Not sure it's possible to overstate that point. Rick has brought a level of music education previously unavailable to the masses, to fans and musicians alike.
Fact. I’ve played guitar for 40 years and my playing ability and fretboard logic is double what it was just by investing into Rick’s education. I bought all four of Rick’s courses and if you’re a guitar player at ANY level or ability, do yourself a favor and invest in Rick.
This video just proves once again how great a storyteller Rick is. Such a basic setup, only his phone, but still manages to hook the viewer deeply into the story. I think that this is some what comparable to songwriting, which Rick is obviously talented at. This is one of the main reasons I love this channel, always so pleasing and perfectly composed videos and stories. It's like I would have the perfect talk with my dad every time I watch a video on this channel haha.
The major difference today is that the music isn't about the music like before, it's the content creation, quirky videos, candid stories, self brand, social banter, and constant engagement with your audience. The music is like a by product of content engagement.
True, but doesn't that also make it more organic? Bands and performers build following and fanbases by actually _engaging_ with them. I don't think the music has to suffer for that.
Yep, there is a lot of algorithm feeding in that process. Just like the previous gate keepers, the algorithm demands certain criteria to be met and in turn does the promotion. This isn't necessarily a flaw of the algorithm. Instead the thing to be learned should be that gatekeepers acting by the numbers like algorithms can as well be replaced by one.
Another instant classic Beato post. He is a fascinating blend of insight, experience, knowledge and skill and it’s all wrapped up in humour and modesty and passion. Love it. Keep it up, Rick. 61 yrs young and going strong!!
Rick if you see this, me and Justin Hawkins gonna get u back in the studio one day just wait and see :) Kidding around, youre truly an exceptional youtuber. Its clear that your great ear and 'perfect pitch' translate also to being able to say things and tell stories and use titles and captions in a very subtle and intelligent and wise way that us younger gen youtube consumers really benefit from
Your channel is part of why UA-cam is my TV these last few years. Honest commentary and well based on music and the technical, not hyped like some other annoying channels.
Me 2 👍👍 Exactly I also look at youtube sort of like my learning channel to meet like minds that like things and learning more like woodworking, hotrods, welding, machining , gardening music etc build your paradise at home but correspond all over the nation and world.
The algorhythm is also somewhat of a gatekeeper. It's harder to get exposed to fresh influences when you are directed towards your biases. Also, I was always willing to give a record or CD a second chance if I didn't like it during the first play because I just spent anywhere between $9 and $19 dollars on it.
I think you are in a minority, not many people bought random CDs or vinyl/tape before that, and hoped they would like it. People bought what they already heard on the radio, or on TV, and sometimes by word of mouth but that would rarely be anything other than what the other person had heard on the radio/TV etc. Things were no different, they were just controlled in a different way in the past. The only time they would buy what they hadn't heard, would be albums from the artists they knew already from hearing in those places. You would maybe get people also finding artists from festivals, or compilations albums and things like that. But they didn't shape the music world. In fact although still not good, it's much better today by a very, very long way including the algorithm.
Algorithm is a joke. I have an Instagram and one of the most average not interesting posts i ever posted has been growing for 3 months. 15,000 have liked it. My other higher-quality posts have 10-30 likes each. Garbage.
Maybe some listeners, but, not most of us, especially those of us who are musicians arent killing the music business. What has been and is toppling the music business, even the art of music, is social media and the content creator mentality. Social media has taken the place of real relationships and content creation has taken the place of, not all, but most of, real creation and sharing. I rely on ole school music to keep me grounded and inspire me on going. And congratulations to you on what you have done on YT!
Always interesting to hear your thoughts Rick. The absence of gatekeepers has created the best of times and the worst of times. Today anyone can write, play, record, and produce a record in their basement with a laptop but... The signal to noise ratio of artists has never been lower and it is really difficult to sift the diamonds out of the vast dunes of sand. If you are an extraordinary musical artist and make a few small missteps in promoting your work, you may never get noticed. Meanwhile millions of streams are happening with mediocre music that fill the space and clog the media.
There's a business opportunity there. Link something) like Spotify with independent YT content. The idea is an algorithm that filters junk. Maybe it already exists?
@@leonardticsay8046 it is even harder; if they have something new, then they would be stupid to drop it somewhere. Because it gets copied for sure and it can literally take a lifetime to get the copyrights back, if the case won't be settled with money (the usual).
Creators may have "killed" the A&R department, but the industry is alive and well. With generous financial tendrils into Spotify and all the major film/TV/commercial licensing platforms, the major labels aren't hurting for profits. They license from TikTok and Soundcloud artists who have done the recordings themselves, made their own videos, driven their own marketing, all the things the labels used to need to do. Now, all they have to do is pick who they want to distribute. That's a lot of costs they no longer need to spend to get pretty much at the same place. I challenge this notion that Sony/Warner/Universal have been dealt the death blow. They're doing their deals differently but make no mistake, they're as strong as they ever were.
The fact that the label spent $500,000 making an album and then dropped you shows you how much money was in the business at the time. I made an album at the same time for $15,000, printed the CDs, hit the road, and made triple what I spent on it.
I guess when they could take 90% of the money made from a song/album then they could afford to have many failures for the few that might work out. I guess now that everyone listens to songs on streaming services that pay the artists (and so I guess the record label, if there is one, as well) very little then this model of developing new artists, giving them a chance, talent spotting and taking a chance has gone, and rescue labels want more of a sure thing based on social media views and likes.
@@lavenderbee3611 the label advances the artist the money. That money has to be paid back. You don't actually get paid "for real" until the advance has been paid back and the label turns a profit on you.
@@lavenderbee3611 "The act" is responsible for the recording costs, the people who make up "the act" aren't personally responsible. Your band can make a million dollar record that sells nothing and bill collectors will never show up at your door, you just won't be able to make any more music with a label because your "act" will still owe the money from the first album. It's not like defaulting on a mortgage or skipping paying credit card bills.
I think how it worked was the band was "advanced" say, 500k and they were responsible for all costs including their own pay and the recording studio and producers, engineers, etc. But an advance would be taken back by the record company if the band was successful and if they weren't they had to dissolve because the debt would strangle the average poor musician. Rick made a smart move to go into production because the producers got paid $.
I am coming up on 70 here in a few weeks. Listening to Rick giving details on what was going on in the music industry and with bands is absolutely fascinating. I just can’t get enough of his videos. I always wanted to be leading a life where I was involved in some facet of the music industry but it wasn’t meant to be. I played guitar in small bands over the years on the side while I worked my real job in IT. Now 6 years into retirement and I still dream of playing gigs and being involved with music some how. But I love that Rick can give me the inside track on a lot of what was happening over the many years. It makes me feel like I am a part of it. Keep it coming Rick! Love what you do!
FINALLY! Somebody else mentioned the telecom act of 1996 and how it affected the recording industry. Thank you, Rick! That doesn't get talked about enough. I'm probably in the minority, but I believe this is also part of what drove the rise of Napster and file sharing. When Napster first hit when I got out of college in the late 90's, we were using it to discover new music and then we were buying those records.
I’m one of the few who always laments the day the Telecommunications Act of ‘96 was ever passed. Big corp ruined radio and media. I was more of the Hip Hop and R&B listener in that era (though there was always some rock music I had enjoyed) and even in those genres I noticed the change. Big corp homogenized radio to where I could go to any region in the country and the stations sound the same based on their respective genres whereas prior to that era I could remember how radio stations in different regions sounded different from other regions. I’m still pissed at Bill Clinton for being the one to help push that bill through.
Right. I miss regional music. We had so many options back then. It was a balance. No one sound alike. U go to different states & cities who were 8:51 also promoting their local talents too & it was beautiful.
Same thing happened in the UK, when Global Radio expanded and started buying most of the FM stations not owned by EMAP or the BBC. Great specialist shows with DJs who could hot mix and presenters who knew how to find and break music in all genres were dropped and cheesy young presenters came in who played whatever was pre-programmed in the system. Local radio studios were shut down and all broadcasts were from studios based in the HQ in London and broadcast nationwide.
Spent my 20's trying to ''make it'' as a musician, whatever that meant. Now I'm entering my 30's and I have over 100k subs on UA-cam, just from teaching, making original music with my guitar, sharing my passion... and that is now my job! It has never been easier, and I'm so glad to be born in this era 😇🎸
That’s awesome. I’m wondering - when that becomes your main income, do you do things like the below? Really curious how this works in practice for someone who’s figured it out. - save for retirement? - pay for health insurance? - pay taxes?
nice... your comment was like my life until the part where you mentioned the 100k subs...haha wish you lots of success! I guess some of us we should just try it too...
Aantone. Funny to see you comment I was just watching Whirlwind again. You guys (Mystery) just blow me away and I cant understand why that beautiful progressive rock cant get a foothold in the USA. I am also a subscriber of yours, watch many vids as an old fella taking up guitar for the first time. You are making fantastic music with Michel. Keep it up.
I remember the pre-internet days of being in a band and pooling our money together to record a demo in a studio so we could shop it around to labels in hopes of getting a record contract. Ahhh, the starry-eyed dreams of youth.
Yes. But the power-shift from 3rd parties like recording studios, dubbing services, record labels, shipping, etc.... to some guy with an old laptop with an internet connection that has more power in it than an entire room full of gear in 1990... with total recall. I think we're trending back towards there being fewer big names in music and less touring. But that'll change in some form. Technology will have music moving in a different direction, again, soon enough.
I don't miss recording in studios (in the 90's) where our budget and their gear essentially limited us to doing live takes with the whole band playing together and having to have everyone get it fucking perfect or else do it again. That was so frustrating and stressful, I hated recording. Now, with the ability to edit digitally, no tape, and the ability to record it by yourself if you want to for free if you know what you're doing ... Now it's actually fun.
@@nedkelly8553 I don't understand...isn't that what you have to do when you play live? And isn't playing live the best part of being a rock musician? I'm not a musician, but that's what the bands that I listen to say. Hell, my gf used to be in a folk band that played bars and got paid in beer, and she said the same thing.
What I love about the A&R folks too was how much they allowed artists to DEVELOP their sound and talent. Some artists didn't sell well at first, but they became icons later as they were allowed the freedom to create. Good A&R guys saw the potential of true artists; bad labels got impatient and dropped bands too early.
Exactly. A three-album de4al was basically putting the band into school. They'd do the first album, with all the songs they wrote trying to get a deal. Then they'd do the second album, with all the songs they wrote while touring the first album, and hopefully growing as writers and performers. The third album wasn't automatically expected to go gold, but it should outsell the first two combined or come pretty close, and the band by that point should start having a good bit of top billing on their shows. Then, they'd get picked up for two more records, which was like having passed to the next grade in school. Now? If your first single isn't immediately "trending" and whatnot, there isn't a second single. *Never mind a whole album.* AND, the record company expects the musicians to spend every waking hour on social media, promoting their stuff - of which the record company still takes 90%+ of the money across all delivery systems (CD, downloads, streaming, etc.) - for no compensation. ALSO, bands now sign deals giving the parasite record companies a fat percentage of their _f---ing T-SHIRT SALES!_ There are a lot of reasons to hate the Clintons. (I've lived right next to Arkansas for 40+ years and have known lots of people from there; don't bother arguing.) But to me, they did no greater damage to the country - and the world - than when Bill signed that 95 Telecom Act. And before anyone accuses me of partisanship, Newt Gingrich was the GOP's Speaker of the House back then, and that clown let that law get to Clinton's desk for him to sign. But that law basically destroyed music as a widespread popular art form.
Great example would be The Beatles.. Vee Jay Records (Black Owned) released The Beatles first Album Please Please Me but, decided to drop them from the label because, of slow sales. Sir George Martin heard something Vee Jay didn't. He gave them time to evolve. They had a #1 single on their first Album with Parlaphone under George Martins gentle guidance......
@A 2nd Opynyn The point of creator music is to bypass such draconian greed. Of course this usually concludes that most acts are reduced to either EDM mixbots or basic guitar flailing folksters, with everything else requiring an actual budget and melodic craft to achieve. All the more reason for those who can achieve the latter to remain todays standout hopefuls, as long as they don’t fall for the evergreen studio trap. Taylor Swift’s naïveté in this regard (as if that was ever a first for any act) should be the last of that for anyone paying attention.
I always felt the opposite. Once the record labels got ahold of the bands, and molded them into what they thought people wanted, the rawness, purity and integrity of the music went away. There are so many bands that I prefer their earlier works compared to their newer music that was honed for the masses. I think that's why I have always loved Rush. They were able to experiment yet maintain their integrity because they never conformed to what the record labels required of them.
@@ronfrosig7354 Huh? Capitol Records passed on The Beatles in 1963 and VeeJay picked them up cheap. Capitol soon realized it had made a huge mistake and sued VJ a number of times. VJ sold at least a million copies of Introducing the Beatles (maybe even more) between injunctions but made some legal mistakes and didn't have the money to promote the Beatles and fight Capitol and had to agree to stop sales in late 1964. VJ certainly didn't "drop them." They had a 5-album deal and would have been happy to be their American record label. Parlophone was owned by EMI which also owned Capitol Records so it was ridiculous it didn't pay attention to its parent company. Your story is a little mixed up.
Rick, Great story. As a musician in Atlanta during the early 70's I csn totally relate to your content here. That was the time of Capricorn (yh. I know they were in Macon, but Atlanta made the bands) Studio One in Doraville, underground Atlanta, which provided a venue for a lot of us, and of course HotLanta where I took publicity pictures for 38 Special before they broke out. I appreciate your channel more than ycould ever now and am indeed a subscriber at 74 and have my XM radio stuck on "Hair Nation " Please keep what you're doing and know that the support is out here and "we love you, man"
Thank you Rick. I met you during the pandemic, obsessively watching all the videos that you had uploaded up to that point. You introduced me to music theory and production. You brought my passion for music back and I never left you after that. All of your videos are thought-provoking, reflexive, interesting and unique. Your enthusiasm and sensitivity are contagious. Please continue enriching our lives with your videos ❤
You're a mind-reader, Rick. I was casually talking with my daughter in the car, I played a new song on Spotify and commented: "Wow, it seems that all music stopped changing around 2000" because the song sounded so derivative. And here you are explaining as an insider why that happened. You are amazing, Rick, thanks
I think the other side of the coin is that the signal-to-noise ratio for music creators has gotten pretty crazy - the discoverability problem. Being a great artist isn't enough, you have to get good at 21st century marketing, and it is hard - a lot harder than learning an instrument for many creatives. So, IMO, it is both easier AND harder to be a popular music creator these days, depending on the artist's brain.
I'm always telling people that my favorite artists (and probably theirs too), would not make it today. No one would ever have heard of Leonard Cohen if he came up in this time. First of all, he got into music because there was money in it, when there was not enough in poetry and fiction. And most, if not all, of my favorite artists have no stomach for self promotion- rightly so, it's unbecoming and ineffective.
@@bloodsugar6005 So true... that last part is why I have no prayer at all of making it in music. As a creative, social anxiety, self consciousness, imposter syndrome, and all the other issues that are so common amongst us creatives will NEVER let me succeed. It's OK, though... I love making music in spite of not being able to make a living at it, and NOT having commercial interests frees me up to just do my own thing, which certainly has its advantages.
@@deathybrs Amen to that. If it makes you feel any better, my band and i don't really have those problems and we're still getting nowhere, lol. I remember hearing a story about how bad Kurt Cobain was at selling t-shirts when he was coming up- said he couldn't sell one to save his life- and thinking that's about how most artists are. We're just proceeding as if there was something going on- making an EP, writing poems etc... I really like your stuff; reminds me of things i couldn't name, and gives me a good feeling.
@@mattrobinson7750 I do, though most of what's on the page linked to my profile is remixes - most of my original stuff is older, as I had been focusing on remixes for a number of years just because I was having fun.
Our radio station here in San Diego KGB for about 7 or 8 years produced an album a year showcasing local bands called “Homegrown “ It was fantastic! And extremely popular. It was a great music scene here in San Diego. Then as you said, the local radio stations became “ corporate “ and the focus was off the locals and on the popular music of the times. So sad ! Rick I thought I knew a lot about music until I subscribed to your channel. Thank you for sharing your music experience and your take on music and the business of music. A lifelong follower and supporter of your channel. !!
From time to time, I still sing some of those songs, "...and your back in, Chula Vista, Chula Vista, ba dom ba dom..." or, "We're Gypsies from Bonsall, there's no stopping at all, We're Gypsies from Bonsall..."
San Diego in the mid eighties had a great jazz scene. Art Good and Lites out Jazz. Humphries. Pacific Beach Cafe. B Street Cafe. I used to go see Fattburger all the time. And Hollis Gentry.
The history of the music industry has always fascinated me, and it's great to hear how it has changed in the past 20 years straight from the source. Merci!
You're the greatest Rick your channel is the wealth of information and everybody should be listening and participating in it teachers are special people
Irony is rick doesn't realize that UA-cam is basically doing exactly what labels started doing in the late 90s. They're consolidating like crazy. The UA-cam algorithm is pretty much snuffing out anything that isn't semi professional. If you've tried searching for content you'll notice they're not even giving you complete searches anymore. Videos I've seen a hundred times can't be found, despite the fact I know that they are there. You now search for something and after 10 entries you get "people also watched". It's absurd how readily the search function refuses to allow you to look for actual things.
When new rock music disappeared from radio I mainly found new bands on YT. It also opened me up to new types of music. I hope that with all the different platforms available that music continues to be as vibrant and creative as it always tries to be.
Thank you Mr. Beato for this. It kinda levels the understanding and lessens the resentment of the artist of the old school ways. Having the music, getting it out there and then doing live shows without A& R or is there those promoters who can make it happen with the local radio stations. The playing field now days is wide open and we hope the fingers are working....
Spot on, Rick! I'm 60. I've been signed, been a session guy, a hired hand, a producer, a writer, etc. There was a time when you needed the labels and a portion of the industry as an artist, but it became nearly impossible for most artists to make a viable living or find an audience when the rug got swept out from under the industry. This is a GREAT time to be an artist and creator because anyone can put their content out independently without a need for anything other than the willingness and the ability. Audyences have the means to find you and there are times when the algorhythms actually help. Just do it as they say.
@@brucesmith3740 there is something to this, the production of music is a difference science than its creation. But common music consumers aren't really interested in what goes into that at this time. And people have always wanted free music, nothings changed there, ever since tape recorders became available.
This side of the thing is true, but the flip side, which isn't so great, is that the proportion of good stuff to bad is dropping, because of the glut of the production of mediocre material you have to filter through to find the gems. In toto there's more good stuff out there, but it can be harder to find, because the industry seems geared to promote mostly the type of stuff that the masses are already listening to. The democratization of the music business is a good thing, but over-democratization inevitably lowers the bar.
The double edge sword is the music market is now grossly oversaturated with so much bad computer generated sound files, Short soundbyte clips for the ADHD TikTokers, not music created by artists. It's nearly impossible now to be heard as a single voice in a sea of noise.
Finally got it so the "algorithms" send mostly music and content that is worth seeing or listening to.. But as mentioned.. It is a blessing and a curse.. because there is more than can be seen or heard.. The fact that there is just literally SO much access to content.. it makes really good music "less special" (as it were)...
Yes, it is new technology that enabled you to reach a big audience, but that would not have happened without all the experience you built up during decades of hard work before UA-cam even existed. Thank you for all that!
Rick, you are a truly inspiring figure and a father to musicians world wide. I have been watching your channel for years; rarely I make a comment, but I have learned so much by watching you talking and playing and explaining what, at times, we all know but forget. The initial video with your son rightly guessing those weird chords should be in a museum in the future, as it is disarmingly beautiful. I hope he one day becomes a big star. If you ever come down to Australia, give us a nod!
Well worth the 14:21 of my life to watch. Rick brings not only lived experience, but intelligence and insight to the music I've listened to for half a century. I know zero music theory, and am not a real musician, but I have a good ear, and his analysis of individual songs (e.g., Steely Dan, The Cars, etc.) is always interesting. Glad I'm a subscriber.
I remember jumping on your channel early on. There was around a thousand people subscribed & it was growing seriously fast. It’s still growing like crazy. You’ve certainly earned it.
You really give us some wonderful insight into the world of music and the business of music. This commentary is just another example not only applies to music but to any passion or idea anyone has and wants to share with others on You tube. Thank you.
I grew up playing in a few bands, worked in a recording studio in Chicago, worked as a DJ, went to college to get a degree in music and business (heh, the business side of the music industry). As it turned out, I got into computers instead, but never lost my love for music. This video outlines how I still think I chose the better career path. Now I watch the historic videos about bands playing in their garage, Gig'ing around the city and traveling in vans - It resonates with me. Love to hear your stories, and the behind-the-scenes!
As a music educator, I try to break down the music industry for my students and how the mediums have rapidly changed since the 90's. Your breakdown of the past 25+ years was fantastic! I'm always so impressed with how you break down songs and sharing thoughts on pedagogy etc. Thank you.
Hey, Rick! I'm not an official musician, but love music and used to be in the radio biz and you nail it here. I like how you touch on the whys and wherefores of the demise of bands/ music and how we knew it, but you also couple that with your optimism that people consume differently and bands can, potentially, have success without the 'gatekeepers' telling them they can't. BTW, thanks for sharing your old band's tune. Very good and radio-worthy, IMO. Keep up the great work. Love the channel, Bro! Gary
Im big fan of yours, thank you for being on here and sharing your history and your stories, it’s important especially for younger people as well as older
I am only 39 but this channel helps to inspire me all the time. I cannot express how much I love to hear about the industry from how it used to be and the stories of how the people who surive how they survived being able to love what they do and talk about what they do. Thank you so much for your musings and willingness to express it all so transparently. Much respect, Paul
Thank you! I'm going on sixty-nine and been playing electric bass professionally for over fifty years and you are 100% right! "The Communications Act of 1996" was the death of regional music getting popular. What killed local music was in the 80's, 90's was states raising the drinking age from eighteen to twenty-one after Vietnam. That's when I got a straight job teaching high school.I believe change is good, but greed is bad.I lived in both music worlds now. The past one you were part of the band, now you send your track to who knows where. I cash the checks and feel nothing.
I loved working on student radio where we chose the content ourselves. We had been building up a following across Europe until tech issues took us off air. We played local artists, underground artists who were signed and artists who sent demos into us. This was 2012-14. I miss it a lot. I have a cousin who does an alternative radio show now and I've made up a playlist of music I find for her to check out and decide if she wants to play it. She's plays a real variety of stuff including these new artists and it's a joy to listen to. I'm under 40, I still buy music magazines and look out for new music. I try to get to concerts, though my health limits it. I love your channel. I love the bands you pick out and I love that you are open to a variety of genres and listen through those Spotify charts to see what diamonds are in there. I love the interviews and I love you taking apart songs. I had wanted to go into the industry but I hit my teens/20s as all those changes happened. Keep recording your videos, Rick. They are so refreshing!
Great video Rick! Very insightful and its amazing how much the music industry has changed in the last 20+ yrs. Always look forward to more of your videos
Great seeing your success Rick. You are a real inspiration for all of us I think. I was thinking of your band members as you talked. I'm sure they are amazed as you are. I know that guy. Keep on going brother. Love your interviews. They bring the artists out of the shadows partly or maybe mostly because they happened upon someone they can trust that knows their language. We are all indebted to you. Thank you very much!
We have WTMD in Baltimore that is run out of Towson University and connected to public radio, so they do the news roundup on the hour. They play all the new music that they choose based on their listeners. It is the best place to hear new music. I always spin the dial when I go to a new area to find the local stations.
Love this!!! You breakdown 'everything music' so well. Have been watching your channel for years and years and continually point new people to it. Your interviews are the best out there! And you interview all of my fave musicians! It's always great to see the musicians open up to you once they see that you know as much about their music as they do. The Sting interview especially. In the very beginning he was like, ok, another interview, lets get this done, but then you started to talk and you could just see his enjoyment as the interview proceeded. That is pure Rick Beato! Loved it! You're a class act Rick and we are so fortunate to have you out here sharing your wealth of knowledge with us. So happy that this channel has had such great success and has become such a great platform for you. Thank you so much! 🎶🎸🎶
Rick, I enjoy your channel very much. You're personable, easy to listen to, great tonality in your voice (almost an overtone), and point out the good and sometimes the bad in all types of music. Hope you reach a Trillion viewers.
as much as I agree with Beato that social media took power (which I too think is a good thing), we shall not forget, that 10-12 years ago it was so much easier to be noticed in UA-cam, compared to the amount of material that is uploaded every second nowadays... its like a buffet that gets longer and longer and people have more and more to choose... so I truly believe that nowadays luck is one of the most important factors on getting a viral video on UA-cam in order. to start a successful channel... would it all have happened the same way for Beato without the Dylan Videos? I doubt that, though people like him definitely deserve that attention (don't get me wrong) ....
Ay my Office at work I have these vinyls decorating my space since 2009. Recently a coworker walked up to my desk, who have been admiring my vinyl collection, and says: “Do you know Rick Beato? He breaks down these rock bands’ music and explains their recording.” That was last year. Today I am addicted to this channel. If you love music in any format, shape, or form; this is the guy to listen to. Thank You, Mr. Beato…for sharing your talent, experience, dedication, and knowledge with us. Your passion and love for music is a school to us all. Cheers!!!!! … Enjoy, learn, and love your videos (content), keep them coming!
I can barely name the great musicians I've been lucky enough to discover on UA-cam. Great players from all over the world, that without this exposure I would never have heard them. And don't forget the legends still performing for us on here. Happy to have some of today's greats to be touring again, too.
Exactly. My favorite band is a Japanese band called BAND-MAID and if not for UA-cam not only would I never had found them, but they probably wouldn't have made it past 2 albums before the label dropped them because it was their song Thrill from their second album that got millions of views and kicked them off.
Great historical music business summary, Rick. Concise and down to the point. I’m a retired advertising executive (also a musician), who worked for major global ad agencies and run one in LA. At the time I wanted to create an ad agency (and I did), to support musicians and help them find their space (as I did for brands) - this was in 2009-2012- but then I realized that labels were only interested in getting my clients’ budget - from my corporate clients- and use their artists to promote our products/brands - which was NOT the idea! After a few years of this, I decided to abandon the music side of the agency business and concentrate only in the ad business as it was. My conclusion then was that the music labels didn’t have the knowledge and ‘strategic’ expertise and sophistication to understand the media communications business as agencies did. Labels are basically promoters (like car dealers) for the most part and lack strategic thinking to develop artists as an ad agency develop brands. Too bad. Music will survive, is in our DNA. Music labels are a different story, like car dealers, here today but maybe gone tomorrow.
I am 66 years old and am (finally) starting to accept new models. The main reason is Emmett Cohen. Being a jazz musician, I have also been lamenting the lack of real, non-tech, music. Emmett has given me great hope that future will have great jazz, without auto-tune and available. He has shown us a model that is now a force to be reckoned with!
We all have our part to play. Never heard of Emmett Cohen until reading your comment, just checked him out - wow! Thank you Jef! And of course Rick for bringing us all together.
I would have never listened to Jazz in days gone by. It wasn't on the radio and I didn't understand it. UA-cam led me to Rick Beato -> Adam Neely -> Martina Da Zilva -> Emmet Cohen and on and on. It's awesome. Same goes for punk.
Rick You’re the Man brother! Love watching your channel and listening to your experiences in the Music world past and present.keep up the awesome work & positive vibes.Thank You for your sincere time,ROCK ON!
Spot on as always Rick, great video. Pros and cons to the modern music industry as well as the 'old school' view. I was a semi-successful musician that took a break when my career went south in my early twenties and pre-social media era. Now I'm back it's like all that never happened and I've had to start again. Making content is exhausting and not what I wanted to do with my life but it seems like if I don't constantly make it I won't get anywhere. I would love to just focus on writing and recording songs but it never seems to be enough. I love your channel, thank you for sharing your thoughts with us.
I think it's a great summation of what has happened to the industry. I miss the old days of waiting for your favorite Led Zepplin album to come out and radio stations taking the time to play 1 side or the whole album for the listeners.
@ghost mall I cringe at some of the music I listened to because radio had decided it was popular. I'm glad my brother had good taste in music because thats what I listen to, and compare new music to it.
Thank you for explaining the music industry to me. It i is an inspiring take on the current music industry. My son is may I say a brilliant musician Jeremy Tuplin but I always wondered why it was so hard to get taken up by a major label and now I understand it is not necessary. Thank you 🙏
I'm impressed by your commitment to educate. You keep us informed and entertained. You've developed a pedagogy for guitarists of all skill levels, to improve with minimal effort, at a reasonable price. Above all, I feel a comraderie with your personality, I identify with you as a like-minded soul. I appreciate your humanity.
Love your content!!! but what i love the most your personal views and thoughts and stories about music and the music industry of the last at least 30 years!!!
Love this format of video where you take us outside on a journey! I think one of the best things you could do for your new interview space is maybe to make it so that you can easily change it up periodically.
I still find joy in creating music, whether there is a listening ear or not. I can’t think of any other form of expression that can unplug you from daily surroundings and place in a pleasant feeling.
I was in a few bands back in the 90s and I often wonder what the hell happened to radio and to the dream everyone used to have have of getting signed to a record label. You just explained all of it.
At some point, I couldn't listen to the radio anymore. The mainstream rock format first killed my taste in classic rock, but then I needed a long break from more modern songs.
@@lucasoheyze4597 I wish this was true. On the mainstream radio lineup, they mix modern rock with classic rock. Okay, let's go to the classic rock station because maybe they would have something different. So much overlap Okay, let's go to the competitor radio brand. Almost the exact same lineup. That song you were trying to get a break from 15 minutes ago? Yeah, they are now playing it
@@TheMattmatic Mostly forgot your USB Thumb Drive and your smartphone is out battery. If the radio was a good way to discover new music without me turning it off due to a song I heard too many times, I'd listen to it.
As someone who's old enough to remember the days of physical media (LPs and such), I have to say the time we're living in now is amazing for music distribution. I know fully well at this point I won't get a record label contact, but I can upload music anytime I want and reach a broad audience and get immediate feedback.
Very interesting to learn how records get made financially. I never realized that it cost $500,000 to produce and make a record. I can see why now there are a lot of good artists we never heard of.
Thank you Rick, it seems your life has been full of rich and interesting experiences and I feel enriched and inspired by listening to you share these stories.
Beautiful video Rick, great work 👏 and congratulations on your own journey! I’m glad you shared yourself to the world and you deserve all the success and support you get ❤
I haven't listened to commercial radio in years. My local NPR where I used to live (WNIJ) has a local music showcase show that brought in local artists from northern Illinois/southern Wisconsin and gave exposure to those who may not have had it. In Tampa where I live now, community radio WMNF has a local music program every Friday that brings in local artists. WMNF is a great station that has no format - one evening they are playing blues artists and another evening they are playing Latin jazz and salsa - I love it!
I was there in the "Good Olde Days" . Geffen Records offered my band The Pysco Girls a $1,000,000 contract in 1990. My attorney was one of the best in the music industry . I looked over the contract and I would be making $7/hr basically. I turned the whole thing down and it was the best decision I have ever made. I talked to my famous friends in bands and no one was making any money and all were in debt. I was making $70,000 a year working 3 days a week doing engineering consulting and $7hr and $1,000,000 in debt made no sense at all. A few of my famous band friends did get paid and got the rights to their stuff after years of litigation. I love the way things are now. DIY or die
I miss walking into a record store and spending all afternoon discovering records guided by sections or by asking a knowledgeable person at the counter. The internet, or youtube for that matter, is anything but.
Hardly. What the Internet provides is a lot more knowledgeable people at a lot more counters who can suggest good work in a lot more sections of the store. The skill you need to develop is figuring out which of those knowledgeable people you would trust for recommendations. Once you do that, the possibility for finding the gems increases dramatically. I've seen the same thing in fiction, written or visual: I've picked up books to read or things to watch that I never would have given a second glance at before because of recommendations of people online that I've learned to trust. Sometimes I like them, sometimes I don't, sometimes I'm indifferent, but I've found a lot more that I've liked than not.
I don't understand. Isn't that what the algorithm is for? The YT algorithm is really good at predicting music that I will like. And there's also the whole reaction video scene...
they made sure we got used to being connect to our personal mobile 📲 device sO' we wouldn't produce big carbon footprint 👣 shipping printing manufacturing buying selling in big air conditioned buildings or be driving around doing anything like that.
Great history lesson, Rick. I am 10 years younger than you, but I remember the days how music used to be. I miss it. You help keep its foundation alive.
Rick, i love your show and as a former dj of over 17 years, i've been preaching this same message to people about the Telecommunications Act of 1996. I started in radio in 1989 and i saw the transformation of "real" radio turn into the homogenized white noise it has become. Today, it doesn't matter what format it is because country sounds like pop, pop is hip hop and hip hop is country and rock forgot how to play notes and solo's because they don't have to. To quote from Almost Famous, "It's all just an industry of cool" and that's not a good thing. Anyways, i want to say thank you for bringing more light to this. I appreciate it!
You may as well complain about the Jones Act from 1920, which my HS Geography teacher did back in the early 1970s (it is really quite that stupid). It is entirely too “Inside Baseball” to get anyone interested.
Rick this same concept applies to TV too. No longer are we limited to what a hollywood producer says we can watch. I can watch your channel for music, then go watch a guy clean a yard, watch aviation, watch a TV or movie highlight, or car repair. It's been years since I've turned on the TV for a non sporting event.
Love your stuff Rick…All what you said is also true for the Book Publishing industry…I wrote 10 technical books for my industry and created a very lucrative business out of thin air for almost no money, just my time, talent, knowledge of my content and Amazon publishing platform…. I would have never been able to get a mainstream publisher to publish my books.
So great to know more of your personal story, While I never questioned your judgement it certainly validates your expertese and gives solid creedance to your insights to this industry and your drive and hard work and inovation to survive in an industry that has gone thru a C Change and is likly to go thru another C change again very soon is beyond inspirational to me. You are The Dojo Master of the Music Business. Love your channel and all your content. Keep reinventing yourself. Much Love Brent Zen. Don’t have your chops but I do have your passion. All the best to you and your family this crazy 2023. Maybe A Beato A&R - Radio Station UA-cam Record Label of sorts is somewhere in the near future.. 😊
From one Rick to another, I love your introspective about the music industry. Certainly, it is a labor of love for most of them and a source of income for very few.
I bet 100% of your international audience needed to see what toppled is in the dictionary, like I had to do. New word learned. Your channel is a life school man! ❤
As always-another wonderful video from an amazing musician, producer, writer and UA-cam success story. The one thing that I think could be talked about more is how to monetize on UA-cam as that is always confusing-maybe I’d better learn that on another UA-cam video, it could be a hole in my education. I started a UA-cam channel about 2007 and I have over 2000 subs-yet I’ve never figured out how to monetize because of changing circumstances within how are UA-cam does that. I realize 2000 is not considered a lot of subs. I would definitely agree that social media has helped my career as I have been hired for bands for tours, and for recording through my Instagram channel. It has helped me make money by being a platform to show what I can do-although I need to work on how to make more money on UA-cam. Thank you Rick for all your incredible work and inspiration!
Hey Mister Beato , first things first , I would like to thank you deeply for your work ! I was blown away by the Keith Jarret , Joni Mitchell ,Pat Metheny interviews , not to mention the objective , practical, direct music theory classes ! Keep up the good work !
Rick I really wish you’d do a video on how Max Martin has dominated all production and songwriting since Britney’s first album - he wrote so much material for Taylor, Katy Perry, Britney, etc etc. That sound has dominated everything for 20 plus years while record companies were/are refusing to support new talented bands that might change the sound of popular music.
And, Rick…. You probably don’t even remember this… but a few years ago, I had relocated from NY to ATL, only about 15minutes away from you. This was right around when you did the interview with Vinnie Colaiuta. I reached out to you, I think through Twitter, and you actually called me back. Which was amazing. We had a conversation while you were on your way to pick up Thai food for your family. Lol We talked for a little while and you gave me some great advice about social media, and doubling down on it. At the time I had a little under 4K subs on UA-cam from an old vid that had gone viral years before & some education stuff I had done with Vic Firth. But no Tiktok and no Instagram. Now social media content is my main thing… and that in part had a lot to do with that conversation and your advice… so I just want to say thank you for the content you make… the inspiration you give to all of us as a well as the time & personal advice you gave to me a few years ago. THANK YOU 🙏
I am an amateur musician that started on UA-cam a little over a year ago. I went from no exposure to 14 subscribers in that time. Obviously a drop in a bucket compared to the professional side of the music industry. For me it's a Learning curve and I am focusing on better music video production. Thanks for your videos that describe your experience with in the music industry.
Thanks Rick. you put the whole picture into a most insightful focus. I've been learning guitar since my first one mom got me when she saw me in the barn on our farm playing broom guitar to The Beatles She Love's You. I was 12 when the Beatles first appeared on Ed's show. One month later I turned 13 and mom surprised me with a sears silver tone acoustic guitar. I had to turn it upside down and I switched the strings as I play natural true lefty. It's harder getting lefty guitars and paying extra but I have several guitars. I'm 72 now and still learning. Worked jobs for a career served in the military but always had a guitar to doodle on. I sing and play at open mics and at community charity events. I play for free for the love of sharing my love of music. Rick, I have found your youtube videos to be very helpful as I'm still learning. Thanks.
Hello Rick, I'm older than you and I really appreciate the valuable, gifted, helpful information you provided in this video. In the year 1960 I fell in love with great music that I loved hearing as it was happening for the past 62 years. I even gave myself a nickname of Mr. Music, because I loved it so much not that I actually played any musical instruments. I played the best songs I loved on my own 45's then LPs then reel to reel tapes then cassette audio tapes and then to CDs. I love my favorite music so much and I have DJ'd a few times at paid gigs but mostly at the 1,000of my own parties I had in my life.
I doubt someone like Ren would have had success with even the best A&R people. But here he is, being seen by millions of people who never thought a guy with a nylon string guitar and a hospital gown could rock them so hard.
I was absolutely thinking of him while thinking about music exposure now compared to when I was growing up (80s & 90s). I don't think an art piece like "Hi Ren" would be on the radio or MTV. For that, I'm grateful for platforms like UA-cam making artists like Ren accessible, though I'm aware of the other side of the coin. I have to give a shout out to Rick because he has such a deep knowledge and appreciation of music, that through him I've discovered so much many more artists, old & new. Thank you Rick!
Rick, i do enjoy your shooting from the hip approach about the industry. There's no hype, no music in the background to church it up, no special effect, just the hard facts about things. That's a nice change. nuff said?
The change in the technology has led to the small 'd' democratization of how music is distributed - the decentralization of things. Cynical me imagines that the UA-cams/TikToks/etc will, more and more, put their corporate fingers on the scale, and decide who sees what. Great video - thank you!
@ghost mall And even if this isn't the case the social media companies and their algorithms, tuned to make them money, not offer a wide, diverse music offering to the listener, is happening. I've been thinking about this while gatekeeper concept and whilst I don't think the situation that was allowed to develop in the US (the big record labels buying up and controlling what two stations played) was healthy, I don't think the same situation happened in the UK, we always had the BBC Radio not under this model, promoting young new talent (from Amy Winehouse to Adele to Ed Sheeran to Florence and the Machine), but even better we had people decide and curate the music that was played to us, it just wasn't just corporate interests. I know it wasn't the BBC, but I remember the story of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody and how the DJ Kenny Everett player it to death despite the band being told no one would play an 8 minutes long track (or however long it was) and it beginning huge. Would that have happened in the US? I doubt it. I think streaming changed everything with these big tech companies taking a huge amount of the money and not enough paid to the artists (and thus their record labels) to sustain the model as it was, making they had to go for safe, more established artists rather than take a chance on a dozen, most of which wouldn't make it big.
Ren is the perfect example of a musician making it on his own as a totally independent artist on UA-cam. Years of hard work and dedication, ( plus truly exceptional talent almost beyond words ), and he's finally breaking through to mass awareness. For those who haven't yet checked him out, be prepared to be blown away.
Rick, I love the historical context as well as the story of your band. We have been ranting about the Telecommunications deregulation act for years. It is amazing how many so-called music enthusiasts have no clue about it and actually believe that everything being played since 1996 was stuff "the people wanted". They seem to have no clue about the loss of autonomy of playlist programmers etc and how that led to the homogenization of mainstream in the music. I guess the part I am struggling in this video is the question as to how creators killed the music business. Your video suggests that creators have found a way to circumvent record labels and create a path to ubiquity in the modern mainstream. Wouldn't that be a good thing? I am not sure how that translates to killing the music business. I do believe creators are killing the music business in a way and that consumer lack of discernment and understanding of monetization is killing the music but I guess I just don't get how this video substantiates creators killing the music business. I hope I am not missing something very obvious here. If time permits, any clarification here would be super helpful. Last, but least, we are huge fans of your videos and we wish you even bigger success with this youtube channel.
You might be working with a different interpretation of that phrase. I believe Beto is referring specifically to the old school RIAA big label, exploitive contracts "music business" not music business as in "the market for music"
Well, my channel is an example of that. Without it, I would just play some music for myself and kept going, because I never intended to be a musician. But UA-cam allowed me to share my love for the music (Mark Knopfler's music in particular) and I started to get a hang of it, and now I'm dabbling in teaching. So it's a beautiful, gradual experience, and even somebody like me - a man without any real musical background and education, can get a bit of success. UA-cam is an amateur's paradise, and I love it.
Rick, you are by far one of the most important people in music today. It’s people like you who are keeping music alive
Not sure it's possible to overstate that point. Rick has brought a level of music education previously unavailable to the masses, to fans and musicians alike.
Fact. I’ve played guitar for 40 years and my playing ability and fretboard logic is double what it was just by investing into Rick’s education. I bought all four of Rick’s courses and if you’re a guitar player at ANY level or ability, do yourself a favor and invest in Rick.
GREEDY EXECUTIVES AND SELF PROCLAIMED ELITES ARE KILLING POP CULTURE.
Agreed, Rick might be one of the most consequential people in music ever, it remains to be seen how long lasting his impact will be
.... in MUSIC today??? WHAT?! LOL SuperLOL !!!
This video just proves once again how great a storyteller Rick is. Such a basic setup, only his phone, but still manages to hook the viewer deeply into the story. I think that this is some what comparable to songwriting, which Rick is obviously talented at. This is one of the main reasons I love this channel, always so pleasing and perfectly composed videos and stories. It's like I would have the perfect talk with my dad every time I watch a video on this channel haha.
He's a raconteur.
settle down fanboy..
Yep. It's content that counts, not slick lighting and camera techniques.
The major difference today is that the music isn't about the music like before, it's the content creation, quirky videos, candid stories, self brand, social banter, and constant engagement with your audience. The music is like a by product of content engagement.
True, but doesn't that also make it more organic? Bands and performers build following and fanbases by actually _engaging_ with them. I don't think the music has to suffer for that.
musicians live for social engagement, drive it, what is more socially engaged
than the people putting a soundtrack to your life?
I don't see any proper musicians doing all that desperate engagement stuff, think Big Thief for instance
That's a gross over-simplification. It is and will always be about the music, but how that music is made, promoted, and heard keeps changing.
Yep, there is a lot of algorithm feeding in that process. Just like the previous gate keepers, the algorithm demands certain criteria to be met and in turn does the promotion. This isn't necessarily a flaw of the algorithm. Instead the thing to be learned should be that gatekeepers acting by the numbers like algorithms can as well be replaced by one.
Another instant classic Beato post. He is a fascinating blend of insight, experience, knowledge and skill and it’s all wrapped up in humour and modesty and passion. Love it. Keep it up, Rick. 61 yrs young and going strong!!
Rick if you see this, me and Justin Hawkins gonna get u back in the studio one day just wait and see :)
Kidding around, youre truly an exceptional youtuber. Its clear that your great ear and 'perfect pitch' translate also to being able to say things and tell stories and use titles and captions in a very subtle and intelligent and wise way that us younger gen youtube consumers really benefit from
Rick Beato; artist, musicologist, educator, philosopher. Keep up the good work
Let’s not forget ‘Storyteller’ and ‘Potential Flannel Daddy’.
historian
Rick started a YT channel and accidentally became a cultural pillar.
musician, producer, nice guy
@@Aokitadamitsu a musicologist is a historian of music
Your channel is part of why UA-cam is my TV these last few years. Honest commentary and well based on music and the technical, not hyped like some other annoying channels.
Me 2 👍👍 Exactly
I also look at youtube sort of like my learning channel to meet like minds that like things and learning more like woodworking, hotrods, welding, machining , gardening music etc build your paradise at home but correspond all over the nation and world.
I think media has experienced a UA-cam revolution.
Thank you for saying just this!
But you can't always trust YT either. Commentary is not always honest or fact-based
Gerry TV is terrible. Glad to have found this channel on UA-cam premium too.
The algorhythm is also somewhat of a gatekeeper. It's harder to get exposed to fresh influences when you are directed towards your biases. Also, I was always willing to give a record or CD a second chance if I didn't like it during the first play because I just spent anywhere between $9 and $19 dollars on it.
The algorithm is the audience
The algorithm is corrupt as hell. Videos that I have made that have left sided content in it get throttled and anything right gets buried.
@@godned74 I totally believe you and I had similar experiences with it.
I think you are in a minority, not many people bought random CDs or vinyl/tape before that, and hoped they would like it. People bought what they already heard on the radio, or on TV, and sometimes by word of mouth but that would rarely be anything other than what the other person had heard on the radio/TV etc. Things were no different, they were just controlled in a different way in the past. The only time they would buy what they hadn't heard, would be albums from the artists they knew already from hearing in those places.
You would maybe get people also finding artists from festivals, or compilations albums and things like that. But they didn't shape the music world.
In fact although still not good, it's much better today by a very, very long way including the algorithm.
Algorithm is a joke. I have an Instagram and one of the most average not interesting posts i ever posted has been growing for 3 months. 15,000 have liked it. My other higher-quality posts have 10-30 likes each. Garbage.
What was impressive is Rick's Hops, did you see how much air he got on that jump on stage.
Yeah, right? Shocked me how high he jumped without stumbling after landing .
That was beyond impressive...
He had a track scholarship in college. So… And he was a longjumper, iirc.
right!!
Might as well JUMP!
Maybe some listeners, but, not most of us, especially those of us who are musicians arent killing the music business. What has been and is toppling the music business, even the art of music, is social media and the content creator mentality. Social media has taken the place of real relationships and content creation has taken the place of, not all, but most of, real creation and sharing. I rely on ole school music to keep me grounded and inspire me on going. And congratulations to you on what you have done on YT!
I am sincerely impressed after hearing your band for the first time. Not much separated you guys from the most famous bands of the day.
Yes they sound very polished (in a good way) and like a smoother Alice In Chains
@@duckmyass a lot of mixes sounded like that in the 90's, especially where video was concerned.
@@duckmyass That's how rock in 1998 sounded for all but the biggest bands.
They sounded like a Jane’s Addiction ripoff.
Always interesting to hear your thoughts Rick. The absence of gatekeepers has created the best of times and the worst of times. Today anyone can write, play, record, and produce a record in their basement with a laptop but... The signal to noise ratio of artists has never been lower and it is really difficult to sift the diamonds out of the vast dunes of sand. If you are an extraordinary musical artist and make a few small missteps in promoting your work, you may never get noticed. Meanwhile millions of streams are happening with mediocre music that fill the space and clog the media.
It’s hard to find new artists who are doing anything new.
There's a business opportunity there.
Link something) like Spotify with independent YT content.
The idea is an algorithm that filters junk.
Maybe it already exists?
Too right. It's the hardest thing for independent artist like myself to be noticed. I sometimes despair....
Right, nowadays it would be hard to imagine something like Bohemian Rhapsody getting put out. It cost an ungodly amount to produce at the time.
@@leonardticsay8046 it is even harder; if they have something new, then they would be stupid to drop it somewhere. Because it gets copied for sure and it can literally take a lifetime to get the copyrights back, if the case won't be settled with money (the usual).
Creators may have "killed" the A&R department, but the industry is alive and well. With generous financial tendrils into Spotify and all the major film/TV/commercial licensing platforms, the major labels aren't hurting for profits. They license from TikTok and Soundcloud artists who have done the recordings themselves, made their own videos, driven their own marketing, all the things the labels used to need to do. Now, all they have to do is pick who they want to distribute. That's a lot of costs they no longer need to spend to get pretty much at the same place. I challenge this notion that Sony/Warner/Universal have been dealt the death blow. They're doing their deals differently but make no mistake, they're as strong as they ever were.
The fact that the label spent $500,000 making an album and then dropped you shows you how much money was in the business at the time. I made an album at the same time for $15,000, printed the CDs, hit the road, and made triple what I spent on it.
I guess when they could take 90% of the money made from a song/album then they could afford to have many failures for the few that might work out. I guess now that everyone listens to songs on streaming services that pay the artists (and so I guess the record label, if there is one, as well) very little then this model of developing new artists, giving them a chance, talent spotting and taking a chance has gone, and rescue labels want more of a sure thing based on social media views and likes.
How does that work, I thought the artist was responsible for recording costs ultimately.
@@lavenderbee3611 the label advances the artist the money. That money has to be paid back.
You don't actually get paid "for real" until the advance has been paid back and the label turns a profit on you.
@@lavenderbee3611 "The act" is responsible for the recording costs, the people who make up "the act" aren't personally responsible. Your band can make a million dollar record that sells nothing and bill collectors will never show up at your door, you just won't be able to make any more music with a label because your "act" will still owe the money from the first album. It's not like defaulting on a mortgage or skipping paying credit card bills.
I think how it worked was the band was "advanced" say, 500k and they were responsible for all costs including their own pay and the recording studio and producers, engineers, etc.
But an advance would be taken back by the record company if the band was successful and if they weren't they had to dissolve because the debt would strangle the average poor musician.
Rick made a smart move to go into production because the producers got paid $.
I am coming up on 70 here in a few weeks. Listening to Rick giving details on what was going on in the music industry and with bands is absolutely fascinating. I just can’t get enough of his videos. I always wanted to be leading a life where I was involved in some facet of the music industry but it wasn’t meant to be. I played guitar in small bands over the years on the side while I worked my real job in IT. Now 6 years into retirement and I still dream of playing gigs and being involved with music some how. But I love that Rick can give me the inside track on a lot of what was happening over the many years. It makes me feel like I am a part of it. Keep it coming Rick! Love what you do!
FINALLY! Somebody else mentioned the telecom act of 1996 and how it affected the recording industry. Thank you, Rick! That doesn't get talked about enough. I'm probably in the minority, but I believe this is also part of what drove the rise of Napster and file sharing. When Napster first hit when I got out of college in the late 90's, we were using it to discover new music and then we were buying those records.
I’m one of the few who always laments the day the Telecommunications Act of ‘96 was ever passed. Big corp ruined radio and media. I was more of the Hip Hop and R&B listener in that era (though there was always some rock music I had enjoyed) and even in those genres I noticed the change. Big corp homogenized radio to where I could go to any region in the country and the stations sound the same based on their respective genres whereas prior to that era I could remember how radio stations in different regions sounded different from other regions. I’m still pissed at Bill Clinton for being the one to help push that bill through.
Possibly because the mp3s were all poor quality because, y'know, dial-up.
Lest not forget Limewire....
Right. I miss regional music. We had so many options back then. It was a balance. No one sound alike. U go to different states & cities who were 8:51 also promoting their local talents too & it was beautiful.
Same thing happened in the UK, when Global Radio expanded and started buying most of the FM stations not owned by EMAP or the BBC. Great specialist shows with DJs who could hot mix and presenters who knew how to find and break music in all genres were dropped and cheesy young presenters came in who played whatever was pre-programmed in the system. Local radio studios were shut down and all broadcasts were from studios based in the HQ in London and broadcast nationwide.
Spent my 20's trying to ''make it'' as a musician, whatever that meant. Now I'm entering my 30's and I have over 100k subs on UA-cam, just from teaching, making original music with my guitar, sharing my passion... and that is now my job! It has never been easier, and I'm so glad to be born in this era 😇🎸
Nice channel. Cool. That is encouraging.
I enjoy your content Antoine. Keep providing excellent content.
That’s awesome. I’m wondering - when that becomes your main income, do you do things like the below? Really curious how this works in practice for someone who’s figured it out.
- save for retirement?
- pay for health insurance?
- pay taxes?
nice... your comment was like my life until the part where you mentioned the 100k subs...haha wish you lots of success! I guess some of us we should just try it too...
Aantone. Funny to see you comment I was just watching Whirlwind again. You guys (Mystery) just blow me away and I cant understand why that beautiful progressive rock cant get a foothold in the USA. I am also a subscriber of yours, watch many vids as an old fella taking up guitar for the first time. You are making fantastic music with Michel. Keep it up.
I remember the pre-internet days of being in a band and pooling our money together to record a demo in a studio so we could shop it around to labels in hopes of getting a record contract.
Ahhh, the starry-eyed dreams of youth.
Yes. But the power-shift from 3rd parties like recording studios, dubbing services, record labels, shipping, etc.... to some guy with an old laptop with an internet connection that has more power in it than an entire room full of gear in 1990... with total recall. I think we're trending back towards there being fewer big names in music and less touring. But that'll change in some form. Technology will have music moving in a different direction, again, soon enough.
I don't miss recording in studios (in the 90's) where our budget and their gear essentially limited us to doing live takes with the whole band playing together and having to have everyone get it fucking perfect or else do it again. That was so frustrating and stressful, I hated recording. Now, with the ability to edit digitally, no tape, and the ability to record it by yourself if you want to for free if you know what you're doing ... Now it's actually fun.
I did that with a group with the old 4 track recorder 😂❤👍👍
@@nedkelly8553 Yup.. Recording a drum track perfectly from beginning to end was almost always very difficult to do. At least for me.
@@nedkelly8553 I don't understand...isn't that what you have to do when you play live? And isn't playing live the best part of being a rock musician? I'm not a musician, but that's what the bands that I listen to say. Hell, my gf used to be in a folk band that played bars and got paid in beer, and she said the same thing.
What I love about the A&R folks too was how much they allowed artists to DEVELOP their sound and talent. Some artists didn't sell well at first, but they became icons later as they were allowed the freedom to create. Good A&R guys saw the potential of true artists; bad labels got impatient and dropped bands too early.
Exactly. A three-album de4al was basically putting the band into school. They'd do the first album, with all the songs they wrote trying to get a deal. Then they'd do the second album, with all the songs they wrote while touring the first album, and hopefully growing as writers and performers. The third album wasn't automatically expected to go gold, but it should outsell the first two combined or come pretty close, and the band by that point should start having a good bit of top billing on their shows. Then, they'd get picked up for two more records, which was like having passed to the next grade in school.
Now? If your first single isn't immediately "trending" and whatnot, there isn't a second single. *Never mind a whole album.*
AND, the record company expects the musicians to spend every waking hour on social media, promoting their stuff - of which the record company still takes 90%+ of the money across all delivery systems (CD, downloads, streaming, etc.) - for no compensation. ALSO, bands now sign deals giving the parasite record companies a fat percentage of their _f---ing T-SHIRT SALES!_
There are a lot of reasons to hate the Clintons. (I've lived right next to Arkansas for 40+ years and have known lots of people from there; don't bother arguing.) But to me, they did no greater damage to the country - and the world - than when Bill signed that 95 Telecom Act. And before anyone accuses me of partisanship, Newt Gingrich was the GOP's Speaker of the House back then, and that clown let that law get to Clinton's desk for him to sign. But that law basically destroyed music as a widespread popular art form.
Great example would be The Beatles.. Vee Jay Records (Black Owned) released The Beatles first Album Please Please Me but, decided to drop them from the label because, of slow sales. Sir George Martin heard something Vee Jay didn't. He gave them time to evolve. They had a #1 single on their first Album with Parlaphone under George Martins gentle guidance......
@A 2nd Opynyn The point of creator music is to bypass such draconian greed. Of course this usually concludes that most acts are reduced to either EDM mixbots or basic guitar flailing folksters, with everything else requiring an actual budget and melodic craft to achieve. All the more reason for those who can achieve the latter to remain todays standout hopefuls, as long as they don’t fall for the evergreen studio trap. Taylor Swift’s naïveté in this regard (as if that was ever a first for any act) should be the last of that for anyone paying attention.
I always felt the opposite. Once the record labels got ahold of the bands, and molded them into what they thought people wanted, the rawness, purity and integrity of the music went away. There are so many bands that I prefer their earlier works compared to their newer music that was honed for the masses. I think that's why I have always loved Rush. They were able to experiment yet maintain their integrity because they never conformed to what the record labels required of them.
@@ronfrosig7354 Huh? Capitol Records passed on The Beatles in 1963 and VeeJay picked them up cheap. Capitol soon realized it had made a huge mistake and sued VJ a number of times. VJ sold at least a million copies of Introducing the Beatles (maybe even more) between injunctions but made some legal mistakes and didn't have the money to promote the Beatles and fight Capitol and had to agree to stop sales in late 1964. VJ certainly didn't "drop them." They had a 5-album deal and would have been happy to be their American record label. Parlophone was owned by EMI which also owned Capitol Records so it was ridiculous it didn't pay attention to its parent company. Your story is a little mixed up.
Rick,
Great story. As a musician in Atlanta during the early 70's I csn totally relate to your content here. That was the time of Capricorn (yh. I know they were in Macon, but Atlanta made the bands) Studio One in Doraville, underground Atlanta, which provided a venue for a lot of us, and of course HotLanta where I took publicity pictures for 38 Special before they broke out.
I appreciate your channel more than ycould ever now and am indeed a subscriber at 74 and have my XM radio stuck on "Hair Nation "
Please keep what you're doing and know that the support is out here and "we love you, man"
Thank you Rick. I met you during the pandemic, obsessively watching all the videos that you had uploaded up to that point. You introduced me to music theory and production. You brought my passion for music back and I never left you after that. All of your videos are thought-provoking, reflexive, interesting and unique. Your enthusiasm and sensitivity are contagious. Please continue enriching our lives with your videos ❤
Love your channel Rick, nice to hear about all your experiences throughout the ever changing times!
I love hearing these behind the scenes talks of the music industry. Rick's knowledge and history of this world is fascinating.
You're a mind-reader, Rick. I was casually talking with my daughter in the car, I played a new song on Spotify and commented: "Wow, it seems that all music stopped changing around 2000" because the song sounded so derivative. And here you are explaining as an insider why that happened. You are amazing, Rick, thanks
I think the other side of the coin is that the signal-to-noise ratio for music creators has gotten pretty crazy - the discoverability problem. Being a great artist isn't enough, you have to get good at 21st century marketing, and it is hard - a lot harder than learning an instrument for many creatives.
So, IMO, it is both easier AND harder to be a popular music creator these days, depending on the artist's brain.
I'm always telling people that my favorite artists (and probably theirs too), would not make it today. No one would ever have heard of Leonard Cohen if he came up in this time. First of all, he got into music because there was money in it, when there was not enough in poetry and fiction. And most, if not all, of my favorite artists have no stomach for self promotion- rightly so, it's unbecoming and ineffective.
@@bloodsugar6005 So true... that last part is why I have no prayer at all of making it in music. As a creative, social anxiety, self consciousness, imposter syndrome, and all the other issues that are so common amongst us creatives will NEVER let me succeed.
It's OK, though... I love making music in spite of not being able to make a living at it, and NOT having commercial interests frees me up to just do my own thing, which certainly has its advantages.
@@deathybrs Amen to that. If it makes you feel any better, my band and i don't really have those problems and we're still getting nowhere, lol. I remember hearing a story about how bad Kurt Cobain was at selling t-shirts when he was coming up- said he couldn't sell one to save his life- and thinking that's about how most artists are. We're just proceeding as if there was something going on- making an EP, writing poems etc... I really like your stuff; reminds me of things i couldn't name, and gives me a good feeling.
Do you have any songs on UA-cam?
@@mattrobinson7750 I do, though most of what's on the page linked to my profile is remixes - most of my original stuff is older, as I had been focusing on remixes for a number of years just because I was having fun.
Our radio station here in San Diego KGB for about 7 or 8 years produced an album a year showcasing local bands called “Homegrown “ It was fantastic! And extremely popular. It was a great music scene here in San
Diego. Then as you said, the local radio stations became “ corporate “ and the focus was off the locals and on the popular music of the times. So sad !
Rick I thought I knew a lot about music until I subscribed to your channel. Thank you for sharing your music experience and your take on music and the business of music. A lifelong follower and supporter of your channel. !!
Saw some great bands at San Diego Street Scene!
@@fishtailfred8686 oh yes !!
From time to time, I still sing some of those songs, "...and your back in, Chula Vista, Chula Vista, ba dom ba dom..." or, "We're Gypsies from Bonsall, there's no stopping at all, We're Gypsies from Bonsall..."
San Diego in the mid eighties had a great jazz scene. Art Good and Lites out Jazz. Humphries. Pacific Beach Cafe. B Street Cafe. I used to go see Fattburger all the time. And Hollis Gentry.
We had the same thing on Long Island NY. Local station WBAB had a Homegrown show and it was awesome. Shame how the industry just imploded.
The history of the music industry has always fascinated me, and it's great to hear how it has changed in the past 20 years straight from the source. Merci!
You're the greatest Rick your channel is the wealth of information and everybody should be listening and participating in it teachers are special people
That is SO true. Record labels were absolutely willing to take risks because there was so much competition from other labels.
Irony is rick doesn't realize that UA-cam is basically doing exactly what labels started doing in the late 90s. They're consolidating like crazy. The UA-cam algorithm is pretty much snuffing out anything that isn't semi professional. If you've tried searching for content you'll notice they're not even giving you complete searches anymore. Videos I've seen a hundred times can't be found, despite the fact I know that they are there. You now search for something and after 10 entries you get "people also watched". It's absurd how readily the search function refuses to allow you to look for actual things.
And now it's completely homogenized pap.
When new rock music disappeared from radio I mainly found new bands on YT. It also opened me up to new types of music. I hope that with all the different platforms available that music continues to be as vibrant and creative as it always tries to be.
Thank you Mr. Beato for this. It kinda levels the understanding and lessens the resentment of the artist of the old school ways. Having the music, getting it out there and then doing live shows without A& R or is there those promoters who can make it happen with the local radio stations. The playing field now days is wide open and we hope the fingers are working....
Spot on, Rick! I'm 60. I've been signed, been a session guy, a hired hand, a producer, a writer, etc. There was a time when you needed the labels and a portion of the industry as an artist, but it became nearly impossible for most artists to make a viable living or find an audience when the rug got swept out from under the industry. This is a GREAT time to be an artist and creator because anyone can put their content out independently without a need for anything other than the willingness and the ability. Audyences have the means to find you and there are times when the algorhythms actually help. Just do it as they say.
Well produced records are gone. People want free music. The music industry is dead, they will make $ on all the recordings by artists have died.
@@brucesmith3740 there is something to this, the production of music is a difference science than its creation. But common music consumers aren't really interested in what goes into that at this time. And people have always wanted free music, nothings changed there, ever since tape recorders became available.
This side of the thing is true, but the flip side, which isn't so great, is that the proportion of good stuff to bad is dropping, because of the glut of the production of mediocre material you have to filter through to find the gems. In toto there's more good stuff out there, but it can be harder to find, because the industry seems geared to promote mostly the type of stuff that the masses are already listening to.
The democratization of the music business is a good thing, but over-democratization inevitably lowers the bar.
The double edge sword is the music market is now grossly oversaturated with so much bad computer generated sound files, Short soundbyte clips for the ADHD TikTokers, not music created by artists. It's nearly impossible now to be heard as a single voice in a sea of noise.
Finally got it so the "algorithms" send mostly music and content that is worth seeing or listening to.. But as mentioned.. It is a blessing and a curse.. because there is more than can be seen or heard.. The fact that there is just literally SO much access to content.. it makes really good music "less special" (as it were)...
Yes, it is new technology that enabled you to reach a big audience, but that would not have happened without all the experience you built up during decades of hard work before UA-cam even existed. Thank you for all that!
Rick, you are a truly inspiring figure and a father to musicians world wide. I have been watching your channel for years; rarely I make a comment, but I have learned so much by watching you talking and playing and explaining what, at times, we all know but forget. The initial video with your son rightly guessing those weird chords should be in a museum in the future, as it is disarmingly beautiful. I hope he one day becomes a big star. If you ever come down to Australia, give us a nod!
Well worth the 14:21 of my life to watch. Rick brings not only lived experience, but intelligence and insight to the music I've listened to for half a century. I know zero music theory, and am not a real musician, but I have a good ear, and his analysis of individual songs (e.g., Steely Dan, The Cars, etc.) is always interesting. Glad I'm a subscriber.
I remember jumping on your channel early on. There was around a thousand people subscribed & it was growing seriously fast. It’s still growing like crazy. You’ve certainly earned it.
You really give us some wonderful insight into the world of music and the business of music. This commentary is just another example not only applies to music but to any passion or idea anyone has and wants to share with others on You
tube. Thank you.
I grew up playing in a few bands, worked in a recording studio in Chicago, worked as a DJ, went to college to get a degree in music and business (heh, the business side of the music industry).
As it turned out, I got into computers instead, but never lost my love for music. This video outlines how I still think I chose the better career path. Now I watch the historic videos about bands playing in their garage, Gig'ing around the city and traveling in vans - It resonates with me. Love to hear your stories, and the behind-the-scenes!
As a music educator, I try to break down the music industry for my students and how the mediums have rapidly changed since the 90's. Your breakdown of the past 25+ years was fantastic! I'm always so impressed with how you break down songs and sharing thoughts on pedagogy etc. Thank you.
Hey, Rick! I'm not an official musician, but love music and used to be in the radio biz and you nail it here. I like how you touch on the whys and wherefores of the demise of bands/ music and how we knew it, but you also couple that with your optimism that people consume differently and bands can, potentially, have success without the 'gatekeepers' telling them they can't. BTW, thanks for sharing your old band's tune. Very good and radio-worthy, IMO. Keep up the great work. Love the channel, Bro! Gary
Im big fan of yours, thank you for being on here and sharing your history and your stories, it’s important especially for younger people as well as older
Rick, you are an American treasure. PLEASE, just keep doing what you are doing. This is consistently the best of the many channels I follow.
The most important thing you ever said~ "Any one can do it. . .that's the most amazing thing! Thanx Rick!
I am only 39 but this channel helps to inspire me all the time. I cannot express how much I love to hear about the industry from how it used to be and the stories of how the people who surive how they survived being able to love what they do and talk about what they do. Thank you so much for your musings and willingness to express it all so transparently. Much respect, Paul
Thank you! I'm going on sixty-nine and been playing electric bass professionally for over fifty years and you are 100% right! "The Communications Act of 1996" was the death of regional music getting popular. What killed local music was in the 80's, 90's was states raising the drinking age from eighteen to twenty-one after Vietnam. That's when I got a straight job teaching high school.I believe change is good, but greed is bad.I lived in both music worlds now. The past one you were part of the band, now you send your track to who knows where. I cash the checks and feel nothing.
I loved working on student radio where we chose the content ourselves. We had been building up a following across Europe until tech issues took us off air. We played local artists, underground artists who were signed and artists who sent demos into us. This was 2012-14. I miss it a lot. I have a cousin who does an alternative radio show now and I've made up a playlist of music I find for her to check out and decide if she wants to play it. She's plays a real variety of stuff including these new artists and it's a joy to listen to. I'm under 40, I still buy music magazines and look out for new music. I try to get to concerts, though my health limits it.
I love your channel. I love the bands you pick out and I love that you are open to a variety of genres and listen through those Spotify charts to see what diamonds are in there. I love the interviews and I love you taking apart songs. I had wanted to go into the industry but I hit my teens/20s as all those changes happened.
Keep recording your videos, Rick. They are so refreshing!
Great video Rick! Very insightful and its amazing how much the music industry has changed in the last 20+ yrs. Always look forward to more of your videos
Great seeing your success Rick. You are a real inspiration for all of us I think. I was thinking of your band members as you talked. I'm sure they are amazed as you are. I know that guy. Keep on going brother. Love your interviews. They bring the artists out of the shadows partly or maybe mostly because they happened upon someone they can trust that knows their language. We are all indebted to you. Thank you very much!
So jealous of your son! I'd love to have had my father teaching me at such a young age. You are great, Rick; and dang you know so much about music!
We have WTMD in Baltimore that is run out of Towson University and connected to public radio, so they do the news roundup on the hour. They play all the new music that they choose based on their listeners. It is the best place to hear new music. I always spin the dial when I go to a new area to find the local stations.
Towson Mass Comm alumn here! You guys have it all now!
Love TMD. ALSO RNR!!
TMD is great, RNR is now gone.
Love this!!! You breakdown 'everything music' so well. Have been watching your channel for years and years and continually point new people to it. Your interviews are the best out there! And you interview all of my fave musicians! It's always great to see the musicians open up to you once they see that you know as much about their music as they do. The Sting interview especially. In the very beginning he was like, ok, another interview, lets get this done, but then you started to talk and you could just see his enjoyment as the interview proceeded. That is pure Rick Beato! Loved it! You're a class act Rick and we are so fortunate to have you out here sharing your wealth of knowledge with us. So happy that this channel has had such great success and has become such a great platform for you.
Thank you so much! 🎶🎸🎶
The "Record Industry" is what destroyed the record industry
Rick, I enjoy your channel very much. You're personable, easy to listen to, great tonality in your voice (almost an overtone), and point out the good and sometimes the bad in all types of music. Hope you reach a Trillion viewers.
as much as I agree with Beato that social media took power (which I too think is a good thing), we shall not forget, that 10-12 years ago it was so much easier to be noticed in UA-cam, compared to the amount of material that is uploaded every second nowadays... its like a buffet that gets longer and longer and people have more and more to choose... so I truly believe that nowadays luck is one of the most important factors on getting a viral video on UA-cam in order. to start a successful channel... would it all have happened the same way for Beato without the Dylan Videos? I doubt that, though people like him definitely deserve that attention (don't get me wrong) ....
Ay my Office at work I have these vinyls decorating my space since 2009. Recently a coworker walked up to my desk, who have been admiring my vinyl collection, and says: “Do you know Rick Beato? He breaks down these rock bands’ music and explains their recording.”
That was last year. Today I am addicted to this channel. If you love music in any format, shape, or form; this is the guy to listen to.
Thank You, Mr. Beato…for sharing your talent, experience, dedication, and knowledge with us. Your passion and love for music is a school to us all. Cheers!!!!! … Enjoy, learn, and love your videos (content), keep them coming!
I can barely name the great musicians I've been lucky enough to discover on UA-cam. Great players from all over the world, that without this exposure I would never have heard them. And don't forget the legends still performing for us on here. Happy to have some of today's greats to be touring again, too.
Liked "Happy to have some of today's greats to be touring again, too."
Exactly. My favorite band is a Japanese band called BAND-MAID and if not for UA-cam not only would I never had found them, but they probably wouldn't have made it past 2 albums before the label dropped them because it was their song Thrill from their second album that got millions of views and kicked them off.
Thank you for sharing your journey and thoughts, Rick. And also for the inspiring words for future Content-Creators.
Great historical music business summary, Rick. Concise and down to the point. I’m a retired advertising executive (also a musician), who worked for major global ad agencies and run one in LA. At the time I wanted to create an ad agency (and I did), to support musicians and help them find their space (as I did for brands) - this was in 2009-2012- but then I realized that labels were only interested in getting my clients’ budget - from my corporate clients- and use their artists to promote our products/brands - which was NOT the idea! After a few years of this, I decided to abandon the music side of the agency business and concentrate only in the ad business as it was. My conclusion then was that the music labels didn’t have the knowledge and ‘strategic’ expertise and sophistication to understand the media communications business as agencies did. Labels are basically promoters (like car dealers) for the most part and lack strategic thinking to develop artists as an ad agency develop brands. Too bad.
Music will survive, is in our DNA. Music labels are a different story, like car dealers, here today but maybe gone tomorrow.
I am 66 years old and am (finally) starting to accept new models. The main reason is Emmett Cohen. Being a jazz musician, I have also been lamenting the lack of real, non-tech, music. Emmett has given me great hope that future will have great jazz, without auto-tune and available. He has shown us a model that is now a force to be reckoned with!
We all have our part to play. Never heard of Emmett Cohen until reading your comment, just checked him out - wow! Thank you Jef! And of course Rick for bringing us all together.
@@NickGates100 please give us a link for his music you mostly adore
I would have never listened to Jazz in days gone by. It wasn't on the radio and I didn't understand it. UA-cam led me to Rick Beato -> Adam Neely -> Martina Da Zilva -> Emmet Cohen and on and on. It's awesome. Same goes for punk.
Thank you. Did not know about him.
Rick You’re the Man brother! Love watching your channel and listening to your experiences in the Music world past and present.keep up the awesome work & positive vibes.Thank You for your sincere time,ROCK ON!
Spot on as always Rick, great video. Pros and cons to the modern music industry as well as the 'old school' view. I was a semi-successful musician that took a break when my career went south in my early twenties and pre-social media era. Now I'm back it's like all that never happened and I've had to start again. Making content is exhausting and not what I wanted to do with my life but it seems like if I don't constantly make it I won't get anywhere. I would love to just focus on writing and recording songs but it never seems to be enough. I love your channel, thank you for sharing your thoughts with us.
“$483,000 on a record” 😳😳😳
Love the story of that record and how it got you into production. Great video, Rick!
My budget is fat, round ZERO! 😉😎💫
I made my 3rd for $50k and it sounds better than this lol.
Some famous bands spent a lot more than THAT on a record!1/2 a mil is on the low end.
@@Fearzero Can we hear it on streaming? What is it?
@@cortical1 “Ascension” is the album name by Billionaire
I think it's a great summation of what has happened to the industry. I miss the old days of waiting for your favorite Led Zepplin album to come out and radio stations taking the time to play 1 side or the whole album for the listeners.
@ghost mall I cringe at some of the music I listened to because radio had decided it was popular. I'm glad my brother had good taste in music because thats what I listen to, and compare new music to it.
New releases were on Tuesdays ♫
Absolutely. I would never have a music following if not for UA-cam.
Thank you for explaining the music industry to me. It i is an inspiring take on the current music industry. My son is may I say a brilliant musician Jeremy Tuplin but I always wondered why it was so hard to get taken up by a major label and now I understand it is not necessary. Thank you 🙏
I'm impressed by your commitment to educate. You keep us informed and entertained. You've developed a pedagogy for guitarists of all skill levels, to improve with minimal effort, at a reasonable price. Above all, I feel a comraderie with your personality, I identify with you as a like-minded soul. I appreciate your humanity.
Love your content!!! but what i love the most your personal views and thoughts and stories about music and the music industry of the last at least 30 years!!!
Love this format of video where you take us outside on a journey! I think one of the best things you could do for your new interview space is maybe to make it so that you can easily change it up periodically.
I still find joy in creating music, whether there is a listening ear or not. I can’t think of any other form of expression that can unplug you from daily surroundings and place in a pleasant feeling.
I was in a few bands back in the 90s and I often wonder what the hell happened to radio and to the dream everyone used to have have of getting signed to a record label. You just explained all of it.
At some point, I couldn't listen to the radio anymore. The mainstream rock format first killed my taste in classic rock, but then I needed a long break from more modern songs.
@@lucasoheyze4597 I wish this was true. On the mainstream radio lineup, they mix modern rock with classic rock. Okay, let's go to the classic rock station because maybe they would have something different. So much overlap
Okay, let's go to the competitor radio brand. Almost the exact same lineup. That song you were trying to get a break from 15 minutes ago? Yeah, they are now playing it
@@JoeStuffzAlt Now all the recorded music in history is there to listen to at the click of a button, so why would anyone listen to the radio really?
@@TheMattmatic Mostly forgot your USB Thumb Drive and your smartphone is out battery. If the radio was a good way to discover new music without me turning it off due to a song I heard too many times, I'd listen to it.
As someone who's old enough to remember the days of physical media (LPs and such), I have to say the time we're living in now is amazing for music distribution. I know fully well at this point I won't get a record label contact, but I can upload music anytime I want and reach a broad audience and get immediate feedback.
Very interesting to learn how records get made financially. I never realized that it cost $500,000 to produce and make a record. I can see why now there are a lot of good artists we never heard of.
Thank you Rick, it seems your life has been full of rich and interesting experiences and I feel enriched and inspired by listening to you share these stories.
Beautiful video Rick, great work 👏 and congratulations on your own journey! I’m glad you shared yourself to the world and you deserve all the success and support you get ❤
I haven't listened to commercial radio in years. My local NPR where I used to live (WNIJ) has a local music showcase show that brought in local artists from northern Illinois/southern Wisconsin and gave exposure to those who may not have had it. In Tampa where I live now, community radio WMNF has a local music program every Friday that brings in local artists. WMNF is a great station that has no format - one evening they are playing blues artists and another evening they are playing Latin jazz and salsa - I love it!
I was there in the "Good Olde Days" . Geffen Records offered my band The Pysco Girls a $1,000,000 contract in 1990. My attorney was one of the best in the music industry . I looked over the contract and I would be making $7/hr basically. I turned the whole thing down and it was the best decision I have ever made. I talked to my famous friends in bands and no one was making any money and all were in debt. I was making $70,000 a year working 3 days a week doing engineering consulting and $7hr and $1,000,000 in debt made no sense at all. A few of my famous band friends did get paid and got the rights to their stuff after years of litigation. I love the way things are now. DIY or die
I miss walking into a record store and spending all afternoon discovering records guided by sections or by asking a knowledgeable person at the counter. The internet, or youtube for that matter, is anything but.
Hardly. What the Internet provides is a lot more knowledgeable people at a lot more counters who can suggest good work in a lot more sections of the store. The skill you need to develop is figuring out which of those knowledgeable people you would trust for recommendations. Once you do that, the possibility for finding the gems increases dramatically. I've seen the same thing in fiction, written or visual: I've picked up books to read or things to watch that I never would have given a second glance at before because of recommendations of people online that I've learned to trust. Sometimes I like them, sometimes I don't, sometimes I'm indifferent, but I've found a lot more that I've liked than not.
@@keith6706 not people though. Algorithm
I don't understand. Isn't that what the algorithm is for? The YT algorithm is really good at predicting music that I will like. And there's also the whole reaction video scene...
they made sure we
got used to being
connect to our personal
mobile 📲 device
sO'
we wouldn't produce big carbon footprint 👣
shipping printing
manufacturing buying selling in big air conditioned
buildings
or be
driving around doing anything like that.
exactly 💯
no vinyl, cassette , cd
in your hand
hopefully that cell phone 🤳
battery 🔋
staying charged to
see and listen to your content
you found
Great history lesson, Rick. I am 10 years younger than you, but I remember the days how music used to be. I miss it. You help keep its foundation alive.
Rick, i love your show and as a former dj of over 17 years, i've been preaching this same message to people about the Telecommunications Act of 1996. I started in radio in 1989 and i saw the transformation of "real" radio turn into the homogenized white noise it has become. Today, it doesn't matter what format it is because country sounds like pop, pop is hip hop and hip hop is country and rock forgot how to play notes and solo's because they don't have to. To quote from Almost Famous, "It's all just an industry of cool" and that's not a good thing. Anyways, i want to say thank you for bringing more light to this. I appreciate it!
You may as well complain about the Jones Act from 1920, which my HS Geography teacher did back in the early 1970s (it is really quite that stupid). It is entirely too “Inside Baseball” to get anyone interested.
Rick this same concept applies to TV too. No longer are we limited to what a hollywood producer says we can watch. I can watch your channel for music, then go watch a guy clean a yard, watch aviation, watch a TV or movie highlight, or car repair. It's been years since I've turned on the TV for a non sporting event.
Rick, you've inspired me to start playing music again after a 20yr hiatus, and for that I will be forever grateful.
Love your stuff Rick…All what you said is also true for the Book Publishing industry…I wrote 10 technical books for my industry and created a very lucrative business out of thin air for almost no money, just my time, talent, knowledge of my content and Amazon publishing platform…. I would have never been able to get a mainstream publisher to publish my books.
So great to know more of your personal story, While I never questioned your judgement it certainly validates your expertese and gives solid creedance to your insights to this industry and your drive and hard work and inovation to survive in an industry that has gone thru a C Change and is likly to go thru another C change again very soon is beyond inspirational to me. You are The Dojo Master of the Music Business. Love your channel and all your content. Keep reinventing yourself. Much Love Brent Zen. Don’t have your chops but I do have your passion. All the best to you and your family this crazy 2023. Maybe A Beato A&R - Radio Station UA-cam Record Label of sorts is somewhere in the near future.. 😊
From one Rick to another, I love your introspective about the music industry. Certainly, it is a labor of love for most of them and a source of income for very few.
I bet 100% of your international audience needed to see what toppled is in the dictionary, like I had to do. New word learned. Your channel is a life school man! ❤
I suspect you underestimate the ability of people outside of America to know words.
Your records with NEEDTOBREATHE are some of my personal favorites. Would love to somehow see y’all work together again one day!
As always-another wonderful video from an amazing musician, producer, writer and UA-cam success story. The one thing that I think could be talked about more is how to monetize on UA-cam as that is always confusing-maybe I’d better learn that on another UA-cam video, it could be a hole in my education. I started a UA-cam channel about 2007 and I have over 2000 subs-yet I’ve never figured out how to monetize because of changing circumstances within how are UA-cam does that. I realize 2000 is not considered a lot of subs. I would definitely agree that social media has helped my career as I have been hired for bands for tours, and for recording through my Instagram channel. It has helped me make money by being a platform to show what I can do-although I need to work on how to make more money on UA-cam. Thank you Rick for all your incredible work and inspiration!
Hey Mister Beato , first things first , I would like to thank you deeply for your work ! I was blown away by the Keith Jarret , Joni Mitchell ,Pat Metheny interviews , not to mention the objective , practical, direct music theory classes ! Keep up the good work !
Rick I really wish you’d do a video on how Max Martin has dominated all production and songwriting since Britney’s first album - he wrote so much material for Taylor, Katy Perry, Britney, etc etc. That sound has dominated everything for 20 plus years while record companies were/are refusing to support new talented bands that might change the sound of popular music.
And, Rick…. You probably don’t even remember this… but a few years ago, I had relocated from NY to ATL, only about 15minutes away from you. This was right around when you did the interview with Vinnie Colaiuta. I reached out to you, I think through Twitter, and you actually called me back. Which was amazing. We had a conversation while you were on your way to pick up Thai food for your family. Lol We talked for a little while and you gave me some great advice about social media, and doubling down on it. At the time I had a little under 4K subs on UA-cam from an old vid that had gone viral years before & some education stuff I had done with Vic Firth. But no Tiktok and no Instagram. Now social media content is my main thing… and that in part had a lot to do with that conversation and your advice… so I just want to say thank you for the content you make… the inspiration you give to all of us as a well as the time & personal advice you gave to me a few years ago. THANK YOU 🙏
Rick grew a beard from the time he was inside to the time he walked out. Impressive.
Yeah....all in about 15 minutes....impressive
Imagine how huge his studio is
@@manu_sanz Hahaha! Too many reverb!
Just like Homer Simpson
I am an amateur musician that started on UA-cam a little over a year ago. I went from no exposure to 14 subscribers in that time. Obviously a drop in a bucket compared to the professional side of the music industry. For me it's a Learning curve and I am focusing on better music video production. Thanks for your videos that describe your experience with in the music industry.
make a tiktok
Thanks Rick. you put the whole picture into a most insightful focus. I've been learning guitar since my first one mom got me when she saw me in the barn on our farm playing broom guitar to The Beatles She Love's You. I was 12 when the Beatles first appeared on Ed's show. One month later I turned 13 and mom surprised me with a sears silver tone acoustic guitar. I had to turn it upside down and I switched the strings as I play natural true lefty. It's harder getting lefty guitars and paying extra but I have several guitars. I'm 72 now and still learning. Worked jobs for a career served in the military but always had a guitar to doodle on. I sing and play at open mics and at community charity events. I play for free for the love of sharing my love of music. Rick, I have found your youtube videos to be very helpful as I'm still learning. Thanks.
Hello Rick, I'm older than you and I really appreciate the valuable, gifted, helpful information you provided in this video. In the year 1960 I fell in love with great music that I loved hearing as it was happening for the past 62 years. I even gave myself a nickname of Mr. Music, because I loved it so much not that I actually played any musical instruments. I played the best songs I loved on my own 45's then LPs then reel to reel tapes then cassette audio tapes and then to CDs. I love my favorite music so much and I have DJ'd a few times at paid gigs but mostly at the 1,000of my own parties I had in my life.
I doubt someone like Ren would have had success with even the best A&R people. But here he is, being seen by millions of people who never thought a guy with a nylon string guitar and a hospital gown could rock them so hard.
Yeah, can't be a coincedence..
I was absolutely thinking of him while thinking about music exposure now compared to when I was growing up (80s & 90s). I don't think an art piece like "Hi Ren" would be on the radio or MTV. For that, I'm grateful for platforms like UA-cam making artists like Ren accessible, though I'm aware of the other side of the coin. I have to give a shout out to Rick because he has such a deep knowledge and appreciation of music, that through him I've discovered so much many more artists, old & new. Thank you Rick!
@@user-sr2nc9ge1d Who is Ren?
Rick, i do enjoy your shooting from the hip approach about the industry. There's no hype, no music in the background to church it up, no special effect, just the hard facts about things. That's a nice change.
nuff said?
The change in the technology has led to the small 'd' democratization of how music is distributed - the decentralization of things. Cynical me imagines that the UA-cams/TikToks/etc will, more and more, put their corporate fingers on the scale, and decide who sees what. Great video - thank you!
@ghost mall And even if this isn't the case the social media companies and their algorithms, tuned to make them money, not offer a wide, diverse music offering to the listener, is happening. I've been thinking about this while gatekeeper concept and whilst I don't think the situation that was allowed to develop in the US (the big record labels buying up and controlling what two stations played) was healthy, I don't think the same situation happened in the UK, we always had the BBC Radio not under this model, promoting young new talent (from Amy Winehouse to Adele to Ed Sheeran to Florence and the Machine), but even better we had people decide and curate the music that was played to us, it just wasn't just corporate interests.
I know it wasn't the BBC, but I remember the story of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody and how the DJ Kenny Everett player it to death despite the band being told no one would play an 8 minutes long track (or however long it was) and it beginning huge. Would that have happened in the US? I doubt it. I think streaming changed everything with these big tech companies taking a huge amount of the money and not enough paid to the artists (and thus their record labels) to sustain the model as it was, making they had to go for safe, more established artists rather than take a chance on a dozen, most of which wouldn't make it big.
things are more centralized now, not decentralized. power/wealth is more concentrated now than 30 years ago.
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
Ren is the perfect example of a musician making it on his own as a totally independent artist on UA-cam. Years of hard work and dedication, ( plus truly exceptional talent almost beyond words ), and he's finally breaking through to mass awareness. For those who haven't yet checked him out, be prepared to be blown away.
Truly appreciate your channel.
Rick, I love the historical context as well as the story of your band. We have been ranting about the Telecommunications deregulation act for years. It is amazing how many so-called music enthusiasts have no clue about it and actually believe that everything being played since 1996 was stuff "the people wanted". They seem to have no clue about the loss of autonomy of playlist programmers etc and how that led to the homogenization of mainstream in the music. I guess the part I am struggling in this video is the question as to how creators killed the music business. Your video suggests that creators have found a way to circumvent record labels and create a path to ubiquity in the modern mainstream. Wouldn't that be a good thing? I am not sure how that translates to killing the music business. I do believe creators are killing the music business in a way and that consumer lack of discernment and understanding of monetization is killing the music but I guess I just don't get how this video substantiates creators killing the music business. I hope I am not missing something very obvious here. If time permits, any clarification here would be super helpful. Last, but least, we are huge fans of your videos and we wish you even bigger success with this youtube channel.
You might be working with a different interpretation of that phrase. I believe Beto is referring specifically to the old school RIAA big label, exploitive contracts "music business" not music business as in "the market for music"
Well, my channel is an example of that. Without it, I would just play some music for myself and kept going, because I never intended to be a musician. But UA-cam allowed me to share my love for the music (Mark Knopfler's music in particular) and I started to get a hang of it, and now I'm dabbling in teaching. So it's a beautiful, gradual experience, and even somebody like me - a man without any real musical background and education, can get a bit of success. UA-cam is an amateur's paradise, and I love it.