Boyd is totally correct about Paul being the most experimental and musically adventurous Beatle. He was really into Stockhausen early on. Paul's solo albums have some really wild shit on them too. Every album has at least one song that creates an entirely new genre.
It's a good interview, but the way EVERYONE talks about music vexes me. Was Boyd doing both industrial and noise music, or did those genres emerge from the stuff influenced by Boyd? Who exactly was doing either genre before him, and what IS the difference between noise and industrial anyway? They do it with heavy metal too. "Black Sabbath played doom metal" GTFO here.
Fantastic interview; been very influenced by Rice lately, as far as reading, imagery, symbolism, etc…thank you for this!
Wow that's always been my favorite Beatles song since I was a kid.
Boyd is totally correct about Paul being the most experimental and musically adventurous Beatle. He was really into Stockhausen early on. Paul's solo albums have some really wild shit on them too. Every album has at least one song that creates an entirely new genre.
Temporary secretary
@@KyleWhiteandfriends The outtakes from that same album, McCartney 2, have a song called "Check My Machine" that is absolutely wild.
A great interview! There are quite a few new insights I have not heard yet. 💀🎧
Fantastic upload!
Fun interview!
Great interview!
😎 groovy
I wonder if Boyd Rice ever read anything by or on Edward Bernais.
It's a good interview, but the way EVERYONE talks about music vexes me.
Was Boyd doing both industrial and noise music, or did those genres emerge from the stuff influenced by Boyd? Who exactly was doing either genre before him, and what IS the difference between noise and industrial anyway? They do it with heavy metal too. "Black Sabbath played doom metal" GTFO here.