“Everything” isn’t corrupt… but capitalism rewards corruption, so almost everything that embraces capitalism either starts out corrupt or eventually ends up corrupted.
@@kierenmacmillan capitalism and monopolies are the exact opposite. What we are experiencing is the merger or state and corporate power from a philosophical sense. Everything seems corrupt because we’ve slipped into a fascist world not a free market world.
I worked as a producer for a music channel back in 2006. One I day suggested to the channel director that we create a request rock show amidst the babble of the commercial stupidity. He said no and summarized it with one sentence: "People don't tell us what's cool, we tell people what's cool." That's when I knew real music was dead.
I’ve had conversations with program directors in the radio market I live in, a top 15 radio market by size. They all had this attitude. Somehow it’s just desserts that they’ve orchestrated their own irrelevance: hardly anyone I know listens to radio and it’s roundly mocked for its lameness.
I gave up on the radio because I'd get in the car and it would be on commercial. And then I'd get out of the car at work and it would still be on commercial. Oh, and they only played 3 songs.
Exact year I stopped listening to new music, exact year! I am still on CD's, keeps me grounded. I don't watch TV anymore either except UA-cam doccos and DVDs. I don't like 'modern' trash.
@@tomryan9827 Must like the Internet today, ads ads ads and who cares about ads. According to Capitalism we are supposed to be working all hours 7 days and spending it all chasing what they say is worthy. Its shite.
thank yòu for sharing - I grew up in the 80s & by the early 2000s, I started noticing a huge disconnect with music. I always thought, that it was because I was starting to get old. but having switched to spotify five years ago, I find that I do listen to modern music, that is less than a year old. the difference is, that it is 'my' modern music, that I find & I choose... I remember growing up with my own radio & listening in the evening with my tape recorder on the ready, recording my own mix tape, because it was legal & it was a thing & you shared ideas at school & compared bands & then went out and bought the really cool albums. now that my son is old enough to learn to read the clock & figure out when bedtime is over on his own, he wants his own alarm clock. going through the offerings, my inside cringed as I stumbled across a few with radio. it was like: "I'm not paying for that..." radio, for me (now), is something of unreliable quality, that you might listen to in the car, because you get traffic updates & it beets the drone of the engine, but that's about it... but for everything else, broadcast radio is dead to me, witch is sad, in its own way. but yes, to quote bob dylan, the times - they are a changing...
“Rick Beato is not a team player” is exactly why today he has nearly 4 million subscribers and is admired by his musical heroes and viewers from all over the world. It’s his Integrity and love for music.
Yeah we like Rick but just because somebody has followers and subscribers doesn't mean jack s***. Look around social media there are more weasels than decent people
That statement made me laugh. There's only one other channel that is as honest and forthright as Rick's when it comes to the wisdom from experience of music, Rock music, instruments, production, recording and "the business" - you name it Rick covers it. And you hit it on the head with his number of UA-cam subscribers. That speaks louder than words! Good comment. Or maybe the "Team" sucks, and nobody with any sense would want to be a part of it. lol
Everything wasn't done for making the most money out of something back before 30 years ago. I could see this country going to hell artistically in the late 80's and then through the 90's with this awful grunge garbage and mostly annoying Rap. Through the sixties,seventies and first half of the 80's there was a tremendous amount of great Soul,Rock and Pop constantly on, and people took it for granted. Now that a generation has been raised on the aforementioned. Almost all of it is completely disposable.
It's neoliberasim, baby. The regulations were ment to prevent big money to buy off all the small entreprenours and rise prices. It's been the same in my country too since mid-nineties. Two or three big companies rule the market in every sector that used to be regulated or publicly owned.
"This corruption" in everything else is very different, and did not all happen for the same reasons. Corporatization is a huge part of much of it, but not all.
I was a DJ at that time. I started in 1990. It was horrific to see the consolidation destroy basically everything I had worked for. Interning, working my way up, and I got replaced by a computer/ repeater. We went from folks that actually did public relations, and played real music. CMJ meant everything, we did remotes, we did local news, local commercials, PSA... ONCE CLEAR CHANNEL CAME IN, IT MADE US NOTHING BUT BUTTON PUSHERS, AND IT RUINED THE ENTIRE Radio CAREER. THANKS TO MONOPOLIES BEING ALLOWED, I HAVE A COMPLETELY USELESS COMMUNICATIONS DEGREE.
Sorry but if you were creating value for the customer, then why would the customer go to the competition? I think satellite radio and eventually streaming put a big dent into local music radio. The people wanted songs or personalities, not 3 songs followed by 7 minutes of commercials.
Yep, or because no label they approached were interested in helping to promote them. Jamiróquai are a great example of how it used to be: at the start, only the singer Jay Kay was contracted, he had no steady band, few finished songs of his own and he had limited technical skills (reading/writing notated music, playing any instruments etc) - he was a brilliant potential frontman and a good singer, but how to launch him? No major label today would have made the efforts that Sony and Jay's manager expended during the making of Jamiroquai's superb debut album in 1992-93: recruiting a live band and a writing partner who was able to sight read music (Toby Smith), long studio sessions, videos, live brass and strings for the album - for a band where almost no one had been heard on records before. That level of backing for a new and unknown band just doesn't happen today (unless they're heavily styled and hyped to fit some thought-out "project" from the label). If Jay Kay had turned up today, the label would have treated him as just a clothes-hanger for external songwriters, producers, remixers and stylists.
I tried explaining this concept to a buddy a few years back, and he didn't believe me. He kept trying to tell me that the radio stations play Drake because he's popular and that's what the people want, and I was telling him the radio stations play him because that's who the powers in charge want to be popular. The consumers don't really have a choice.
Thats a fact.... "they're" reshaping our culture and society by design by force feeding the masses with crap and controlling or attempting to shut down our "Artistic output"... kinda like force feeding GMO foods on everyone.
It's a vicious cycle. Consultants and marketers notice trends from more independent artists, find a malleable artist and make them play music that conforms to those trends, the public hears that music and buy it, and that funds more airplay for the malleable artist.
It really is sickening how the stations pretty much control what we not only listen to, but what we think we like. If a song is played over and over again, it becomes catchy to everyone having to hear it. Even if you didn't like it when it first came out. And that's how music becomes "popular" to the masses.
Corruption and greed has always been with us since the beginning of time. What's different now is our modern technology is a force multiplier that vastly increases the corruption and greed for the tiny few who hold the power and money.
That was exactly what happened … I was a Program Director for Alt Rock stations from 95-07 … When our station was purchased by Clear Channel and told we’d still have control of our lists … then, we were told what to play … when I refused because I felt the records didn’t fit the cities vibe (w/ research to back me up) it didn’t take long for me to get blown out. I worked at 2 other stations after that, different companies, but the same promise … and same result. Don’t miss it.
What a sad story bro! Yeah, I've traveled all over the country, and the stations sound, with an exception of a few renegade stations in very small markets, all the damn same, with sometimes, even the same DJ's! Just so sad! This is why people listen more and more to UA-cam, Spotify, etc., because terrestrial radio, SUCKS! People have to vote with their ears!
And how many great musicians, songs, albums and concerts have we all missed because aspiring musicians decided, "why bother... it's just not worth it". What the handful of greedy & corrupt people did to the music industry was criminal.
They’re still out there, plugging away. Unfortunately, we lack the curators like a John Peel or a Giles Peterson to help us sift through the mountain of good new artists out there now. Program directors just phone it in-like they’ve been doing the last three decades.
Mainstream songs are usually about sex and love. I miss being in California in the 80s when bands like Metallica were singing about war, religion, social issues. The powers that be don't want us thinking about society's problems.
Just as the book: ' Food Inc.,' which tells the beginning of GMO foods (Monsanto and Roundup resistant soybeans) and the ability to "patent life", Bill Clinton adds another notch to his belt with the Telecommunication Act. Both have a far-reaching negative effects on American Life and culture. It's true, Democrats ruin everything!
@@Peter_S_ Any time a new technology or medium comes out there is a 5 year "glory days" period before it becomes pasteurized and homogenized by the powers that be.
@NolanVoid-dr1ch ? Look it up; there's even a Wikipedia page on it, LOL. The Video Game Crash of 1983 was a thing and lots of people have made videos about it. By mid-1983, Atari had lost $356 million and laid off 3,000 of its 10,000 workers. Atari also moved all manufacturing to Hong Kong and Taiwan. Lots of companies went bust and lots of amazing scrap also hit the surplus stores in Silicon Valley. The industry didn't start growing again until 1985. There have been crashes before and there will be more in the future.
Here in Sweden, there is a radio station known as Radio Österåker, a station where you can call in and request songs to be played. My dad is a big fan of that station, he calls in from time to time. There are sometimes when the requested song isn’t there, something that they fix for later.
As a freshman in college i wrote a report on how the 1996 telecom act was ruining radio. Broadcast professor brought in a clear channel vp to give a talk and he had a prepared statement but I kept interrupting to ask what happens to variety and discovery of new music if we are always hearing the same stuff. He squirmed as the professor smiled. Somehow I still decided to go into music/ audio recording 😂
I remember the odd couple Feingold (my senator) and John McCain fighting against that. Of course that act passed easily as only 18 voted Nay, but those two scored some cool points with me
I'm old enough to have noticed that it was going downhill even beforehand, because Clear Channel antics. The Telecommunications Act just made it much MUCH worse. I stopped listening to Radio in the late 90s due to frustration and disgust.
Rick Beato not a team player? He's not only a genius in what he's created here on UA-cam, but he is loyal to where he came from: the music and the musicians. Thanks Rick.
Rick Beato is indeed a team player! For the teams of: listeners, creators, music, truth, and justice. Just not for the so-called "owners," who got no skin in the game, and put no heart or soul into what they do. Who sell death, not life. They took a living thing and killed it by indifference. How many reminders do we need that idolatry of money is a sin? More, evidently. Thank you, Rick!
Remember waiting for a record to drop…hitting the record store with excitement, pulling the album out of the sleeve at home, carefully dropping the needle, sitting or lying in the floor, and studying the artwork and upcoming songs on the first listen. IT WAS SUCH A COOL EXPERIENCE….alone or with friends. Man that was a long time ago.
Coming out of the late 70’s into the mid 80’s, nothing was more exciting than waiting for the new Rush albums. You knew it was gonna be different than the last one but never expected what they came up with. Yes, devouring everything written on the sleeve and cover. Used to know the address of Mercury Records in Chicago by heart! Magic days today’s kids will never know. SAD
As a Judas Priest fan I have not been disappointed this year! Though I'm too poor for the record, all I have is Spotify but I did see them live last week, so the poor fellas make some money with me. Plus I did buy every record before the last 3. Hell of a show. Uriah Heep opened for them. Great night, I love both bands. UH have some new tunes as well, enjoyed the album a lot. Some songs came on in shuffle and I actually thought it was an oldie.
It was last week. And it turns out that Taylor Swift dropped a DOUBLE album. Plus, there has always been ample excitement and anticipation for Beyonce albums. And others that you might not know about because you're not in the target audience. Most of this post, and most of the comments, just reveal some old farts sitting around bemoaning the fact that "today's music is not as good as it was in my Golden Age". Yes, Rick, there are LOTS of kids and young adults who have never heard a note of the Beatles, Michael Jackson, Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, etc. Especially from the 2nd-tier bands and below. The kids have their own stuff, just like we did, and when I try to get my daughter to listen to Dylan and Hendrix and Barry McGuire, she responds like I did when I was 13 and my dad tried to turn me on to Benny Goodman, Dean Martin, Perry Como and Satchmo. Same as it ever was.
The part about listening to music together really resonated with me. People used to build community and identities around music. I think that's why people like tribute bands, because it reminds them of those days.
I couldn't agree with you more. When he said that, I started thinking about how in the 90s, I could talk about music and relate to my coworkers over a shared love of any band from the 60s to the 90s. Now at work, no one talks about music. There isn't a collective love for artists that is shared anymore.
@@Fearzero I think that is very sad. How are you supposed to hear new music if you’re not exposed to it? As you can probably tell, I’m strictly old school.
Nah, Netflix would have a trans person of color telling us that the straight white patriarchy destroyed rock and roll. Hollywood's pretty much a one trick pony that starts with a conclusion and works backwards, very shallowly, to justify that conclusion.
I’m a drum teacher. I teach my students one thing about the industry… I tell them to forget about success, and only to focus on loving music, and creating music they love… anything other than that is fake and won’t last, and certainly won’t make them happy. The secret is to suffer and create.. if you are true to yourself and your art and you are good then success will be the result.. not the goal. That’s the problem.. art is not business
Hunter Thompson once said "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." He was right on target in my mind.
@@prod.SonicGems-ii3glNo, you obviously are unaware of HST's work - some of which are one of the best literary work of the 20th century. The implication of that quote is that the music business is even worse.
This explains so much. I played bass in a signed band, and wondered why they needed to rent two vintage SVT stacks to blend with the DI bass tracks. More importantly, they were annoyed when I tracked all the bass lines in two days.
Having lived through this as a radio programmer from the 70s, a radio consultant in the 90s, and a VP of progamming at Clear Channel (and others) this is an accurate assessment of what happened. Corporate greed, consolidation, mergers, and chaos in the systems that built both radio and records/music in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Another factor in radio programming that RIck only touched on here is radio becoming reliant on music research. This amounted to auditorium tests where we would play 5-7 seconds of a song in a hotel conference room of 100 men or women and they would grade the song on a 1-5 scale - it was also done over the phone and later online . Of course the songs they knew and the library songs tested high and newer stuff was not as high. More and more the older songs tested a lot better and the airplay became more focused on the library. When you add all the producer and record company issues it even makes the issue worse Great video Rick and Jim
Interesting question. Really the whole business changed as Rick and Jim noted. Really only Country music seems fairly healthy now. Much of that comes from strong tours and listening to Country radio outside of the top east and west coast big cities.
As was explained in the video, Producer/Managers wanted every band to sound the same, severely limiting the sounds of bands who got airplay, thus killing musical diversity and appeal to the vast majority of the audience. Rock music itself is still popular, but that simply isn't reflected radio stations that play new acts anymore. @@infintyplus
Rick... you are a hero for putting this stuff out. I am doing my due diligence and passing it on to others I care about and think should know this. This is one of my favorite favorite youtube channels and I don't even play an instrument but I LOVE music and can't live without it.
I remember the 70's, and I'm going to say it was better than the 80's. There was more diversification on the type of music you'd hear on many stations. By the 80's the stations had pretty locked-in genres, so the diversity was lessened. Still, until the mid-90's I would listened to rock radio to hear new stuff, and revisit old favorites.
@@kelleyfamily2636 Everybody up until the 2000s thought that their decade of music was the best. I’ve lived nearly 7 decades. I remember pre FM and post FM. I remember Free-Form, I remember ClearChannel buy outs etc. I thought that we had lost the art of music making around the end of the 90s. But there are many extremely talented musicians right now who hopefully grow beyond UA-cam fame. They deserve a break!
I worked in FM Rock Radio in the 80's as CD's were coming out. When I started out, I could choose 20mins of tunes every hour. By the time I quit, I had no choice. The playlist came from a computer in Houston, timed to the second.
I remember going into our local radio station when I was kid in Cub Scouts in the 80's. Small city. Kokomo, Indiana. They were so happy about a new computer they got that they showed us that picked the songs for them, instead of a DJ doing it. Even at the age of 10, I hated what they were telling me. Years later, I became a musician and was in a band that was being looked at by Geffen, Immortal, and Maverick. The band that was helping us to get noticed was called Transmatic, and they told us insider horror stories I will NEVER FORGET!! They address some of what they told us in this video. I am so glad these guys have the balls to lay it all out on the table. The things they are saying were the exact things I told other people but was laughed at because of. This video is TOTAL vindication for me!! Lol
So here's my question, if this is the case then what is the point of having a DJ at all? why do they have any humans working at the radio station if it's all computerized now?
Radio personalities were a big thing. Not so much anymore, since the internet There are many stations that don't use on-air personalities.@@trophyscene5015
@@trophyscene5015 they've got very few, most of the commercials are national too. The only reason for a DJ now is for local add reads & to make sure the equipment doesn't break down
With all due respect for your incredible work over the years on this channel Mr Beato, this one here is your most important episode of musical education.
You are totally right except the correct title to this video should be "Yet another example of how the Corruption and Greed of Neoliberal Economics ruined an Industry." I'm an aerospace engineer with 30+ years working in industrial control systems and automation. I have mostly worked in manufacturing and mining with stints in oil & gas, water treatment, waste processing, dairy and a few other odd jobs. This mentality is so rampant across every business sector I have worked in. You might not think that the current disaster that's Boeing is related to this but it is. Boeing used to have Lockheed and McDonnell Douglas as competitors in jets for airlines. BUT according to Neoliberals that's not efficient so they let Boeing swallow up their competitors. Once you get monopolised control of a market there's no other way to increase profits but to cut costs or raise prices and ECONOMISTS are obsessed with cutting costs and management are obsessed with finding new costs to add to consumers. Economists and Business Managers brag about efficiency but have NO IDEA what efficiency actually is or what it means in any given industry. All of the sorts of activities I am hearing here about costs and practices I can give similar examples in all of the industries I have worked. I can even use it to explain why we haven't been back to the moon for over 50 years.
The last lines say it all. We're in the "Post Radio Era". Radio was the heart of the shared experience of discovering new music. I have fond memories of NY's Scott Muni introducing new music and then running out to buy the album, so I can add it to my own collection.
Yeah I miss the discovery journey the deejays of WNEW would take us on and WPLJ too, especially Vin Scelsa. The golden days of FM. They would talk about the band or the singer before/after playing the song and really gave you a musical education.
So interesting to hear this. I remember the local rock radio changing in 97 almost overnight. It got noticeably worse. Same with music videos. You could tell corporate America took over.
My band “blew up” around 2014. We were just 3 musicians in Brooklyn totally independent. But Sirius satellite radio had an Alt station that was pretty much free of the big corporate hegemony of FM radio. They played our single and listeners kept requesting it. It broke their top ten and stayed in their top 18 for like 9 months. FM Radio however would NOT touch it, because we weren’t signed. So we eventually signed and suddenly FM would play our music, as long as there was an expensive “radio campaign” behind the single. From the point of getting signed forward all we could do personally was go further into debt despite the music performing really well on radio (2 Billboard Alt Top 10 singles, many more hitting the charts).
I remember when, here in the UK, Radio 1 DJ Simon Mayo was the first to play Def Leppard's new single, Let's Get Rocked. As a DL fan I was really looking forward to hearing it and knew when it was going to get its first airing. Once the song had finished, Simon said, "I really liked that! I'm going to play it again!", and he did. Loved that! Could never happen now.
Hey Rick, AMAZING discussion, thank you for recording this. Life-musician here, and was involved in the 2010's bringing streaming into the mainstream and attempting to re-invigorate the idea of working musicians who could actually make a living creating and performing new and innovative music like we enjoyed in the 60's-90's. To keep it simple, to get music to be cool and new again, we need an FCC mandate that carves out a part of the FM spectrum specifically for non-corporate, independent stations. For example, a new regulation requiring that each DMA must reserve 106.1-107.1 MHz for indie radio stations that are not allowed to be purchased by large corporations. Maybe it's 87.1-88.1. Who knows. The point being, by carving out spectrum that cannot be monetized by large corporate entities, and encourages radio stations to play local independent artists or other new music of their choosing, might foster a new "alternative rock" movement across all the DMA's and beyond.
I remember things changing for the worse in the mid 90's. We could really hear the difference on the local radio. This is exactly what many people in my generation suspected. Thank you.
I was a DJ at a small Midwestern radio station in the late 90's/early 2000's. I can remember the DJ's looking at the horrible playlists and scratching their heads and going "what is this crap?" The only way to get a new song by a new artists, or a great new song by a clasic artist was to sneak it in and write it down as a request. The program manager would call you up and say "what was THAT crap?". And you'd reply "That’s ROCK N ROLL, man!". You were risking your job just for playing something you thought music fans might actuality want to hear! By the time I left radio to go back to college, everything was formatted and prerecorded in a computer. They were telling all the jocks what to say and having them read off of cue cards! It was really over. Every time I hear the song "the last DJ", I shake my head and think about the death ride of rock radio......
That was when KROQ became Corp Radio and all the good cutting edge DJs left. Richard Blade was the one who pushed the envelope in LA. Rodney On the Rock and many others made that station.
In 2001 I was returning to Denver, having lived elsewhere since 1994. As I drove into town I started looking for my favorite radio stations, and lit on KBCO, an independent Boulder station that had specialized in new and innovative artists who didn't get much airplay on more mainstream stations. I was surprised to hear them playing some bland pop tune; when a commercial break came up, the spot mentioned that KBCO was part of Clear Channel. It was like discovering that an old friend had become a collaborator with an evil occupation army.
@@kivahunter6959 Well now you have to hunt for it yourself. Spotify will attempt to learn your habits and there's a bunch of options to find similar stuff. It's not the same but it's quicker than going row by row in a record store until you find something good.
Clear Channel, now I Hate Radio, I mean "Heart" was the end of the end for variety on FM radio.. It's incredible because these assholes got greedy they decided its to hard to try to be creative and find creative acts, actual talent, to satisfy the public. So they bough t up everything, increased Payola on a grand scale, and gave a big FU to the public or anyone who wanted to make actual legitimate music!
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, when I still listen to the radio, there were two competing rock station in Appleton, Wisconsin. One was WAPL, and the other one I just remember as the Eagle. Often, they would play the same song at the same time, with just a few seconds between the two radio station. Now I understand.
Man, this was an episode that easily could have been an hour longer! What a great insight. I think this info is highly valuable for kids who are in their teens and twenties now. You're really creating a legacy here, Rick!
Amazing story - I remember in the late 1970's when the folks at WKRP in Cincinnati were talking about the future of radio being the corporate overlords and the resulting death of rock. The writers saw this coming pretty early!
Some of the writers were in radio previously. Bill Dial, who wrote the Turkey drop episode, was one. They probably had input from other radio people as well.. such as production consultant DJs.
Yep. there was that one episode where Mrs. Carlson wanted to bring in that national program director to basically replace Andy. That was such a great show.
What’s even more sadly ironic about that is that Disney owns that show now through a series of corporate mergers that put its production company’s library of shows in their hands.
WKRP was so brilliant in many respects. I was in radio thru the show's run, and I could honestly tell people that the reality was even weirder than the show! Broadcast radio was a "crazy" way to make a living but a local radio station was really the only place in a small town where a creative performing person could find kindred souls to work with, and actually make a living...
Awesome vid! I’ve said this for so long now. The industry always screamed about things they said were destroying their industry through theft (tape duplicating, minidiscs, Napster) when really… what destroyed their industry was their own greed. 😢
People establish governments to protect themselves from other people. It is a failure of government when their agencies get captured by corporate agendas that undermine their protective purpose, and instead promote corporate interest. That is the definition of corruption.@@christopherweise438
We all miss it! I fixed the tape deck on my vintage Mitsubishi stereo system. I thought since it was so "new" to my 13 yr old that it would pique his interest... 30 seconds into first song he was bored and walked off to go play video games. So sad.
This explains the death of alternative rock in 1996. I was hanging out in clubs in Portland/Seattle area starting in 2000. The amount of revolutionary music I've heard locally would blow people's minds. The number of bands that could have changed the music world that passed without any national notice is heartbreaking.
@@cvr527But there have been other bands and scenes with new sounds that could have been the next Nirvana, Tool, or Primus but there was zero radio play for new bands with new sounds so they never get the chance to reach the national audience like NIN and Janes Addiction did. The fact that radio stopped taking chances on new musical ideas is what killed alternative rock.
@@cvr527they oversaturated the “alternative” scene with all these poser bands that “looked” the part but sounded the exact same. Than the industry went back to the bubble gum boy band crap and the gangsta rap thing post 2pac……
@@americanbadass88 Sure, but the point made in the video is that that happened because there were a small group of corporate radio guys that took over everything. When they got control all the unique stuff just dried up. We didn't hear Don Cabellero or Steve Albini's bands because the squares took over. So we got cheap knock off copies of Nirvana for 10 years ...
@@Napalm6b Agreed. I saw two Bands and one Solo Artist make their way to the national stage from Mid-Michigan in the early and mid-nineties before The Telecommunications Act shut that down, and I'm sure others can remember THEIR scenes sprouting bands that stormed the nation before THAT Law.
I’m 72 and my favorite memories of my youth are of the Southern California music scene. Small venues, underground radio (where we would find stations broadcasting in small shopping centers where we could stand outside the storefront windows and watch the DJ as we listened to bands that would never be heard today). It’s almost impossible for many people to believe just how alive the music world was then. Playing the music from that time only hints at what we experienced. I’m hopeful by what I hear from the independent scene that’s rising now. Perhaps we can break free of the clear channel model of manipulation and control of music. I still believe in what music can mean when the artist is in control of their art. The people will vote by what their ears tell them. Thank you for another fine conversation about what has shaped so many lives.
AMEN, I grew up in So Cal back in the day. K-earth. KCBQ, KGB. KROQ etc. I knew Shotgun Gun Tom Kelly, Wolfman Jack back in the day, they made SO Cal Radio!
Those days are unfortunately over. For good. We are now in the age of AI, and nothing will ever be the same again. Music will very soon (within a few years even) be exhausted; Every possible veriation of musical song will have been created, either by a person or by AI. There won't be anything left to create that won't already have been created. I realize that sounds impossible, but it is coming before the end of the 2020s.
I worked at Clear Channel and Cox Media Group in the mid to late 90’s and watched the radio business get destroyed first hand. From voice tracking, to set liners you were forced to read, to playing the newest “so called” hits ever 90 minutes it was painful to be a part of and watch happen. All personality was just thrown out the window. Just do what the computer says to do. America, you can thank Bob Neil for a lot of that mess. I bet he ruined a lot of radio stations in Atlanta as well didn’t he Rick? Format consultants, gotta love ‘em!
A lot of the radio stations over here in the UK, may have different names but they all sound the same. And here's the reason: they're all owned by one company called Global Radio. It's not a new thing, it's been happening for years. I do listen to the radio but that's at work, I never listen at home like I used to.
I worked in radio from the late 80s until about 5 years ago when my job was eliminated...nationwide! I remember the days when one local station could break an artist, because I worked for one! We got a lot of money thrown at us from labels and indie promoters because even though it was a medium market, if your record was a hit on our station it was almost guaranteed to go national. That's all gone now.
Payola. I've often wondered how much exactly a top plugger for say Sire records, or CBS records lays out annually. I gather their is a large amount of gratuities cash, merchandise, working girls, powder etc
it's not entirely gone in a way, the local radio station broke out oliver anthony. they heard about him, sent some recording people to him and posted it on their youtube channel.
Too much power for the monopolists and market consolidators to handle. The repeal of the media ownership rules at the FCC was probably one of the most destructive things that happened in 1996. Pharma was deregulated in 1996 and the Sacklers and their Purdue Pharma started their opioid cartel with help from Congress, after Congress was paid off. Now, 5 huge media monopolies run 99% of our media. You see how the media drives public opinion, controls the narrative, creates fear, and controls what people think and do. Many Americans fall victim to the destructive media narrative of people like Steve Bannon and Alex Jones. The satellite radio stations are riddled with political fear mongering. So people are paying for their own indoctrination. Truck drivers are a great example. They are probably the most hate mongered group in the nation. I can tell that the big satellite radio station monopolies are forcing the old AM/FM stations out of business. Eventually it will all be pay radio. Sad Sad. Not a word about it anywhere. Why? Because all of media belongs to a larger media monopoly. You should check out Nexstar Media Group. They run the destructive narrative of the ACU/CPAC political racketeers. They push private prisons, privatization of public schools very efficiently in several states. They do this by collaborating with fully funded ACU/CPAC elected state official people. People like Governors Noem, Abbott, Huckabee-Sanders, and DeSantis.
Thank you Rick that was a great conversation between you and Jim… As a former manager of A&R for CBS records on the West Coast, everything these guys said is true, ladies and gentlemen… The thing they left out though, is the drugs during the 80/90s in the music business… It was prevalent. It drove the industry and it came crashing down around a lot of people… Think of all the great artists we lost From the 80s and 90s… Anyway, keep up the great work love what you do Rick!!!!❤️🎸🎼
Yep sure was. People joked about it where I worked as an assistant engineer. Our studio had a “drug guy”, a runner (they ran errands) who could get artists whatever they wanted.
At first I was thinking, dang this is 25 minutes. Now I'm begging for more. I support a more detailed series on the topic if you two would we be willing to do it. Super interesting and enlightening - thank you for all you do.
I have watched a few of your videos. I played guitar for over a decade in the eighties. A couple friends and I formed a band. A fairly large gathering would come to hear us. I ended up pawning my guitar and equipment to help support my new family. I have always regretted that decision, but hindsight is worthless. I was never able to buy another guitar. I really enjoy your channel. Just subscribed!
I was an on-air jock from the mid 80s until I finally quit in 2000, and I watched this wonderful medium turn from magical to mechanical. Cumuluses huge takeover in the mid-90s turned all the stations into cookie cutter outfits where station managers and thus their lowlife DJs (as they saw us) were slaves to the most lame playlists you could imagine. And came to be all about saving money and not making it. As for the subpar music side of things, the record industry forced formulaic sounding, non-inspiring pablum puke down our listeners' throats. If industry heads new how much different listener tastes can be from market to market even within the same radio format / genre, they surely didn't give two craps about it. It didn't fit the short-sighted blueprint. And mindless local radio managers just followed along like good corporate sheep who would do anything to hold on to their $30,000 a year jobs.
@@Ues2DCbut if thats the system then you or we need to develop consistent methods of implementing capitalism in fairer and better ways. Guitar is a good analogy because it too has limitations but within those limitations are so many possibilities. To me, many things are split off to be in the public domain and management of that public domain, the work of government needs much more robust integration with the people. When you erode that connection then that "democracy" becomes simply tyranny.
Frank Zappa nailed this trend in his brief clip about what went wrong with the music "industry". So sad. A local band used to be able to get a demo tape to a station and they would play it!! People would call the radio stations and request those songs and it would take off from there. So friggin ORGANIC!! The saddest thing is, those days will never come back. :(
Didn't he also say that all the artistic freedom and experimentation occured when the cigar chomping executive "suits" were in charge of the record companies, and it all went belly up when the young hip guys took over?
@@SuperNevileYep, there's a vid of Zappa where he says that. The suits were willing to take a risk to make some money. The hipsters weren't, because of their own prejudiced tastes.
I love how I hear a commercial for the iHeartRadio music festival on a radio station that plays absolutely none of the artists mentioned in the ad for the music festival
You both could not have articulated this any better. This is an incredibly transparent documentary of what the radio/music industry was and has turned into. A "must watch" for all artists. Thank you for this!
SO ACCURATE. I remember all of this, and I wish there was someone to call it out at the time. People say Hip Hop killed rock music, but the Rock Industrial Complex did that all by itself.
The fact that you only had a handful or producers and mixers really explains why we're all saying "all these song sound the same" when we turn on the radio!.... They really do! Really insightful video here.... I just had no idea this was going on for all of these years... Thank you Rick!
Now days i dont know if its so much the same producers than it is just everyone doing copycat work using popular formulas running things through the same plugins etc.
As a musician, I've always been amazed at how bad the average persons ears are. Hearing comments about how "this song sounds exactly like that song', when the songs sounded entirely differently were not uncommon to come across from "average listeners" in my experience. No matter how much you might point out the different instrumentation between the songs, the different chord progressions, the different melody, the different chorus, etc. they couldn't hear it, and in their opinion that the songs sounded "the same" for no other reason than because their ears were so undeveloped, that they simply could not hear what was obviously very different to someone who's ears were more "developed" (which refers to the part of the brain that is used to focus and concentrate upon the sound coming in through the ears, who are able to hear the distinctions in tone and timbre, who are able to hear the different instruments as distinct individual sounds throughout the frequency spectrum, etc.). One example that comes to mind was people claiming Ritchie Blackmore's "Catch the Rainbow" was the same as Hendrix's "Little Wing". They would be willing to get into arguments, insisting they were the same song, and how Blackmore had "ripped off" Jimi. The similarity in tempo, and instrumentation alone was enough to make them associate one song to another in their mind, and to claim they were, essentially, the "same song", despite that not being the case at all. It has never been unusual for me to have someone listen to a song they think they know well and point out certain parts, asking them to listen to certain words repeated in the background or the part a certain instrument plays, and have their eyes open wide and tell me "I've never heard that before". This is quite common, simply because the ears of an average person are undeveloped, and they've never focused their attention on listening for certain sounds or keeping the music in the forefront of their minds as someone who has disciplined themselves to practice, listen to, and study music such as when learning an instrument or learning the art of mixing music on a multi-track recorder has done. So, I stopped putting any credence in people claiming "all these songs sound the same" a long time ago, since everyone I've ever heard make that claim couldn't tell the difference between a beautiful violin soloist or an Appalachian fiddler; or tell you how many instruments were actually on any given recording, whether there are 3 or 7 instruments present, since they have no ability to pick them out. It's quite doubtful that Rick's explanation of all of the "cross-collateralization" of music business expenses coming out of advances made upon the artists royalties explains so many people not being able to hear quite distinctive differences between bands and songs. Even the "production qualities" of the final product became known as "
Yep!! ...and this was why I stopped listening to the radio and revisited all my albums, tapes😱 and CDs... And added to my collection by purchasing CDs from bands I liked at gigs 💪👍
@@GlennMarshallRocksCatch the Rainbow does sound like Little Wings in the same way as the movie scene where Mozart improves Salieri's music by adding flourish and extra notes.
There's a lot of truth to what you guys talked about. For me, I, for the most part, stopped listening to radio in the late 1990's. It was so frustrating switching from one station to the next trying to find something that didn't sound the same. Your conversation shed some light on why things sounded the same. I started burning CD's with the songs I liked to hear and later, as technology advanced, made my own play lists on a thumb drive or my phone. Anyway, great post and thank you both for the info.
1968 Simon & Garfunkel's 'Bookends' album came out. We had just gotten a new record player, from Sears I think, where the turntable would fold down and the speakers detached so you could place them strategically in the living room. My two older sisters and me, plus a couple friends cut the shrink wrap on the new record, placed it on the turntable and listened to both sides, basking in the sound and creativity. It's almost hard to write this. What a rich and satisfying experience that was.
I can't tell you how much I cherish listening to an entire album start to finish and anticipating that next song and knowing that next song and just knowing that the whole record was a complete work of art, it was a piece of creativity that was kind of Halo dropped into your life at a certain point .. making records to sell off the singles really really decrease the quality of a whole record
I had the same experience playing Revolver for the first time. I still remember manually placing the stylus of my desktop record player on the record and hearing that weirdly wonderful count-in to "Taxman." I was twelve and it was a transformative experience. I feel sorry for the generations who have no idea what I'm talking about.
I’m Ricks age. I miss it too. When someone like Led Zeppelin releases a new album, the entire world was excited. I think the greatest measure of that era is that the songs from that era are still being listened to by young and old alike. I don’t see any artist today that I think will be getting air time in 2075.
The problem with music right now is there is nothing very original happening. I'm not suggesting there isn't anything good getting released but nothing really original. The 50's to the 80’s was the era for rock, from then on rock music has mostly been a variation of what has been done before. A major problem for popular music in my opinion is nothing new has happened in well over 20 years. Hip hop is still popular but there's nothing original coming out either & the genre is over 40yrs old. It's as if popular music has become stuck in time, nothing groundbreaking is happening.
@@tsurek No, they won't. Have you been listening? The industry will just make up a new "recording artist" that recycles the same sounds you're thinking of, and no one at all will remember the originals.
I think after around 2000 or so, almost no bands/artists have had the kind of wide cross-genre breakthroughs that were a typical thing in the seventies and eighties: a band gaining attention and interest for their music far outside of the particular genre they are in. Pink Floyd, Steely Dan, Prince, The Who, Bob Marley, Talking Heads, Pearl Jam are all examples of that, and so are many soul stars (Aretha Franklin, Isaac Hayes, Rod Stewart, Lauryn Hill etc). Radiohead were among the last bands to achieve that, and a musically innovative band too, like the rest I cited - during the last twenty years almost no new acts have managed to do it, and this is a sign of a more and more shut-in music business.
This maybe the most important video you have ever made. We need to get the music business back into the hands of the people who really want to help artists and share music with everyone.
It’s so much worse than what’s being talked about here. This is a great video! I hope it becomes a series. He’s 100% right about the Telecommunications Act. It’s lead to way too much leverage for corporations and has destroyed our culture. Obviously the business side of things needs to happen, but they should not be in control of our culture. Today’s is the result of not just the balance being tipped, but completely thrown out and replaced by the corporations.
So thx a lot for that discussion - as a former studio Owner, Sound Engineer/Mixer, Producer and Musician somehow - and my Ex wife was a radio promotor - here down in germany - i really like that - thats so true - and I am lucky that Ive sold my studio way back in the early 90ties - and stopped music at all - ´til 2014 when Ive started again - makin music, build a little studio - and will go on til the end - take care and thx
Imagine the music we have been robbed of because of this. I was becoming a young adult by the time Napster came out. I'm also one of those people who couldn't hum a tune from Taylor Swift even though her face is everywhere.
I COMPLETELY agree with you on Taylor Swift. Her face is everywhere but are her songs noteworthy (no pun intended)? Bought an album of hers recently but couldn't get through it feeling my IQ was going down. Love here personally Roxette, Depeche Mode, A-Ha, ABBA, The Beatles, Queen, etc. These are bands that produced memorable melodies and lyrics with raw musical talent.
This episode by Rick Beato and Jim Barber delves deep into the complexities that contributed to the decline of rock music. It's eye-opening to understand the impact of policy, corruption, and greed on such a beloved genre. Their insights are invaluable for anyone passionate about music history. Great work shedding light on this important topic!
I like listening to these guys because while other younger UA-camrs are stingy with one tip per video, these veterans are giving us so much valuable info. Current state of reality.
Yes, these guys have obviously been around, they have long experience and have seen the changes in the industry and media from the inside. Plus, they don't need to kow-tow to the industry, to airbrush things. I feel the same way about much of pop/fashion culture journalism over the last twenty years, it's often sycophantic and playing down to what is accepted to be hip or big: as a young journalist these days, in the MSM, you don't slag an artist who is doing great commercially (Madonna, Rihanna, Jay-Z etc). Music journalism used to be a great deal more intelligent and inspiring than it's become since around 2005.
Perhaps they're not "stingy" but specialized in a particular "tip" or set of "tips" and spend the video to give detail on a specific one with pros and cons; as well as examples of how, when, where, who and why to use it/use it with or not.
Truth! I'm 61 and witnessed this first hand. Thank you for making this video. I remember when the "Suits" started showing up at the recording studio. We knew something was up and boy were we right. One day you're recording music and the next day you're recording audio books and commercials and the day after that you're looking for a job. OK, it didn't happen that fast, but it was pretty quick. This is what turned the music industry into a bunch of cookie cutter bands and artists producing generic rubbish. Don't get me wrong, the creative, innovative and talented folks are still out there. You just need to know where to look and it's not on the radio stations. This is why I love the local music scenes. I encourage folks to treat themselves and go see some local bands.
Is it possible that the industry only promoted lousy heavy metal bands and ignored the good ones in order to trick the public into thinking heavy metal in general sucks, based on the crappy bands that were given exposure?
Former major market corporate radio music director and talent. Can vouch for everything discussed here. Keep up the great work, Rick! Love your channel.
I just wanted to let you know that you inspired me in this video. You were discussing the days of sitting around and listening to records with your friends. I play in a couple local bands and the scene here has died. No place to play and only a handful of bands. I decided to host a Local Band CD Listening party every month. 2 hours 2 bands. They bring their CD and play it for the rest of the group and discuss recording, song meanings etc. The first one is coming up in 2 weeks and i already have over 20 people talking about it. Hopefully this can help revive the music scene here in Canton OH. Very informative video btw!
Well done. In the Bay Area, Live 105 [KITS] has returned, a station long known for giving the first break to bands that went national. Aaron Axelsen features local new bands every Sunday night 8-10 PM.
I would also like to mention how this change to corporate radio changed the Emergency Broadcast System, and has lead to several incidents where small and medium size towns have gotten hurt by not having local radio information about things like derailments, toxic chemical leaks. There were several pieces of legislation in the 90’s that have had devastating effects on the film, radio, music and TV industry because of greed, and many people got hurt
Not need for paying investigative reporters, just get all the news "that matters" off the Internet with ai. Sure a lot of things will be missed, but the corporation will still make more money & that's what matters.
Yes! There is no local news when something of vital importance occurs. It's very scary, especially with the increase i n wildfires and floods here. There's also no indepth reporting nor follow-up to things that are happening or happened. The "local news" is a joke.
Good discussion! I completely quit listening to commercial radio about 40 years ago, mainly because of the annoying ads, but also because of music being played. Instead, I switched to community radio where I quickly became familiar with so much music that was far more interesting, diverse, new, etc. Nowadays I listen to strictly internet stations, streaming community stations, and even hundreds of airchecks from my favorite station from back in the day. If a band wants to get known, community stations and internet stations seem the way to go. Forget corporate radio, leave them in the dustbin of history. And for what it's worth, I've never knowingly heard a single note of Taylor Swift either.
He's so right!! I myself use to go around the world to different Record shops & Concerts! I'm 55 and still love collecting LPs. But I do still use online sites to find new bands, then I'll go out and by the full album!
Great video Rick! That’s exactly what happened to my band around 95-96. We got approached by A&R people that loved us but wanted to see if we could sound more like Stone Temple Pilots or Nirvana. We were more of the Cheap Trick sounding type band
“As we celebrate mediocrity all the boys upstairs want to see / How much you'll pay for what you used to get for free” - Tom Petty, “The Last DJ” Stuck in my head all day after watching this. Thank you both for the fascinating lesson.
I know what I'm willing to pay for what I used to get for free, which is why I have satellite radio. There I listen to the Spectrum (plays new rock records that can't get airplay on the few rock radio stations left), Deep Tracks (plays obscure songs from bands, plays obscure bands), the Beatles Channel (not just the Beatles but 1950s-early 1960s hits that inspired the Beatles but are never played on radio anymore), and Classic Vinyl (all your favorite classic-rock tunes without the commercials). Sat is a necessity now; terrestrial radio is all rap, hair-band rock, and electronic pop.
I don't pay for any music and listen to whatever I want, this is the beauty of UA-cam. The downside is that I don't know one group that has made a record in the past 10 years. When I accidentally turn on the radio my ears are assaulted by the awful sounds I tend to hear
I started off at rock radio in 1986. Even then the DJ couldn't randomly just play a song or even a request by a listener. The management would lose their minds. That was also when we started seeing the out of town consultants come in. The kiss of death right there I'll tell you.
We had a room full of music and would pull music based on a rotation spanning about 20 years. The choice was ours within that, even then I felt free to play something that caught my attention. Left radio for good within a year of computer takeover. It was the coolest job, but once it changed I knew I could make more money “not having fun” elsewhere. Still glad I was there when I was. The artists that sell their song rites for large sums are perhaps being wise?
Bravo Rick for yet another peel-back straight talk about corrupt business practices and what killed the excitement of bands locking in to create masters in studios. Here’s another sad thing. The manipulation of satellite radio by execs. killing station programming to include regular shows that bled music talk, booked guests, artists, music professionals, DJ’s, because the share didn’t meet the numbers for advertising. Shout out to Volume channel on Sirius that featured Mark Goodman, Nik Carter, Lori Majuski, Alan Light & best producers ever, all dissecting music genres, times & artists everyday. Channel flushed. And that is subscription radio programming!
I live in a tiny town named Wauseon, Ohio and we are blessed to still have a locally owned, personally programmed radio station, 96.1 WMTR. When I listen to it, it's like being back in the 70s or 80s. There's NO rotation, heavy or light, and the music is awesome. With "progress" comes the destruction of individuality.
It was bad for decades before that, Alan Freid and the whole payola scandal. They just found newer and newer ways to screw musicians. This is still super informative and relevant. Thank you Rick
Before 1996 you could only own 20 FM stations... iheart radio owns almost 1000 today and then there's Cumulus and a few others which own most of the rest. And due to decades of consolidation the "Big Three" record companies Sony, Universal and Warner control as much as 80% of the market now. There may have been some types of payola going on back in the day but most stations before 1996 were independently owned and operated. And they were programmed locally by in house program directors. I think most people who grew up listening to rock radio in America would say there was a noticable decline in variety and quality on rock radio right around the turn of the century...
I had no idea the depth of corruption the record companies went; I now know why rock-n-roll died. I like to see a part 2 of this discussion!! Come on Rick 🙂
Living near another country offered the opportunity to hear music you wouldn't normally get in other US cities. In Buffalo, NY we could listen to stations out of Toronto and Niagara Falls Canada that played music you generally didn't hear in the rest of the US. Sure you heard the bigger bands like Rush, Brian Adams, and Loverboy but you also heard Larry Gowan, Kim Mitchell, The Northern Pikes, Platinum Blond, and Honeymoon Suite. When I met my wife (from Virginia) she had never heard of half the bands in my CD collection.
I can vouch for the fact that the southern US got the shaft musically. My pen pals in NJ got all the new bands 6 months before we ever heard them on the radio. They kept telling me about a band called Def Leppard. I called a radio station to request they play them, but they said they'd never heard of them! Right... One pen pal was good enough to make a mix tape for me!
I grew up in the time that people would come over and see your record collection and ask you to play them something you really liked. We sought out music from people whose opinion we admired and sometimes you would turn out to be the influencer ( to use a present day term). There were also radio stations that were cool because they played albums that you wanted to go out and buy. For people who grew up with great music, be happy that you got to experience that. We may bemoan the state of music and radio now, but we can remember the good times (and pull out our old albums and listen again).
And people would actually sit down and listen to the full album after it was recommended. I liked having a tangible piece from the artist and the experience of the music. I loved reading the stuff they put inside cassettes and CDs, the photos and lyrics - it was incredible. I'm sad about not having that these days and it is so unfortunate that the this and next gen will never experience it.
On the other side, we were still fed what the radio stations played to a large extent and we didn't have the diversity in music that exists today because of the internet. Basically anyone can make any kind of music and make it available to everyone around the world.
@@JamesG1126and that's where I'd ask for stats. There's great music out there, if you go look for it. Some of the most innovative things have been happening in the underground metal scene lately. The thing we miss is not great music, it's the human element in the music. We miss what music stood for, a universal human experience. You are correct, 95% of popular music is crap. So that experience is...bye-bye. We miss that, we need that back. How, we as a race must find a way. Music has always been an important social force. We can't let corporates destroy millenias of connection for their profit
I worked as DJ at two different small stations in Illinois - and a BIG part of the job was choosing what music we wanted to play for our shift. It was all driven by a passion for the music and making our listeners love the music. I did a stint at a recording studio, played in a few bands (We all thought we would get discovered and be ROCK stars), but then it just evaporated.
I'm thinking back now .... I was busy doing other things my parents were really ill. OK I take back what i wrote back earlier it was mid-90s now that I pin down the chronology. ok you guys nailed it.
A perfect storm... telecommunications act nukes local flavor [which really is necessary for a music scene of any flavor], massively top heavy recording industry [too big to succeed] and the consolidation of certain non-band operators and the spark was lost.
Excellent video Rick. Not trying to brag but…, I’m a very good musician. It used to upset me that I never “made it” in the industry. However, when I hear videos like this one, I feel so fortunate to have been spared from the dark corrupt fleecing side of it.
It's as good a time as any to take the DIY approach (maybe 'better than ever.') Of course, there will be 'cross training' involved, if you want to avoid the sheep-shears...
I was just watching The Warning’s TedX talk where they talked about all the different people who wanted to sign them as long as they changed to be more marketable. They said, “This isn’t just business for us. This is our art.” Instead of signing away their musical futures, they leaned heavily into social media and Patreon, and were able to support themselves enough to independently produce an EP and two albums, and to develop a loyal fan base. By the time they signed, they were able to negotiate to retain their artistic freedom. This is probably not an option for most bands, but I give them and their management credit for understanding how to leverage their social media.
I'm definitely calling bullsh*t on that one. They were marketable from the get-go simply by virtue of being "girls playing rock." When they were kids it was cute, as young women they're even more marketable for certain audiences. Don't get me wrong, they are great musicians and performers and it is quite commendable what they've done, but they don't have to pretend their road to success was difficult when in fact it wasn't, especially considering their parents were wealthy enough to support their music career and they had, at least in Mexico, industry connections prior to starting their band.
System of a Down is a good example, Serj quickly became the bands manager and producer after their time with Rick Rubin. After that Shavo became a regular writer and director for their music videos and they all manage themselves. A good early example of this band takeover.
Thank you so much Rick for covering this important topic... I will also add that if music listeners are not willing to pay for the music they listen to... if labels can't sell albums... the artists no longer get advances or tour support. Some may disagree but streaming is a very real factor in why rock (album-oriented genre) is suffering so badly in the 21st century. Streaming destroyed the industry.
I never allowed any control or charging of any equipment when I did recording. In fact, Max Norman produced our first EP at his studio pro bono with the agreement that when a deal is secured, we would use him and pay him accordingly and fairly for the major label release. We were never offered anything that was beneficial for the band though Ross Robinson was interested in us and Nickelback. He chose the latter and based on their success, it was a good call. We ended up creating our own label to release our full length. Thought I would share since they discussed how bands would amass huge debts with bad business decisions.
If you don’t mind me asking, what was the name of your band? (I used to really like Ross Robinson’s production, especially on the early Korn and Limp Bizkit albums and the Sepultura “Roots” album).
@@Genethagenius Choking Ghost... We had shared bills with Incubus, Fight, No Doubt, Static-X, Hoobastank, Digital Underground, Fishbone, Nazareth, SOAD, Dio, King's X etc... the live scene in LA 95-2005 was loaded and ended up with some international heavyweights who continue to sell loads of tickets all over the world.
Thank you for using your platform, Rick, to share what many of us have witnessed and experienced on our own over the years. It's important for folks like me to know we're not alone in our thoughts and beliefs and to have people like you who have the tools to show, provide evidence, that what we believe to be is quite true. We are being herded into the post humanist world and we need strong voices like your to sound the alarm.
I grew up in the late '60s and '70s in the Boston area, and every free minute was spent listening to the radio and following rock, including a bunch of amazing local bands, some of whom made it big. I worked at a couple of college radio stations while in school, and the whole scene was such a blast. Your great conversation helped me to understand how we could go from that exciting, dynamic and creative time to the miserable era we're in now. The "free market" is killing everything good in every area of society because it can all be manipulated to empower a handful of greedy assholes at the expense of everyone else. I'm so incredibly grateful to have lived through the '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s and feel bad for the youth of today who will never know the joy and wild times they missed. The fact we weren't spending every moment recording and posting everything means we're left with only our memories but it also means there's no incriminating evidence!
To mj8631, you answered your own question about the "free market." The corp.s have consolidated the business, reduced costs and (it appears to me) treated musicians, their creativity and their music as conveyor belts packaging cans of beans. The period of time in the '60s and '70s you describe, and I miss too, were closer to an actual "free market' than the corporate speak we have today.
Ironically, my last professional gig in the music business was on a Peter Wolf record in the mid-90s. He gave me an honest take on where the industry was heading, and it convinced me to walk away. I have 1000 regrets, but this isn't one of them. TLDR; Peter World turned me into a software engineer. 🙃
I was taught in recording school, by my teachers, to bring my own outboard gear to a tracking or mixing session so I could rent the gear back to myself and make more money. So funny that you mention this whole thing.
@@JackTalkThai_411 Or underpants over spandex nr 117? I haven't been to the cinema in 15 years. I can't afford it and I wouldn't know what to watch. Well once I was invited for Star Wars by Mickey Mouse and it was... it was a movie.
Thank you for this video. I had the misfortune of trying to break into music in the 1990s, and had no idea of what I was trying to do. Unfortunately, the book my manager and producer were using to learn the industry was at least a decade older. I ended up burned out on writing and performing. This video explained a lot of what we were bumping into at the time, and I appreciate the education.
Very early in my music career I heard a saying…..”The music biz is full of crooks, thieves, scammers, con artists and liars, not to mention some bad people too”. I never forgot that, and as such I have been able to still make a living for many decades in music. I have worked with some of those big name bands that you mentioned who actually “made it”, but I chose to not pursue fame and fortune. Instead, I concentrate on writing, recording and performing on my terms. No, I haven’t made millions of $$, most people have no idea who I am, but my mortgage was paid off years ago, I own my own small studio, I perform often, and usually get to come home most nights. Most important, after 60 years (yeah, I started performing very young!) I still love what I do, and have no plans to retire……ever! Still sell CD’s too, believe it or not! Not as many as I used to, but it didn’t cost much to record them either. And I get all the profit!
That sounds a lot like a popular quote, usually attributed to Hunter Thompson -- "The Music Business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."
I think the big corporate interests are getting 'hoisted by their own petard' since outlets like YT are available to all aspiring musicians to get their names out there. The discerning listener will ignore the pop cult's flavor of the week. It seems like this is happening in slow motion due to the sheer mass of the industry megaliths, but the outcome is inevitable. Your example is one for future generations to follow.
As an ordinary music fan from the 80’s, I did notice this incestuous trend in the music industry. I didn’t have the back story or an understanding of the causes and intricacies (which is very interesting to finally learn about, thank you) but I noticed how homogenous not just the music had become, but the whole radio landscape. I stopped listening to the radio and stuck to music I loved. That is what I love so much about the music landscape now, no corporate radio station hand feeding me music I don’t even like. I love exploring the abundant and colorful tapestry of music organically, sharing new finds with friends, family and coworkers… and them reciprocating. What pisses me off the most is when I find some incredible band from back in the late 90’s/2000’s that I never heard of. How much great music did I miss out on because of that system? Grrrr. I’m making up for lost time now… finding both old and new music, the sky is the limit.
But at least you are actively looking for music, that is great! Because i am so tired of hearing how there are no good bands/no good music any more, but they just listen to the radio or watch TV, you know? I can't tell you how much that bothers me, not only because i am a musician, but also a live sound guy and have worked with and for hundreds and hundreds of incredibly creative and good musicians, but they played in front of 5 to 50 people. Usually the very best concerts happened in front of a handful of people, including me and the bar staff =( Loved reading your comment!
I am a huge radio fan. I felt all this happening during the 90s/2000s. It was so confusing/infuriating when all this was happening. I wondered about this for 25 years. Thank you for validation what we all felt as radio fans
The older you get, the more you realize that everything is corrupt. Every system, industry, corporation, etc. and it's disheartening.
Exactly.
This was my realisation when I was 20.
Growing up and working just gave me the examples as to HOW it was corrupt.
“Everything” isn’t corrupt… but capitalism rewards corruption, so almost everything that embraces capitalism either starts out corrupt or eventually ends up corrupted.
@@kierenmacmillan Since the 80s, market fundamentalism has taken over society, so lots more things are corrupt now.
@@kierenmacmillan capitalism and monopolies are the exact opposite. What we are experiencing is the merger or state and corporate power from a philosophical sense. Everything seems corrupt because we’ve slipped into a fascist world not a free market world.
I worked as a producer for a music channel back in 2006. One I day suggested to the channel director that we create a request rock show amidst the babble of the commercial stupidity. He said no and summarized it with one sentence: "People don't tell us what's cool, we tell people what's cool." That's when I knew real music was dead.
The very reason why Rap music has turned into Crap music. 😢😢
it's always been like that. People just age out of being the target demographic.
Real music isn't dead at all. It's just completely ignored by the mainstream corporate gate keepers.
That violates the law of top 40.
I’ve had conversations with program directors in the radio market I live in, a top 15 radio market by size. They all had this attitude. Somehow it’s just desserts that they’ve orchestrated their own irrelevance: hardly anyone I know listens to radio and it’s roundly mocked for its lameness.
That makes sense. I got so annoyed with radio stations by 1999, that I quit listening. I only listened to CD's, and then external media.
90% of what I hear now comes from my own CD collection.
I gave up on the radio because I'd get in the car and it would be on commercial. And then I'd get out of the car at work and it would still be on commercial.
Oh, and they only played 3 songs.
I can't stand ANY radio music stations any more.
Exact year I stopped listening to new music, exact year! I am still on CD's, keeps me grounded. I don't watch TV anymore either except UA-cam doccos and DVDs. I don't like 'modern' trash.
@@tomryan9827 Must like the Internet today, ads ads ads and who cares about ads. According to Capitalism we are supposed to be working all hours 7 days and spending it all chasing what they say is worthy. Its shite.
thank yòu for sharing - I grew up in the 80s & by the early 2000s, I started noticing a huge disconnect with music. I always thought, that it was because I was starting to get old. but having switched to spotify five years ago, I find that I do listen to modern music, that is less than a year old. the difference is, that it is 'my' modern music, that I find & I choose... I remember growing up with my own radio & listening in the evening with my tape recorder on the ready, recording my own mix tape, because it was legal & it was a thing & you shared ideas at school & compared bands & then went out and bought the really cool albums. now that my son is old enough to learn to read the clock & figure out when bedtime is over on his own, he wants his own alarm clock. going through the offerings, my inside cringed as I stumbled across a few with radio. it was like: "I'm not paying for that..." radio, for me (now), is something of unreliable quality, that you might listen to in the car, because you get traffic updates & it beets the drone of the engine, but that's about it... but for everything else, broadcast radio is dead to me, witch is sad, in its own way. but yes, to quote bob dylan, the times - they are a changing...
“Rick Beato is not a team player” is exactly why today he has nearly 4 million subscribers and is admired by his musical heroes and viewers from all over the world. It’s his Integrity and love for music.
Well said man, well said !
Yeah we like Rick but just because somebody has followers and subscribers doesn't mean jack s***. Look around social media there are more weasels than decent people
That statement made me laugh. There's only one other channel that is as honest and forthright as Rick's when it comes to the wisdom from experience of music, Rock music, instruments, production, recording and "the business" - you name it Rick covers it. And you hit it on the head with his number of UA-cam subscribers. That speaks louder than words! Good comment. Or maybe the "Team" sucks, and nobody with any sense would want to be a part of it. lol
Jeah, but the other guys are richer so they are obviously better and know more than him. $=inteligence and quality. Accountants rule dude! :-)
The two have nothing to do with each other...
This corruption has gotten into and ruined everything. Music, journalism, politics, education, science, medicine ... well ... everything.
Everything wasn't done for making the most money out of something back before 30 years ago. I could see this country going to hell artistically in the late 80's and then through the 90's with this awful grunge garbage and mostly annoying Rap. Through the sixties,seventies and first half of the 80's there was a tremendous amount of great Soul,Rock and Pop constantly on, and people took it for granted. Now that a generation has been raised on the aforementioned. Almost all of it is completely disposable.
It's neoliberasim, baby.
The regulations were ment to prevent big money to buy off all the small entreprenours and rise prices.
It's been the same in my country too since mid-nineties. Two or three big companies rule the market in every sector that used to be regulated or publicly owned.
Private equity firms…
Marxism, Progressivism, Wokism whatever you callitism is the cause but I agree about greed. @@treignsinblood
"This corruption" in everything else is very different, and did not all happen for the same reasons. Corporatization is a huge part of much of it, but not all.
I was a DJ at that time. I started in 1990. It was horrific to see the consolidation destroy basically everything I had worked for. Interning, working my way up, and I got replaced by a computer/ repeater. We went from folks that actually did public relations, and played real music. CMJ meant everything, we did remotes, we did local news, local commercials, PSA... ONCE CLEAR CHANNEL CAME IN, IT MADE US NOTHING BUT BUTTON PUSHERS, AND IT RUINED THE ENTIRE Radio CAREER. THANKS TO MONOPOLIES BEING ALLOWED, I HAVE A COMPLETELY USELESS COMMUNICATIONS DEGREE.
This is so heartbreaking. What a waste.
Sorry but if you were creating value for the customer, then why would the customer go to the competition? I think satellite radio and eventually streaming put a big dent into local music radio. The people wanted songs or personalities, not 3 songs followed by 7 minutes of commercials.
@@forgetaboutit1069one size fits all I guess. Once clear channels came in they brought out everything
@@forgetaboutit1069When the market is controlled by a monopoly there is no competition.
@@forgetaboutit1069wouldn’t his argument have been long before the aforementioned?
I fondly remember a time where you could call into your local station and make a request and the Disc Jockey would gladly work it into the rotation.
Man, I miss those days 😢
Rick beato is a conartist
@@UA-cam_2user Do tell.
I just learnt what DJ stands for
Now I think even the DJs are just AI.
I can only imagine how many great bands we missed due to them not having enough money to afford a studio session
But these days artists can get their own studios, do their own productions, distribution. UA-cam is one way to distribute.
@@robertewalt7789 This is true, but it's not quite the same. As Bruce Sterling pointed out, what's really scarce is *attention*, not distribution.
worse yet, how much awful music have we endured because they COULD afford a studio session.
Yep, or because no label they approached were interested in helping to promote them. Jamiróquai are a great example of how it used to be: at the start, only the singer Jay Kay was contracted, he had no steady band, few finished songs of his own and he had limited technical skills (reading/writing notated music, playing any instruments etc) - he was a brilliant potential frontman and a good singer, but how to launch him?
No major label today would have made the efforts that Sony and Jay's manager expended during the making of Jamiroquai's superb debut album in 1992-93: recruiting a live band and a writing partner who was able to sight read music (Toby Smith), long studio sessions, videos, live brass and strings for the album - for a band where almost no one had been heard on records before. That level of backing for a new and unknown band just doesn't happen today (unless they're heavily styled and hyped to fit some thought-out "project" from the label). If Jay Kay had turned up today, the label would have treated him as just a clothes-hanger for external songwriters, producers, remixers and stylists.
Imagine that across every field, capitalism truly devours the human soul.
I tried explaining this concept to a buddy a few years back, and he didn't believe me. He kept trying to tell me that the radio stations play Drake because he's popular and that's what the people want, and I was telling him the radio stations play him because that's who the powers in charge want to be popular. The consumers don't really have a choice.
Thats a fact.... "they're" reshaping our culture and society by design by force feeding the masses with crap and controlling or attempting to shut down our "Artistic output"... kinda like force feeding GMO foods on everyone.
It's a vicious cycle. Consultants and marketers notice trends from more independent artists, find a malleable artist and make them play music that conforms to those trends, the public hears that music and buy it, and that funds more airplay for the malleable artist.
It really is sickening how the stations pretty much control what we not only listen to, but what we think we like. If a song is played over and over again, it becomes catchy to everyone having to hear it. Even if you didn't like it when it first came out. And that's how music becomes "popular" to the masses.
The corporate media masters control not only what we see and hear, but who and how, thereby influencing how we think and feel. @@keymaster430
Similar to art galleries where my professional interest lies.
Corruption and greed has destroyed almost everything.
What it hasn't destroyed , it will .
But in the end, the rich get richer. So it's all good, right? That's the end point of capitalism and the purpose of many politicians.
Almost everything is kinda bland these days, like movies and shows, nothing new,
Corruption and greed has always been with us since the beginning of time. What's different now is our modern technology is a force multiplier that vastly increases the corruption and greed for the tiny few who hold the power and money.
That’s why we need a government of the people to push back against the Apple/Googles of the world.
That was exactly what happened … I was a Program Director for Alt Rock stations from 95-07 … When our station was purchased by Clear Channel and told we’d still have control of our lists … then, we were told what to play … when I refused because I felt the records didn’t fit the cities vibe (w/ research to back me up) it didn’t take long for me to get blown out. I worked at 2 other stations after that, different companies, but the same promise … and same result. Don’t miss it.
Wow.
And they wonder why audiences have been shrinking ever since.
So weird how much control other people have over art. Something that should come from the soul. It’s so freaking bizarre!!!!!!
Well with all the payola it’s no surprise you were told what to play lol😂
What a sad story bro! Yeah, I've traveled all over the country, and the stations sound, with an exception of a few renegade stations in very small markets, all the damn same, with sometimes, even the same DJ's! Just so sad! This is why people listen more and more to UA-cam, Spotify, etc., because terrestrial radio, SUCKS! People have to vote with their ears!
And how many great musicians, songs, albums and concerts have we all missed because aspiring musicians decided, "why bother... it's just not worth it". What the handful of greedy & corrupt people did to the music industry was criminal.
Bingo
I was one of them.
They’re still out there, plugging away. Unfortunately, we lack the curators like a John Peel or a Giles Peterson to help us sift through the mountain of good new artists out there now. Program directors just phone it in-like they’ve been doing the last three decades.
I played music for 15 years. Quit because I wasn’t making money. Waste of time
@@johnolmos8670You really need to do it for the true love of it!😀
And THIS, ladies and gentlemen, is FINALLY the answer to the ancient question: “why does today’s music sounds like crap?”
They're too lazy to think of new ideas.
It's all computer no live instruments
Mainstream songs are usually about sex and love. I miss being in California in the 80s when bands like Metallica were singing about war, religion, social issues.
The powers that be don't want us thinking about society's problems.
You can switch "music sounds" for many other things and the answer will always be the same.
Just as the book: ' Food Inc.,' which tells the beginning of GMO foods (Monsanto and Roundup resistant soybeans) and the ability to "patent life", Bill Clinton adds another notch to his belt with the Telecommunication Act. Both have a far-reaching negative effects on American Life and culture. It's true, Democrats ruin everything!
I worked in a major studio in Hollywood from 1995-2005 and this conversation and examples was EXACTLY how things went down.
I worked at West LA Music for a few years. What studio did you work at?
Same with video game industry 1996-2000, and youtube 2015-2021.
@@bigneiltoo I remember the collapse of the video game industry very well..... back in 1983.
@@Peter_S_ Any time a new technology or medium comes out there is a 5 year "glory days" period before it becomes pasteurized and homogenized by the powers that be.
@NolanVoid-dr1ch ? Look it up; there's even a Wikipedia page on it, LOL. The Video Game Crash of 1983 was a thing and lots of people have made videos about it. By mid-1983, Atari had lost $356 million and laid off 3,000 of its 10,000 workers. Atari also moved all manufacturing to Hong Kong and Taiwan. Lots of companies went bust and lots of amazing scrap also hit the surplus stores in Silicon Valley. The industry didn't start growing again until 1985. There have been crashes before and there will be more in the future.
Here in Sweden, there is a radio station known as Radio Österåker, a station where you can call in and request songs to be played. My dad is a big fan of that station, he calls in from time to time. There are sometimes when the requested song isn’t there, something that they fix for later.
It used to be like that here in the states. But it's been about 25 years or more.
@@sulatlalaki Right, now I know.
@@thesnesgeek Canada and America used to have music channels like Much Music that would take requests everyday for an hour to play music videos.
Czech Republic has radio stations that allow request songs as well. This iron boot seems to be more of a North American thing.
@@julianne_warren Yes
As a freshman in college i wrote a report on how the 1996 telecom act was ruining radio. Broadcast professor brought in a clear channel vp to give a talk and he had a prepared statement but I kept interrupting to ask what happens to variety and discovery of new music if we are always hearing the same stuff. He squirmed as the professor smiled. Somehow I still decided to go into music/ audio recording 😂
Congratulations! Now fetch my soy latte, boy.
@@Paul-mx8sfyou drink soy?
@@dickstrykerLol😂
I remember the odd couple Feingold (my senator) and John McCain fighting against that. Of course that act passed easily as only 18 voted Nay, but those two scored some cool points with me
I'm old enough to have noticed that it was going downhill even beforehand, because Clear Channel antics.
The Telecommunications Act just made it much MUCH worse. I stopped listening to Radio in the late 90s due to frustration and disgust.
Rick Beato not a team player? He's not only a genius in what he's created here on UA-cam, but he is loyal to where he came from: the music and the musicians. Thanks Rick.
Rick Beato is indeed a team player! For the teams of: listeners, creators, music, truth, and justice. Just not for the so-called "owners," who got no skin in the game, and put no heart or soul into what they do. Who sell death, not life. They took a living thing and killed it by indifference. How many reminders do we need that idolatry of money is a sin? More, evidently. Thank you, Rick!
Remember waiting for a record to drop…hitting the record store with excitement, pulling the album out of the sleeve at home, carefully dropping the needle, sitting or lying in the floor, and studying the artwork and upcoming songs on the first listen. IT WAS SUCH A COOL EXPERIENCE….alone or with friends. Man that was a long time ago.
Coming out of the late 70’s into the mid 80’s, nothing was more exciting than waiting for the new Rush albums. You knew it was gonna be different than the last one but never expected what they came up with. Yes, devouring everything written on the sleeve and cover. Used to know the address of Mercury Records in Chicago by heart! Magic days today’s kids will never know. SAD
As a Judas Priest fan I have not been disappointed this year! Though I'm too poor for the record, all I have is Spotify but I did see them live last week, so the poor fellas make some money with me. Plus I did buy every record before the last 3. Hell of a show. Uriah Heep opened for them. Great night, I love both bands. UH have some new tunes as well, enjoyed the album a lot. Some songs came on in shuffle and I actually thought it was an oldie.
you can still do all of this, except be a kid again
Yes in particular With headphone on Steve Miller Band- Book of Dreams..wow.. fare out.
It was last week. And it turns out that Taylor Swift dropped a DOUBLE album.
Plus, there has always been ample excitement and anticipation for Beyonce albums. And others that you might not know about because you're not in the target audience. Most of this post, and most of the comments, just reveal some old farts sitting around bemoaning the fact that "today's music is not as good as it was in my Golden Age". Yes, Rick, there are LOTS of kids and young adults who have never heard a note of the Beatles, Michael Jackson, Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, etc. Especially from the 2nd-tier bands and below. The kids have their own stuff, just like we did, and when I try to get my daughter to listen to Dylan and Hendrix and Barry McGuire, she responds like I did when I was 13 and my dad tried to turn me on to Benny Goodman, Dean Martin, Perry Como and Satchmo.
Same as it ever was.
The part about listening to music together really resonated with me. People used to build community and identities around music. I think that's why people like tribute bands, because it reminds them of those days.
I couldn't agree with you more. When he said that, I started thinking about how in the 90s, I could talk about music and relate to my coworkers over a shared love of any band from the 60s to the 90s. Now at work, no one talks about music. There isn't a collective love for artists that is shared anymore.
I am SO glad you exposed how the music industry operates/operated.
This will save so many artists thinking they're playing a different game.
Music industry is so greedy that they would hire the non-talent.
Radio is dead now. It's all Spotify now.
every atom of our existence is monitized and anything profitable at all is scooped up by the corporate slime machine and ruined, nothing new here
@@Fearzero
spot on comment 👍 or should i say Spot ify 🙄
@@Fearzero I think that is very sad. How are you supposed to hear new music if you’re not exposed to it? As you can probably tell, I’m strictly old school.
This was an incredibly important video. It would be worthwhile for Rick to create an entire series of videos on corruption in the music industry.
And name names. Why not?
Might not be too very healthy.
LedHed Pb 207.20 🎶 🎸 🎹
This isn't corruption but racketeering.
He should add more people with more examples. And then how autotune took over. etc etc
@@DannyOKC and when turns out that most of the names come from single ethnic group, that would be the end of rick beato.
This totally deserves to become a Netflix documentary
How about it as a new episode of "This Is Pop."
@@TranscendentBen Modern pop music, especially that of female artists, is basically an extension of porn industry.
Netflix would raceswap Rick lol
No gay content so no, it wouldn't happen.
Nah, Netflix would have a trans person of color telling us that the straight white patriarchy destroyed rock and roll. Hollywood's pretty much a one trick pony that starts with a conclusion and works backwards, very shallowly, to justify that conclusion.
I’m a drum teacher. I teach my students one thing about the industry… I tell them to forget about success, and only to focus on loving music, and creating music they love… anything other than that is fake and won’t last, and certainly won’t make them happy. The secret is to suffer and create.. if you are true to yourself and your art and you are good then success will be the result.. not the goal. That’s the problem.. art is not business
Hunter Thompson once said "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." He was right on target in my mind.
He was implying that the corruption was a good thing...
@@prod.SonicGems-ii3glNo, you obviously are unaware of HST's work - some of which are one of the best literary work of the 20th century. The implication of that quote is that the music business is even worse.
@@prod.SonicGems-ii3gl no that is not what he was implying. Look up irony in the dictionary, please
a long plastic hallway and a glass staircase
All ran by the usual suspects: your Epsteins and Weinsteins
This explains so much. I played bass in a signed band, and wondered why they needed to rent two vintage SVT stacks to blend with the DI bass tracks. More importantly, they were annoyed when I tracked all the bass lines in two days.
They were annoyed that they didn't get to rip you off enough
Not a team player, eh ;)
Good one! ;D
Having lived through this as a radio programmer from the 70s, a radio consultant in the 90s, and a VP of progamming at Clear Channel (and others) this is an accurate assessment of what happened. Corporate greed, consolidation, mergers, and chaos in the systems that built both radio and records/music in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Another factor in radio programming that RIck only touched on here is radio becoming reliant on music research. This amounted to auditorium tests where we would play 5-7 seconds of a song in a hotel conference room of 100 men or women and they would grade the song on a 1-5 scale - it was also done over the phone and later online . Of course the songs they knew and the library songs tested high and newer stuff was not as high. More and more the older songs tested a lot better and the airplay became more focused on the library. When you add all the producer and record company issues it even makes the issue worse Great video Rick and Jim
Do to think rock music would have lost popularity had things stayed the same as they were in the 70s
Because other types of music did not lose popularity
Interesting question. Really the whole business changed as Rick and Jim noted. Really only Country music seems fairly healthy now. Much of that comes from strong tours and listening to Country radio outside of the top east and west coast big cities.
@@davelange4039 yeah it changed but why did rock music become unpopular
As was explained in the video, Producer/Managers wanted every band to sound the same, severely limiting the sounds of bands who got airplay, thus killing musical diversity and appeal to the vast majority of the audience. Rock music itself is still popular, but that simply isn't reflected radio stations that play new acts anymore. @@infintyplus
Rick... you are a hero for putting this stuff out. I am doing my due diligence and passing it on to others I care about and think should know this. This is one of my favorite favorite youtube channels and I don't even play an instrument but I LOVE music and can't live without it.
Man, this really made me appreciate what we had listening to local radio back in the 80s when I was growing up. It’s a shame those days are long over.
For me 70’s and 80’s. We can’t forget unique DJ’s like Wolfman Jack,either.👍👍
It was the public that allowed their Govt to become an Oligarchy ….. corrupt Govt produces corrupt systems and institutions
80's was the best decade for music, awesome variety, labels and studio DJ's took chances on new sounds
I remember the 70's, and I'm going to say it was better than the 80's. There was more diversification on the type of music you'd hear on many stations. By the 80's the stations had pretty locked-in genres, so the diversity was lessened. Still, until the mid-90's I would listened to rock radio to hear new stuff, and revisit old favorites.
@@kelleyfamily2636
Everybody up until the 2000s thought that their decade of music was the best. I’ve lived nearly 7 decades. I remember pre FM and post FM. I remember Free-Form, I remember ClearChannel buy outs etc. I thought that we had lost the art of music making around the end of the 90s. But there are many extremely talented musicians right now who hopefully grow beyond UA-cam fame. They deserve a break!
I worked in FM Rock Radio in the 80's as CD's were coming out. When I started out, I could choose 20mins of tunes every hour. By the time I quit, I had no choice. The playlist came from a computer in Houston, timed to the second.
Wow crazy. Out of curiousity, what year did you quit?
I remember going into our local radio station when I was kid in Cub Scouts in the 80's. Small city. Kokomo, Indiana. They were so happy about a new computer they got that they showed us that picked the songs for them, instead of a DJ doing it. Even at the age of 10, I hated what they were telling me. Years later, I became a musician and was in a band that was being looked at by Geffen, Immortal, and Maverick. The band that was helping us to get noticed was called Transmatic, and they told us insider horror stories I will NEVER FORGET!! They address some of what they told us in this video. I am so glad these guys have the balls to lay it all out on the table. The things they are saying were the exact things I told other people but was laughed at because of. This video is TOTAL vindication for me!! Lol
So here's my question, if this is the case then what is the point of having a DJ at all? why do they have any humans working at the radio station if it's all computerized now?
Radio personalities were a big thing. Not so much anymore, since the internet There are many stations that don't use on-air personalities.@@trophyscene5015
@@trophyscene5015 they've got very few, most of the commercials are national too. The only reason for a DJ now is for local add reads & to make sure the equipment doesn't break down
With all due respect for your incredible work over the years on this channel Mr Beato, this one here is your most important episode of musical education.
I agree.......but I also think that you could show your respect for Mr Beato by spelling his name correctly.
@@chrisfromnoosa1905 True. My bad.
😊@@SmokDiplodoq
Actually... Spotify is the head of that mafia... they want us to listen to reggaeton and mexican stuff...
You are totally right except the correct title to this video should be "Yet another example of how the Corruption and Greed of Neoliberal Economics ruined an Industry."
I'm an aerospace engineer with 30+ years working in industrial control systems and automation. I have mostly worked in manufacturing and mining with stints in oil & gas, water treatment, waste processing, dairy and a few other odd jobs. This mentality is so rampant across every business sector I have worked in.
You might not think that the current disaster that's Boeing is related to this but it is. Boeing used to have Lockheed and McDonnell Douglas as competitors in jets for airlines. BUT according to Neoliberals that's not efficient so they let Boeing swallow up their competitors.
Once you get monopolised control of a market there's no other way to increase profits but to cut costs or raise prices and ECONOMISTS are obsessed with cutting costs and management are obsessed with finding new costs to add to consumers. Economists and Business Managers brag about efficiency but have NO IDEA what efficiency actually is or what it means in any given industry.
All of the sorts of activities I am hearing here about costs and practices I can give similar examples in all of the industries I have worked. I can even use it to explain why we haven't been back to the moon for over 50 years.
The last lines say it all. We're in the "Post Radio Era". Radio was the heart of the shared experience of discovering new music. I have fond memories of NY's Scott Muni introducing new music and then running out to buy the album, so I can add it to my own collection.
Video killed the Radio Star!
@@shengyi1701 Digital killed the radio star.
@@shengyi1701The Buggles made an accurate foreshadowing of what was to come!
Yeah I miss the discovery journey the deejays of WNEW would take us on and WPLJ too, especially Vin Scelsa. The golden days of FM. They would talk about the band or the singer before/after playing the song and really gave you a musical education.
@@barbarayoung9376 At least we have folks like @rickbeato and @ProfessorofRock to explore the history of music.
So interesting to hear this. I remember the local rock radio changing in 97 almost overnight. It got noticeably worse. Same with music videos. You could tell corporate America took over.
And this is the way everything is going. Gross!
corpos can ruin anything
My band “blew up” around 2014. We were just 3 musicians in Brooklyn totally independent. But Sirius satellite radio had an Alt station that was pretty much free of the big corporate hegemony of FM radio. They played our single and listeners kept requesting it. It broke their top ten and stayed in their top 18 for like 9 months. FM Radio however would NOT touch it, because we weren’t signed. So we eventually signed and suddenly FM would play our music, as long as there was an expensive “radio campaign” behind the single. From the point of getting signed forward all we could do personally was go further into debt despite the music performing really well on radio (2 Billboard Alt Top 10 singles, many more hitting the charts).
I've heard from an indie band that Sirius is still the money maker.
Care to share your bands name and is it on spotify?
Stay Indie y'all
What’s your band called?
My band is The Klitz
I remember when, here in the UK, Radio 1 DJ Simon Mayo was the first to play Def Leppard's new single, Let's Get Rocked. As a DL fan I was really looking forward to hearing it and knew when it was going to get its first airing. Once the song had finished, Simon said, "I really liked that! I'm going to play it again!", and he did. Loved that!
Could never happen now.
I remember that also when I lived in Ireland then.
@@miketyler4536 Really? That's awesome! I'm pretty sure Joe Elliot was Simon's guest on that day, so he would have been chuffed.
Hey Rick, AMAZING discussion, thank you for recording this. Life-musician here, and was involved in the 2010's bringing streaming into the mainstream and attempting to re-invigorate the idea of working musicians who could actually make a living creating and performing new and innovative music like we enjoyed in the 60's-90's. To keep it simple, to get music to be cool and new again, we need an FCC mandate that carves out a part of the FM spectrum specifically for non-corporate, independent stations. For example, a new regulation requiring that each DMA must reserve 106.1-107.1 MHz for indie radio stations that are not allowed to be purchased by large corporations. Maybe it's 87.1-88.1. Who knows. The point being, by carving out spectrum that cannot be monetized by large corporate entities, and encourages radio stations to play local independent artists or other new music of their choosing, might foster a new "alternative rock" movement across all the DMA's and beyond.
Love the idea... But it's probably impossible, due to the graft and corruption of the federal government. Money talks, BS walks... Y'know..
I remember things changing for the worse in the mid 90's. We could really hear the difference on the local radio. This is exactly what many people in my generation suspected. Thank you.
I try to tell people that rock died in the early 90s when bands like Damn Yankees were paid millions to not make new music!
@@johnnyjohnson1326 Rock didn't die, it's just been in hiding. They don't play it on the radio.
@@johnnyjohnson1326rock is alive and well in my house
I was a DJ at a small Midwestern radio station in the late 90's/early 2000's. I can remember the DJ's looking at the horrible playlists and scratching their heads and going "what is this crap?"
The only way to get a new song by a new artists, or a great new song by a clasic artist was to sneak it in and write it down as a request. The program manager would call you up and say "what was THAT crap?". And you'd reply "That’s ROCK N ROLL, man!". You were risking your job just for playing something you thought music fans might actuality want to hear!
By the time I left radio to go back to college, everything was formatted and prerecorded in a computer. They were telling all the jocks what to say and having them read off of cue cards! It was really over.
Every time I hear the song "the last DJ", I shake my head and think about the death ride of rock radio......
That was when KROQ became Corp Radio and all the good cutting edge DJs left. Richard Blade was the one who pushed the envelope in LA. Rodney On the Rock and many others made that station.
No more Johnny Fever.
In 2001 I was returning to Denver, having lived elsewhere since 1994. As I drove into town I started looking for my favorite radio stations, and lit on KBCO, an independent Boulder station that had specialized in new and innovative artists who didn't get much airplay on more mainstream stations. I was surprised to hear them playing some bland pop tune; when a commercial break came up, the spot mentioned that KBCO was part of Clear Channel. It was like discovering that an old friend had become a collaborator with an evil occupation army.
KBCO introduced me to tons of great music back in the day! This breaks my heart.
@@kivahunter6959 Well now you have to hunt for it yourself. Spotify will attempt to learn your habits and there's a bunch of options to find similar stuff. It's not the same but it's quicker than going row by row in a record store until you find something good.
Clear Channel, now I Hate Radio, I mean "Heart" was the end of the end for variety on FM radio.. It's incredible because these assholes got greedy they decided its to hard to try to be creative and find creative acts, actual talent, to satisfy the public. So they bough t up everything, increased Payola on a grand scale, and gave a big FU to the public or anyone who wanted to make actual legitimate music!
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, when I still listen to the radio, there were two competing rock station in Appleton, Wisconsin. One was WAPL, and the other one I just remember as the Eagle. Often, they would play the same song at the same time, with just a few seconds between the two radio station. Now I understand.
Man, this was an episode that easily could have been an hour longer! What a great insight.
I think this info is highly valuable for kids who are in their teens and twenties now.
You're really creating a legacy here, Rick!
as a kid in my teens I agree
Fantastic insite to that side of the business. Wish there was more
@chip... There is. Just watch Congress.
Amazing story - I remember in the late 1970's when the folks at WKRP in Cincinnati were talking about the future of radio being the corporate overlords and the resulting death of rock. The writers saw this coming pretty early!
Some of the writers were in radio previously. Bill Dial, who wrote the Turkey drop episode, was one. They probably had input from other radio people as well.. such as production consultant DJs.
Yep. there was that one episode where Mrs. Carlson wanted to bring in that national program director to basically replace Andy. That was such a great show.
What’s even more sadly ironic about that is that Disney owns that show now through a series of corporate mergers that put its production company’s library of shows in their hands.
WKRP was so brilliant in many respects. I was in radio thru the show's run, and I could honestly tell people that the reality was even weirder than the show! Broadcast radio was a "crazy" way to make a living but a local radio station was really the only place in a small town where a creative performing person could find kindred souls to work with, and actually make a living...
@@rmcq1999 One of the best final lines from a TV show: "I swear to God, I thought turkeys could fly."
Awesome vid! I’ve said this for so long now. The industry always screamed about things they said were destroying their industry through theft (tape duplicating, minidiscs, Napster) when really… what destroyed their industry was their own greed. 😢
BA-Zingo! The record industry killed itself, along with a corrupt monopoly-enabling FCC.
Humans and their greed will eventually ruin everything. There is always a line crossed as somebody thinks they can push it just a little bit farther.
People establish governments to protect themselves from other people. It is a failure of government when their agencies get captured by corporate agendas that undermine their protective purpose, and instead promote corporate interest. That is the definition of corruption.@@christopherweise438
And that gd autotune 😮
We all miss it!
I fixed the tape deck on my vintage Mitsubishi stereo system. I thought since it was so "new" to my 13 yr old that it would pique his interest...
30 seconds into first song he was bored and walked off to go play video games. So sad.
This explains the death of alternative rock in 1996. I was hanging out in clubs in Portland/Seattle area starting in 2000. The amount of revolutionary music I've heard locally would blow people's minds. The number of bands that could have changed the music world that passed without any national notice is heartbreaking.
From some of the stuff I have read, alternative kind of killed itself. Too many drugs and not enough focus.
@@cvr527But there have been other bands and scenes with new sounds that could have been the next Nirvana, Tool, or Primus but there was zero radio play for new bands with new sounds so they never get the chance to reach the national audience like NIN and Janes Addiction did. The fact that radio stopped taking chances on new musical ideas is what killed alternative rock.
@@cvr527they oversaturated the “alternative” scene with all these poser bands that “looked” the part but sounded the exact same. Than the industry went back to the bubble gum boy band crap and the gangsta rap thing post 2pac……
@@americanbadass88 Sure, but the point made in the video is that that happened because there were a small group of corporate radio guys that took over everything. When they got control all the unique stuff just dried up. We didn't hear Don Cabellero or Steve Albini's bands because the squares took over. So we got cheap knock off copies of Nirvana for 10 years ...
@@Napalm6b Agreed. I saw two Bands and one Solo Artist make their way to the national stage from Mid-Michigan in the early and mid-nineties before The Telecommunications Act shut that down, and I'm sure others can remember THEIR scenes sprouting bands that stormed the nation before THAT Law.
I’m 72 and my favorite memories of my youth are of the Southern California music scene. Small venues, underground radio (where we would find stations broadcasting in small shopping centers where we could stand outside the storefront windows and watch the DJ as we listened to bands that would never be heard today).
It’s almost impossible for many people to believe just how alive the music world was then. Playing the music from that time only hints at what we experienced.
I’m hopeful by what I hear from the independent scene that’s rising now. Perhaps we can break free of the clear channel model of manipulation and control of music. I still believe in what music can mean when the artist is in control of their art. The people will vote by what their ears tell them.
Thank you for another fine conversation about what has shaped so many lives.
AMEN, I grew up in So Cal back in the day. K-earth. KCBQ, KGB. KROQ etc. I knew Shotgun Gun Tom Kelly, Wolfman Jack back in the day, they made SO Cal Radio!
Remember when Supertramp was "underground"?
My dude, small venues, and underground radio STILL EXISTS. You're just out of the loop.
I grew up in So Cal at the same time and remember how great the music scene was and how great the radio was, KLOS, KMET, KROQ, KNAC.
Those days are unfortunately over. For good. We are now in the age of AI, and nothing will ever be the same again.
Music will very soon (within a few years even) be exhausted; Every possible veriation of musical song will have been created, either by a person or by AI. There won't be anything left to create that won't already have been created.
I realize that sounds impossible, but it is coming before the end of the 2020s.
I worked at Clear Channel and Cox Media Group in the mid to late 90’s and watched the radio business get destroyed first hand. From voice tracking, to set liners you were forced to read, to playing the newest “so called” hits ever 90 minutes it was painful to be a part of and watch happen. All personality was just thrown out the window. Just do what the computer says to do. America, you can thank Bob Neil for a lot of that mess. I bet he ruined a lot of radio stations in Atlanta as well didn’t he Rick? Format consultants, gotta love ‘em!
Not finding the Bob Neil you're referring to.
A lot of the radio stations over here in the UK, may have different names but they all sound the same. And here's the reason: they're all owned by one company called Global Radio. It's not a new thing, it's been happening for years. I do listen to the radio but that's at work, I never listen at home like I used to.
I was waiting for this video for such a long time because I had always wondered how the music business really declined
I worked in radio from the late 80s until about 5 years ago when my job was eliminated...nationwide! I remember the days when one local station could break an artist, because I worked for one! We got a lot of money thrown at us from labels and indie promoters because even though it was a medium market, if your record was a hit on our station it was almost guaranteed to go national. That's all gone now.
"...someone still loves you!" - Freddie Mercury
Payola.
I've often wondered how much exactly a top plugger for say Sire records, or CBS records lays out annually. I gather their is a large amount of gratuities cash, merchandise, working girls, powder etc
Yes, and is know as payola - aka bribery.
it's not entirely gone in a way, the local radio station broke out oliver anthony. they heard about him, sent some recording people to him and posted it on their youtube channel.
Too much power for the monopolists and market consolidators to handle. The repeal of the media ownership rules at the FCC was probably one of the most destructive things that happened in 1996. Pharma was deregulated in 1996 and the Sacklers and their Purdue Pharma started their opioid cartel with help from Congress, after Congress was paid off. Now, 5 huge media monopolies run 99% of our media. You see how the media drives public opinion, controls the narrative, creates fear, and controls what people think and do. Many Americans fall victim to the destructive media narrative of people like Steve Bannon and Alex Jones. The satellite radio stations are riddled with political fear mongering. So people are paying for their own indoctrination. Truck drivers are a great example. They are probably the most hate mongered group in the nation. I can tell that the big satellite radio station monopolies are forcing the old AM/FM stations out of business. Eventually it will all be pay radio. Sad Sad. Not a word about it anywhere. Why? Because all of media belongs to a larger media monopoly. You should check out Nexstar Media Group. They run the destructive narrative of the ACU/CPAC political racketeers. They push private prisons, privatization of public schools very efficiently in several states. They do this by collaborating with fully funded ACU/CPAC elected state official people. People like Governors Noem, Abbott, Huckabee-Sanders, and DeSantis.
Thank you Rick that was a great conversation between you and Jim… As a former manager of A&R for CBS records on the West Coast, everything these guys said is true, ladies and gentlemen… The thing they left out though, is the drugs during the 80/90s in the music business… It was prevalent. It drove the industry and it came crashing down around a lot of people… Think of all the great artists we lost From the 80s and 90s… Anyway, keep up the great work love what you do Rick!!!!❤️🎸🎼
Read Geezer Butler’s new Biography- stunning the amount of coke! Same with Glenn Hughes’ biography
Yep sure was. People joked about it where I worked as an assistant engineer. Our studio had a “drug guy”, a runner (they ran errands) who could get artists whatever they wanted.
At first I was thinking, dang this is 25 minutes. Now I'm begging for more. I support a more detailed series on the topic if you two would we be willing to do it. Super interesting and enlightening - thank you for all you do.
yea same here, I wouldnt have minded even an hour or so of them discussing this, I would listen to the whole thing
25 minutes is a long video for you? When i saw the video title, i thought it wasn't nearly enough time for the topic. It wasn't.
I have watched a few of your videos.
I played guitar for over a decade in the eighties. A couple friends and I formed a band. A fairly large gathering would come to hear us.
I ended up pawning my guitar and equipment to help support my new family. I have always regretted that decision, but hindsight is worthless.
I was never able to buy another guitar.
I really enjoy your channel. Just subscribed!
I was an on-air jock from the mid 80s until I finally quit in 2000, and I watched this wonderful medium turn from magical to mechanical. Cumuluses huge takeover in the mid-90s turned all the stations into cookie cutter outfits where station managers and thus their lowlife DJs (as they saw us) were slaves to the most lame playlists you could imagine. And came to be all about saving money and not making it. As for the subpar music side of things, the record industry forced formulaic sounding, non-inspiring pablum puke down our listeners' throats. If industry heads new how much different listener tastes can be from market to market even within the same radio format / genre, they surely didn't give two craps about it. It didn't fit the short-sighted blueprint. And mindless local radio managers just followed along like good corporate sheep who would do anything to hold on to their $30,000 a year jobs.
don't forget the ad's. all those millions of ad's $'s just waiting to be enticed by the radio sales team.
Fk the music, just get the $'s
It's about and always was about social engineering buddy. They do it in the schools too
Some of the same people who would complain about this will get angry if you point out capitalism’s role in this outcome.
@@Ues2DCbut if thats the system then you or we need to develop consistent methods of implementing capitalism in fairer and better ways. Guitar is a good analogy because it too has limitations but within those limitations are so many possibilities. To me, many things are split off to be in the public domain and management of that public domain, the work of government needs much more robust integration with the people. When you erode that connection then that "democracy" becomes simply tyranny.
Corporations are inherently destructive of creativity. They exist only to make money… they are soulless…😢
Please, more conversations like these on how the music industry really works!! Eye-opening. Thank you!!
Frank Zappa nailed this trend in his brief clip about what went wrong with the music "industry". So sad. A local band used to be able to get a demo tape to a station and they would play it!! People would call the radio stations and request those songs and it would take off from there. So friggin ORGANIC!! The saddest thing is, those days will never come back. :(
Web3 fixes this
"So friggin ORGANIC!!"
And the antonym of _organic_ is _corporate_ !
Didn't he also say that all the artistic freedom and experimentation occured when the cigar chomping executive "suits" were in charge of the record companies, and it all went belly up when the young hip guys took over?
@@SuperNevileYep, there's a vid of Zappa where he says that. The suits were willing to take a risk to make some money. The hipsters weren't, because of their own prejudiced tastes.
I love how I hear a commercial for the iHeartRadio music festival on a radio station that plays absolutely none of the artists mentioned in the ad for the music festival
You both could not have articulated this any better. This is an incredibly transparent documentary of what the radio/music industry was and has turned into. A "must watch" for all artists. Thank you for this!
SO ACCURATE. I remember all of this, and I wish there was someone to call it out at the time. People say Hip Hop killed rock music, but the Rock Industrial Complex did that all by itself.
@JB_Eckl……..I’m wondering whether or HOW complicit an East Coast Radio DJ like Howard Stern was in all of this?! Please, anyone, enlighten me!r
Hip hop most certainly didn't kill rock, they lived in harmony and collaborated quite a bit in the 90s
The fact that you only had a handful or producers and mixers really explains why we're all saying "all these song sound the same" when we turn on the radio!.... They really do! Really insightful video here.... I just had no idea this was going on for all of these years... Thank you
Rick!
Now days i dont know if its so much the same producers than it is just everyone doing copycat work using popular formulas running things through the same plugins etc.
As a musician, I've always been amazed at how bad the average persons ears are. Hearing comments about how "this song sounds exactly like that song', when the songs sounded entirely differently were not uncommon to come across from "average listeners" in my experience.
No matter how much you might point out the different instrumentation between the songs, the different chord progressions, the different melody, the different chorus, etc. they couldn't hear it, and in their opinion that the songs sounded "the same" for no other reason than because their ears were so undeveloped, that they simply could not hear what was obviously very different to someone who's ears were more "developed" (which refers to the part of the brain that is used to focus and concentrate upon the sound coming in through the ears, who are able to hear the distinctions in tone and timbre, who are able to hear the different instruments as distinct individual sounds throughout the frequency spectrum, etc.).
One example that comes to mind was people claiming Ritchie Blackmore's "Catch the Rainbow" was the same as Hendrix's "Little Wing". They would be willing to get into arguments, insisting they were the same song, and how Blackmore had "ripped off" Jimi. The similarity in tempo, and instrumentation alone was enough to make them associate one song to another in their mind, and to claim they were, essentially, the "same song", despite that not being the case at all.
It has never been unusual for me to have someone listen to a song they think they know well and point out certain parts, asking them to listen to certain words repeated in the background or the part a certain instrument plays, and have their eyes open wide and tell me "I've never heard that before". This is quite common, simply because the ears of an average person are undeveloped, and they've never focused their attention on listening for certain sounds or keeping the music in the forefront of their minds as someone who has disciplined themselves to practice, listen to, and study music such as when learning an instrument or learning the art of mixing music on a multi-track recorder has done.
So, I stopped putting any credence in people claiming "all these songs sound the same" a long time ago, since everyone I've ever heard make that claim couldn't tell the difference between a beautiful violin soloist or an Appalachian fiddler; or tell you how many instruments were actually on any given recording, whether there are 3 or 7 instruments present, since they have no ability to pick them out.
It's quite doubtful that Rick's explanation of all of the "cross-collateralization" of music business expenses coming out of advances made upon the artists royalties explains so many people not being able to hear quite distinctive differences between bands and songs.
Even the "production qualities" of the final product became known as "
@@GlennMarshallRocks that’s very long.
Yep!! ...and this was why I stopped listening to the radio and revisited all my albums, tapes😱 and CDs... And added to my collection by purchasing CDs from bands I liked at gigs 💪👍
@@GlennMarshallRocksCatch the Rainbow does sound like Little Wings in the same way as the movie scene where Mozart improves Salieri's music by adding flourish and extra notes.
There's a lot of truth to what you guys talked about. For me, I, for the most part, stopped listening to radio in the late 1990's. It was so frustrating switching from one station to the next trying to find something that didn't sound the same. Your conversation shed some light on why things sounded the same. I started burning CD's with the songs I liked to hear and later, as technology advanced, made my own play lists on a thumb drive or my phone. Anyway, great post and thank you both for the info.
1968 Simon & Garfunkel's 'Bookends' album came out. We had just gotten a new record player, from Sears I think, where the turntable would fold down and the speakers detached so you could place them strategically in the living room. My two older sisters and me, plus a couple friends cut the shrink wrap on the new record, placed it on the turntable and listened to both sides, basking in the sound and creativity. It's almost hard to write this. What a rich and satisfying experience that was.
I remember that...
I can't tell you how much I cherish listening to an entire album start to finish and anticipating that next song and knowing that next song and just knowing that the whole record was a complete work of art, it was a piece of creativity that was kind of Halo dropped into your life at a certain point
.. making records to sell off the singles really really decrease the quality of a whole record
@@Say_When ...and now lots of new artists produce nothing but one-off singles to get their .00001 cents per play on Spotify. Jesus wept.
I had the same experience playing Revolver for the first time. I still remember manually placing the stylus of my desktop record player on the record and hearing that weirdly wonderful count-in to "Taxman." I was twelve and it was a transformative experience. I feel sorry for the generations who have no idea what I'm talking about.
Kids today have no idea what it's like everyone in your school anticipating a new album. That experience was incredible
I’m Ricks age. I miss it too. When someone like Led Zeppelin releases a new album, the entire world was excited. I think the greatest measure of that era is that the songs from that era are still being listened to by young and old alike. I don’t see any artist today that I think will be getting air time in 2075.
The problem with music right now is there is nothing very original happening. I'm not suggesting there isn't anything good getting released but nothing really original. The 50's to the 80’s was the era for rock, from then on rock music has mostly been a variation of what has been done before. A major problem for popular music in my opinion is nothing new has happened in well over 20 years. Hip hop is still popular but there's nothing original coming out either & the genre is over 40yrs old. It's as if popular music has become stuck in time, nothing groundbreaking is happening.
Plenty of artists will
@@tsurek Give us some names
@@tsurek No, they won't. Have you been listening? The industry will just make up a new "recording artist" that recycles the same sounds you're thinking of, and no one at all will remember the originals.
I think after around 2000 or so, almost no bands/artists have had the kind of wide cross-genre breakthroughs that were a typical thing in the seventies and eighties: a band gaining attention and interest for their music far outside of the particular genre they are in. Pink Floyd, Steely Dan, Prince, The Who, Bob Marley, Talking Heads, Pearl Jam are all examples of that, and so are many soul stars (Aretha Franklin, Isaac Hayes, Rod Stewart, Lauryn Hill etc). Radiohead were among the last bands to achieve that, and a musically innovative band too, like the rest I cited - during the last twenty years almost no new acts have managed to do it, and this is a sign of a more and more shut-in music business.
This maybe the most important video you have ever made. We need to get the music business back into the hands of the people who really want to help artists and share music with everyone.
😂😂😂 keep dreaming that Fantasy
@@joco2826 Why so negative?
@@jmsjms296 facts
I personally appreciate people like Rick who are original and courageous thinkers.
It’s so much worse than what’s being talked about here. This is a great video! I hope it becomes a series. He’s 100% right about the Telecommunications Act. It’s lead to way too much leverage for corporations and has destroyed our culture. Obviously the business side of things needs to happen, but they should not be in control of our culture. Today’s is the result of not just the balance being tipped, but completely thrown out and replaced by the corporations.
So thx a lot for that discussion - as a former studio Owner, Sound Engineer/Mixer, Producer and Musician somehow - and my Ex wife was a radio promotor - here down in germany - i really like that - thats so true - and I am lucky that Ive sold my studio way back in the early 90ties - and stopped music at all - ´til 2014 when Ive started again - makin music, build a little studio - and will go on til the end - take care and thx
Imagine the music we have been robbed of because of this. I was becoming a young adult by the time Napster came out. I'm also one of those people who couldn't hum a tune from Taylor Swift even though her face is everywhere.
I COMPLETELY agree with you on Taylor Swift. Her face is everywhere but are her songs noteworthy (no pun intended)? Bought an album of hers recently but couldn't get through it feeling my IQ was going down. Love here personally Roxette, Depeche Mode, A-Ha, ABBA, The Beatles, Queen, etc. These are bands that produced memorable melodies and lyrics with raw musical talent.
This episode by Rick Beato and Jim Barber delves deep into the complexities that contributed to the decline of rock music. It's eye-opening to understand the impact of policy, corruption, and greed on such a beloved genre. Their insights are invaluable for anyone passionate about music history. Great work shedding light on this important topic!
I like listening to these guys because while other younger UA-camrs are stingy with one tip per video, these veterans are giving us so much valuable info. Current state of reality.
Yes, these guys have obviously been around, they have long experience and have seen the changes in the industry and media from the inside. Plus, they don't need to kow-tow to the industry, to airbrush things. I feel the same way about much of pop/fashion culture journalism over the last twenty years, it's often sycophantic and playing down to what is accepted to be hip or big: as a young journalist these days, in the MSM, you don't slag an artist who is doing great commercially (Madonna, Rihanna, Jay-Z etc).
Music journalism used to be a great deal more intelligent and inspiring than it's become since around 2005.
Perhaps they're not "stingy" but specialized in a particular "tip" or set of "tips" and spend the video to give detail on a specific one with pros and cons; as well as examples of how, when, where, who and why to use it/use it with or not.
What a weird comment
Truth! I'm 61 and witnessed this first hand. Thank you for making this video. I remember when the "Suits" started showing up at the recording studio. We knew something was up and boy were we right. One day you're recording music and the next day you're recording audio books and commercials and the day after that you're looking for a job. OK, it didn't happen that fast, but it was pretty quick. This is what turned the music industry into a bunch of cookie cutter bands and artists producing generic rubbish. Don't get me wrong, the creative, innovative and talented folks are still out there. You just need to know where to look and it's not on the radio stations. This is why I love the local music scenes. I encourage folks to treat themselves and go see some local bands.
Is it possible that the industry only promoted lousy heavy metal bands and ignored the good ones in order to trick the public into thinking heavy metal in general sucks, based on the crappy bands that were given exposure?
Former major market corporate radio music director and talent. Can vouch for everything discussed here. Keep up the great work, Rick! Love your channel.
Radio back in the 80s taping my own music on a Kmart 4 pack of cassettes, lots of fun!
I just wanted to let you know that you inspired me in this video. You were discussing the days of sitting around and listening to records with your friends. I play in a couple local bands and the scene here has died. No place to play and only a handful of bands. I decided to host a Local Band CD Listening party every month. 2 hours 2 bands. They bring their CD and play it for the rest of the group and discuss recording, song meanings etc. The first one is coming up in 2 weeks and i already have over 20 people talking about it. Hopefully this can help revive the music scene here in Canton OH. Very informative video btw!
It's so awesome what you're doing. Kudos!!
Well done. In the Bay Area, Live 105 [KITS] has returned, a station long known for giving the first break to bands that went national. Aaron Axelsen features local new bands every Sunday night 8-10 PM.
That's awesome. Keep pushing
Great idea!
Bad luck if people don't like the record...
I would also like to mention how this change to corporate radio changed the Emergency Broadcast System, and has lead to several incidents where small and medium size towns have gotten hurt by not having local radio information about things like derailments, toxic chemical leaks. There were several pieces of legislation in the 90’s that have had devastating effects on the film, radio, music and TV industry because of greed, and many people got hurt
Not need for paying investigative reporters, just get all the news "that matters" off the Internet with ai.
Sure a lot of things will be missed, but the corporation will still make more money & that's what matters.
Yes! There is no local news when something of vital importance occurs. It's very scary, especially with the increase i n wildfires and floods here. There's also no indepth reporting nor follow-up to things that are happening or happened. The "local news" is a joke.
Good discussion! I completely quit listening to commercial radio about 40 years ago, mainly because of the annoying ads, but also because of music being played. Instead, I switched to community radio where I quickly became familiar with so much music that was far more interesting, diverse, new, etc. Nowadays I listen to strictly internet stations, streaming community stations, and even hundreds of airchecks from my favorite station from back in the day. If a band wants to get known, community stations and internet stations seem the way to go. Forget corporate radio, leave them in the dustbin of history. And for what it's worth, I've never knowingly heard a single note of Taylor Swift either.
Taylor who ?
I too, have never knowingly experienced a Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Katy Perry, and the list goes on, song. Congrats!
How 'bout you make a list of these non-commercial stations/streams. I'm starvin'.
He's so right!! I myself use to go around the world to different Record shops & Concerts! I'm 55 and still love collecting LPs. But I do still use online sites to find new bands, then I'll go out and by the full album!
Great video Rick! That’s exactly what happened to my band around 95-96. We got approached by A&R people that loved us but wanted to see if we could sound more like Stone Temple Pilots or Nirvana. We were more of the Cheap Trick sounding type band
“As we celebrate mediocrity all the boys upstairs want to see / How much you'll pay for what you used to get for free”
- Tom Petty, “The Last DJ”
Stuck in my head all day after watching this. Thank you both for the fascinating lesson.
Love that song
The Last DJ was inspired by long time LA maverick DJ Jim Ladd who unfortunately past just before the holidays this year.
I know what I'm willing to pay for what I used to get for free, which is why I have satellite radio. There I listen to the Spectrum (plays new rock records that can't get airplay on the few rock radio stations left), Deep Tracks (plays obscure songs from bands, plays obscure bands), the Beatles Channel (not just the Beatles but 1950s-early 1960s hits that inspired the Beatles but are never played on radio anymore), and Classic Vinyl (all your favorite classic-rock tunes without the commercials). Sat is a necessity now; terrestrial radio is all rap, hair-band rock, and electronic pop.
I don't pay for any music and listen to whatever I want, this is the beauty of UA-cam. The downside is that I don't know one group that has made a record in the past 10 years. When I accidentally turn on the radio my ears are assaulted by the awful sounds I tend to hear
Deep tracks was DJ Jim Ladd’s last gig before he recently joined the great gig in the sky.
I started off at rock radio in 1986. Even then the DJ couldn't randomly just play a song or even a request by a listener. The management would lose their minds. That was also when we started seeing the out of town consultants come in. The kiss of death right there I'll tell you.
Man, I do feel for you. I was hitting the radio market in 86 after four years of constructive freedom.
Anytime a "consultant" comes in, the business will be broke in a year.
They do this everywhere they go
Yup by the 80s it was starting to be replaced by computers. The 50-70s AM radio giants like WABC, WLS, KHJ were the golden years.
We had a room full of music and would pull music based on a rotation spanning about 20 years. The choice was ours within that, even then I felt free to play something that caught my attention. Left radio for good within a year of computer takeover. It was the coolest job, but once it changed I knew I could make more money “not having fun” elsewhere. Still glad I was there when I was. The artists that sell their song rites for large sums are perhaps being wise?
Bravo Rick for yet another peel-back straight talk about corrupt business practices and what killed the excitement of bands locking in to create masters in studios. Here’s another sad thing. The manipulation of satellite radio by execs. killing station programming to include regular shows that bled music talk, booked guests, artists, music professionals, DJ’s, because the share didn’t meet the numbers for advertising. Shout out to Volume channel on Sirius that featured Mark Goodman, Nik Carter, Lori Majuski, Alan Light & best producers ever, all dissecting music genres, times & artists everyday. Channel flushed. And that is subscription radio programming!
I live in a tiny town named Wauseon, Ohio and we are blessed to still have a locally owned, personally programmed radio station, 96.1 WMTR. When I listen to it, it's like being back in the 70s or 80s. There's NO rotation, heavy or light, and the music is awesome. With "progress" comes the destruction of individuality.
It was bad for decades before that, Alan Freid and the whole payola scandal. They just found newer and newer ways to screw musicians. This is still super informative and relevant. Thank you Rick
Before 1996 you could only own 20 FM stations... iheart radio owns almost 1000 today and then there's Cumulus and a few others which own most of the rest. And due to decades of consolidation the "Big Three" record companies Sony, Universal and Warner control as much as 80% of the market now. There may have been some types of payola going on back in the day but most stations before 1996
were independently owned and operated. And they were programmed locally by in house program directors. I think most people who grew up listening to rock radio in America would say there was a noticable decline in variety and quality on rock radio right around the turn of the century...
Yes while that may be true, this chat was about the extreme shift in 1996 and the huge changes to the whole industry that followed.
I had no idea the depth of corruption the record companies went; I now know why rock-n-roll died. I like to see a part 2 of this discussion!! Come on Rick 🙂
Living near another country offered the opportunity to hear music you wouldn't normally get in other US cities. In Buffalo, NY we could listen to stations out of Toronto and Niagara Falls Canada that played music you generally didn't hear in the rest of the US. Sure you heard the bigger bands like Rush, Brian Adams, and Loverboy but you also heard Larry Gowan, Kim Mitchell, The Northern Pikes, Platinum Blond, and Honeymoon Suite. When I met my wife (from Virginia) she had never heard of half the bands in my CD collection.
I can vouch for the fact that the southern US got the shaft musically. My pen pals in NJ got all the new bands 6 months before we ever heard them on the radio. They kept telling me about a band called Def Leppard. I called a radio station to request they play them, but they said they'd never heard of them! Right... One pen pal was good enough to make a mix tape for me!
I grew up in the time that people would come over and see your record collection and ask you to play them something you really liked. We sought out music from people whose opinion we admired and sometimes you would turn out to be the influencer ( to use a present day term). There were also radio stations that were cool because they played albums that you wanted to go out and buy. For people who grew up with great music, be happy that you got to experience that. We may bemoan the state of music and radio now, but we can remember the good times (and pull out our old albums and listen again).
Not only that, but many Album Oriented Rock stations would play an album every night, which everyone at home could record for themselves on tape!
And people would actually sit down and listen to the full album after it was recommended. I liked having a tangible piece from the artist and the experience of the music. I loved reading the stuff they put inside cassettes and CDs, the photos and lyrics - it was incredible. I'm sad about not having that these days and it is so unfortunate that the this and next gen will never experience it.
On the other side, we were still fed what the radio stations played to a large extent and we didn't have the diversity in music that exists today because of the internet. Basically anyone can make any kind of music and make it available to everyone around the world.
@@JamesG1126How could you have possibly listened to every single piece of music that exists on the internet?
@@JamesG1126and that's where I'd ask for stats. There's great music out there, if you go look for it. Some of the most innovative things have been happening in the underground metal scene lately. The thing we miss is not great music, it's the human element in the music. We miss what music stood for, a universal human experience. You are correct, 95% of popular music is crap. So that experience is...bye-bye. We miss that, we need that back. How, we as a race must find a way. Music has always been an important social force. We can't let corporates destroy millenias of connection for their profit
I worked as DJ at two different small stations in Illinois - and a BIG part of the job was choosing what music we wanted to play for our shift. It was all driven by a passion for the music and making our listeners love the music. I did a stint at a recording studio, played in a few bands (We all thought we would get discovered and be ROCK stars), but then it just evaporated.
It's quite sad to think how disconnected we've become from these experiences
This explains why I stopped listening to the radio in the mid-nineties, I did notice everything become sterile but has no idea why,
I'm thinking back now .... I was busy doing other things my parents were really ill. OK I take back what i wrote back earlier it was mid-90s now that I pin down the chronology. ok you guys nailed it.
A perfect storm... telecommunications act nukes local flavor [which really is necessary for a music scene of any flavor], massively top heavy recording industry [too big to succeed] and the consolidation of certain non-band operators and the spark was lost.
Same here...
In the mid 90s, almost all of the music sucked or sounded the same!
Spot on! Boring, boring, boring..... at that point.
country music has the same problem, if it comes from Nashville, I'm out
This was an excellent conversation. Lot's of parallels to the film industry.
Excellent video Rick. Not trying to brag but…, I’m a very good musician. It used to upset me that I never “made it” in the industry. However, when I hear videos like this one, I feel so fortunate to have been spared from the dark corrupt fleecing side of it.
Keep going, Robert! :)
It's as good a time as any to take the DIY approach (maybe 'better than ever.') Of course, there will be 'cross training' involved, if you want to avoid the sheep-shears...
I was just watching The Warning’s TedX talk where they talked about all the different people who wanted to sign them as long as they changed to be more marketable. They said, “This isn’t just business for us. This is our art.” Instead of signing away their musical futures, they leaned heavily into social media and Patreon, and were able to support themselves enough to independently produce an EP and two albums, and to develop a loyal fan base. By the time they signed, they were able to negotiate to retain their artistic freedom. This is probably not an option for most bands, but I give them and their management credit for understanding how to leverage their social media.
I'm definitely calling bullsh*t on that one. They were marketable from the get-go simply by virtue of being "girls playing rock." When they were kids it was cute, as young women they're even more marketable for certain audiences. Don't get me wrong, they are great musicians and performers and it is quite commendable what they've done, but they don't have to pretend their road to success was difficult when in fact it wasn't, especially considering their parents were wealthy enough to support their music career and they had, at least in Mexico, industry connections prior to starting their band.
System of a Down is a good example, Serj quickly became the bands manager and producer after their time with Rick Rubin. After that Shavo became a regular writer and director for their music videos and they all manage themselves. A good early example of this band takeover.
Kudos for them choosing rock instead of radio pop though.
Thank you so much Rick for covering this important topic... I will also add that if music listeners are not willing to pay for the music they listen to... if labels can't sell albums... the artists no longer get advances or tour support. Some may disagree but streaming is a very real factor in why rock (album-oriented genre) is suffering so badly in the 21st century. Streaming destroyed the industry.
It’s just too bad that they are awful
I never allowed any control or charging of any equipment when I did recording. In fact, Max Norman produced our first EP at his studio pro bono with the agreement that when a deal is secured, we would use him and pay him accordingly and fairly for the major label release. We were never offered anything that was beneficial for the band though Ross Robinson was interested in us and Nickelback. He chose the latter and based on their success, it was a good call. We ended up creating our own label to release our full length. Thought I would share since they discussed how bands would amass huge debts with bad business decisions.
If you don’t mind me asking, what was the name of your band? (I used to really like Ross Robinson’s production, especially on the early Korn and Limp Bizkit albums and the Sepultura “Roots” album).
@@Genethagenius Choking Ghost... We had shared bills with Incubus, Fight, No Doubt, Static-X, Hoobastank, Digital Underground, Fishbone, Nazareth, SOAD, Dio, King's X etc... the live scene in LA 95-2005 was loaded and ended up with some international heavyweights who continue to sell loads of tickets all over the world.
Thank you for using your platform, Rick, to share what many of us have witnessed and experienced on our own over the years. It's important for folks like me to know we're not alone in our thoughts and beliefs and to have people like you who have the tools to show, provide evidence, that what we believe to be is quite true. We are being herded into the post humanist world and we need strong voices like your to sound the alarm.
I grew up in the late '60s and '70s in the Boston area, and every free minute was spent listening to the radio and following rock, including a bunch of amazing local bands, some of whom made it big. I worked at a couple of college radio stations while in school, and the whole scene was such a blast. Your great conversation helped me to understand how we could go from that exciting, dynamic and creative time to the miserable era we're in now. The "free market" is killing everything good in every area of society because it can all be manipulated to empower a handful of greedy assholes at the expense of everyone else. I'm so incredibly grateful to have lived through the '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s and feel bad for the youth of today who will never know the joy and wild times they missed. The fact we weren't spending every moment recording and posting everything means we're left with only our memories but it also means there's no incriminating evidence!
I truly miss WBCN and WFNX
It's all true what you say, but nowadays there is an internet and social media, so many talented musicians can break up through it.
To mj8631, you answered your own question about the "free market." The corp.s have consolidated the business, reduced costs and (it appears to me) treated musicians, their creativity and their music as conveyor belts packaging cans of beans.
The period of time in the '60s and '70s you describe, and I miss too, were closer to an actual "free market' than the corporate speak we have today.
Ironically, my last professional gig in the music business was on a Peter Wolf record in the mid-90s. He gave me an honest take on where the industry was heading, and it convinced me to walk away. I have 1000 regrets, but this isn't one of them.
TLDR; Peter World turned me into a software engineer. 🙃
@@kennydonahue2781 Sadly we will never hear anything like that again. But wasn't it great?
I was taught in recording school, by my teachers, to bring my own outboard gear to a tracking or mixing session so I could rent the gear back to myself and make more money. So funny that you mention this whole thing.
It‘s the most common sign of greed and model used by greedy people.
@@GiancarloBenzina the most?
The movie business was destroyed as well .
What??? You mean you don’t get excited when you find out that Fast & The Furious 14 is going to be released this summer?
lol let’s just puke up an idea that’s already been done? Yeah lower the risk. Maybe a superhero film again? Oh yeah 😅😂
@@JackTalkThai_411 Or underpants over spandex nr 117? I haven't been to the cinema in 15 years. I can't afford it and I wouldn't know what to watch. Well once I was invited for Star Wars by Mickey Mouse and it was... it was a movie.
Yea of the bald type was corrupt but toothless was pretty fair
Yes!
Thank you for this video. I had the misfortune of trying to break into music in the 1990s, and had no idea of what I was trying to do. Unfortunately, the book my manager and producer were using to learn the industry was at least a decade older. I ended up burned out on writing and performing. This video explained a lot of what we were bumping into at the time, and I appreciate the education.
Very early in my music career I heard a saying…..”The music biz is full of crooks, thieves, scammers, con artists and liars, not to mention some bad people too”. I never forgot that, and as such I have been able to still make a living for many decades in music. I have worked with some of those big name bands that you mentioned who actually “made it”, but I chose to not pursue fame and fortune. Instead, I concentrate on writing, recording and performing on my terms. No, I haven’t made millions of $$, most people have no idea who I am, but my mortgage was paid off years ago, I own my own small studio, I perform often, and usually get to come home most nights. Most important, after 60 years (yeah, I started performing very young!) I still love what I do, and have no plans to retire……ever! Still sell CD’s too, believe it or not! Not as many as I used to, but it didn’t cost much to record them either. And I get all the profit!
My late father would say "The entertainment business is full of crooks and liars; the music business is even WORSE!"
That sounds a lot like a popular quote, usually attributed to Hunter Thompson -- "The Music Business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."
Agree and I found out early that no matter how much you love music, the music business has no love for you.
Greg, well done Mr. You did it well and smart. I admire how things worked out for you because you were switched on.
I think the big corporate interests are getting 'hoisted by their own petard' since outlets like YT are available to all aspiring musicians to get their names out there. The discerning listener will ignore the pop cult's flavor of the week. It seems like this is happening in slow motion due to the sheer mass of the industry megaliths, but the outcome is inevitable. Your example is one for future generations to follow.
As an ordinary music fan from the 80’s, I did notice this incestuous trend in the music industry. I didn’t have the back story or an understanding of the causes and intricacies (which is very interesting to finally learn about, thank you) but I noticed how homogenous not just the music had become, but the whole radio landscape. I stopped listening to the radio and stuck to music I loved.
That is what I love so much about the music landscape now, no corporate radio station hand feeding me music I don’t even like. I love exploring the abundant and colorful tapestry of music organically, sharing new finds with friends, family and coworkers… and them reciprocating.
What pisses me off the most is when I find some incredible band from back in the late 90’s/2000’s that I never heard of. How much great music did I miss out on because of that system? Grrrr.
I’m making up for lost time now… finding both old and new music, the sky is the limit.
But at least you are actively looking for music, that is great! Because i am so tired of hearing how there are no good bands/no good music any more, but they just listen to the radio or watch TV, you know? I can't tell you how much that bothers me, not only because i am a musician, but also a live sound guy and have worked with and for hundreds and hundreds of incredibly creative and good musicians, but they played in front of 5 to 50 people. Usually the very best concerts happened in front of a handful of people, including me and the bar staff =(
Loved reading your comment!
Radio has become a dead zone of the same 200 songs.
Yes! I was born in 75 and I'm still scouring spotify for new music
So glad I found this! For years I just blamed it all on MTV.
Mtv was bought in the late 80s and turned to crap
I am a huge radio fan. I felt all this happening during the 90s/2000s. It was so confusing/infuriating when all this was happening. I wondered about this for 25 years. Thank you for validation what we all felt as radio fans