I never noticed this before because I usually watch interviews rather than just listening, but if you close your eyes his way of speaking kind of sounds like Anthony Jeselnik at some points
These are the good JRE episodes. No politics, just the influential people for our culture. Listening to Rubin describe how he chose Aerosmith's break-beat bc it was no different than hip-hop shows how calculated he was in winning audiences by opening minds.
He’s one of the most estimated men in music, by far. He has plenty of popularity and plenty of artists clamber to work with him. I get your point, but it’s just wrong haha
@depression jones. ah, yeah i forgot about working with Kanye too. say what you want about him, but Kanye is a creative genius. i love everything he's done since Graduation. MBDTF and Yeezus are my favorite albums.
This is the ONE famous person I would love to talk to before I die! The stories this man has in his brain! A TRUE LEGEND!!! Thanks for this interview Joe!
Oh mane.....I'm 35...a huge Hop-Hop head since I was a kid already. But when I heard Bring the noise ond the Tony Hawk games as a teenager, even when this song was already more than 10 years old, it sparked my love for Punkrock & Metal also. I find it so funny when I still meet some fans from one of these genres who have a solid hate for the other one
@@mucktown same here, im almost 45, if it sounds good and you have a good feeling i dont care what kind of music it is, all genres has its good songs;)
Not only did 'Walk This Way' bring Hip-Hop into the mainstream, it simultaneously revitalized Aerosmith's career by releasing a Hip-Hop version of a hit that they already had more than a decade earlier.
Agreed. None of my teen friends or I had ever heard of Aerosmith before that song was re-released. In 1983 if you were into Aerosmith you probably had mutton chop sideburns and worked second shift at the plant. In 1984 everyone in the world had heard of Aerosmith.
This is the song that got me into hip-hop also. I used to listen to rap a bit like Grandmaster Flash during the breakdancing era, around ‘83/84, but when Walk This Way came out I became a complete hip-hop head for the next five years. I started losing interest in hip-hop when it was all turning into gangster rap in the early 90’s and they were even trying to make begign rap acts like EPMD, De La Soul, MC Hammer, and others into gangster rappers. Fun fact: Run-DMC were never on Def Jam, they were on Profile Records or some other label, even though Run is Russell Simmons’ brother. Public Enemy was my favourite act on Def Jam, followed by LL Cool J. Another really good hip-hop label was Tommy Boy, they had been around since the breakdancing era and put out a lot of albums during that time also.
Wow that's kind of the opposite for me. I got into Hip Hop during the hey days of gangster rap and in the late 2000s around when 50 Cent lost to Kanye in their little sales numbers beef I lost interest in Hip Hop and moved towards Dubstep with the rise of Skrillex bringing that genre to the mainstream.
I had just moved back from Jakarta Indonesia....was 13 years old working at Diablo Lanes in Concord, California being paid $3.75 an hour and the owners son came over to me with his Walkman and said "hey, check out this new tape I just bought" and he put the earphones to my head and I heard Walk This Way by Run-D.M.C. for the very first time and that was it......hooked for life. I'm glad to have been part of that musical transition. Our era was the best of them all.
I was eleven years old when Run DMC did ‘Walk This Way’ and I couldn’t wait for Christmas because that’s all I wanted. It was the first cassette tape I ever had and I still remember every word on the album, I literally played it to death.
one of my favorite podcasts of all time. as a big fan of everything producing, rick is a legend and i had no idea he was so articulate and down to earth
Holy shit…. *RICK RUBIN!!!!! The beastie boys, RUN DMC, LL COOL J, danzig, S.O.A.D, chili peppers, slayer, Aerosmith, and many more.* This man has changed the way music is played throughout the years.
Hey Rick! Thanks for all the absolutely stunning Johnny Cash releases! The remembrance of my folks immediately singing along to Bury Me Not upon first hearing it still send chills down my spine.
I think of the song as a break-thru in multiple ways. And a demonstration of the energy and power of rock combined with a new emerging energy of rap. Breaking thru the wall was PERFECT for the video. Rick Rubin is a genius!
This dude put hip hop on the map for me when I was a kid and it was new. I'm still a rock n roll guy but I'm grateful for Rick's brilliance and what he did for all kinds of popular music.
As a New Yorker who first starting Buying Hip Hop tapes in 86, well my parents starting Buying it for me and found it on the radio before that, I feel in love with it before I knew what the music was called now I'm 46 and still a huge Hip Hop head!
Songs like walk this way and bring the noise by anthrax, along with bands like the beastie boys, really brought rap into rock/metal and even helped lead to the creations of rapcore and nu metal. Rick Rubin did more to bring rap into rock than anyone else.
Bring The Noise is a timeless classic. Me and my older brother listened to that song so much as kids when it first came out. Made me a lifelong fan of both Anthrax and Public Enemy!
kinda weird how his earliest claims to fame came from allegedly having the idea for using “Walk This Way”, and the general sound of Raising Hell.... turns out none of that wasn’t really his own idea at all, but at this point he’s long-since parlayed it into a seriously impressive career in “the business” so whatever 🤷♂️
I remember when that came out. The World Premiere video on MTV. From Quincy/Dorchester(Dot). This was my worlds colliding and was so epic. Requested it many times on 'BCN (RIP).
We studied this song in my first college course “The History of Rock and Roll” It was the final song of the semester, we studied from slave songs, to blues, jazz, R and B, rock and roll, psychedelic rock, all the way to this song. The idea was to acknowledge black roots of rock and roll, and then coming full circle with early hip hop and rock merging as one. So cool to listen to the producer
Run DMC, LL Cool J, The Beastie Boys, Slayer, The Cult, Danzig, Public Enemy, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Johnny Cash, Jay Z.... and so many more. Some of their best and most iconic work was done with the help of this man. A visionary behind the consoles.
To have Rick Rubin @3:00 minutes in stick his hand out and professionally tell Jamie to stop on a sound bite is a huge honor for any sound engineer! Jamie caught on, and played the bite again. Something about awesome professionalism turns me on!
This guy is one of the bravest, innovate and just all around cool people in modern popular music. I've been listening to hip-hop since the mid 80s and haven't stopped, but the one thing I always wanted to ask him is how he morally dealt with how ALOT of samples are flat-out copies of older songs, with some flourishes. For example, Walk This Way. Aerosmith wrote the music from the ether, the cosmos that great songwriters can tap into and create something original. Run DMC added a new dimension to the song, but, as a songwriter and writer, I can tell you it's much more difficult to write a song from scratch than write lyrics. Eminem can verbally assault any 4/4 beat, whether it's a classic Dido song (Stan), or some dude hitting a spaghetti pot with a wooden spoon. Guys like Diddy and Will Smith take old pop songs, plagiarize the music to a tee, write average rhymes over them and voila! number 1 hits galore. It's why I respected Wu Tang so much. 36 Chambers is RZA's creation with minimum samples. No Donna Summer songs behind Clan in da Front. That said, I wish I had the opportunity to spend 5 minutes with Rick Rubin. Dude is a flat-out legend.
Well they rapped they didn't pretend to use instruments. The producers were going off the tradition of hiphop which was using the turntables. You're right its not easy to make music from scratch, but consider what they were dealing with.
Hip hop artist back in the 70s didn't have the luxury of making beats. That's where sampling originated from... Spinning vinyl (samples) to 4 track recorders and spittin rhymes over them. No such thing as drum machines back then so they worked with what was available. Of course it became a legal nightmare when they started selling records and the record labels that had the rights to those songs weren't getting compensated.
Rogan did yeomans work pulling this out of Rubin. I have heard Rick Rubin on many other podcasts as I am a huge fan of his impact on hip hop and this is the best and most coherent discourse on the matter. Bravo to Joe.
Man, I didn't even realize who Rick Rubin was until half way through this video! Does anyone else remember crush groove? I was obsessed with that movie when I was a kid. The fat boys, Kurtis Blow, the beastie boys! I remember arguing with my uncle when I was like 5 because I thought Rick was like the forth beastie boy, that just did behind the scenes kind of stuff.
remember seeing it on MTV " button 17 on the cable box that hooked to our TV " I was to young to understand the concept but I remember it was awesome 🤙
That beat at 3 mins he talks about is how the heartbeat of hip-hop sounds like. Breakdance grew on the beat... i can fully understand why he was so excited to talk about it.
Rick Rubin is a great interview loaded with very interesting stories and articulates very well and Joe compliments him by letting him tell his stories with little to no interruption. Not just be a lesson if somebody is worthy enough to interview, let them talk
@@andrewgonzalez6208 no its not, dude knowing a lot about music and movies says you dont spend enough time on the grind, quit wasting time on "culture"
Yeah, I remember Speaks on LI., just before you hit long beach. It was freakin' huge, for the time. I remember them having two or three separate, rooms. The main room was a stage and usually rock n roll with a bar and giant dance floor/viewing area. It was lined on the perimeter with booths. They was also a dance/disco room with a bar. Then another room that was a huge bar with pool tables and pinball machines. Staggered out of that place many a times. The property was huge also. I think the parking lot was bigger than a football field.
@@latortugapicante719 No. It probably wouldn't have. Big hair bands would probably still be around today... luckily Rick rubin stopped that from happening
No way Rick Rubin is on the JRE. This is amazing. I am such as huge fan of him. One of the greatest music producers of all time. This man has truly done and see it all in the music world. I wish I could be friends with Rick Rubin, I feel I would not only get along with him. But also have deep conversations on both music and life. He's one of the most interesting music producers ever. I would easily put him in the same category as Dr. Dre, Kanye, Pharrell, Timbaland etc. Top Tier 100%.
That hit was a major turning point for Aerosmith... they got clean, then released "Permanent Vacation", produced by Bruce Fairbairn, and it was a huge hit. After that it was the album "Pump" which was a MASSIVE hit.
Hands down this is the best record producer! Rick's roster is so eclectic and amazing. Blood Sugar Sex Magik was a life changing album for me and is still in my regular play list. live recording that album probably made it what it is today!
Man your not lying I remember that album being huge as a young kid and realizing how good it was but not really appreciating it , but later in life I really realize how superb it is,one of the few and only albums I can play through in it’s entirety, it’s just full of energy and punch and soul with edge and class and heavy Funk…the major hits on the record just seal the deal it’s the others that stand out to your ear… definitely one of kind sound
It’s truly a work of art when compared to other RHCP albums not produced by Rubin! I saw the interview with Anthony on Rogan today and it just solidifies everything Rick helped them bring to that album.
Beastie Boys, Run DMC and LL Cool J got me into hip hip back in the 80s...miss those days/artists...can't believe Rick Rubin has been at the top for so long...he really is the GOAT 🐐
Yep i remember when that came out i went to my local music store and bought both cassettes Aerosmith - Permanent Vacation and Run DMC - Raising Hell. Played both of them to death. Back when music was good.
I was discussing this with the young folk about I tho this song was one of many especially at that time!!! Very very ground breaking most people had no idea!!!
@@earthmurmurs8659 Guys I wasn't trying to disrespect Rick Rubin. I understand he is a Legend in the Music Industry. I just was pointing out that Joe was marveling at his stories. Those stories being from the "hip-hop world" I was just saying there needed to be more guests from that genre. Never even said Rick was from the Hip-Hop World in fact. Just that he (Joe Rogan) needed to have more people from that world on his show. SO AGAIN, I WASNT TRYING TO DISRESPECT RICK AND ALL THAT HE'S ACCOMPLISHED IN HIS LIFE. Thank you for your response Earth... EDIT: Clarified I was referring to Joe Rogan after "he"
It accelerated hip hop's entry into the mainstream. All music, except bubble gum pop, starts underground. I was 13 when Run & Aerosmith collaborated. I was already listening to rap, Slick Rick was my gateway. A friend gave me a copy. If there were 10 or so boys in a small mountain highschool (my senior class had 73 grads) were listening to rap, it would've eventually became mainstream. But I'm soooo glad it came to prominence when it did.
I absolutely remember rap not being considered music in the 80s. And I remember how Aerosmith /RUN DMC collaboration, the video, & how that helped shut the critics up. EDIT: Forgot to say how much I loved it!
Ha...back in the 80's I remember a local news station had a story about how bad new music was and how we would all devolve because of it. They used a line or two from a Beastie Boys song from License to Ill. I was so excited because I had just recently gotten the cassette. It was like the mainstream doesn't like it so that basically validated it to me.
Well I do not think rap is music even to this day. It is often creative and has great flow and nice beats and can be gritty or sound amazing. But it is not music. Neither is Techno or Punk or most Metal. Music has set rules and patterns. These styles mostly ignore those rules and styles. All have their merits and amazing artists though.
I remember all of that. I got in an argument with my girlfriend, because I corrected her. She thought it was Mick Jagger singing with Run-DMC. I told her it was Steven Tyler and Aerosmith, but she didn't believe me. I think it was one correction too many. She got all belligerent and angry. I responded with laughter.
you might want to check out some communication skills, I'd start with Dale Carnegie's How to make friends, the title is sillly but there is good info about how to come across your point and don't get people angry about it.
@@canobenitez Not necessary and it wouldn't work anyway. I stopped pretending a loooooong time ago. I'm not going to start again now that I've retired.
@@canobenitez LOL! That's a no for me. First, old men don't care if they are liked or not. We have no need to prove ourselves anymore. Second, I don't understand why you would want to argue with me over a weird argument I had with my girlfriend back in 1986 anyway. It's kinda creepy Bennie
This is so fascinating. Growing up the only reason I knew why rappers weren't main stream was because they were to hardcore. I couldn't have imagined that there was a debate around whether to producing Rock this Way. It's my favorite song of all time.
I remember going thru all those emotions when the new "walk this way" came out. I finally gave in and said, yeah, this cool this works...never really gave in to rap or hip hop.
Absolutely right about first reactions to new music. The first time I heard Can I play With Madness? by Iron Maiden, my initial thought was, this is not 'Maiden and it sucks. After I heard it a few more times, I realized how great that song was.
"We were being charged horrendous amounts of money. And for me, if you're going to produce something, you're fucking there. I don't care who you are!" He also added: "The Rick Rubin of today is a ... shadow of the Rick Rubin that he was. He is overrated, he is overpaid, and I will never work with him again"
the album Pump really was the turn around and reentry for Aerosmith. And then the great run of songs included on sound tracks rocketed them back into every dance hal
The stories this man has in his legendary career. Could listen to him talk for hours
I never noticed this before because I usually watch interviews rather than just listening, but if you close your eyes his way of speaking kind of sounds like Anthony Jeselnik at some points
@@CantTellYou aye what up fellow artist
A
He does a podcast
There aren't any words to describe this man's impact on modern music.
Unlimited
Almost as big as The Beetles
@@Miguelfilippo *Beatles
@@adriantrusca1245 good job. It was a test - you passed 👍
Are you referencing the terrible mumble rap and pop music that has the same sound in every band and performer? Or actual music
These are the good JRE episodes. No politics, just the influential people for our culture. Listening to Rubin describe how he chose Aerosmith's break-beat bc it was no different than hip-hop shows how calculated he was in winning audiences by opening minds.
While i enjoy both, these are way less stressfull. Not sure about that first comment, but i know what you mean.
Classic Rogan that I used to listen to years ago now I can't with all the right wing red pill brain rot
Exactly! 🤘
Chuck Palahniuk/ Glenn Villeneuve for example 💪💪😄🤘
@@gri7 well if the left would stop being so corrupt and evil maybe there would be less right wing red pill brain rot.
Who is Rick Rubin?
He’s such an enigma, probably the most underestimated man in modern music
Tons of huge artists have worked and want to work with him. I don't think he's been underestimated for quite some time.
Who is underestimating him? Not me. I'm what way is such a open and well spoken man enigma? Your words don't make sense
He’s one of the most estimated men in music, by far. He has plenty of popularity and plenty of artists clamber to work with him. I get your point, but it’s just wrong haha
Possibly one of the best things to happen to music, Rick Rubin. Thank you.
This guy is an absolute Legend.
He's worked with everyone from Jay-Z, and Beastie Boys to Black Sabbath, Slayer, and The Smashing Pumpkins.
And lets not forget SOAD and Metallica!
Adele, Beyonce, Johnny Cash and moreeeee
Also LiL pump
Red hot chili peppers 🌶
@depression jones. ah, yeah i forgot about working with Kanye too. say what you want about him, but Kanye is a creative genius. i love everything he's done since Graduation. MBDTF and Yeezus are my favorite albums.
This is the ONE famous person I would love to talk to before I die! The stories this man has in his brain! A TRUE LEGEND!!! Thanks for this interview Joe!
"Walk This Way" was definitely groundbreaking. The Rap/Rock song that really changed my life was Anthrax and Public Enemy "Bring the Noise".
Oh mane.....I'm 35...a huge Hop-Hop head since I was a kid already. But when I heard Bring the noise ond the Tony Hawk games as a teenager, even when this song was already more than 10 years old, it sparked my love for Punkrock & Metal also. I find it so funny when I still meet some fans from one of these genres who have a solid hate for the other one
@@mucktown same here, im almost 45, if it sounds good and you have a good feeling i dont care what kind of music it is, all genres has its good songs;)
Soul on a roll but you treat it like soap on a rope cuz the beats and the rhymes are so dope 😎
The quadruplet flow from chuck on that song is insane! It’s one of my faves too!!
Not only did 'Walk This Way' bring Hip-Hop into the mainstream, it simultaneously revitalized Aerosmith's career by releasing a Hip-Hop version of a hit that they already had more than a decade earlier.
youtu.be.com/X7TYshhWh1Q
Agreed. None of my teen friends or I had ever heard of Aerosmith before that song was re-released. In 1983 if you were into Aerosmith you probably had mutton chop sideburns and worked second shift at the plant. In 1984 everyone in the world had heard of Aerosmith.
Aerosmith was done by 1986--completely fried out. When they did the music video for Walk This Way, they were fresh out of rehab
A genre that was never needed or wanted.
@@jakerock_ And yet the entire cultural landscape around you says otherwise...
This is the song that got me into hip-hop also. I used to listen to rap a bit like Grandmaster Flash during the breakdancing era, around ‘83/84, but when Walk This Way came out I became a complete hip-hop head for the next five years. I started losing interest in hip-hop when it was all turning into gangster rap in the early 90’s and they were even trying to make begign rap acts like EPMD, De La Soul, MC Hammer, and others into gangster rappers. Fun fact: Run-DMC were never on Def Jam, they were on Profile Records or some other label, even though Run is Russell Simmons’ brother. Public Enemy was my favourite act on Def Jam, followed by LL Cool J. Another really good hip-hop label was Tommy Boy, they had been around since the breakdancing era and put out a lot of albums during that time also.
Loud and Nervous records are others
Wow that's kind of the opposite for me. I got into Hip Hop during the hey days of gangster rap and in the late 2000s around when 50 Cent lost to Kanye in their little sales numbers beef I lost interest in Hip Hop and moved towards Dubstep with the rise of Skrillex bringing that genre to the mainstream.
I had just moved back from Jakarta Indonesia....was 13 years old working at Diablo Lanes in Concord, California being paid $3.75 an hour and the owners son came over to me with his Walkman and said "hey, check out this new tape I just bought" and he put the earphones to my head and I heard Walk This Way by Run-D.M.C. for the very first time and that was it......hooked for life. I'm glad to have been part of that musical transition. Our era was the best of them all.
I was eleven years old when Run DMC did ‘Walk This Way’ and I couldn’t wait for Christmas because that’s all I wanted. It was the first cassette tape I ever had and I still remember every word on the album, I literally played it to death.
Same! I was 6. Cassette tapes, what a different time that was.
Just crazy to think Aerosmith was making hip hop beats in the 70 and early 80s
one of my favorite podcasts of all time. as a big fan of everything producing, rick is a legend and i had no idea he was so articulate and down to earth
Check out his podcast dude. He’s had some amazingly talented artists on there. The Andre 3000 interview is pretty special..
@@brandonleehenry6393 damn didnt even know he had one! thanks for the heads up
Holy shit…. *RICK RUBIN!!!!! The beastie boys, RUN DMC, LL COOL J, danzig, S.O.A.D, chili peppers, slayer, Aerosmith, and many more.*
This man has changed the way music is played throughout the years.
Hey Rick! Thanks for all the absolutely stunning Johnny Cash releases! The remembrance of my folks immediately singing along to Bury Me Not upon first hearing it still send chills down my spine.
Yo leave that "chills dwn my spine " out of comments. It's dumb as hell and you kid's use it for everything. It's lost its true meaning.
@@imAdolff this kid is 55 and my folks have since passed.
Loved this comment!
@@BarnabyWild13 then type like a 55yr old man. Not, like some 13yr old kid.
@@imAdolff yea you’re right, it really brings chills down my spine when I read someone comment something brings chills down their spine
I think of the song as a break-thru in multiple ways. And a demonstration of the energy and power of rock combined with a new emerging energy of rap. Breaking thru the wall was PERFECT for the video. Rick Rubin is a genius!
Rick Rubin is a legend
not for corey taylor.
This dude put hip hop on the map for me when I was a kid and it was new. I'm still a rock n roll guy but I'm grateful for Rick's brilliance and what he did for all kinds of popular music.
What a great guest for this show! I’ll have to listen to this entire episode.
As a New Yorker who first starting Buying Hip Hop tapes in 86, well my parents starting Buying it for me and found it on the radio before that, I feel in love with it before I knew what the music was called now I'm 46 and still a huge Hip Hop head!
Songs like walk this way and bring the noise by anthrax, along with bands like the beastie boys, really brought rap into rock/metal and even helped lead to the creations of rapcore and nu metal. Rick Rubin did more to bring rap into rock than anyone else.
Bring The Noise is a timeless classic. Me and my older brother listened to that song so much as kids when it first came out. Made me a lifelong fan of both Anthrax and Public Enemy!
@@SS-gx7tg Onyx and Bio-hazard with 'slam' is a good one too.
I played those two cross-over classics to some rock kids and one of them said those two songs marked the downfall of rock.
He also brought thrash into the mainstream with signing Slayer to Def Jam in 1986. Helping them create the masterpiece - Reign in Blood.
kinda weird how his earliest claims to fame came from allegedly having the idea for using “Walk This Way”, and the general sound of Raising Hell.... turns out none of that wasn’t really his own idea at all, but at this point he’s long-since parlayed it into a seriously impressive career in “the business” so whatever 🤷♂️
So Happy for Ricks existence!!! He's one creative, open minded artist!!!
I remember when that came out. The World Premiere video on MTV. From Quincy/Dorchester(Dot). This was my worlds colliding and was so epic. Requested it many times on 'BCN (RIP).
We studied this song in my first college course “The History of Rock and Roll”
It was the final song of the semester, we studied from slave songs, to blues, jazz, R and B, rock and roll, psychedelic rock, all the way to this song.
The idea was to acknowledge black roots of rock and roll, and then coming full circle with early hip hop and rock merging as one.
So cool to listen to the producer
That sounds like such a fun college course. I wish I had that option!
@@mariahmueller579 it was an elective. Very fun indeed
Run DMC, LL Cool J, The Beastie Boys, Slayer, The Cult, Danzig, Public Enemy, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Johnny Cash, Jay Z.... and so many more. Some of their best and most iconic work was done with the help of this man. A visionary behind the consoles.
Also Jake Bugg's Second Album Shangri-la Too! Check it Out if You Haven't!
Renegades was an amazing album
System of a Down’s Toxicity
Neil Diamond's 12 songs lol
Slipknot
To have Rick Rubin @3:00 minutes in stick his hand out and professionally tell Jamie to stop on a sound bite is a huge honor for any sound engineer!
Jamie caught on, and played the bite again. Something about awesome professionalism turns me on!
@Czaszka You forgot your video
@@niktve Get better headphones ;)
@@niktve it's the professional touch that gets me going. Sound engineering is just work to me.
That was priceless!
After listening to this episode, I listened to the song and got goosebumps! So cool.
Such a legend, I really hope he’ll always be remembered for his contributions and efforts to bring cultures together.
This guy is one of the bravest, innovate and just all around cool people in modern popular music. I've been listening to hip-hop since the mid 80s and haven't stopped, but the one thing I always wanted to ask him is how he morally dealt with how ALOT of samples are flat-out copies of older songs, with some flourishes. For example, Walk This Way. Aerosmith wrote the music from the ether, the cosmos that great songwriters can tap into and create something original. Run DMC added a new dimension to the song, but, as a songwriter and writer, I can tell you it's much more difficult to write a song from scratch than write lyrics. Eminem can verbally assault any 4/4 beat, whether it's a classic Dido song (Stan), or some dude hitting a spaghetti pot with a wooden spoon. Guys like Diddy and Will Smith take old pop songs, plagiarize the music to a tee, write average rhymes over them and voila! number 1 hits galore. It's why I respected Wu Tang so much. 36 Chambers is RZA's creation with minimum samples. No Donna Summer songs behind Clan in da Front.
That said, I wish I had the opportunity to spend 5 minutes with Rick Rubin. Dude is a flat-out legend.
Jesus man, pull their balls outa your mouth and get some air. Touch some grass today 😅
Plenty of good hip hop and rap with no samples. A lot with, but a lot without too. But I enjoy your POV, thank you
Bringing up Eminem, spaghetti together... Lol sry
Well they rapped they didn't pretend to use instruments. The producers were going off the tradition of hiphop which was using the turntables. You're right its not easy to make music from scratch, but consider what they were dealing with.
Hip hop artist back in the 70s didn't have the luxury of making beats. That's where sampling originated from... Spinning vinyl (samples) to 4 track recorders and spittin rhymes over them. No such thing as drum machines back then so they worked with what was available. Of course it became a legal nightmare when they started selling records and the record labels that had the rights to those songs weren't getting compensated.
1 of the pioneers of the hip hop game rick rubin is a legend!🎸🎧🎹🎛🎷🎤🤘🏼🤟🏼
He is super cool and so forthcoming with sharing his experiences
I've always wanted to see mr Rubin on a podacast my prayes were answered, thanks Joe... All the way from South Africa
The 1st hour of this JRE is damn good. The history of what Rick was doing in the 80s and making music is history
Rogan did yeomans work pulling this out of Rubin. I have heard Rick Rubin on many other podcasts as I am a huge fan of his impact on hip hop and this is the best and most coherent discourse on the matter. Bravo to Joe.
What happened after the first hour?
@@Ineedfwns topics changed, still good, but 1st hour was extremely interesting on 80s music that DJ Double R produced or was involved with
Rick Rubin is a legend! I had a chance to meet him at the Tibetan Freedom concert with MCA from the Beastie boys. Super humble and chill guy.
With Rogan's recent MAGA push, I thought at first he had DAVE Rubin on. Imagine my pleasant surprise... 🤣
And still drippin’ in *swag*
It is so refreshing to see Joe with someone so genius that he is humbled and word-trimmed...and this is just a lovely interview :-)
Man, I didn't even realize who Rick Rubin was until half way through this video! Does anyone else remember crush groove? I was obsessed with that movie when I was a kid. The fat boys, Kurtis Blow, the beastie boys! I remember arguing with my uncle when I was like 5 because I thought Rick was like the forth beastie boy, that just did behind the scenes kind of stuff.
The interview guests have been crazy lately
Great interview Joe, you killed it.
Rick, thanks for ALL your work.
remember seeing it on MTV " button 17 on the cable box that hooked to our TV " I was to young to understand the concept but I remember it was awesome 🤙
That beat at 3 mins he talks about is how the heartbeat of hip-hop sounds like. Breakdance grew on the beat... i can fully understand why he was so excited to talk about it.
This was a great listen for music lovers world wide. I have been waiting to hear RR on this show for a long time. Great episode!
You can tell that this guy is a genuine Master of his craft
He's wearing the headphones as if he's in the booth. Its in him 💯
Great interview
Rick Rubin is a great interview loaded with very interesting stories and articulates very well and Joe compliments him by letting him tell his stories with little to no interruption. Not just be a lesson if somebody is worthy enough to interview, let them talk
Throughout this podcast, Joe Rogan gradually realizes how much of a legendary icon and pioneer Rick Rubin is 😂
@fm you have no business discussing Rick Rubin if you don’t like music in the first place wth
Yea Joe doesn’t know anything about music and movies. It’s annoying
@@andrewgonzalez6208 no its not, dude
knowing a lot about music and movies says you dont spend enough time on the grind, quit wasting time on "culture"
@@denisblack9897 people don’t spend enough time on culture. if they did we’d have a lot less bullshit in the world
@@denisblack9897 that was the most retarded thing I've read all week
Dude is dropping gems 💎
MCs & writers take notes 📝
Yeah, I remember Speaks on LI., just before you hit long beach. It was freakin' huge, for the time. I remember them having two or three separate, rooms. The main room was a stage and usually rock n roll with a bar and giant dance floor/viewing area. It was lined on the perimeter with booths. They was also a dance/disco room with a bar. Then another room that was a huge bar with pool tables and pinball machines. Staggered out of that place many a times. The property was huge also. I think the parking lot was bigger than a football field.
Wow! Speaks. Forgot about that place.
This guy literally created modern music for western civilization
Ohh please. It would have gotten with or without him
He ruined music, your just a sheep
@@latortugapicante719 No. It probably wouldn't have. Big hair bands would probably still be around today... luckily Rick rubin stopped that from happening
You have to respect anyone who's been down that many chimneys.
Knowing that Rick Ruben was in Austin tx is kind of a trip
That guy is incredible
No way Rick Rubin is on the JRE. This is amazing. I am such as huge fan of him. One of the greatest music producers of all time. This man has truly done and see it all in the music world.
I wish I could be friends with Rick Rubin, I feel I would not only get along with him. But also have deep conversations on both music and life.
He's one of the most interesting music producers ever. I would easily put him in the same category as Dr. Dre, Kanye, Pharrell, Timbaland etc. Top Tier 100%.
It's like ZZ Top and Santa had a kid.
Whilst they were on DMT
@@mrmagoozle 😆😅😂🤣
Yup saw Aero at the Calderone in Hempstead NY 1984, it held maybe 2500 ppl after seeing them at Nassau Coliseum a year previous.
That hit was a major turning point for Aerosmith... they got clean, then released "Permanent Vacation", produced by Bruce Fairbairn, and it was a huge hit. After that it was the album "Pump" which was a MASSIVE hit.
One of the greatest of all time
Hands down this is the best record producer! Rick's roster is so eclectic and amazing. Blood Sugar Sex Magik was a life changing album for me and is still
in my regular play list. live recording that album probably made it what it is today!
Man your not lying I remember that album being huge as a young kid and realizing how good it was but not really appreciating it , but later in life I really realize how superb it is,one of the few and only albums I can play through in it’s entirety, it’s just full of energy and punch and soul with edge and class and heavy Funk…the major hits on the record just seal the deal it’s the others that stand out to your ear… definitely one of kind sound
@@earthmurmurs8659 yeah that album is def way different then all the rest
It’s truly a work of art when compared to other RHCP albums not produced by Rubin! I saw the interview with Anthony on Rogan today and it just solidifies everything Rick helped them bring to that album.
you made a great video!
Beastie Boys, Run DMC and LL Cool J got me into hip hip back in the 80s...miss those days/artists...can't believe Rick Rubin has been at the top for so long...he really is the GOAT 🐐
Yep i remember when that came out i went to my local music store and bought both cassettes Aerosmith - Permanent Vacation and Run DMC - Raising Hell. Played both of them to death. Back when music was good.
I listened to Raising Hell over and over as a kid.
I was discussing this with the young folk about I tho this song was one of many especially at that time!!! Very very ground breaking most people had no idea!!!
Never seen Joe so starstruck but I get it
Never seen Joe blown away so much in one clip. Would love to see him talk with more people from the Hip Hop world. It's needed for sure...
Get rza on
@@TheGeneralDisarray RZA been on. Great episode
isn’t Rick Rubin more of a superproducer of music in general than he is “from the hiphop world”
@@CantTellYou Of course but Joe seemed very blown away by the stories about Hip Hop artists. Hence my comment.
@@earthmurmurs8659 Guys I wasn't trying to disrespect Rick Rubin. I understand he is a Legend in the Music Industry. I just was pointing out that Joe was marveling at his stories. Those stories being from the "hip-hop world" I was just saying there needed to be more guests from that genre. Never even said Rick was from the Hip-Hop World in fact. Just that he (Joe Rogan) needed to have more people from that world on his show. SO AGAIN, I WASNT TRYING TO DISRESPECT RICK AND ALL THAT HE'S ACCOMPLISHED IN HIS LIFE. Thank you for your response Earth...
EDIT: Clarified I was referring to Joe Rogan after "he"
It accelerated hip hop's entry into the mainstream. All music, except bubble gum pop, starts underground. I was 13 when Run & Aerosmith collaborated. I was already listening to rap, Slick Rick was my gateway. A friend gave me a copy. If there were 10 or so boys in a small mountain highschool (my senior class had 73 grads) were listening to rap, it would've eventually became mainstream. But I'm soooo glad it came to prominence when it did.
I was in 6th grade when RUN DMC - Walk This Way was released! I loved It!
Rick looking like he just got off a merry-go-round that was tied to a rope pulled by a truck.
The question is, what will bring hip-hop out of the mainstream?
Pepto bysmol works with diarrhea
Nothing. It’s too diverse of a genre. I would bet 100 more years at least
Tons of independent artists who have much better music then what mainstream has been distributing.....I haven't listened to msm in 4 years.
This has to go down as one of the best
Rubin is an interesting dude. And so talented. Legend.
I absolutely remember rap not being considered music in the 80s.
And I remember how Aerosmith /RUN DMC collaboration, the video, & how that helped shut the critics up.
EDIT: Forgot to say how much I loved it!
Ha...back in the 80's I remember a local news station had a story about how bad new music was and how we would all devolve because of it. They used a line or two from a Beastie Boys song from License to Ill. I was so excited because I had just recently gotten the cassette. It was like the mainstream doesn't like it so that basically validated it to me.
@@natethegr8230 Sounds like that news station had a soothsayer.
Well I do not think rap is music even to this day. It is often creative and has great flow and nice beats and can be gritty or sound amazing. But it is not music. Neither is Techno or Punk or most Metal. Music has set rules and patterns. These styles mostly ignore those rules and styles. All have their merits and amazing artists though.
@@VestigialHead who tf made those rules?
@@GapToothBitch The musicians of the world over the last thousand years or so. Thought that was pretty obvious.
I remember all of that. I got in an argument with my girlfriend, because I corrected her. She thought it was Mick Jagger singing with Run-DMC. I told her it was Steven Tyler and Aerosmith, but she didn't believe me. I think it was one correction too many. She got all belligerent and angry. I responded with laughter.
Reminds of this girl who I used to work with when the song came out and she referred to Steven Tyler as "the man with the scary voice"
you might want to check out some communication skills, I'd start with Dale Carnegie's How to make friends, the title is sillly but there is good info about how to come across your point and don't get people angry about it.
@@canobenitez Not necessary and it wouldn't work anyway. I stopped pretending a loooooong time ago. I'm not going to start again now that I've retired.
@@axepagode33626 It might be the best time to start, no one likes an old man who you can't argue with.
@@canobenitez LOL! That's a no for me. First, old men don't care if they are liked or not. We have no need to prove ourselves anymore. Second, I don't understand why you would want to argue with me over a weird argument I had with my girlfriend back in 1986 anyway.
It's kinda creepy Bennie
This is so fascinating. Growing up the only reason I knew why rappers weren't main stream was because they were to hardcore. I couldn't have imagined that there was a debate around whether to producing Rock this Way. It's my favorite song of all time.
I remember going thru all those emotions when the new "walk this way" came out. I finally gave in and said, yeah, this cool this works...never really gave in to rap or hip hop.
Dudes a legend. I remember being a little kid and playing raising hell on the player. As a kid seeing the word Hell on a record alone was shocking.
First tape I ever bought that had the word 'motherfucker' on it 👍. At 13 years old, it was revolutionary.
rick rubin is one of the coolest dudes to ever live
Checking in from the DMV
"Walk This Way" and "Fight for Your Right (to Party)" came out when I was in Jr. High. EVERYONE at school became hiphop fans that year!
Paved the way for moments like Jay-Z and Linkin Park
Classic
Jaz-O & Big Daddy Kane opened doors for Jay-Z, not this hillbilly
My life is infinitely better because my dad was crap and I looked up to Joe.
Joe Rogan
JRE interviews like Rick Rubin interviews normally. I like that.
JOE ROGAN never fails to entertain us!❤️✅
0 subs by November
Refreshing to see Joe actually talk about music with a musical guest
He should have Steve Albini on.
I was shocked he didn’t bring up MMA and the comedy scene or bowhunting, but I didn’t listen to the whole thing.
@@lenderzconstable they talked about comedy for like half of it💀
@@Kusettajapoika how bout gorillas or apes with spears, did he mentioned those as well?
Absolutely right about first reactions to new music. The first time I heard Can I play With Madness? by Iron Maiden, my initial thought was, this is not 'Maiden and it sucks. After I heard it a few more times, I realized how great that song was.
Produced one of my fav albums, The Cult's Electric
Rick is a legend. Being involved with everyone from Beastie Boys to Slayer to Johnny Effing Cash. No doubt he's a music producer hall of famer.
Rick is a hack.
“You got Chocolate in my Peanut Butter.” “You got your Peanut Butter in my Chocolate.”
Anthrax and Public enemy was huge back in day with song “ bring the noise “.
Omg I'm 47 yrs old and I didn't know who Areosmith was until Run DMC released walk this way lol. I love Areosmith now
Finally a Rubin worth listening to.
YES. I thought it was the latest in Joe's MAGA guest streak, with DAVE Rubin. Imagine my pleasant surprise...
@@sthubbins4038 I can't wait to see Trump back in office.
@@HarryManback0 Good luck with that. 🤣
@@sthubbins4038 yeah... he's going to prison anytime now!! 🙄
How rock committed suicide as a joke.
Rick Rubin showed me transcendental meditation
I was in middle school when Run DMC did "walk this way". That song, ironically, introduced me to Aerosmith as a band.
One of the biggest moments in music. Brought hip hop into the mainstream, defined rap-rock, and staged Aerosmith’s comeback.
This is fascinating ❤
Excellent ❤
Rick Ruben doesn’t get credit for been a great producer
he's literally known as one of greatest of all time. Everyone still seeks him out to make music with him.
yeah he is doing pretty good
Yeah he fuckin does lol
"We were being charged horrendous amounts of money. And for me, if you're going to produce something, you're fucking there. I don't care who you are!" He also added: "The Rick Rubin of today is a ... shadow of the Rick Rubin that he was. He is overrated, he is overpaid, and I will never work with him again"
Who said this?
@@jamescurran6277 Slipknot’s frontman Corey Taylor
the album Pump really was the turn around and reentry for Aerosmith. And then the great run of songs included on sound tracks rocketed them back into every dance hal
The best anything - divides opinion. Design, music etc
I remember when that came out. It was huge. Cruising was still allowed. Sac and Modesto ca. 1987