanks for the great video 😅
@KuennBeats
@KuennBeats 12 күн бұрын
22 year old producer here, you're definitely right. My favorite producers use analog equipment and have VERY unique sound signatures, regardless of the actual musical content, and that's something I'm hoping to build. This video's almost like a tutorial on how to humanize music if you think about it.
@24vojo
@24vojo 11 күн бұрын
exactly!
@vf1923
@vf1923 8 күн бұрын
Or I guess de-unhumanize, haha.
@zacharysmithingell5460
@zacharysmithingell5460 7 күн бұрын
I love the convenience of a modern DAW but I love the breath and air and personality and character of music where every line and part is sung and performed (rather than copy/pasted). I love hearing pitch wobbles on a vocal, or on a harmony or backing vocal. When I record I want it to not only be the best version of that song, capturing all the power and emotion and dynamic, but also a true representation of the musicians at the time they recorded. When I listen back I want to get the feeling that we had in the room on those days. Great video, points well made.
@DodgaOfficial
@DodgaOfficial 12 күн бұрын
As a producer that works mostly in digital, I go to really great lengths to give my music a human feel. I try to introduce tons of little imperfections, glitches, noise, bit crushing, all sorts of things to give everything a sense of motion and humanity.
@SuperNevile
@SuperNevile 5 күн бұрын
Interested reading the other day that when recording the strings on "Eleanor Rigby", Geoff Emerick put the microphones right up to the instruments. The musicians hated it and moved back, whereupon Geoff moved the microphones back up to the instruments. The musicians eventually accepted the microphone positions, played the score, hated the session, didn't want to hear the playback, and left. But at least Geoff got that unique string sound. Sometimes you have to upset musicians to get the right sound.
@ricsannicholas5746
@ricsannicholas5746 2 күн бұрын
Really appreciated this video. Brilliantly done. Oh... The KTEL album. Fabulous touch.
@wacharaboy
@wacharaboy 7 күн бұрын
I just cannot agree more with you. Every single point you covered made sense. PLEASE make a video with each of the topics you wanted to include in this video. Cheers from CR 🇨🇷 !
@moogan2561
@moogan2561 6 күн бұрын
Awesome video!! The quality of your videos and knowledge of music in general is pleasing. Keep crushing it man, just subscribed!
@johnnymandez
@johnnymandez 12 күн бұрын
Love it! Thanks for putting this information out there. I’m inspired! ❤️
@happyshadow
@happyshadow 12 күн бұрын
I think music is more diverse than it was in the 60's, and the 70's and the 80's... we live in Avery diverse musical world now. the thing that makes everything sound the same is the discovery/the way music is consumed. Go try find the strangest music you can! It's out there. There's loads of interesting crossover Classical electronic, Jazz and Hiphop. We've never had such a diverse musical landscape, just be careful which big label is paying to narrow your musical discovery journey toward there artists
@shan5445
@shan5445 11 күн бұрын
I don't think you understand
@bmphil3400
@bmphil3400 11 күн бұрын
Whole genres of music were created in the 60s and 70s. That's not happening now. Electric blues, psychedelic, folk, acid rock, heavy metal, R&B, Soul, Disco, Progressive Rock were all pretty much INVENTED in the 60s and 70s. They are not inventing much that's new now.
@riffraffrichard
@riffraffrichard 11 күн бұрын
I agree there’s some wild stuff being made. I think it’s never in the mainstream you find experimentation and innovation. However, there is a lot of generic sounding stuff being created and it’s because it’s never been easier to make music using a laptop and very simple set up to produce a proficient professional sounding track. Unfortunately this can make production lazy and by numbers like building a Lego model. The key when making music is to find the heart of the song and build an aesthetic for that.
@79Glitch
@79Glitch 11 күн бұрын
Ridiculous comment. There has never been a LESS diverse time for music in my lifetime, and I’m 45. But unlike yourself (I’m presuming based on your comment) and younger generations now, my cohorts and I were obsessed with tracking down and consuming music that preceded our generation, so we were buying CD’s, tapes, and vinyl of music from 60’s, 70’s, and early 80’s that we missed, especially the funk and blue note jazz-funk-fusion stuff from the 70’s that formed the basis of our favorite hip hop by people like Wu-tang, Boot Camp, Tribe, and Outkast. I was also big on using the library to hear old vinyl, cassettes and CD’s, which you could check out (still can, actually). The amount of pure genius and creativity that existed from that time period is virtually endless. I’m still discovering new favorite artists, bands, and songs from fertile period all the time. The modern music scene … is a wasteland. Everything does, in fact, sound the same as everything else, or is completely derivative in the most obvious and lazy ways. I still have a hunger for discovering music. If there were modern artists worth discovering, I would find them and and listen (the Louis Cole’s of the world are few and far between). There simply isn’t anything going on. The only people who could possibly think differently, and sorry if this is insulting … are VERY limited (nicer way of saying ignorant) in their musical knowledge, probably a product of the modern generations reliance on steaming services? Whereas we would discover an artist we like-James Brown, Otis Redding, Bill Evans, Prince, The Beatles, Led Zepplin, etc.-and proceed to find and devour everything they’ve ever recorded, including lost demos, side projects, solo careers, live concert albums and VHS tapes … kids today simply hear the one or two songs an artist has on steaming services rotation or playlists, or whatever songs happens to be floating around tik tok. It’s a very different culture in terms of music enthusiasm, which also probably explains the lack of innovation or unique sounds? Everyone is just in a general malaise and apathy about music because it’s so readily available to you whenever you want; there’s nothing exciting about music anymore; there’s no hunger for discovery on the part of the consumer, or conversely, a hunger to do something no one has ever done before in terms of the artists. This video nails a lot of points that Rock Beato left out of some of his recent criticisms, or had different angle on some of the points he typically makes as well. Good stuff.
@jalawto
@jalawto 10 күн бұрын
@@79Glitch So I am slightly younger than you and a musician and am more than a casual music listener so here's my input to your input. First I am curious what are the newest bands you listen to since you mentioned some 90's hip hop so I wonder if that's around the period you stopped searching for new music. Around the 90's is when there was a wide divergence in musical genres and if you were still waiting for the next great rock band you were robbing yourself of the best new music because rock just wasn't where music was heading by then, save for maybe red hot chili peppers or Oasis but as popular as they were there was better stuff to be found. Radiohead has been the most critically acclaimed band since around 2000 which proves that music was heading in a different direction by the 90's/2000s. Indie music became huge around this time, Dinosaur Jr., Pavement, Elliott Smith, Modest Mouse then later Arcade Fire, Death Cab for Cutie, Bright Eyes and one of my personal favorites Fleet Foxes. Metal became huge in the 90's with bands like Faith No More, Death, Immortal. Evolving into newer bands like Necrophagist, Mastodon, and one of my favorites Between the Buried and Me. The only caveat is you have to like screaming vocals but you can't say that all the metal that's come out isn't good music just because you don't like screaming, or at least you can't say it's repetitive and derivative, I guess taste is subjective. Hip hop and rap, I admit I only listen to 90's stuff like the bands you mentioned and can't stand the newer stuff. Rap took off more than any other genre and is the new rock and roll. If I were to say any new genre is unoriginal and derivative I'd pick rap(outside of radio pop music), I think the 90's hip hop was the peak and since Lil Wayne onwards it's all awful but hey that's just me. Kendrick Lamar and Kanye West are both popular and critically acclaimed and I wouldn't say there's not something to their popularity because of my own taste. Post hardcore and punk became bigger even though the 80's had a lot of great hardcore and punk as well. Fugazi, Lagwagon, NOFX, Rancid, The Descendants. Some of my favorite music was the earlier emo/screamo stuff like Alexisonfire, Coheed and Cambria, At the Drive-In, and one of my personal favorites mewithoutYou. Post-Rock and math-rock. Slint, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Tortoise, Mogwai. Hella, Don Caballero, Tera Melos, Minus the Bear. There's been a lot of amazing music but the tastes have changed. Even my musical tastes are slightly outdated because a lot of the music I've listed was 90's-2010's bands. There is an oversaturation of music these days because of home recording being more accessible and there is a lot of copycat bands as well because of that but I just don't think you can say in all fairness that there's no good music anymore. If you look around you can find pretty much anything under the sun but a lot of it isn't stuff the casual music fan would stumble upon.
@eugenetzigane
@eugenetzigane Күн бұрын
AMEN!! 🎉 I'm a classical conductor and I have been saying for years that even in the classical music world, conductors, soloists and orchestra are all sounding the same. High-level, no doubt. And we may not be using the same instruments, presets, or recording equipment, but this deadly pursuit of perfection since the Modernist revolution of the 1920s has finally really killed the uniqueness of artists worldwide. Thanks for addressing this problem so clearly and with evidence. Admirable!! Bravo!!!
@petro5
@petro5 20 сағат бұрын
Wow this is my first time on your channel and immediately subscribed. This was the most eloquently concise I’ve ever seen this info broken down. Amazing, man, Fckin hats off 🤠
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 4 сағат бұрын
Awesome! Thank you so much!
@luciencrofts
@luciencrofts 5 күн бұрын
Totally agree with everything you say. Technology squeezing the life out of music.
@paulam5864
@paulam5864 4 күн бұрын
Technology squeezing the life out of EVERYTHING! 😢😢😢
@DominicJanlin
@DominicJanlin 6 күн бұрын
THIS is the info I’ve been looking for. Definitely earned a subscriber!!
@DaDudeClub
@DaDudeClub 8 күн бұрын
Oh yes. That - and, man, it's the saddest thing going to live gigs and even there they'll all sound the same. That's most refreshing video I've seen in a while, helps me save hundreds on therapy - thank you!
@reillybrown6364
@reillybrown6364 6 күн бұрын
New favourite recording channel, this is gold.
@polygonalmasonary
@polygonalmasonary 7 күн бұрын
The very best comparison of analog and digital music, and the overuse of technology in music I have heard. Brilliant video 🙏🫡🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧♥️
@stevedoesnt
@stevedoesnt 12 күн бұрын
I recognized this inevitability years ago. Many did. The difference between me and many of my cohorts though, is that MANY have taken all of the shortcuts anyway, and prioritized time and money and relieving themselves of their own inhibitions. “Make everything perfect” is something that virtually no listeners ever asked for. Only producers and musicians.
@pablolachmann7044
@pablolachmann7044 10 күн бұрын
And it's based on fear that you're not professional and show some vulnerability. But that is what makes art interesting.
@vf1923
@vf1923 8 күн бұрын
And not all types of musicians. I'm a classical musician and taking all this stuff away to me sounds kinda like taking away "music".
@fabio_silva144
@fabio_silva144 6 күн бұрын
Texture, dynamics, imperfections. Music is much more than a math equation.
@whaleguy
@whaleguy 11 күн бұрын
I know a pretty famous producer who uses amp sims. He's produced a bunch of bands, and all of them have the same guitar tones on their records! It's almost like he doesn't even know how to use amp sims other than picking his favourite preset. Meanwhile I have used four different amp sims on a single song. I am not saying everyone needs to do this, but what really needs to happen is for people to explore their software more thoroughly instead of sticking to the same few presets. Pod Farm is a really old amp sim, but even it had 78 different guitar amps and 28 bass amps. It alone can be a source of infinite variety if people just used it properly.
@josephfigueroa3527
@josephfigueroa3527 11 күн бұрын
You should try what Alive In Chains did and try different IRs, mics, and amps for the lows, mids, and highs. I have my own secret formula for my IR mix that's fucking killer.
@MrPete0282
@MrPete0282 10 күн бұрын
Yea sure 78+28 eq curves... Another issue with coded plugins is they're the same very often just different GUIs it's called in-house code, especially when mixed a certain way by the same engineer it will sound the same. Also even if they were that different you're asking one guy to learn 100+ amp sims and what you can do with them... quite the learning curve assuming a guy of a certain age, it makes more sense to use a few that you know & like, plus if the band likes it the job is done! Anyway typical thing with plugins , eg. u can easily match different uad eqs, or with soft synths emulations a new comes out and it sounds like the previous one , too much hype.
@whaleguy
@whaleguy 7 күн бұрын
@@josephfigueroa3527 I haven't gone that crazy yet but I do intend to. Amp blending is such a deep rabbit hole you can get lost in. So far, I have used it more traditionally, in trying to blend amps that have different kinds of distortion. There is one amp in there that is just unusable. I have tried it on so many tracks and never found a good place for it. But I will keep trying till I find a place to use it 🙂
@PieterKaan1
@PieterKaan1 4 күн бұрын
Spot on! Billy is right in everything he states. The technology makes it all so easy but it takes the human out of the equation.
@drawaline279
@drawaline279 6 күн бұрын
Love the way you explain every concept you introduce without taking it all for granted. This video is GOLD 💯 More like this, please 🙏 It's hard to believe this channel has only 17K subscribers.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 6 күн бұрын
Thanks! I only had a little over 9K subs a few weeks ago so 17K is a lot for me. Thanks so much for watching and commenting!
@christopherrobleto-harvey2876
@christopherrobleto-harvey2876 6 күн бұрын
sound engineer here...i was born in the early 80's. i've been saying this kind of thing for years. spot on.
@gisfortheguitar
@gisfortheguitar 12 күн бұрын
Enjoyed the waveform visuals and explanation. Awesome stuff. I'm hoping the brickwall clipping is a temporary fad 😢 Music needs dynamics!
@marlobedancin
@marlobedancin 7 күн бұрын
yeah thats not gonna happen I think. Loudness has won, since it usually makes stuff sound better to the ear. Not as unique, but warmer, punchier, more qualitative. All the good stuff. However the reals pros actually don't overdo it, or if they do it know how to still have everything sound dynamic.
@timbrown7652
@timbrown7652 8 күн бұрын
1,342 Rick Beato videos in one! Amazing
@tripthelightfantastic6519
@tripthelightfantastic6519 Күн бұрын
I just discovered your channel and this video is so refreshing! Thank you for sharing.
@Gauravanartist
@Gauravanartist Күн бұрын
Wow, I just have to say, you are a genius the way you explained how everything sounds the same today. Your expertise and experience shine through. You’ve done a great job in shedding light on these issues, and I’m sure it’s going to open the eyes of a lot of people. I started my music journey with Pink Floyd, and now I can really appreciate the difference between the old and new sounds. Hats off to you for sharing these important insights! Please make more videos.
@klisher
@klisher 12 күн бұрын
i think theres a tendency today for artists to be scared to step outside of the tried and tested drum loops and plugins. also not listening to a diversity of music. thinking they have to like X,Y or Z otherwise they will passed over.
@THA-REAPER
@THA-REAPER 12 күн бұрын
Its also the sources of information we share. Pre-internet days how did you find things out? Hopefully a magizine or a published book. If you're really lucky...knowing like minds that like passing the info. Even the forum days you still had to read, but you can completely interpret what you read differently. Now we have KZbin. We're shown, we can hear, we can download the same files, influenced to grab the same gear, theres algorithms. There was a time where most people swore to keep lots of knowledge to themselves or amongst the crew they were working with.
@tonywilbanks3541
@tonywilbanks3541 12 күн бұрын
This was sooo much fun to watch...and since we're pretty much of the same generation I have witnessed all that you spoke of. Unfortunately a good amount of today's music listeners don't know what they don't know (and are missing with the human elements being removed). The majority of my music equipment is analog, I listen to vinyl and shoot film in my camera.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! I guess you can still get pictures developed or do you do it yourself?
@Spamton123
@Spamton123 11 күн бұрын
actually, i myself, who is a part of gen z, don't actually like the music on the radio right now. it's become quite stale. it was actually at least slightly better 4 years ago and before. now it's just taylor swift and country music and rap. it's too boring. ADD SOME STUFF or TAKE AWAY STUFF.
@bradhardisty1652
@bradhardisty1652 9 сағат бұрын
Enjoying. I got turned onto your channel by another studio friend. I feel like I'm listening to myself, lol. I've had these arguments and complaints for years.I was so pro tech back at the beginning, literally, working at West LA Music starting in 89, as the only Apple for music dealer in LA. Getting Digidesign proto types including Sound Tools. In fact Pro Tools partially existed due to feedback from Karl and myself and input we got from showing prototypes to Producers etc. Any way I started going anti tech because of musical problems going into the 2000s. Sure, digital media is so easy to mess with but all I think about is old consoles, tape and machines.
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 5 сағат бұрын
Sound tools.... I am old.
@akamrkris
@akamrkris 12 сағат бұрын
Great Video, Constant DAW usage and recognizing my songs were becoming robotic led me to go completely dawless in 2020. I've never looked back. Go Analogue!
@JIMBCPA
@JIMBCPA 10 күн бұрын
Very well done, subscribing!
@michaelneppel1748
@michaelneppel1748 12 күн бұрын
Copy/Paste is awful. Songs must evolve.
@peterjanssen5901
@peterjanssen5901 11 күн бұрын
I believe, musicians don't call it copy/paste, they call it "covers"
@Arcessitor
@Arcessitor 11 күн бұрын
@@peterjanssen5901 That's not what this is referring to. This is about copy pasting internally, within the song.
@elijahworden219
@elijahworden219 11 күн бұрын
I mean yeah but I love loop songs but I also listen to hiphop
@whatilearnttoday5295
@whatilearnttoday5295 11 күн бұрын
Even if you're playing 4 on floor techno with zero real variation. PLAY IT! Even if it's the same motif over rand over, press record, play the entire tune. THE ENTIRE TUNE. PLAY IT!!! Every bassist worth their salt will tell you that ever bar is different, even when it's the same.
@jangobango2847
@jangobango2847 11 күн бұрын
​@whatilearnttoday5295 the boomer echo chamber in here is great
@eleven903
@eleven903 4 күн бұрын
There are many of us who are making music that does NOT sound the same. Many, many of us. I would suggest that some of you veterans of the industry--if you really care about the future of music--do some deep diving for that music, and then promote it, so that it has a fighting chance.
@SaskiaRobin
@SaskiaRobin 2 күн бұрын
thissss. i swear sometimes older gens blame their isolation from good music (which 100% still exists - amyl and the sniffers, fontaines dc, big thief, mitski, courtney barnett, i could go onnn) on kids not having like a 'real artistic understanding' or something to make themselves feel better about not being young anymore. these kinda videos do nothing to promote good music, they just pander to people feeling out of the loop
@SaskiaRobin
@SaskiaRobin 2 күн бұрын
also bland pop music has always existed. like grunge was never meant to be mainstream it was a response to corporate music in the 80s
@Endarz
@Endarz 8 күн бұрын
I subbed after what you said you had to cut from this video due to length. You, sir, are a gold mine of information.
@AdrianaCordovez
@AdrianaCordovez 4 күн бұрын
Finally i found someone who i can relate too...i totally get it...and this is why the best music ever made was done in this raw form..like recording a live band all the way through the song and just living it like that.... thats the way i want to make my music! thank you so much for sharing this!!!
@idogepgyar
@idogepgyar 12 күн бұрын
Well said! 🤘
@kevinbatchelor9566
@kevinbatchelor9566 12 күн бұрын
This is the absolute best explanation I’ve heard on this. Nice work!
@Mr.PhatsVarietyVibesShow
@Mr.PhatsVarietyVibesShow 12 күн бұрын
my 2 cent worth opinion: ONE major factor for the invention of all those gadgets & auto-tuners is due to the fact that we lack talent, sure we have a bunch of modern technology, but those techs aren't a substitute for real talent: Modern day vocalists don't have the talent as the previous generation had, so they rely on modern tech to help them along , because they don't want to invest 20 years of their life to hoeing their vocals & really learn to sing for real, so hence we have auto-tuners.. it's true music isn't supposed to be perfect it's supposed to have glitches & one other major factor why live bands & singers have to use backing tracks & auto-tuners live is because they can't duplicate live what was recorded in the studio , so I am 100% sure based on my opinion that auto-tune has to be used live. because the live performance just can't be reproduced ... & this is what I think killed live music.. I bet most of our famous vocalists are using auto-tuners live or lip sinking ,because based on my opinion it's just too impossible to sing night after night on tour night after night because if they did their voice would go out.. nobody in my opinion can sing night after night & go on tour night after night. Maybe perhaps back in the day before all this modern tech was invented the concert goers expected to hear mistakes during a live performance so it wasn't a big deal . And also most people only have relative pitch having perfect pitch is very rare in humans, so the music during a live performance doesn't have to be perfect. Most people can't hear the glitches or the mistakes anyway, so why is modern music have to be perfect in pitch & time? in summary all this modern tech & all those cool gadgets are designed to cover up for the lack of talent we lack pure talent. I've been inside the studios in the late 80's early 90's before all this modern apps, & tech stuff was invented.. Back in the day before all this modern tech was invented it took months even years to complete a whole record, or album, or a single LP/EP studio musicians would spend hours upon hours in the studio working on their sound & going over take after take.. just putting down vocals would take weeks modern music in my opinion sucks, because it all sounds the same being produced on the same sound board & gadgets.
@locobabylocke
@locobabylocke 20 сағат бұрын
I’m a producer/songwriter and the things you said about air got me hooked. Using voice/instrument/mic just leaves so much room for frequencies. I wanna add more choir now since I really like it! I also have the perfection disease. Tryna not to quantize my drums on 100% now, maybe 95%… and focusing on just recording more sounds instead of searching on splice… Thanks a lot!
@capionthegreat4582
@capionthegreat4582 2 күн бұрын
This was a dope informative video.Its crazy because KZbin videos are starting to all seem the same too.Yours was different and eye opening!
@AdedotunAdeniran-c5k
@AdedotunAdeniran-c5k 6 күн бұрын
Modern music today is trash I mean, I was born in 2007, but I prefer 90s And some modern music today are good but many are robots making music
@t23c56
@t23c56 11 күн бұрын
The only reason anyone would think modern music all sounds the same is because they have stopped actively seeking out new music. This is like listening to a "best of the 80s" radio station and saying it all sounds the same because they all use the same synth patches and snare sound.
@hi-ccowboy7983
@hi-ccowboy7983 11 күн бұрын
There’s truth to that, but it’s also true that modern engineers often use a cookie cutter approach to recording and mixing.
@ace-smith
@ace-smith 11 күн бұрын
people have been trying to figure out “why new music sounds the same” for so long that the first stuff it was said about is now old music that sounds different
@jeremythornton433
@jeremythornton433 11 күн бұрын
I think it mainly applies to pop music.
@josephfigueroa3527
@josephfigueroa3527 11 күн бұрын
I've been trying to find new bands that don't sound like every other trash modern band out there. I've gone to underground shows and have dug into the depths of 4chan. Everybody sounds the same. Even in the 80s, you could tell who you were listening to regardless of the vibe of the era.
@hi-ccowboy7983
@hi-ccowboy7983 11 күн бұрын
@ nobody sounds like Melt-Banana or Otoboke Beaver.
@Mike-in3cp
@Mike-in3cp 2 күн бұрын
Thank you… I had theories, but holy SH**! I didn't realize the death by a thousand cuts aspect of why everything sounds so homogenized even across genres. Wow.
@skylinefilms9958
@skylinefilms9958 23 сағат бұрын
I totally agree with everything you have just said , and I am loving your video very informative supporting from 🇿🇼 Zimbabwe
@NoReplyNZ
@NoReplyNZ Күн бұрын
Excellent video. Much love from New Zealand 🇳🇿
@ericliu6022
@ericliu6022 6 күн бұрын
Ever since I started mixing about a year ago I was always so confused about the loudness concept. I never understood why I was supposed to make a verse with acoustic guitar sound as loud as a chorus with a full band. This demonstration is so helpful. Thank you.
@sorte_far
@sorte_far 12 сағат бұрын
Super inspiring and On the spot Billy. Same sounds. Same plugins. Same output etc. But I really would have loved if this DAW stuff was around when I was fresh faced and a Youngee version. I had my 4 track 🎉
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 4 сағат бұрын
DAWs are just tools. The question is: are you running them or are they running you?
@GiovannyLeiteOficial
@GiovannyLeiteOficial 6 күн бұрын
This video is an entire course!! Thanks Freaking, you changed my way to produce
@gliddofglood
@gliddofglood 6 күн бұрын
I thought this was fascinating. It’s also really well shot and edited. Very professional piece of work. Thanks!
@hansleopoldhelm6415
@hansleopoldhelm6415 Күн бұрын
Been talking about this for years! Couldn't agree more! Expressiveness and dynamics are so underrated they should be the most important thing to look for when putting a song together. As for the custom sounds I believe there's so much decision impairment that you are kinda stuck with presets, personally I choose to have limitations so I come up with my personal point of view. Today I feel most artists and musician arrangements sound like they are entirely on grid and sound plasticky. btw excellent content! :D
@montollo1098
@montollo1098 7 күн бұрын
This is quite possibly the explanation I've ever seen about the differences between new and older music. Amazing job, thanks for posting this.
@almostgudenough2975
@almostgudenough2975 Күн бұрын
I agree whole heartedly! I am in this music production course, and everyone is saying, "your song's too dynamic." "You need to stop trying to be unique, cause if you do your mixes will be horrible." "don't reinvent the wheel." Shut up. I am going to make what I like and only what I like, and if I have to spend a long time learning how to mix and master it so be it. I'm not an NPC who likes everything everyone else likes. And AI is a whole other issue that will probably add a huge layer to this problem. Anyone can give an AI a prompt and have it make something and take all the credit. What happened to actual skill, talent and commitment? Good stuff. Speak the truth boldly!
@precisionsoundworksstudio
@precisionsoundworksstudio 9 сағат бұрын
Billy, you got me freaking out! Great vid!
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume
@FreakingOutWithBillyHume 5 сағат бұрын
Oh no.... you're not supposed to freak out. I'm handling the freaking out for everybody.
@Tyler-wl8kq
@Tyler-wl8kq 5 күн бұрын
You nailed this , over compression and NOT sounding live is a music killer in my humble opinion
@zcr87401
@zcr87401 4 күн бұрын
You are the absolute man! Thanks for pointing this out. Def looking forward to more of your videos
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