@@dmitrykazakov2829 Maybe you need to listen to it with a music production ear. Listen to the mix, overdubbing and layering going on. Listen to Freddy's voice and band harmonies. Listen to Brians guitar. Take note of the huge variety of music styles. The Album is Queen showing off all their skills. Queen 2 is easy listening to any Queen fan
@@dmitrykazakov2829 Wow! Queen II is probably my favourite Queen album. I love the theme and how the songs merge into one another, March of the Black Queen is EPIC!
@@armlesswalrus I know, many like it. To me it is even worse than Hot Space or Flash Gordon. They really spent everything on Queen I and recharged only in Sheer Heart Attack. Father to Son, Funny How Love and Seven Seas of Rhye borrowed from Queen I and unnecessarily expanded are only tracks good for Queen. The rest is dull, overproduced and uninteresting...
My immediate answer… Dirt is a masterpiece. And the only way to ever pay justice to those heavy lyrics is with an equally heavy sound. And those lyrics are f***ing lead…
I love this conversation and I love this channel. I was at a party over the weekend and someone brought up UA-cam channels. Three other people beside myself mentioned Rick Beato and all agreed that he has the best channel. We are of various ages and musical tastes. That was a fun discovery. Rick's channel is a uniting force for music lovers
Reggatta de Blanc was a great example of a better second album, The Police at their best as a band, in sync, not pressed for time to produce, the groove on that album is killer, and *I feel* that on the song Walking On the Moon we started to really hear what The Police sound was
Definitely a great example and one of the first albums I bought. I think I bought that and Boston - Dont Look Back (not a better second album but still good) at the same time as my first two albums. I think I was 12 when Regatta de Blanc was released.
For me, the best second record is Candy-O by The Cars. It was just its own unique sound and beat. It helped to support the new wave movement as well. I don't think it was better than their first album, but just different and a classic second album for sure.
I Rocked out to Both of those L.P.'s by the Cars back when they first came out. They were the Best in that Genre of Music! They Kept New Wave Alive!!! They had the Hits!
I just came on here to say the exact same thing. The musicianship, layering, and originality of the Cars is (was) incredible. Candy-O is a perfect example of that.
These people's opinion is no more worthy than anyone else's. Foe r instance I saw Zep's second tour in the U.S. I really liked and still like their first album. There second album is why I lost interest in them. I don't really like to hear someone sing about the gonad's(lemon song). I think it is kind of juvenile. The thing about Beato is he really doesn't understand the sixties.
G'day from downunder! Whilst I appreciate your main channel of tuition & analysis, THIS DISCUSSION means more to me than anything you have done. You see, you 4 guys are just me and my mates sitting around having a beer 30 years ago, listening to albums and talking music. The only difference is each of us would have a beer and there would be someone going to the record player and putting on an album every so often and telling us to "listen to this!!". Sadly, now, a few of my mates are ghosts around the campfire but the memories of those conversations are brought back, each time I play one of those albums. Rock on Rick!
I think Hendrix's Axis: Bold as Love is one of the greatest second albums in rock history. It's one of a few times in which an artist's creativity was fully in bloom at their second record. I think Radiohead is another great example for another reason. Their first album was only really known for their breakthrough single 'Creep,' and they could very easily have been thought of (and probably were thought of) as a one hit wonder, but their second album The Bends was very interesting in that they were a band still ascending, and that album forever dispelled any thought that they would fade and leave the scene early. And then of course there was OK Computer, which was another level entirely.
I was going to comment but I think I better "Wait Until Tomorrow." Yes. AXIS: BOLD AS LOVE was a great second album. The music. The album art work. The song order. I played that album so much in the 60s it wore out the groove on the vinyl.
I love all of Hendrix's work, but I think that Axis: Bold as Love is still a bit constrained. All of the pieces are still limited by 60s pop sensibilities - all the pieces are short and cute (with the exception of If 6 was 9) and it doesn't really have the bombast of the other 2 studio albums.
This roundtable discussion was thoroughly enjoyable. I hope you have the opportunity to do more of these. You always let your guests talk at length and you listen and let the conversation go wherever it leads. You are becoming the Dick Cavett of music interviews! Nuno Bettencourt, Visiting Abbey Road, Yngwie Malmsteen, Andy Summers, Pat Metheny... I am on a bit of binge this weekend enjoying everything.
Some of the best 2nd albums that come to mind: Led Zeppelin- II Black Sabbath- Paranoid Metallica- Ride the Lightning Iron Maiden- Killers Judas Priest- Sad Wings of Destiny Slipknot- Iowa Mastodon- Leviathan Aerosmith- Get Your Wings Nirvana- Nevermind Alice in Chains- Dirt Stone Temple Pilots- Purple Pearl Jam- Vs. The Black Crowes- The Southern Harmony & Musical Companion Live- Throwing Copper I Mother Earth- Scenery and Fish The Tragically Hip- Road Apples The Tea Party- Splendor Solis or Edges of Twilight (Depending on what you consider their first) Kiss- Hotter Than Hell Tool- Aenima RATM- Evil Empire Oasis- Whats the Story? (Morning Glory) Rush- Fly By Night Jimi Hendrix- Axis: Bold as Love The Doors- Strange Days Cream- Disraeli Gears
Absolutely the best 41:17 I've spent in a long time. What a great discussion about recordings and formats and artists. Bravo. By the way, one of my favorite 2nd albums is Def Leppard High-N-Dry. By far their best album, and one of the best albums of the day. Ozzy Diary of a Madman is also pretty stellar. Just sayin.
high n dry is their most underrated album. I think its better than Hysteria. You have ' another hit and run', 'bringin on a heartbreak'followed by the raw instrumental 'switch 625', 'mirror mirror'and plenty of good tracks.
Imagine dropping the needle on Zep II for the first time wondering if they were able to capture the energy and aggression of their first album and then whole lotta love starts
Fly By Night - 2nd Album. Lee/Lifeson/Peart - 2nd version of band (OBTW FBN was their 1st album). The Warning - first time I've felt the depth of emotion for a band since I became a Rush convert after hearing 2112 for the first time in 1976 as a sophomore in high school. DPA have single-handedly rekindled this 62-year old's love of straight ahead hard rock and given me hope for the future of that genre. OBTW DPA are just slightly younger than LLP were when Rush cut FBN :).
If this is a test run for a new series I vote “yes”. I absolutely love listening to the “Inside the baseball “ type conversations.. awesome production..
Old Dudes! Great post Rick! I'm 70 and I grew up on all the icons! The music of your youth is what stays with you the longest! It will always transfer you to the place in time when it first blew your mind!
AAAAAAHHHHH!!!! ALL MY HEROES IN ONE ROOM!! December 6th 2021 I contracted COVID at age 43. Spent 82 days in ICU. 33 day coma. Lost 51lbs. Complete organ failure. Encephalopathy. Pneumonia. completely fully disabled now just shy of my 45th birthday. THANK YOU FOR YOUR VIDEOS!! You both truly love every waking moment and it shows. Truly incredible MEN!! I hope I have the privilege of meeting you all someday!! Funny, I joined the AVIATION CLUB & STARTED PLAYING GUITAR AT AGE 12!!! Stay safe
@policeofficer94 Thank you for sharing your story. I am so sorry you contracted COVID and am fully disabled now. It’s amazing how wonderful these videos are! Rick has such a love of music and knowledge of music as well. His interviews are the best! It seems like he is talking to an old friend.
It's a nasty disease to be sure. Killed my brother-in-law and wife's favorite cousin and just about got me last April. I have a chronic auto-immune disease and protecting myself against the anti-vax crowd is getting harder and harder...
This round table was outstanding, Rick! Huge fan of Ward’s, too! Definitely looking forward to your next discussion. Please don’t wait too long 😁👍🏼 Greetings from Fort Lauderdale 🌴
this was an excellent show…and my first comment…hello Rick, tommy, fellow 63 year old guitarist and lover of all things from our day.. “album covers on the shag carpet” days with headphones after school…absolutely dig your show and respect to your musicianship… tr
My friend's mom had a huge 8 track stereo and a Columbia Records subscription. She let him pick one album and he chose Van Halen II. That first listen of EVH was magical. I was immediately hooked and that album became the soundtrack of my life that summer and on into my freshman year in high school. Van Halen played most of that album at Oakland Coliseum that summer and that one show still lives on in my mind as Legend. VH II really takes the killer attitude and live feel of the first album, kicks up the swagger to 11 and slams it home with a vengeance. I'm biased as hell but I think it's a great second album and was the perfect musical landscape for that period of my life. 🤘🎸 (As I was writing this, I just listened to the 2015 re-master and it's still soooo good😊)
I totally agree VH II was the one for me as well the album was raw and had a great summer vibe from front to back each track is a classic. They were young and hungry. Everyone was coming into there prime - from Mikey’s backing vocals and bass coming thru strong to Dave’s voice and Al’s thunder drums and of course Ed…. Ed’s riffs on that album can’t be topped from the intros to beautiful girls and women in loves harmonics - never heard anything like that before
Wow, been a sub'd viewer of Ward's and Rick for a while. I'm a DE/FF sonar tech vet and a drummer. I alwaze see the gear behind Ward on his videos, but never put 2 & 2 together. Who knew! Rock on sir and keep on updating us on the current situation in the Middle East. A Trick of the Tail era btw w/Bill Bruford helping on percussion...
1982 Asia, Toto, John Mellencamp, Duran Duran< Steve Miller, ABC, Fleetwood Mac, Adam Ant all released million selling albums, while Dionne Warwick, Steve Winwood, The Beach Boys, The Who, Golden Earring and The Rolling Stones all released albums
I'm 52 and I find new and amazing music all the time. Anyone who says there's no new good music is not trying to find it. I play drums and Bass so that's what I'm generally looking for.
Very interesting discussion. Please do more of these musical roundtables, Rick. Now, I just really wish people, critics, music lovers, experts who gush about the likes of R.E.M., Steely Dan, Guns N Roses etc. would talk about and acknowledge the sheer brilliance an gross under appreciation of Supertramp and ELO. Both bands are unique, popular, have superior musicians and writing, and amazing albums sound reproduction. Also, they were both fantastic in concert. Their output, mainly in the 1970s, was phenomenal. They should be talked about with the same reverence, or moreso, than most bands, past and present. Supertamp and ELO are admired but should be legendary.
You guys talked about the difference between experiencing an older band fresh when they came out vs. being younger and experiencing them decades later. I'd love to hear a roundtable discussion with young people and their experiences hearing the classic rock bands in recent times and how it affected them.
Interesting that you bring this up, because there are younger people with channels that do reactions to songs. Pretty much each one is blown away by music from back in the day, like one last night reacted to Dire Straits, Sultans Of Swing. The reviewer actually said: I cannot believe I did not listen to this music sooner in my life. Another said: Wow, ya'll had killer music back then.
I'm a much younger guy (still in my twenties) and I grew up listening to the music from the 70s and 80s, as well as the modern stuff. I can assure you that a 40 year old song can become a part of your memories just as much as a contemporary one, and the connection stays with you forever. Whenever I hear a song from Mott the Hoople's "Mott" album, it takes me back to the time when I just moved to my own flat, and it was in 2016, some 43 years after the album was released. It really comes down to what you're listening to at the moment, no matter how old it is
My daughter and her new husband are both in their early twenties. They love all kinds of music. Contemporary as well as older stuff. Frank Sinatra and the Beatles, to Post Malone. I like that they enjoy the old stuff, but I'm biased. In fact, I would definitely say they like the older music more than I like newer music. So...
Rick Beato is the “producer of the people”. Just how accessible he has made himself with his channel. His insights and instructions are wonderful, and his interviews and stories are a great listen. Like Anthony Bourdain gleefully regaling his times in the kitchen, Beato does the same with his stories in bands, studios, etc. Imagine the stories of producers we all know. Imagine the tea the likes of Martin Birch, who is sadly dead, could say about Deep Purple, Maiden, and Sabbath. What about Flemming Rasmussen and tales of Blackmore and Metallica. Did Joe Lynn Turner’s wig ever fall off? What about Lange and Jones and their stories? Thank you Mr Beato. You are a music-philes companion. Osiris speed, sir.
2nd Foo Fighter album is great. 3 songs that people absolutely love, and 'Everlong' pops into the download rankings all the time, 26 years after its release.
How cool…. I’ve been following Ward for years as I’m an old Navy fighter attack pilot with much in common, and I’ve followed Rick for years as an old amateur bass and guitar guy. I’ve been a church musician for over thirty years, and I enjoy playing along with Rick’s guitar videos a lot. Who knew you guys were friends!? Great discussion, brought back tons of memories of my high school and college days, mimicking all of those great players you were talking about. I recall sitting in a concrete stairwell with my college roommate, playing Lightfoot, CSN&Y, Beatles, Simon & Garfunkle and a zillion others. The natural reverb in that stairwell was incredible! We had a following in there. Great fun….not a lot of studying going on though. 🤣
I always felt like the Get your Wings album by Aerosmith was a fantastic second record. Took the blueprint from their debut and made a quantum leap into there distinct blues rock sound imo. It has the classic songs like Train kept Rollin’ and Same old Song and Dance, but even better deep cuts such as Season of Wither, Lord of the Thighs, etc.
Completely agree. The first album was a careful working out of influences. Not bad, but they really found their swagger and their identity on the second album.
Get Your Wings is one of the albums that every once in while (although not anymore) throws the general public for a loop. It’s was the 2nd album and people bought it and thought their debut album “Aerosmith” was actually their 2nd. People went to the record store and thought ohh Aerosmith put out a new album, because they saw it there too. Same thing happened with Nirvana (my least favorite band) people thought “Nevermind” was the debut and “Bleach” was the 2nd album. When in reality it’s the other way around.
Yeah they were considered almost a novelty act for their first album but Paul's Boutique solidified them as a serious band and has a bunch of their best work
@@michaelperez4001 They don't get the props for some of the amazing guitar parts and arrangements over the years. Always takes me back to another dream world of nostalgia.
In regards to the comment at 38:49 , I live in Japan and was driving a very old, low end vehicle a few years back that came stock with a simple radio /cassette and a single speaker on the passenger's door. When I was driving home from work in the evening, NHK radio used to play full, uninterrupted albums at the DJ's whim. Anyway, one night it was "Are You Experienced," the mono version. It sounded phenomenal! Still fresh, violent, and alive. Indeed, the medium changes the message a lot.
Agree…nothing preceded or succeeded the coolness of Show Biz Kids. King of the World, Your Gold Teeth….nothing like them either…plus it was nice to see a little less control and just let it rip.
SD's entire catalog is great, but for me their 1st 2 LPs are the best stylistically and sonically for what I like to hear. They were a band for those two records. Then they became Donald and Walter with the best session cats they could assemble.
I’m glad Ward brought up Genesis. It took me 40 years to fall in love with the Peter Gabriel era. I didn’t even know that Peter (big fan, just saw him in Denver) was in Genesis until many years after I became a fan of the band starting with the video “Turn It On Again”. I think I had to mature musically to appreciate that prog era. ‘The Lamb Lies Down..’ started me down that rabbit hole. I missed out on all that great music for almost 4 decades. Now I can honestly say that I LOVE ALL versions of Genesis!
It's rare to find somebody who 'loves all versions' of the band. If a fan loves, say, Trespass (a GREAT 2nd album) or Foxtrot they are unlikely to like 'We Can't Dance' or 'Invisible Touch' - they are effectively different bands. In my experience - having loved the band since the 70s - most Gabriel-era fans completely accepted Collins becoming vocalist and their albums like Trick of the Tail - but many lost interest after Steve Hackett left. The album 'Duke' (1980) seems to be where remaining fans left the ship.
These guys were all so interesting and knowledgeable. This should be a regular group podcast, but would need a more focused topic, this one covered so many things!
Glad they mentioned it because my favorite 2nd album of all time is Counting Crows’ “Recovering the Satellites.” Of course, I’m biased because they’re my favorite band, and “August and Everything After” is my favorite debut album. They’re actually my favorite 2 albums of all time. They’re so different, but each spoke directly to me and what I was going through emotionally at the times (high school for “August” and college during “Satellites.”
I'm 54, a lifelong music lover, and I just discovered Jason Isbell this year. His music hits me and makes me feel like the stuff I discovered and loved as a teenager and a young man.
AC/DC's second album, "T.N.T" often gets overlooked in this discussion because Atlantic released a compilation of their first 2 albums as their debut international release. What many people outside of Australia know as "High Voltage" is really their second album: It's a Long Way to the Top... Rock 'n' Roll Singer... The Jack... Live Wire... T.N.T.... Rocker... Can I Sit Next to You, Girl... High Voltage... School Days...
This was awesome, loved hearing y'all just do the (like friends -off the cuff) compare-contrast and questioning of the how's, what's ,where's, when's of all things experiential of music..... Mahalo : )
This is an absolutely fabulous discussion. Being 70 I can relate firsthand to so much of what you are talking about. This should be required viewing for anyone interested in music and how the making and consumption of music has changed over the years. Great work Rick and friends.
FRAN!!! Killer guitarist...crazy UA-cam channel...did AMAZING work with The Tom Collins and Butch Walker and The Black Widows, too. Good seeing his mug here.
Can you still love music like you did when you did when you were young? A: at 42 years old I discovered Porcupine Tree, which led of course to Steven Wilson. I went on a multi year track to absorb every drop. Now of course he's remastering all of my old heroes' music. So, yes, Rick - you can!
You don't know what we're talking about though. In 1982 you bought the cassette or the Vinyl and that's it. You went to you're room and listened carefully to the whole album. There wasn't much else, really no game systems, no internet, no phones... except the house phone. These guys (or once in a while a lady rocker) were like heroes (okay I see you get that), and some of them like Ozzy you were scared of at first!!! It was a whole other experience and if you got to go to a concert!!!! Well I think you're into something differnt anyway - Porcupine Tree? 😅😁
@@robdurfee6861 It's good for the soul. Many years I couldn't go to concerts. Then life changed - mainly the kids grew up and I was on my own again, separated from my wife. And with freedom I got to do some things that I loved again. I went to a lot of rock concerts the past 7 years.
Love Frank Capitanelli! His channel is fun and interesting and his personality is infectious. Great gtr player. The Tom Colllins were legendary...so wish they were heard by more ears.
Commenting on the band mentioned @17:05. DIIV the band (formerly known as DIVE) is alive and well. I just saw them open up for Depeche Mode in Philadelphia 4 nights ago. They were terrific. Their sound reminded me of a cross between The Cure and The Pixies.
I had absolutely no idea. Love Ward, love Rick, that they even know each other completely blows my mind, let alone the origin story of Ward's channel, I just had no clue. Fantastic.
I love this conversation and really appreciate the combined thoughts of all of the participants. Brilliant, dynamic flow of conversation. So cool there are historical relationships and friendships between them. What cameras are you using for this? Really well pulled together, sound and video.
Love the idea of "best sophomore effort"; the focus is usually on sophomore flops. I have to add a vote for Pavement's "Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain". Oh, and Rick, you are looking much younger here for some reason. You don't look old by any means (we're the same age!), but at first glance, seeing you, I thought this was an older vid from some years ago. Keep doing what you're doing! And speaking of first takes: I have heard more than one person verify that Jamerson's bass track on What's Goin' On was one take; the first take. Which is kind of superhuman! Oh, and I am in the exact same camp as Jim B: Like Rick, I was probably in kindergarten when Hey Jude released. But I am the eldest, my parents were Silent Gen, not Greatest Gen, and I was not really aware of the Beatles until my friend's mom got him into them in the mid-70s; 70s AM Gold all the way (Seventy-Seeeven, Double-You-Ay-Bee-See!). For me, it was Punk/Alternative that felt "generational" for me. It broke and was current when I was in high school, unlike the 60's or early 70s music.
I've been following Ward Carroll's channel for a few years now and I remember being surprised when I saw him on here with Rick - not knowing then that he was so involved with guitar/music. Growing up not too far from Oceana Naval Air Station in Va. Beach, the Tomcat (F-14) was THE plane. We'd go watch the annual airshow there with the Blue Angels as the main draw, but the Oceana Tomcat pilots (guys like Ward ) always had a demo, too, and they would absolutely flog the place.
You didn't mention the role of radio stations. In the 1970s (when I was in college) I closely followed the music press -- and heard the artists I read about on "album-oriented rock" stations. Then as adulthood encroached I fell away from the music press and didn't have as much for the radio, so I was less current with new music. Over the last ten years I have a discovered a great current-day rock station in my town which doesn't ignore the classics, but also plays a lot of new rock music. That's where I'm again hearing a lot of new artists -- and I'm so glad to have found it!
The Black Crowes "Southern Harmony" was their finest moment. I still listen to that record fairly often and it still gets played on 11
I love this album, it’s in my top ten list ❤
REMEDY!!!!
It's an entire-album listen.... front to back, just a great record.
Queen II is the second studio album by the British rock band Queen in 1974. Set in stone the future of the bands sound and vision.
I never understood people liking Queen II. To me it is one of the weakest Queen albums, especially between magnificent Queen I and Sheer Heart Attack.
I love black side and I like Queen I more@@dmitrykazakov2829
@@dmitrykazakov2829 Maybe you need to listen to it with a music production ear. Listen to the mix, overdubbing and layering going on. Listen to Freddy's voice and band harmonies. Listen to Brians guitar. Take note of the huge variety of music styles. The Album is Queen showing off all their skills. Queen 2 is easy listening to any Queen fan
@@dmitrykazakov2829 Wow! Queen II is probably my favourite Queen album. I love the theme and how the songs merge into one another, March of the Black Queen is EPIC!
@@armlesswalrus I know, many like it. To me it is even worse than Hot Space or Flash Gordon. They really spent everything on Queen I and recharged only in Sheer Heart Attack. Father to Son, Funny How Love and Seven Seas of Rhye borrowed from Queen I and unnecessarily expanded are only tracks good for Queen. The rest is dull, overproduced and uninteresting...
Dirt by Alice in Chains is an amazing 2nd album .. Especially after how great Facelift was ....
My immediate answer… Dirt is a masterpiece. And the only way to ever pay justice to those heavy lyrics is with an equally heavy sound. And those lyrics are f***ing lead…
Good call!!! I also like Purple from STP.
FACTS..
you call that music?
Hell Yeah!!! Them Bones Kicks Ass!, and Down in a Hole, Rooster! etc.
I love this conversation and I love this channel. I was at a party over the weekend and someone brought up UA-cam channels. Three other people beside myself mentioned Rick Beato and all agreed that he has the best channel. We are of various ages and musical tastes. That was a fun discovery. Rick's channel is a uniting force for music lovers
Reggatta de Blanc was a great example of a better second album, The Police at their best as a band, in sync, not pressed for time to produce, the groove on that album is killer, and *I feel* that on the song Walking On the Moon we started to really hear what The Police sound was
Also a great example of a band that produced better albums than the last for their entire career.
Definitely a great example and one of the first albums I bought. I think I bought that and Boston - Dont Look Back (not a better second album but still good) at the same time as my first two albums. I think I was 12 when Regatta de Blanc was released.
Great example! 'Outlandos D'Amour' is my least favourite Police album. It still is in my Top5 of Police albums, though 😉
Oh, yeah. I agree!
For me, the best second record is Candy-O by The Cars. It was just its own unique sound and beat. It helped to support the new wave movement as well. I don't think it was better than their first album, but just different and a classic second album for sure.
Agree.
100%!!! I think Candy-O is better than the first album.
I Rocked out to Both of those L.P.'s by the Cars back when they first came out. They were the Best in that Genre of Music! They Kept New Wave Alive!!! They had the Hits!
LOL I was gonna say this as well. Never imagined someone else would have mentioned it already.
I just came on here to say the exact same thing. The musicianship, layering, and originality of the Cars is (was) incredible. Candy-O is a perfect example of that.
Queen II, Chicago II, Led Zeppelin II - some II's off the top of my head. All fantastic albums.
Queen 2 is a masterpiece. It's art.
Chicago II is actually the groups third album. It was Chicago Transit Authority, then Chicago
Chicago is the second album - Chicago III is the third album@@Almeida5
@@Almeida5 Nope. CTA was the first one. Chicago II was the second.
Led Zep II is probably the best 2nd album ever.
I'm an Aussie and local band Midnight Oil, their 2nd album "Head Injuries" is my favourite.
Without question. Agree 💯 %! LZ2
The Church - Blurred Crusade...
These people's opinion is no more worthy than anyone else's. Foe r instance I saw Zep's second tour in the U.S. I really liked and still like their first album. There second album is why I lost interest in them. I don't really like to hear someone sing about the gonad's(lemon song). I think it is kind of juvenile.
The thing about Beato is he really doesn't understand the sixties.
@@user-zq9kl1pc1x I agree. That middle section of whole lotta love is a poor excuse for psychedelia. San Francisco bands had the best psychedelia.
@@user-zq9kl1pc1x I can only imagine how you feel about Dark Side of the Moon if Whole Lotta Love spoils an album as great as LZII.
Fly by Night comes immediately to mind as a great second album and a point of major change in the band's lineup.
My thoughts, too, first band that came to mind.... Rush.
The perfect second album. Changed where the band was headed.
A big Rutsey fan though, I loved his style. He could groove.
Nicely bridged their premier with what would come later
I so knew someone had already mentioned 'Fly By Night'! 😄👍
I am so grateful to be able to listen to smart, passionate people talk about music. Please have more of these discussions.
Queen 2, one of the greatest 2nd albums. Masterpiece
G'day from downunder! Whilst I appreciate your main channel of tuition & analysis, THIS DISCUSSION means more to me than anything you have done. You see, you 4 guys are just me and my mates sitting around having a beer 30 years ago, listening to albums and talking music. The only difference is each of us would have a beer and there would be someone going to the record player and putting on an album every so often and telling us to "listen to this!!". Sadly, now, a few of my mates are ghosts around the campfire but the memories of those conversations are brought back, each time I play one of those albums. Rock on Rick!
I think Hendrix's Axis: Bold as Love is one of the greatest second albums in rock history. It's one of a few times in which an artist's creativity was fully in bloom at their second record.
I think Radiohead is another great example for another reason. Their first album was only really known for their breakthrough single 'Creep,' and they could very easily have been thought of (and probably were thought of) as a one hit wonder, but their second album The Bends was very interesting in that they were a band still ascending, and that album forever dispelled any thought that they would fade and leave the scene early. And then of course there was OK Computer, which was another level entirely.
It’s a masterpiece. Its incredible how music evolved from ‘rock around the clock’ to ‘castles made of sand in the space of about a decade.
I was going to comment but I think I better "Wait Until Tomorrow." Yes. AXIS: BOLD AS LOVE was a great second album. The music. The album art work. The song order. I played that album so much in the 60s it wore out the groove on the vinyl.
@@FL8mileshigh1
The guitar playing on Wait Till Tomorrow is astonishing, so nonchalant.
I love all of Hendrix's work, but I think that Axis: Bold as Love is still a bit constrained. All of the pieces are still limited by 60s pop sensibilities - all the pieces are short and cute (with the exception of If 6 was 9) and it doesn't really have the bombast of the other 2 studio albums.
This roundtable discussion was thoroughly enjoyable. I hope you have the opportunity to do more of these. You always let your guests talk at length and you listen and let the conversation go wherever it leads. You are becoming the Dick Cavett of music interviews! Nuno Bettencourt, Visiting Abbey Road, Yngwie Malmsteen, Andy Summers, Pat Metheny... I am on a bit of binge this weekend enjoying everything.
Some of the best 2nd albums that come to mind:
Led Zeppelin- II
Black Sabbath- Paranoid
Metallica- Ride the Lightning
Iron Maiden- Killers
Judas Priest- Sad Wings of Destiny
Slipknot- Iowa
Mastodon- Leviathan
Aerosmith- Get Your Wings
Nirvana- Nevermind
Alice in Chains- Dirt
Stone Temple Pilots- Purple
Pearl Jam- Vs.
The Black Crowes- The Southern Harmony & Musical Companion
Live- Throwing Copper
I Mother Earth- Scenery and Fish
The Tragically Hip- Road Apples
The Tea Party- Splendor Solis or Edges of Twilight (Depending on what you consider their first)
Kiss- Hotter Than Hell
Tool- Aenima
RATM- Evil Empire
Oasis- Whats the Story? (Morning Glory)
Rush- Fly By Night
Jimi Hendrix- Axis: Bold as Love
The Doors- Strange Days
Cream- Disraeli Gears
Fly to the rainbow. Scorpions
You forgot these gems:
Queen - Queen II
Rainbow - Rising
Uriah Heep - Salisbury
Mötley Crüe - Shout at the Devil
Dio - The Last in Line
Absolutely the best 41:17 I've spent in a long time. What a great discussion about recordings and formats and artists. Bravo. By the way, one of my favorite 2nd albums is Def Leppard High-N-Dry. By far their best album, and one of the best albums of the day. Ozzy Diary of a Madman is also pretty stellar. Just sayin.
high n dry is their most underrated album. I think its better than Hysteria. You have ' another hit and run', 'bringin on a heartbreak'followed by the raw instrumental 'switch 625', 'mirror mirror'and plenty of good tracks.
Imagine dropping the needle on Zep II for the first time wondering if they were able to capture the energy and aggression of their first album and then whole lotta love starts
Music From Big Pink is fantastic of course, but The Band (their self-titled second album, the one with the brown cover) is PERFECTION.
This is the comment I was looking for. Gets my vote as well, followed closely by Bridge of Sighs.
100% Also needed to make sure someone said this. The Band’s second album is amazing.
Robin Trower…. Yup …and still doing it‼️
Absolutely, and if they didn't mention it, I should stop listening to this now.
First album I thought of: The Band. Great as Big Pink is, that album is better.
Fly By Night - 2nd Album. Lee/Lifeson/Peart - 2nd version of band (OBTW FBN was their 1st album). The Warning - first time I've felt the depth of emotion for a band since I became a Rush convert after hearing 2112 for the first time in 1976 as a sophomore in high school. DPA have single-handedly rekindled this 62-year old's love of straight ahead hard rock and given me hope for the future of that genre. OBTW DPA are just slightly younger than LLP were when Rush cut FBN :).
Fran is the best. Please get this group together for more podcasts!
If this is a test run for a new series I vote “yes”. I absolutely love listening to the “Inside the baseball “ type conversations.. awesome production..
Old Dudes! Great post Rick! I'm 70 and I grew up on all the icons! The music of your youth is what stays with you the longest! It will always transfer you to the place in time when it first blew your mind!
AAAAAAHHHHH!!!! ALL MY HEROES IN ONE ROOM!! December 6th 2021 I contracted COVID at age 43. Spent 82 days in ICU. 33 day coma. Lost 51lbs. Complete organ failure. Encephalopathy. Pneumonia. completely fully disabled now just shy of my 45th birthday. THANK YOU FOR YOUR VIDEOS!! You both truly love every waking moment and it shows. Truly incredible MEN!! I hope I have the privilege of meeting you all someday!! Funny, I joined the AVIATION CLUB & STARTED PLAYING GUITAR AT AGE 12!!!
Stay safe
Are you still disabled as a result of the virus?
@policeofficer94 Thank you for sharing your story. I am so sorry you contracted COVID and am fully disabled now.
It’s amazing how wonderful these videos are! Rick has such a love of music and knowledge of music as well. His interviews are the best! It seems like he is talking to an old friend.
It's a nasty disease to be sure. Killed my brother-in-law and wife's favorite cousin and just about got me last April. I have a chronic auto-immune disease and protecting myself against the anti-vax crowd is getting harder and harder...
I've been watching you on & off for about 4 years, I think.
I like it very much.Thank you.
This round table was outstanding, Rick!
Huge fan of Ward’s, too! Definitely looking forward to your next discussion. Please don’t wait too long 😁👍🏼
Greetings from Fort Lauderdale 🌴
Loved this conversation and group of personalities. Great stuff.
Great conversation Rick. Bring everyone back for another show
this was an excellent show…and my first comment…hello Rick, tommy, fellow 63 year old guitarist and lover of all things from our day.. “album covers on the shag carpet” days with headphones after school…absolutely dig your show and respect to your musicianship…
tr
My friend's mom had a huge 8 track stereo and a Columbia Records subscription. She let him pick one album and he chose Van Halen II. That first listen of EVH was magical. I was immediately hooked and that album became the soundtrack of my life that summer and on into my freshman year in high school. Van Halen played most of that album at Oakland Coliseum that summer and that one show still lives on in my mind as Legend. VH II really takes the killer attitude and live feel of the first album, kicks up the swagger to 11 and slams it home with a vengeance. I'm biased as hell but I think it's a great second album and was the perfect musical landscape for that period of my life. 🤘🎸 (As I was writing this, I just listened to the 2015 re-master and it's still soooo good😊)
I totally agree VH II was the one for me as well the album was raw and had a great summer vibe from front to back each track is a classic. They were young and hungry. Everyone was coming into there prime - from Mikey’s backing vocals and bass coming thru strong to Dave’s voice and Al’s thunder drums and of course Ed…. Ed’s riffs on that album can’t be topped from the intros to beautiful girls and women in loves harmonics - never heard anything like that before
VH II rules!!!
Wow, been a sub'd viewer of Ward's and Rick for a while. I'm a DE/FF sonar tech vet and a drummer. I alwaze see the gear behind Ward on his videos, but never put 2 & 2 together. Who knew! Rock on sir and keep on updating us on the current situation in the Middle East.
A Trick of the Tail era btw w/Bill Bruford helping on percussion...
Linkin Park’s second album Meteora is a phenomenal maturing of their early sound; there isn’t a single bad song on that record.
Hybrid theory better though
I love this format of organic dialog about music in general. So. Much. Fun. Would love to listen more of these kinds of conversations.
Nirvana Nevermind absolutely needs to be on this list. It's always forgotten about as far as great 2nd albums.
Good call😎👍
That was the first album that came to my mind when they made the question. I think few 2nd albums are that great
@@Colaeroimages there were a bunch of great 2nd albums in that era. Alice in chains, faith no more are a couple more
Absolutely. As others said, AIC should be here.
I think it's more than the second album on the timeline though.
That was more than wonderful! Thank you!
"Who needs new music ! Everybody knows music reached perfection in 1978" - Homer Simpson
Absolute nonsense it’s developed drastically since that year your still living in the past
He said 1974 btw lol
1982 Asia, Toto, John Mellencamp, Duran Duran< Steve Miller, ABC, Fleetwood Mac, Adam Ant all released million selling albums, while Dionne Warwick, Steve Winwood, The Beach Boys, The Who, Golden Earring and The Rolling Stones all released albums
True.
I'm 52 and I find new and amazing music all the time. Anyone who says there's no new good music is not trying to find it. I play drums and Bass so that's what I'm generally looking for.
Great 2nd records:
Rush - Fly By Night
The Cars - Candy O
Foreigner - Double Vision
Foreigner doesn't get the respect it deserves as a band
Loved this conversation. More of this please.
A couple of great second albums that come to mind are Throwing Copper by Live and In Search of Space by Hawkwind.
Rick, thx so much for this post!!! It hit on so many different subjects that are relevant to me. I really appreciate all of the work that you do!
Seeing @WardCarroll on Beato is my heaven. Fighter Jets and Gibsons. I’m so happy.
Very interesting discussion. Please do more of these musical roundtables, Rick.
Now, I just really wish people, critics, music lovers, experts who gush about the likes of R.E.M., Steely Dan, Guns N Roses etc. would talk about and acknowledge the sheer brilliance an gross under appreciation of Supertramp and ELO. Both bands are unique, popular, have superior musicians and writing, and amazing albums sound reproduction. Also, they were both fantastic in concert. Their output, mainly in the 1970s, was phenomenal. They should be talked about with the same reverence, or moreso, than most bands, past and present. Supertamp and ELO are admired but should be legendary.
FRAN!!!
Love Fran and his channel. And, of course, Rick and his stuff too. Had no idea these guys were all connected. Very 😎.
Rick, I really enjoyed this discussion over morning coffee. Great video!
You guys talked about the difference between experiencing an older band fresh when they came out vs. being younger and experiencing them decades later. I'd love to hear a roundtable discussion with young people and their experiences hearing the classic rock bands in recent times and how it affected them.
Tons of them on UA-cam first listens.
Interesting that you bring this up, because there are younger people with channels that do reactions to songs. Pretty much each one is blown away by music from back in the day, like one last night reacted to Dire Straits, Sultans Of Swing. The reviewer actually said: I cannot believe I did not listen to this music sooner in my life. Another said: Wow, ya'll had killer music back then.
Imperfections assumed to be interpretive artistic endeavor.
I'm a much younger guy (still in my twenties) and I grew up listening to the music from the 70s and 80s, as well as the modern stuff. I can assure you that a 40 year old song can become a part of your memories just as much as a contemporary one, and the connection stays with you forever. Whenever I hear a song from Mott the Hoople's "Mott" album, it takes me back to the time when I just moved to my own flat, and it was in 2016, some 43 years after the album was released. It really comes down to what you're listening to at the moment, no matter how old it is
My daughter and her new husband are both in their early twenties. They love all kinds of music. Contemporary as well as older stuff. Frank Sinatra and the Beatles, to Post Malone. I like that they enjoy the old stuff, but I'm biased. In fact, I would definitely say they like the older music more than I like newer music. So...
So awesome to See Ward Carroll on Ricks Channel!
Old school Talent Buyer / Music Nerd here - WOW! This is one of the best chats I have seen in a long time -
Thank you -
Awesome group talk! Was like sitting down with my brother or an old friend! Look forward to the next chat!
Rick Beato is the “producer of the people”. Just how accessible he has made himself with his channel. His insights and instructions are wonderful, and his interviews and stories are a great listen. Like Anthony Bourdain gleefully regaling his times in the kitchen, Beato does the same with his stories in bands, studios, etc.
Imagine the stories of producers we all know. Imagine the tea the likes of Martin Birch, who is sadly dead, could say about Deep Purple, Maiden, and Sabbath. What about Flemming Rasmussen and tales of Blackmore and Metallica. Did Joe Lynn Turner’s wig ever fall off? What about Lange and Jones and their stories?
Thank you Mr Beato. You are a music-philes companion. Osiris speed, sir.
Hey Ward ! I had no idea you guys were friends! Nice!
2nd Foo Fighter album is great. 3 songs that people absolutely love, and 'Everlong' pops into the download rankings all the time, 26 years after its release.
Definitive Foo Fighters album!
This is very interesting. Personally love these different perspectives of music in general in longer format. Keep it coming. 👍🏻👍🏻
The self titled Collective Soul album from 1995 (their 2nd) is absolutely awesome.
How cool…. I’ve been following Ward for years as I’m an old Navy fighter attack pilot with much in common, and I’ve followed Rick for years as an old amateur bass and guitar guy. I’ve been a church musician for over thirty years, and I enjoy playing along with Rick’s guitar videos a lot. Who knew you guys were friends!? Great discussion, brought back tons of memories of my high school and college days, mimicking all of those great players you were talking about. I recall sitting in a concrete stairwell with my college roommate, playing Lightfoot, CSN&Y, Beatles, Simon & Garfunkle and a zillion others. The natural reverb in that stairwell was incredible! We had a following in there. Great fun….not a lot of studying going on though. 🤣
Siamese Dream by the Smashing Pumpkins is a quantum leap ahead of their debut! 😀
Thank you! Couldn’t agree more.
You four need to do a regular podcast. Just loved the insight and opinions.
Great discussion. All your friends are so cool. Steppenwolf 2 was a great album.
I felt like I was in the room!!! Thank you guys:)
I always felt like the Get your Wings album by Aerosmith was a fantastic second record. Took the blueprint from their debut and made a quantum leap into there distinct blues rock sound imo. It has the classic songs like Train kept Rollin’ and Same old Song and Dance, but even better deep cuts such as Season of Wither, Lord of the Thighs, etc.
I was thinking the same.
Completely agree. The first album was a careful working out of influences. Not bad, but they really found their swagger and their identity on the second album.
I can't stand Train Kept A Rollin', but I absolutely love Same Old Song and Dance and Seasons of Wither.
Get Your Wings is one of the albums that every once in while (although not anymore) throws the general public for a loop. It’s was the 2nd album and people bought it and thought their debut album “Aerosmith” was actually their 2nd. People went to the record store and thought ohh Aerosmith put out a new album, because they saw it there too.
Same thing happened with Nirvana (my least favorite band) people thought “Nevermind” was the debut and “Bleach” was the 2nd album. When in reality it’s the other way around.
Paul’s Boutique by Beastie Boys was a truly groundbreaking sophomore album.
Yeah they were considered almost a novelty act for their first album but Paul's Boutique solidified them as a serious band and has a bunch of their best work
Loved this! Great perspectives!
Suede’s second album Dog Man Star was an amazing album after a brilliant debut album that defined the 90’s britpop sound
Serious kudos for seeing Suede mentioned. Best band of that entire scene for me. Adore them.
@@DevypocalypseGreat seeing other Suede fans here. Their latest album Autofiction is fantastic from start to finish
@@michaelperez4001 They don't get the props for some of the amazing guitar parts and arrangements over the years. Always takes me back to another dream world of nostalgia.
In regards to the comment at 38:49 , I live in Japan and was driving a very old, low end vehicle a few years back that came stock with a simple radio /cassette and a single speaker on the passenger's door. When I was driving home from work in the evening, NHK radio used to play full, uninterrupted albums at the DJ's whim. Anyway, one night it was "Are You Experienced," the mono version. It sounded phenomenal! Still fresh, violent, and alive. Indeed, the medium changes the message a lot.
I like this format every now and then. Four older guys that are huge music fans, just having a general conversation about music, artists, etc.
! OOOOO ! MGOSH ! A supremely magical table CONVO about MUSIC …..
"Can't Buy A Thrill"--incredible first album. "Countdown To Ecstasy"--even better second album.
Agree…nothing preceded or succeeded the coolness of Show Biz Kids. King of the World, Your Gold Teeth….nothing like them either…plus it was nice to see a little less control and just let it rip.
Pearl Of The Quarter is probably the nearest they got to a love song. Great track.
SD's entire catalog is great, but for me their 1st 2 LPs are the best stylistically and sonically for what I like to hear.
They were a band for those two records. Then they became Donald and Walter with the best session cats they could assemble.
And they just kept getting better!
Duran Duran's Rio is a highly underrated album. Great second album.
Agree, one of the strongest albums of all time - it's a masterpiece- every song is amazing
Van Halen 2 is my favorite 2nd album. While it's not as great as their debut it is still INCREDIBLE and a joy to listen too! 🤘🎸
My favorite VH record. 1 is second.
Great show Rick! Love the topic & content from your guests . Cheers buddy .
Versus - Pearl Jam
Siamese Dream - Pumpkins
Purple - STP
WTS Morning Glory - Oasis
Underdogs - Matthew Good Band
Just some of my own faves.
I’m glad Ward brought up Genesis. It took me 40 years to fall in love with the Peter Gabriel era. I didn’t even know that Peter (big fan, just saw him in Denver) was in Genesis until many years after I became a fan of the band starting with the video “Turn It On Again”. I think I had to mature musically to appreciate that prog era. ‘The Lamb Lies Down..’ started me down that rabbit hole. I missed out on all that great music for almost 4 decades. Now I can honestly say that I LOVE ALL versions of Genesis!
It's rare to find somebody who 'loves all versions' of the band. If a fan loves, say, Trespass (a GREAT 2nd album) or Foxtrot they are unlikely to like 'We Can't Dance' or 'Invisible Touch' - they are effectively different bands. In my experience - having loved the band since the 70s - most Gabriel-era fans completely accepted Collins becoming vocalist and their albums like Trick of the Tail - but many lost interest after Steve Hackett left. The album 'Duke' (1980) seems to be where remaining fans left the ship.
These guys were all so interesting and knowledgeable. This should be a regular group podcast, but would need a more focused topic, this one covered so many things!
Glad they mentioned it because my favorite 2nd album of all time is Counting Crows’ “Recovering the Satellites.” Of course, I’m biased because they’re my favorite band, and “August and Everything After” is my favorite debut album. They’re actually my favorite 2 albums of all time. They’re so different, but each spoke directly to me and what I was going through emotionally at the times (high school for “August” and college during “Satellites.”
I'm 54, a lifelong music lover, and I just discovered Jason Isbell this year. His music hits me and makes me feel like the stuff I discovered and loved as a teenager and a young man.
100%
Same here, 55, but I stumbled on him 2 years ago. Saw him live this year. Did not expect to feel like that about new music again.
@@HasturT I saw them in July, seeing them again in February. So damn good.
The Knights of the not-Round Table. These are my favorite episodes. Interviews with artists and discussions with pals. Good stuff! thankyou
You could do this as a series, Rick. Great episode.
I'd watch, most definitely.
I really liked this sort of roundtable format. I’d sure watch another one like this.
AC/DC's second album, "T.N.T" often gets overlooked in this discussion because Atlantic released a compilation of their first 2 albums as their debut international release. What many people outside of Australia know as "High Voltage" is really their second album: It's a Long Way to the Top... Rock 'n' Roll Singer... The Jack... Live Wire... T.N.T.... Rocker... Can I Sit Next to You, Girl... High Voltage... School Days...
This was awesome, loved hearing y'all just do the (like friends -off the cuff) compare-contrast and questioning of the how's, what's ,where's, when's of all things experiential of music..... Mahalo : )
CandyO. Best second Album behind arguably the best debut album by The Cars.
I don't know if you'd win that argument, but I would stand beside you while you made it.
Just keep listening to Classic Rock & Beato
OASIS What's the Story Morning Glory? 22 million buyers can't be wrong. Amazing 2nd album!
This is an absolutely fabulous discussion. Being 70 I can relate firsthand to so much of what you are talking about. This should be required viewing for anyone interested in music and how the making and consumption of music has changed over the years. Great work Rick and friends.
Rush - Fly By Night; the change to Peart as drummer and lyricist was huge.
Somehow I missed that you and Ward knew each other. I just found you both independently with my interests in aviation and music. Great episode!
Same here.
FRAN!!! Killer guitarist...crazy UA-cam channel...did AMAZING work with The Tom Collins and Butch Walker and The Black Widows, too. Good seeing his mug here.
Yes, make a Podcast. IT was so much fun.
Can you still love music like you did when you did when you were young? A: at 42 years old I discovered Porcupine Tree, which led of course to Steven Wilson. I went on a multi year track to absorb every drop. Now of course he's remastering all of my old heroes' music. So, yes, Rick - you can!
You don't know what we're talking about though. In 1982 you bought the cassette or the Vinyl and that's it. You went to you're room and listened carefully to the whole album. There wasn't much else, really no game systems, no internet, no phones... except the house phone. These guys (or once in a while a lady rocker) were like heroes (okay I see you get that), and some of them like Ozzy you were scared of at first!!! It was a whole other experience and if you got to go to a concert!!!! Well I think you're into something differnt anyway - Porcupine Tree?
😅😁
I’m 47 and am still constantly adding new songs to my Spotify playlists. I don’t think I will ever stop searching out new music
@@robdurfee6861 It's good for the soul. Many years I couldn't go to concerts.
Then life changed - mainly the kids grew up and I was on my own again, separated from my wife. And with freedom I got to do some things that I loved again.
I went to a lot of rock concerts the past 7 years.
Excellent conversation! Well done!
Love Frank Capitanelli! His channel is fun and interesting and his personality is infectious. Great gtr player. The Tom Colllins were legendary...so wish they were heard by more ears.
I got so excited when seeing Fran here! 😁 Love what he does on his channel and also what I've seen/heard from his musical past 😊
Please do this again. Loved it.
Commenting on the band mentioned @17:05.
DIIV the band (formerly known as DIVE) is alive and well. I just saw them open up for Depeche Mode in Philadelphia 4 nights ago. They were terrific. Their sound reminded me of a cross between The Cure and The Pixies.
I had absolutely no idea. Love Ward, love Rick, that they even know each other completely blows my mind, let alone the origin story of Ward's channel, I just had no clue. Fantastic.
Reggatta de Blanc is one mighty fine 2 album.
Back in the mid 80's I saw Michel Hedges live in a small pub, here in Sweden. It blew my mind, It's one of the best "band" experiences I've ever had.
Looking at guitar playing today… Stanley Jordan and Hedges are the biggest influences by far.
I love this conversation and really appreciate the combined thoughts of all of the participants. Brilliant, dynamic flow of conversation.
So cool there are historical relationships and friendships between them. What cameras are you using for this? Really well pulled together, sound and video.
Love the idea of "best sophomore effort"; the focus is usually on sophomore flops. I have to add a vote for Pavement's "Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain". Oh, and Rick, you are looking much younger here for some reason. You don't look old by any means (we're the same age!), but at first glance, seeing you, I thought this was an older vid from some years ago. Keep doing what you're doing! And speaking of first takes: I have heard more than one person verify that Jamerson's bass track on What's Goin' On was one take; the first take. Which is kind of superhuman! Oh, and I am in the exact same camp as Jim B: Like Rick, I was probably in kindergarten when Hey Jude released. But I am the eldest, my parents were Silent Gen, not Greatest Gen, and I was not really aware of the Beatles until my friend's mom got him into them in the mid-70s; 70s AM Gold all the way (Seventy-Seeeven, Double-You-Ay-Bee-See!). For me, it was Punk/Alternative that felt "generational" for me. It broke and was current when I was in high school, unlike the 60's or early 70s music.
I've been following Ward Carroll's channel for a few years now and I remember being surprised when I saw him on here with Rick - not knowing then that he was so involved with guitar/music. Growing up not too far from Oceana Naval Air Station in Va. Beach, the Tomcat (F-14) was THE plane. We'd go watch the annual airshow there with the Blue Angels as the main draw, but the Oceana Tomcat pilots (guys like Ward ) always had a demo, too, and they would absolutely flog the place.
Mooch!
I dunno how people can live near Oceana --- those F-14's made the house shake!
@@fredwerza3478 Very true!
Who wouldn't like those jets flying over your house? That's the sound of FREEDOM, son!
Jeez, he has an LP and a Hummingbird sitting on stands on the background of his UA-cam set.
You didn't mention the role of radio stations. In the 1970s (when I was in college) I closely followed the music press -- and heard the artists I read about on "album-oriented rock" stations. Then as adulthood encroached I fell away from the music press and didn't have as much for the radio, so I was less current with new music. Over the last ten years I have a discovered a great current-day rock station in my town which doesn't ignore the classics, but also plays a lot of new rock music. That's where I'm again hearing a lot of new artists -- and I'm so glad to have found it!
I can't believe Ward and Rick are good friends! I follow both of their channels