The 4 Bands That Will Still Be Played In 2100

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 9. 05. 2024
  • Has history already decided that these four bands (who have not released a record in 30 years) will still be popular in the year 2100? I believe it has, let's discuss.
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Komentáƙe • 7K

  • @RickBeato
    @RickBeato  Pƙed 27 dny +1904

    I’m not sure why people didn’t understand that I’m only talking about artists that haven’t released a new record in 30 years last. The last time I checked the Rolling Stones released a record last year. Same goes for a lot of the bands that people are saying in the comments.

    • @tactrix1h
      @tactrix1h Pƙed 27 dny +19

      The one main recording that Nirvana released was surprisingly NOT one of the main 5 that you mentioned. It was "From the Muddy Banks of Wishkah". Now why am I bringing this up? There are 2 things to note about this CD that makes it very important. #1 It had some of the best songs they ever made all on 1 CD instead of multiple albums. #2 it was basically released as a tribute Album after Kurts death. I personally had that before I had any of their other stuff and I love Nirvana.
      And of course the other one was MTV unplugged in NY, which came out directly after Kurts death. And that one went multiplatinum.

    • @NJGuy1973
      @NJGuy1973 Pƙed 27 dny +36

      Did you read "But What If We're Wrong" by Chuck Klosterman? He speculated that 300 years from now, one rock star will be remembered as symbolic of rock music itself. Chuck Berry.

    • @84jdgregory
      @84jdgregory Pƙed 27 dny +16

      It's CZcams Rick! We all love what you do and generally take your word for things. We also gotta give shout outs to our personal favs!

    • @robertsaul234
      @robertsaul234 Pƙed 27 dny +9

      "The Cosmos Rocks" Queen 2005

    • @alwaysemployed656
      @alwaysemployed656 Pƙed 27 dny +21

      Yeh I was thinking the same exact thing. Bands that have been retired for decades and still gets played as if they are currently active and popular. Queen retired? Let's be honest. Is Queen really Queen without Freddie and John Deacon?

  • @robertsaul234
    @robertsaul234 Pƙed 28 dny +5719

    You're forgetting The Rolling Stones. They'll still be touring.

    • @Ghostguitars2
      @Ghostguitars2 Pƙed 28 dny +85

      Yes they will😂

    • @ElizabethBSoCal
      @ElizabethBSoCal Pƙed 28 dny +13

      😂

    • @davidlaw689
      @davidlaw689 Pƙed 28 dny +284

      The Strolling Bones

    • @rayerscarpensael2300
      @rayerscarpensael2300 Pƙed 28 dny +37

      Rick is hardly mentionning them lately, while previously stating they were his all time favourite band...maybe he couldn t get an interview after Hackney Diamonds.. he didn t even review the album or mention the release.

    • @richcarlson887
      @richcarlson887 Pƙed 28 dny +4

      Truth

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz Pƙed 28 dny +3573

    I'll be 128 in 2100. I can't wait to see if Rick's predictions are right.

    • @Funkybassplayer
      @Funkybassplayer Pƙed 28 dny +77

      See you there 😁

    • @jasonh6919
      @jasonh6919 Pƙed 28 dny +47

      Only if you're not busy skydiving or skiing down Everest 😂

    • @HieronymousCheese
      @HieronymousCheese Pƙed 28 dny +17

      See you in the old folk's home!

    • @SterlingSimmons22
      @SterlingSimmons22 Pƙed 28 dny

      There will probably be some sort of age-slowing medication released between now and then anyway

    • @patrickcampion7966
      @patrickcampion7966 Pƙed 28 dny +29

      Young whipper-snapper. I'll be 131. Betting heavily on advances in medical science to offset my youthful 'indiscretions'

  • @daleal7250
    @daleal7250 Pƙed 20 dny +111

    We’re still listening to Beethoven’s 5th symphony. Good music is timeless.

    • @bygmesterfinnegan6938
      @bygmesterfinnegan6938 Pƙed 4 dny +1

      Ah yes Nirvana, the definition of good music...

    • @chapig2305
      @chapig2305 Pƙed 3 dny +2

      @@bygmesterfinnegan6938 as long as people relate to it and enjoy it is as good as any other art. it may not be as sophisticated as beethoven but i'll choose to listen to nirvana any day.

    • @MarkPeotter
      @MarkPeotter Pƙed 3 dny

      @daleal7250 It blows my mind that the best music ever written was written right after the inventions of tempered tuning, the piano, and standard notation. For the next 200 years all music was written down. After that, everything is just regurgitation.

    • @markbaileycimarron-memoria3446
      @markbaileycimarron-memoria3446 Pƙed 3 dny

      you gotta start a youtube channel and get the word out.

    • @jamesdavison2927
      @jamesdavison2927 Pƙed 2 dny

      Amen

  • @Syd-yu3vn
    @Syd-yu3vn Pƙed 22 dny +82

    Wish you'd mentioned CCR: 2 songs with over a bil streams & still 36.1 milloon monthly listeners, on Spotify. Songs with lyrics as relevant today as they ever were. John Fogerty is a living legend. 😊

  • @robertplotkin2708
    @robertplotkin2708 Pƙed 26 dny +318

    “If it was released today, I’d say ‘wow.’” I think that nails it. If the music still sounds fresh and alive, people will keep enjoying it, no matter how old it is. That’s why some music that’s 500 years old is still popular, and some music that came out last year has already been forgotten.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 Pƙed 24 dny

      What is the 500-year-old music that's still popular?

    • @betsyab121
      @betsyab121 Pƙed 24 dny +20

      JS Bach is pretty timeless. Chord structure is used by many musicians still.

    • @marshmcclory487
      @marshmcclory487 Pƙed 24 dny +4

      500 years is a stretch, but your point is well taken. FYI: Bach was born 339 years ago.

    • @cotedebeaune2012
      @cotedebeaune2012 Pƙed 24 dny +7

      Mozart, baby! OK; it's "only" about 250 years but still.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 Pƙed 24 dny +2

      @@cotedebeaune2012 No banging early harpsichord riffs? We get a little loose when we start making these points. đŸ€Ł
      I think Nirvana "surviving" to 2100 depends heavily on whether we have a resurgence of instrument-based rock at some point in the next 75 years. Basically, its popularity will likely rely on whether something has popped up to replace it. We're not exactly oozing with well-known classical music in the past century that we don't know through movie soundtracks.

  • @garymorris1856
    @garymorris1856 Pƙed 19 dny +111

    I will never forget seeing the Beatles in concert in 1965, and Ringo is coming to where I live this September, amazing.

    • @twalrus1
      @twalrus1 Pƙed 15 dny +1

      I first saw the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show (1965)

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz Pƙed 12 dny +1

      The Beatles are overrated.

    • @twalrus1
      @twalrus1 Pƙed 12 dny +3

      @@tarstarkusz Name another band that is more successful.

    • @twalrus1
      @twalrus1 Pƙed 12 dny +4

      @@tarstarkusz "The Beatles are overrated."
      So are your gandma's oatmeal cookies!
      (Hey, I didn't wanna go there, but you forced my hand.)

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz Pƙed 12 dny +2

      @@twalrus1 You actually make a good point. People who like something have a hard time believing other people don't think that thing is the bee's Knees.

  • @stephenosullivan9016
    @stephenosullivan9016 Pƙed 21 dnem +8

    Great job as always Rick!

  • @user-yn6zo4wp5b
    @user-yn6zo4wp5b Pƙed 25 dny +668

    I love that George Harrison wrote the most popular /streamed Beatles song.
    Thank God for George.

    • @FrankRizzo557
      @FrankRizzo557 Pƙed 24 dny +12

      Heard the song yesterday why doing my Home Depot trips and thought the same thing.

    • @MysticMountainGems
      @MysticMountainGems Pƙed 24 dny +23

      My favorite Beatle. I love how much he loved Indian Classical.

    • @gregm8522
      @gregm8522 Pƙed 24 dny +43

      And arguably the Beatles’ best song: While My Guitar Gently Weeps.

    • @Chris_LaFrance_MAI
      @Chris_LaFrance_MAI Pƙed 23 dny +23

      George is the greatest underrated Superstar of all time - I know that is an oxymoron

    • @brandall101
      @brandall101 Pƙed 23 dny +12

      Sweet revenge for not being taken seriously enough pushed him to that level
 it’s hard to argue it’s the best Beatles tune as at least 5 or so others could be in that conversation, but it’s definitely at that level. Every bit as magical from the start as Hey Jude and A Day in the Life. It’s literally a perfect song. Sinatra, James Brown, and Elvis covered it ffs

  • @derekhiemforth
    @derekhiemforth Pƙed 24 dny +316

    When Rick mentioned that Kurt Cobain will always be 27, it made me realize that the one trait those four bands all share is a sense of "ending too soon." The Beatles were all still in their 20s and still the biggest band in the world when they called it quits. The Police were also young, and were at the peak of their popularity, with "Synchronicity" having been one of the biggest albums of 1983. Nirvana was obviously cut short by Cobain's death, as Rick mentioned.
    Queen is the only one that seems a bit of an outlier, as they were in their 40s, they were 14 albums into their career, and they'd been around for 20 years by the time Freddie died. But Freddie's death was such a big deal, and he was such a giant presence, that his passing still felt like it brought the band's career to a close too early.

    • @montaguehorseposture6203
      @montaguehorseposture6203 Pƙed 23 dny +12

      "Ending too soon" is a cultural rather than musical driver. You can't tell from listening to Get Back or Pennyroyal Tea that it was from the artist's last album of a relatively short career, indeed the artist probably hoped it would be otherwise.

    • @derekhiemforth
      @derekhiemforth Pƙed 22 dny +11

      @@montaguehorseposture6203 Oh yeah, totally. It's not that "ending too soon" affected the music; it's that "ending too soon" may draw more attention to the band and their music, and if the people paying attention like the music, then they'll keep listening to it.

    • @lordhenrywotton95
      @lordhenrywotton95 Pƙed 22 dny +3

      Totally agree, if an artist’s career ends suddenly, they don’t hang around long enough to become irrelevant.
      Look at The Smiths vs Morrissey, one fell apart at the peak of their powers, the other makes a worse album every few years and makes increasingly irritating pronouncements on politics and dietary habits.
      Just a personal opinion, but one I’m sure I share with others.

    • @sir_sack
      @sir_sack Pƙed 22 dny +8

      I think another thing that made Queen so big was Live Aid and their Wembley performance in 1986 because they just stopped touring after that, and the public didn't really know what was going on until they saw Freddie in 1989 or 1990 looking really ill. Which made it a topic of discussion. That's just my opinion though

    • @avburns
      @avburns Pƙed 22 dny +3

      @@sir_sack I don't follow Brian May but Queen has a way of "popping up". The biopic, appearing on American Idol which lead to Adam Lambert's "joining"...I would add unplanned things like Seth Macfarlane's Ted movie which used Flash Gordon, a movie with Queen on the soundtrack. Heck, the new Highlander with Henry Cavil will probably have some version of Who Wants To Live Forever, introducing them yet again to a new audience.

  • @user-vx7vi3vq1c
    @user-vx7vi3vq1c Pƙed 22 dny +6

    Beethoven, Mozart, Bach.

  • @samuelsessions2817
    @samuelsessions2817 Pƙed 19 dny +4

    Rick, you are absolutely fantastic. Although I listen to Bach frequently, the video you did on him and musicians’ reactions to him led me to listen to his music even more. Thank you for what you do. FYI: I consider great music, of all genres, a portal to heaven. Maybe not a great phrase, but I mean it. Have an idea for you: Clapton’s “Groaning the Blues” from the ‘94 Scorsese documentary (finally released on DVD) back to back with “Holy Mother” with Pavarotti. Talk about musicianship and range! On fire and in a musical trance followed by transcendence and the beauty of playing with restraint but deep, deep emotion.

  • @r54070
    @r54070 Pƙed 28 dny +594

    I've had this conversation with my wife and friends. These songs are 50-plus years old. I graduated high school in the mid-70's. I can't imagine listening to...or buying...music from 1923, 24, 25...50 years prior. The fact that music from the 1960's and 70's still is relevant today is pretty incredible.

    • @bea78tles
      @bea78tles Pƙed 27 dny +50

      Yes, I tell young people this. I feel bad that they have to listen to the 60s 70s 80s or whatever. I wish they had current music that is good enough to make them not have any interest in my generation's music.

    • @vichikes
      @vichikes Pƙed 27 dny +45

      Part of it I think has to do with technology. The technology was so barebones in the 20s that it was hard to make a creative record shine.

    • @ikarooz
      @ikarooz Pƙed 27 dny +5

      Many of those hits are the backbone of contemporary music. Social media has blown up some, ignored others.

    • @Juststartingout768
      @Juststartingout768 Pƙed 27 dny +6

      I was on Tik Tok last night and someone had added Zorba The Greek to their video. That tune has to be 50 years old but I think it is good enough they will be playing it in another 50

    • @richardlippi8438
      @richardlippi8438 Pƙed 27 dny +17

      Oddly enough, Paul was a big fan of 1920’ music because that was what his Dad played around the house. Paul recorded “Just Because” which was composed in the late twenties.

  • @johnharrison6522
    @johnharrison6522 Pƙed 25 dny +226

    Beatles, Zeppelin, Floyd, Talking Heads. All have songs that are timeless. I came home the other day to my son playing Beatles songs on the piano. Those songs came out 55 years ago and he has no connection to the cultural moment in which they were release, but he loves them because they are simply great songs. There are so many popular songs that will be forgotten, but these bands will last.

    • @dansonntag4685
      @dansonntag4685 Pƙed 24 dny +15

      I love this list. Without any connection to spotify numbers my top three guesses for Rick's topic were Zep, Beatles, Floyd. Adding Heads to it is icing on the cake!

    • @user-ze5cw1mo1j
      @user-ze5cw1mo1j Pƙed 24 dny +17

      Talking Heads will be forgotten. They're fading fast as I write. What the Beach Boys did, just one example, was light years beyond Talking Heads

    • @Mr_Xilef5737
      @Mr_Xilef5737 Pƙed 24 dny +4

      What about Queen!?

    • @johnharrison6522
      @johnharrison6522 Pƙed 24 dny

      Somewhere in the top ten.

    • @dabo8249
      @dabo8249 Pƙed 23 dny +2

      Pink Floyd released an album on 2014

  • @blikketty77
    @blikketty77 Pƙed 20 dny +17

    Man, Dont Stop Me Now is fine, but there are probably 50+ queen songs id rather listen to, maybe 100.
    Its not uncommon that a band will have a song that isnt their best or super representative of their catalog be their biggest hit, but its wild to have a song become such a prominent part of their catalog from tv and movie usage decades after any new material.

    • @x00p3
      @x00p3 Pƙed 9 dny +1

      My favorite music of Queen is mostly on their first album.

    • @fbdgjgvnhvkfnych8252
      @fbdgjgvnhvkfnych8252 Pƙed 2 dny +1

      Radiohead is a great example of this

  • @andrewmichaelcrook340
    @andrewmichaelcrook340 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    Wow rick I'm travelling to work for the past 2 years now , using Australian public transport 28 minutes by train in that time I've been listening to all of those bands , you hit the nail on the head ,absolutely and when someone will say ' Hay Andrew you love music what are or have been listening to well every time it those artists

  • @WowbaggerTheInfinitelyProlonge
    @WowbaggerTheInfinitelyProlonge Pƙed 28 dny +623

    Bowie's estate or record label needs to hire a P.R. person to get the same impact as Queen for newer generations. His creativity deserves to be recognized in this mix of artists.

    • @steveelder5306
      @steveelder5306 Pƙed 28 dny +28

      that's a fact. really better than any of these.

    • @markkavanagh7377
      @markkavanagh7377 Pƙed 28 dny +36

      Yes, but Queens music is great for crowds, Bowies not so much.

    • @menstruatormobile9467
      @menstruatormobile9467 Pƙed 28 dny +52

      I don't trust anyone who doesn't like Bowie.

    • @ejomo11
      @ejomo11 Pƙed 28 dny

      Now that's a tee shirt I will wear.. Love it!@@menstruatormobile9467

    • @johnmcmahonBXLA
      @johnmcmahonBXLA Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Has there been a Bowie movie?

  • @digitaljanus
    @digitaljanus Pƙed 25 dny +392

    Queen is the band that literally has something for everyone. Long, technical compositions for prog-heads. Funky disco tracks. Arena-pleasing hard rock anthems. Proto-metal headbangers. Freddie Mercury's impeccable voice and their imaginative videos for fans of musical theatre and the more standard kind. They invented the jock jam. Some of the sweetest love ballads. Nerdy soundtracks and songs about dragons for sci-fi fantasy nerds. And they always sound like they're having a good time. What's not to love?

    • @JakobBornaBerac
      @JakobBornaBerac Pƙed 23 dny +30

      For me Queen is the only band where I love every single song, I rarely find one that I skip when It comes on

    • @user-er3ri6sc3j
      @user-er3ri6sc3j Pƙed 23 dny +12

      Very well put. Versatility in craftmanship. Back in March 2001 at the Waldorf Astoria in NYC the R&R HOF Induction ceremony met Jer and Kashimira the mother and sister to Freddie and met Brian May. Didn't run into Roger but his wife at the time Debbie.

    • @user-er3ri6sc3j
      @user-er3ri6sc3j Pƙed 23 dny +6

      Also within musical theater the vaudevillian town hall pastiche. With the lead singer a little but if Liberace and Ethel Merman and Julie Andrew's. Throw in the Marx Brothers.

    • @davemeade4371
      @davemeade4371 Pƙed 23 dny +8

      Nah. It really doesn't.
      And I say that as a Queen fan.

    • @user-er3ri6sc3j
      @user-er3ri6sc3j Pƙed 23 dny +9

      @@davemeade4371 Please elaborate. Everything that was written I agree with.

  • @patrickpaganini
    @patrickpaganini Pƙed 22 dny +3

    Excellent video.

  • @dagnabbit6187
    @dagnabbit6187 Pƙed 22 dny +11

    Zeppelin , Creedence , Bowie ( some songs) , the Who ( some songs ), Beatles ( the White Album ) the Stones ( Exile on Main Street ) , Journey ( again some songs ), Pink Floyd , and the Doors . Why the Doors ? They are a circular rotation band . They go in and out of fashion and will do that for eternity .

    • @debonairpandabear4698
      @debonairpandabear4698 Pƙed 16 dny +1

      My admiration to you for including Journey. I agree, and if not some songs, at least "Don't Stop Believin'!"

    • @dagnabbit6187
      @dagnabbit6187 Pƙed 2 dny

      @@debonairpandabear4698 Thank you since you were so kind I will put something else out there interesting . A roving editor in a magazine from the 90s ( I think Musicians ) said that in the coming cultural revisionism , the Velvet Underground will overtake the Beatles by 2040. Well that day is almost here but I personally don’t see it happening but you never know . Posterity is a fickle thing . One of my favorite American Writers from the 20 th Century ,Carl Sandburg , got unjustly thrown under the bus by counter culture elitist academia revisionism

  • @michaelscerbo35
    @michaelscerbo35 Pƙed 27 dny +139

    That has been on my mind forever. The day Rick interviews Paul or Ringo will be some of the best news this channel has ever had. And there’s a ton of good news constantly!

    • @Tom-hk6ub
      @Tom-hk6ub Pƙed 27 dny

      I can't see Ringo doing it ...

    • @geneward4438
      @geneward4438 Pƙed 25 dny +3

      Great idea. Both seem to be fairly accessible- I hope it happens soon!

    • @sportsygirl8
      @sportsygirl8 Pƙed 25 dny +1

      That would be absolutely amazing!!!

    • @stevenperren1678
      @stevenperren1678 Pƙed 25 dny +3

      Paul will do it.

    • @DibIrken
      @DibIrken Pƙed 25 dny

      Nah. They copyright strike him for playing their music even if it's for education al purposes. They are all about that money. They'd ask for a huge fee for that interview.

  • @sambourne4923
    @sambourne4923 Pƙed 27 dny +372

    CCR are criminally overlooked on this channel. Over 35 million monthly listeners as I type this (more than most bands mentioned in this vid) and two songs with over 1 billion streams (and a third song not far behind). Their last official album of new material was released in 1972. Great timeless songs. Blueprint Moon should be on that list too. ;)

    • @vernasbury2174
      @vernasbury2174 Pƙed 27 dny +12

      NatĂŒrlich!!! CCR ist mein lieblings!

    • @StretchFletcher
      @StretchFletcher Pƙed 27 dny +4

      fair point.

    • @purplehaze1274
      @purplehaze1274 Pƙed 27 dny +15

      I agree, Rick should even do a video just about them and their huge streaming numbers. They had a lot of hits in the late 60's-early 70's but the level of their popularity today is surprising because they were never considered as iconic or legendary as some of their other contemporaries like Rolling Stones, Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Zeppelin yet today they top them all.

    • @sambourne4923
      @sambourne4923 Pƙed 27 dny +13

      @@purplehaze1274 A CCR vid would be great. Good point about their popularity. I wonder if it may have something to do with the simplicity of the songs (in a good way). They’re basically standards now and have become part of the general repertoire. Also the lyrics are more relevant and timeless than say most Zeppelin lyrics (although I love Zeppelin too).

    • @Bigrobkerr
      @Bigrobkerr Pƙed 27 dny +9

      Yeah, and unlike the overrated bands mentioned here, they are tragically underrated in comparison.

  • @mattlech5194
    @mattlech5194 Pƙed 19 dny

    You're absolutely right, the music and what it does to people when they listen to it is crucial. I'm quite sure that the four bands you mentioned will "live" forever. Thank you for this interesting perspective.

  • @ariel33699
    @ariel33699 Pƙed 21 dnem +2

    For me it's the creativity and depth of the songwriting that makes these bands great. I can think of some current artists that have that depth but it's too soon to say if they will last, though I suspect they will... I won't say who because I don't want to have a fight about it!

  • @shootytheturtle
    @shootytheturtle Pƙed 24 dny +188

    I have traveled all over the world - 30 plus countries over a period of 35 years - and the three bands that I always hear everywehere no matter the language/culture are: Beatles, ABBA, Bob Marley & The Wailers. There are many other widely popular bands, of course, but these ones jumped out as universally loved.

    • @jontalbot1
      @jontalbot1 Pƙed 23 dny +11

      Bob Marley is loved in countries with a lot of brown people in my experience. Abba mostly white people. Beatles are the most universal

    • @rexwave4624
      @rexwave4624 Pƙed 23 dny +5

      I saw a big Bob Marley painting on the front of a club in Kuala Lumpur.

    • @diogomarques9228
      @diogomarques9228 Pƙed 22 dny +14

      ​@@jontalbot1 Bob Marley is universally known i am from Portugal and there s a lot of cloths and stuff of Bob Marley

    • @sathira_anuk5179
      @sathira_anuk5179 Pƙed 22 dny +4

      And MJ, too

    • @seaburyneucollins688
      @seaburyneucollins688 Pƙed 21 dnem +3

      That's kinda a good point. The most popular classics of 2100 won't necessarily be the whatever seems to be standing the test of time currently on spotify, because that doesn't represent the global audience, which will become a larger portion of streaming by that date. I could definitely see Bob Marley being bigger in 2100 than The Police.

  • @bctwitty
    @bctwitty Pƙed 23 dny +108

    It’s all about the 60’s, 70’s, 80’s and 90’s having produced some of the most incredible recording artists that continue to span generations of time, people and their global cultures.
    It is kind of fascinating when stopping to think about it for a bit.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Pƙed 22 dny +11

      A lot of that has to do with the fact that the recording industry hadn't completely consolidated. There was a lot more room for some experimentation, especially in the '60s. Now, all the music that I hear is pretty much the same, I have no idea who did any of it and have a hard time identifying that it was different groups.

    • @theo9976
      @theo9976 Pƙed 17 dny +8

      I know old farts (like me) always say that contemporary music is crap but music today truly is overproduced crap. I can't wait for the pendulum to swing and we get some raw, talented, and unique music again.

    • @AlanSmitheeman
      @AlanSmitheeman Pƙed 15 dny

      I would add the 50's in there as well. Great rockers like Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis, and Little Richard won't ever be forgotten.

    • @craigstephenson7676
      @craigstephenson7676 Pƙed 11 dny

      And also, those songs were in movies , making them more popular, then a new generation saw those movies, they continued to be popular, leading them to be in more movies and generally ubiquitous in pop culture. It’s impossible to not hear these songs

    • @ttbjammn
      @ttbjammn Pƙed 5 dny +2

      The golden age of rock is long gone...

  • @jfitch1112
    @jfitch1112 Pƙed 7 hodinami

    Would be wonderful to listen to a conversation between you and Sir Paul!

  • @scottamici8152
    @scottamici8152 Pƙed 19 dny +1

    Rick as usual you hit the nail right on the head. I'm a little surprised about Prince he's my favorite on your list and had the least amount of listeners.

  • @bvalt1
    @bvalt1 Pƙed 28 dny +205

    Mozart, Bach, Queen, Led Zeppelin, Beatles, Scott Joplin, Robert Jonson.....etc... so many insanely talented artists, for centuries people will know their music. When all else has gone, may their music play on............

    • @noahpincus8344
      @noahpincus8344 Pƙed 27 dny +8

      I agree with the others. Who the hell are Scott Joplin and Robert Jonson?

    • @dyer2cycle
      @dyer2cycle Pƙed 27 dny +6

      you had me until the Scott Joplin and Robert Johnson...Who tf are they?

    • @alexkx8599
      @alexkx8599 Pƙed 27 dny +5

      ​@@noahpincus8344 Typos. Janis Joplin and Robert Johnson.

    • @ChristianBurrola
      @ChristianBurrola Pƙed 27 dny +14

      If you don’t know Scott Joplin do yourself a favor and look him up. And while you are at it also listen to Edward Macdowell, Charles Ives, Jelly Roll Morton, and Cab Calloway.

    • @stewpot6998
      @stewpot6998 Pƙed 27 dny +9

      John Bonham!!
      Go listen to Misty Mountain Hop!! Just do it. Yeah!!!!

  • @leongallagher6792
    @leongallagher6792 Pƙed 28 dny +651

    Pink Floyd, led Zeppelin

  • @MusicLover10538
    @MusicLover10538 Pƙed 7 dny +9

    ELO is still rocking after 54 years. Jeff Lynne's ELO will have 32 concerts in North America this Summer and Fall of 2024.

    • @keithpodhradsky1314
      @keithpodhradsky1314 Pƙed 7 dny +2

      RIP Mr. Tandy and thank you!

    • @richardjames3446
      @richardjames3446 Pƙed 4 dny +1

      One of the giants of music. Far ahead of Clapton. Producer, guitarist, singer and session man, even in the Travelling Willburys.. One of the greatest. Another, far less known, still touring. is Steve Hackett. (musician at the top for about 54 years.

    • @MusicLover10538
      @MusicLover10538 Pƙed 4 dny +2

      @@richardjames3446 Absolutely!

  • @brianmcquillan6664
    @brianmcquillan6664 Pƙed 13 dny +6

    It fine that you are making your theory from Spotify data.
    As long as you realize that it is a segment of music listeners, not everyone.

  • @toyfreaks
    @toyfreaks Pƙed 27 dny +292

    Also, on the topic of Queen's eternal popularity... In the mid 1990's, I was flipping through the bins of my local record store across from a couple rocker dudes with Poison hair and studded leather jackets. Bohemian Rhapsody came on the store speakers and they both looked at each other and said "WAYNE'S WORLD!" That what the moment I knew they had been immortalized

    • @NJGuy1973
      @NJGuy1973 Pƙed 27 dny +8

      On the list of Rock Stars Who Benefitted By Dying, Freddie Mercury is #3, just behind #2 Elvis and #1, MJ.

    • @philiptaylor7902
      @philiptaylor7902 Pƙed 27 dny +7

      @@NJGuy1973 John Lennon? Kurt Cobain? George Harrison? just from Rick's four bands.

    • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
      @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 Pƙed 27 dny +8

      Queen had no way to reproduce their heavily overdubbed records live. But their sound is so distinctive, dramatic and dynamic, that they give that impression. That's part of their magic.

    • @thebookwasbetter3650
      @thebookwasbetter3650 Pƙed 27 dny +13

      Queen was never heard of until they were asked to write Bohemian Rhapsody for Wayne's World. They took off in popularity after that.
      Source: Any member of my class of 1994.

    • @danielstoddart
      @danielstoddart Pƙed 27 dny +16

      Rick didn't mention it, but that Wayne's World bit was the first time I remember Queen getting revived for a younger generation. And that's happened several times now at least. Whoever is in charge of licensing Queen's music is a genius.

  • @hipjazzbone
    @hipjazzbone Pƙed 27 dny +146

    As a music teacher, we talk about this in class A LOT! I often start off with something along the lines of "Why do we still know Bach's name 274 years after he died?" And it shortly gets followed by "Will we still know _____________ in 100 years?" (I've been teaching a while. The blank has changed a lot over the years, but I used Bieber for a long time) It's worth pointing out that a majority of my grade nines don't know the Beatles. And a majority of my grade 11s and 12s have them on their playlists and are certain they'll still be well known in 100 years. Queen was very popular amongst my students long before Bohemian Rhapsody came out. It's very clear that what parents listen to is a huge impact on this. A lot of dads play a lot of Metallica.

    • @j.d.waterhouse4197
      @j.d.waterhouse4197 Pƙed 27 dny +9

      A student I had once told me his favorite song was the 30 minute version of Inna Godda Da Vida. But I'm sickened by what passes as music these days being foisted on these kids...especially the auto-tuned vocals, which apparently now kids say they PREFER over natural voices.

    • @ThatsNotFunnyThatsSick
      @ThatsNotFunnyThatsSick Pƙed 27 dny +9

      @@j.d.waterhouse4197 Watch a Taylor Swift concert on TV, then watch Led Zeppelin, The Song Remains The Same at Madison Square Garden in 1973. Just like coming home from school to look at a screen, or get out on your BMX bike and ride around until you know dinner is ready.

    • @Mcandmar
      @Mcandmar Pƙed 27 dny +5

      Was listening to Johann Pachelbel Canon in D Major earlier this evening and thinking the exact same thing, is there any music today that people will listen to, and find magical in 270 years time. Doubt it.

    • @joshuaonmaui5965
      @joshuaonmaui5965 Pƙed 27 dny +2

      “
. and you’ll never hear gangsta rap music again” - Deaf Tone from the Son

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Pƙed 26 dny +8

      "Why do we still know Bach's name 274 years after he died?" You can thank Felix Mendelson in part...from a retired music teacher. what is sad is we glorify only one medium or source of music, kids do Not know Gershwin, Ellington, Dvorak, etc and are not "trained" to care, and now we have adults running around with peer pressure and corporate radio and other controlled media playlist impressions about classical and jazz music, [in short they have no damn clue] very little knowledge about world music, [including my old bones self lol]. But also, I have always said regarding the funding of school music programs by hack amateur local school boards and the hack amateur United States Government..."You'll never see a weed growing in a football stadium."

  • @Tob1Kadach1
    @Tob1Kadach1 Pƙed 13 dny +6

    I still listen to all my music on CD & will long after Spotify is gone

    • @andysmith4734
      @andysmith4734 Pƙed 2 dny

      CDs unfortunately don't last forever. Especially if not stored correctly.

  • @groovefunkel
    @groovefunkel Pƙed 18 dny +1

    Rick, you should do an episode on the top 5 or 10 deceased artists that you would love to have interviewed and why.

  • @toyfreaks
    @toyfreaks Pƙed 27 dny +41

    This question reminds me of your video on The Bach Effect. It was amazing to hear all of those musicians and songwriters talk about how his work influenced their understanding of music.

  • @Phd366
    @Phd366 Pƙed 28 dny +48

    I bought your lessons bundle. I LOVE IT! I was so lost trying to learn to play guitar by myself 😅
    Guitar has helped me a lot with my anxiety. Thank you! ❀

    • @roberthevern6169
      @roberthevern6169 Pƙed 28 dny +3

      My air guitar including Joe Cocker type movements works well for me! As long as nobody's looking....

    • @jconnon
      @jconnon Pƙed 27 dny +3

      Nirvana are shite. There I said it. In fact all grunge is mince.

    • @YMagoulo
      @YMagoulo Pƙed 27 dny

      @@jconnon I guess people just like listening to shite music.

    • @Bob3519
      @Bob3519 Pƙed 27 dny

      @@roberthevern6169 Brother, if you sang out of tune I would never walk out on you! Keep on Rockin’ 👍

  • @scottsnyder2726
    @scottsnyder2726 Pƙed 2 dny

    Let’s hope so! Your closing argument was music that was “creative”. Amen to that! Each of the bands you mentioned hopefully will delight new listeners who love music for millenniums.

  • @tklrrbccar3906
    @tklrrbccar3906 Pƙed 7 dny +2

    Rick, I must say ny brother. YOU ARE JUST THE BEST!!! I really mean it!

  • @sadsismint
    @sadsismint Pƙed 28 dny +446

    Bands that "cancel/copywrite strike" people like Rick and others will also fade away over time. Once the generation dies that listen to these old bands that strike or don't stream, they'll be forgotten about.
    It's the bands that share, let people listen to them and stay on these modern platforms, even for sales, are staying relevant to history.
    Letting new people enjoy old music is what will keep the legends alive.

    • @peaceseeker52
      @peaceseeker52 Pƙed 28 dny +37

      It is a disaster that Motown was kept that brilliance under lock and key while the artists need go fund me pages for health care these days.

    • @EnvirotekCleaningSystems
      @EnvirotekCleaningSystems Pƙed 28 dny +8

      Exactly right. I introduced my grand baby to Prince when she was just a toddler. Before is death, it would have been impossible to just play video after video of him performing and his music is best watched or danced to.

    • @hux2000
      @hux2000 Pƙed 28 dny +38

      Yep! Rick didn't mention it but Queen is notable in being far ahead of the game when it comes to encouraging the online spread of their music. They don't copyright strike anyone who uses their stuff in their videos, because they see that as advertising that benefits them. Conversely, the Beatles resisted for *years* even having a channel on CZcams or selling their music on the Apple store. With that dumb policy, they missed out on a ton of exposure to newer generations. Is it any wonder that so many younger people love Queen now but view the Beatles as overrated "grandpa music"?

    • @yesand5536
      @yesand5536 Pƙed 28 dny +16

      @@hux2000 EMI and the estates thought that they'd play the long game and make access to the Beatles so rare that it goes up in value. However, Queen played the other long game that won out more. Just because you have a long game and it sounds established doesn't mean it's going to equate to full success over that time. Ah well, decisions.

    • @donpardo2510
      @donpardo2510 Pƙed 28 dny +23

      Who's Don Henley?

  • @jm.w
    @jm.w Pƙed 28 dny +291

    Hate them or love them - ABBA will never die.
    Musicals, movies, avatar concerts..
    They keep being relevant.

    • @roberthevern6169
      @roberthevern6169 Pƙed 28 dny +9

      And to me, they represent all that was wrong with RADIO at the time..
      Just my opinion
      (Shhh, I may have liked 'Fernando' a tiny bit....shhh!)

    • @ejomo11
      @ejomo11 Pƙed 28 dny +30

      But they do have the same ingredient that he mentions here at the end of this post... Great songs! Really, some of the best written songs in history. AND... Kurt Cobain was a fan of ABBA... so stick that in your pipe and smoke it, all you music snobs!

    • @billycox475
      @billycox475 Pƙed 28 dny +12

      Yep, love Abba

    • @ND-OPS
      @ND-OPS Pƙed 28 dny +9

      I think rick focuses more on rock

    • @Soldano999
      @Soldano999 Pƙed 28 dny +2

      I agree

  • @christophercagan8160
    @christophercagan8160 Pƙed 20 dny +1

    True creativity that speaks to people's hearts deserves to be remembered, and it will be.

  • @tariqalhajri8166
    @tariqalhajri8166 Pƙed 22 dny

    Something to consider. Quite often on Spotify or CZcams music when a user selects a song, the next recommended song comes up according to Spotifys reccomendation engine or whatever. The songs on those bands seem to be the go to Generic Rock genre because man I get the Police and Nirvana creeping in way more than necessary even if I'm listening to something like The Eagles or Fleetwood Mac (example only). If there was a way to check the users selection from search or library that would be interesting to see the numbers comparing to most streamed which is still legit

  • @christophervincent3520
    @christophervincent3520 Pƙed 28 dny +323

    As a Brit, I should point out that 3 out of the 4 are from our little country!

    • @marieuzes
      @marieuzes Pƙed 28 dny +5

      ❀❀❀

    • @Juststartingout768
      @Juststartingout768 Pƙed 27 dny +21

      There is a phrase, if you want a tune made go to Britain. If you want it played technically go to America

    • @BigBri550
      @BigBri550 Pƙed 27 dny +1

      Maybe that's because most Spotify users are Brits? 😊

    • @dhoopes510
      @dhoopes510 Pƙed 27 dny +7

      Claiming The Police as a British band is a bit of a stretch, considering their drummer, producer, and record label. But you make a valid point on the others. Cheers.

    • @daemoe158
      @daemoe158 Pƙed 27 dny

      Cheers.

  • @lodragan
    @lodragan Pƙed 28 dny +136

    I had the supreme pleasure of seeing Queen live in concert at the height of their powers in ~1980; what hit me most about it was how good it sounded. The concert sounded like the tracks on the album - the vocals, the instruments, the mixing - it was all awesome. Then the interactions between Freddy and the crowd - that was just icing on the cake. Not only was he a superb vocalist and writer, he was an excellent showman - God bless him. We miss you Freddy!

    • @ChristopherWalker007
      @ChristopherWalker007 Pƙed 28 dny +11

      I saw them live in Melbourne in 1985 (I was 17) on their Radio GaGa tour and I have to say your assessment is 100% correct. From the sound to Freddy's interactions with the audience... just brilliant.

    • @Juststartingout768
      @Juststartingout768 Pƙed 27 dny +6

      I was recording myself and had come out of a studio in Glasgow. Sitting under the bridge at Glasgow Central train station Dunkin Donuts at 2am is when I heard that Freddy was gone. There used to be newspapermen with the early morning editions and that is how everyone heard at the same time over a donut and early morning coffee.

    • @markbaker5167
      @markbaker5167 Pƙed 27 dny +12

      In those days I went to see almost any band that came to Charlotte NC. I bought a ticket to see Queen just because they came there and didn't expect much. I liked them ok just from the radio. But I was blown away...one of the best live performances I've ever seen!

    • @ChuffingNorah
      @ChuffingNorah Pƙed 27 dny +6

      Pah! Zat eez nuttin'! I saw Queen live in 1975 at the Glasgow Apollo, when they had just recorded Bo Rap! The Upper Levels of the Theatre literally vibrated!

    • @MojoVince
      @MojoVince Pƙed 27 dny +2

      Cmon people, it's FreddIE.

  • @13terapyn
    @13terapyn Pƙed 2 dny +1

    I hope that Rick Beato's content is watched well into 21, 2200 and beyond

  • @RobertLakeMusic
    @RobertLakeMusic Pƙed 21 dnem

    Yep authenticity is what these people's strove for with the right tools, and sometimes just hit the nail on the head once is all you need so to speak

  • @kidgmusic
    @kidgmusic Pƙed 27 dny +15

    May your channel achieves that longevity too, and that future generations will still be able to be inspired by the greats you’ve interviewed when they look back at all the work you’ve done. ❀

  • @TenthAvenue94
    @TenthAvenue94 Pƙed 26 dny +151

    Bob Marley and the Wailers deserved to be mentioned surely. Bob died way back in 1981 and his music has 26 million monthly listeners, "Three Little Birds" being close to one billion streams. His legacy is huge and continues to inspire millions around the world.

    • @StrikerSML
      @StrikerSML Pƙed 24 dny +2

      Never even heard of them lol

    • @dagsct
      @dagsct Pƙed 24 dny +6

      I know it’s not spelled out but pretty sure he meant only Rock bands


    • @Fiasco3
      @Fiasco3 Pƙed 24 dny +3

      Guilty of listening to him today. Because he's a unique vibe.

    • @samhailess
      @samhailess Pƙed 24 dny

      defo

    • @scottttym
      @scottttym Pƙed 24 dny +3

      ​@@dagsctBob is pretty close to rock reggae..
      Literally Roots, Rock, Reggae

  • @griffinj1832
    @griffinj1832 Pƙed 19 dny +2

    Queen is so much a part of popular culture via advertising. One night my wife and I were streaming some shows with ads (yes, we are cheap), and there were multiple commercials with different Queen songs. The music just sounds fresh and translates well to today's media.

  • @DaveE7171
    @DaveE7171 Pƙed 22 dny +1

    My personal picks are Beatles, AC/DC, Eagles, Led Zeppelin. (need a list of 5 to include Rolling Stones).
    In 76 years, these will easily stand the test of time.

  • @Dina72920
    @Dina72920 Pƙed 26 dny +32

    My sons are in their early 20s now, they’ve come to me many times over the years about songs they’ve heard on Grand Theft Auto and other video games. The game creators are introducing a lot of great classic stuff to a whole new generation. It’s pretty cool!

    • @andrear1751
      @andrear1751 Pƙed 25 dny +5

      Video games and popular anime has been reviving interest in so many vintage songs and artists. That may be the key element to all this.

    • @Salmagundiii
      @Salmagundiii Pƙed 24 dny +3

      You raise an important point. By 2100, nobody will be listening for the sake of nostalgia anymore. So it will depend on new audiences being introduced to these groups. I bet of the groups listed, Nirvana has the most aging Gen-X listeners at the moment.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Pƙed 21 dnem

      @@Salmagundiii Yes, my guess is that it's ultimately going to be whatever groups recorded the most standards and were able to get into the most movies that people still listen to. Especially anybody that manages their way into the Christmas Canon. Getting in there ensures that you'll be listened to forever. I was kind of surprised that nobody has mentioned Bing Crosby as he's been the best selling vocalist ever, with outright sales that are competitive with the number of times some of these songs have been played. And he's recorded Christmas canon songs, been incorporated in movies that retain popular appeal many decades later as well.

  • @brandonjordan1937
    @brandonjordan1937 Pƙed 28 dny +72

    Also, I think Spotify putting songs into playlists and pushing those helps with some bands numbers

    • @jonny5alive123
      @jonny5alive123 Pƙed 28 dny +13

      Yeah this helps old bands way more than Rick realises, the big record labels are paying Spotify to push only the biggest acts in playlists.

    • @Mao_722
      @Mao_722 Pƙed 28 dny +4

      If Spotify didn't support better sound quality, you'll definitely not have Spotify in 2100 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @s0m3cunt91
      @s0m3cunt91 Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Facts

    • @krusher74
      @krusher74 Pƙed 28 dny +6

      yeah, the numbers are in their algorithms. You search a band and play their station and spotify with just feed you the same hits over and over.

    • @AndresGrimace
      @AndresGrimace Pƙed 27 dny

      So, because Spotify tells people to listen something they just do?
      Ok... Then, it's been great for Queen. My fav band ever!

  • @steveallen3434
    @steveallen3434 Pƙed 19 dny

    great songs are great songs in any time period and if you made an impact on a generation at the same time all the better for your future legacy

  • @BobSaxon-ou7ww
    @BobSaxon-ou7ww Pƙed 23 dny

    Saw queen with Adam Lambert and they were fantastic in concert. I also saw the struts and I am convinced they will be the next big arena concert band.

  • @dlux703
    @dlux703 Pƙed 25 dny +5

    As always, great concepts and entertaining perspectives. I would LOVE to see your reaction/analysis of one of "Royal Blood's" tracks, Pull Me Through, as I find this group to be groundbreaking.

  • @erniericardo8140
    @erniericardo8140 Pƙed 25 dny +27

    Rick, I hope Paul as well as Ringo come on your channel for an interview - I would Love to see that👍

    • @penndark8854
      @penndark8854 Pƙed 20 dny

      But what would they talk about??? ;)

    • @barnabu5
      @barnabu5 Pƙed 20 dny

      They could talk about Ringo’s drumming
.and trips to India

  • @nodivisions
    @nodivisions Pƙed 14 dny +1

    Radio.
    From the 60s to the 90s, a handful of radio stations focused *the entire nation* on a relative handful of bands.
    Then the internet fractured our attention and our culture, allowing us all to specialize into a greater number of bands in the long tail. It's much harder now for any single band to reach the massive level of acceptance that the best bands of the radio era achieved.

  • @derickball2994
    @derickball2994 Pƙed 19 dny +1

    Love the beard!

  • @richinoable
    @richinoable Pƙed 27 dny +269

    Stones still recording/touring!
    But the Beatles achieved Shakespeare-like immortality.

    • @richinoable
      @richinoable Pƙed 27 dny +8

      @@JHimminy uhhhh, no

    • @danieljones3846
      @danieljones3846 Pƙed 27 dny +4

      I was a huge Beatles head back in college, now I always skip their songs 😓

    • @MusicMan73790
      @MusicMan73790 Pƙed 27 dny +4

      The Stones are insignificant in the big picture of creativity and longevity. Heck, they are insignificant NOW, lol.

    • @richinoable
      @richinoable Pƙed 26 dny +8

      @@MusicMan73790 you have no idea what those words mean

    • @jacobigregory
      @jacobigregory Pƙed 26 dny +6

      @@MusicMan73790 What are you even talking about? That's simply wrong. Are you, like, 22?

  • @rileymooneyham8051
    @rileymooneyham8051 Pƙed 28 dny +5

    Hey Rick. Love the vid. You should do a video like this, but for solo rock artists

  • @zalordsguard1880
    @zalordsguard1880 Pƙed 10 dny +1

    I think a great follow up to this video would be "Musicians that will probably be forgotten in the future but shouldn't be." I would love to see your thoughts. I work with younger people and I'm surprised by the artists they don't remember such as Tom Petty.

  • @trevorsharpham2112
    @trevorsharpham2112 Pƙed 14 dny +2

    All 4 bands have members who still tour (under their own or with new bands) and also are played heavily by radio stations.

  • @paulfrank9047
    @paulfrank9047 Pƙed 24 dny +25

    Beatles, Stones, Who, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd are my five who will be played in 100 years. It's also worth noting that modern multitrack recording is relatively new in human history. A lot of secular music is lost to history since 'regular' people/musicians could not read or write. This isn't a problem in modern times since even artists with no music theory can record music on a budget. Thus, more artists from the 1950s on will be played/remembered simply due to the fact people can and will still be able to actually listen to music of the past.

    • @CombatMedic1O
      @CombatMedic1O Pƙed 18 dny +3

      The doors will always be played, maybe not hugely popular but always remain relevant. For the soul fact they sound like no other band and still sonically great.

    • @ZCEKanimations
      @ZCEKanimations Pƙed 16 dny

      @@CombatMedic1Ofacts

  • @kimi9572
    @kimi9572 Pƙed 26 dny +86

    Fleetwood Mac has regained more popularity since that skateboard video and now has 33 million monthly listeners. Plus, Rumours will still be catchy and timeless at 2100.

    • @BigOleMatty
      @BigOleMatty Pƙed 24 dny

      Also the amazon prime series was loosely based on Fleetwood Mac so people probably looked them up because of that. I think its called Daisy Jones and the Six or something similar

    • @jeffk.9251
      @jeffk.9251 Pƙed 23 dny +1

      My daughter was home for college this past Christmas and we drove down to NYC and she put on one of her playlists and Fleetwood Mac was one of the songs on her list. Plenty of new stuff I hadn't heard of, but Fleetwood Mac was one of the older songs she had on her playlist. Thought it was cool that she was listening to older songs like that.

    • @happypapi1903
      @happypapi1903 Pƙed 22 dny

      I think it helped that Daisy Jones and the Six also renewed interest in Fleetwood Mac because that fictional band were essentially caricatures of Fleetwood Mac.

    • @user-yn6zo4wp5b
      @user-yn6zo4wp5b Pƙed 22 dny

      So true. Dreams is still one of the greatest songs ever. I remember when it was a new song on the radio, my mother driving the car circa 77. 47 years later still sounds fresh. Bitter sweet 1970’s, Miss you mom.

    • @j_edwards6075
      @j_edwards6075 Pƙed 22 dny +1

      They've only got 1 or 2 decent songs though.

  • @user-qt3dg3qn6x
    @user-qt3dg3qn6x Pƙed 22 dny +1

    The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, ABBA. Massive during their time and still massive now.

  • @hewrecbizman
    @hewrecbizman Pƙed 17 dny

    I feel it's great to hear how popular songs from 1980's rock bands still are. I'm glad to hear about especially 80's bands songs still being so popular, also because I'm still doing the hard metal-ish rock music artist thing at 56 years old, and it makes me feel hopeful that I can still gain enough fans. Right now I'm composing my songs in Bandlab because I don't have any instrument and don't have money for any, but I met a electric guitar player who said he'd like to play electric guitar for me, and has been getting a band together and he's 50, so hearing how popular especially 1980's band songs still are, makes me feel hopeful enough that specially with that guy and his band, that them and me together might still be able to aquire enough fans. That's probably if I get listening more to them 80's and 90's rock bands songs more, to really learn what's made their songs still so popular.

  • @mikescullyoldfarm4759
    @mikescullyoldfarm4759 Pƙed 27 dny +6

    love the passion. you are the best Rick

  • @jeanoltvedt
    @jeanoltvedt Pƙed 28 dny +46

    Each of those groups, in their own way, introduced their audience to something new and different from other groups. Most of it was the unique song writing as well as the arrangement of the songs and the unique voices that sang them. Very distinct productions!

    • @Deephouse_Gent66
      @Deephouse_Gent66 Pƙed 28 dny

      Completely agree. Nicely put!

    • @Juststartingout768
      @Juststartingout768 Pƙed 27 dny +4

      I agree and I would go further. While photographs evoke memories, music evokes feelings and our favorite songs are often the timeline to our lives.

  • @noneofyoubusiness4895
    @noneofyoubusiness4895 Pƙed 20 dny +2

    Correction: Queen have released several albums since Freddy Mercury died!
    Most notably "Made in Heaven" which features the voice of Freddy Mercury.

  • @arthurlorelle6355
    @arthurlorelle6355 Pƙed 15 dny

    Hey Rick, have ever tried to secure an interview with Ringo or Paul. Bet they would oblige. Look fwd. to it if you could pull it off. Love ur site.

  • @jasondennison8911
    @jasondennison8911 Pƙed 28 dny +53

    Queen is unique in the sense that they were so completely larger than life but so immediately relatable and accessible in their music. I grew up on them practically from birth and 46 years later it’s still as fresh as the first time I listened to it for the first time. Freddie, Brian, John and Roger hit that perfect creative mix that transcends the passage of time

    • @pepmasters-999
      @pepmasters-999 Pƙed 27 dny +7

      Queen really have gone on to get bigger and bigger with the intervening years. Somebody to Love and Dont Stop Me Now have become almost standards in a way that they weren't during the true life of the band (i.e. before Freddie died). We Are the Champions, We Will Rock You and Another One Bites the Dust will go on forever just through sporting events alone. There's real variety in their music and advertisers love them. Was amazed that Cool Cat ended up in that Amazon advert not that long ago.

    • @theonlyredspecial
      @theonlyredspecial Pƙed 27 dny +7

      They had such great albums too. Everyone knows the hits but the songs on the albums that a lot of people don’t know are fantastic. So there is a lot to find after the initial hits. My young relatives love queen albums. It’s just great music.

    • @keithstover2899
      @keithstover2899 Pƙed 26 dny +6

      @@theonlyredspecial I've always considered it something of a cultural crime that very few people have ever even heard Queen I (titled "Queen"). When I first it in 1973, It was the heaviest music I had heard since Hendrix. "Keep Yourself Alive" was a minor hit and "Liar" did well in the U.K, but it didn't get played here in the states. Neither did Queen II, which was equally fantastic. "Killer Queen" put them on the map and then "Bohemian Rhapsody." I think Freddie's influence led the band away from hard rock and into more theatrical compositions, but my personal favorites will always be those first two albums.

    • @theonlyredspecial
      @theonlyredspecial Pƙed 26 dny +6

      @@keithstover2899 yes queen I and queen Ii were fantastic. Would be considered prog rock I suppose but back in those days I don’t think anything was classified so heavily as it has been in recent years. They were young men with so many creative ideas and those albums were just flowing with so many great riffs and fantastical lyrics. Father to son and white queen were two of my favourites. Played to death when I was a child. A night at the opera also remains in my mind as my older female cousin brought the vinyl over to our house and I listened to it in complete awe, never sure of what was going to happen next.
      They are known for their hit singles but they were an album band. Some of my favourite songs on their albums were never released as singles.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 Pƙed 24 dny +1

      They'll be all but gone by 2100. That's a LONG time for a band that has already all but disappeared once already.

  • @mudwiser1391
    @mudwiser1391 Pƙed 23 dny +12

    Love your channel Rick. I have a suggestion for a guest. The great Mike Post. His musical genius can be heard on many TV's biggest shows not to mention working with Mason Williams on Classical Gas, Eddie Van Halen on Van Halen III (there's gotta be some good studio stories from that album). He has a long list of credits. He just released a Bluegrass/Blues album. I think he would be a great guest... Am I wrong?

  • @thegreyman4920
    @thegreyman4920 Pƙed 18 dny +2

    AC/DC, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Metallica, and Pink Floyd are a few I know will still be popular.

  • @jimz68
    @jimz68 Pƙed 27 dny +7

    I really enjoy your excitement and enthusiasm for this music.

  • @LavrencicUrban
    @LavrencicUrban Pƙed 25 dny +5

    AWESOME DISCUSSION!

  • @freddiemann5555
    @freddiemann5555 Pƙed 11 dny

    One word...
    TIMELESS

  • @harry_astron
    @harry_astron Pƙed 18 dny

    He’s absolutely right! đŸ€˜

  • @semarko
    @semarko Pƙed 27 dny +64

    I was surprised to not hear Creedence Clearwater Revival being mentioned. No records released since '72, yet they have over 35 million monthly listeners on Spotify.

    • @ricardo_miguel13
      @ricardo_miguel13 Pƙed 27 dny +7

      or Abba with 31.6m (although they made an album some years ago)

    • @scotty4489
      @scotty4489 Pƙed 27 dny +8

      CCR and The Rolling Stones share a huge built in advantage in longevity: both of them signed away publishing rights to their managers who worked tirelessly to sell them out to anyone willing to write a check. As a result both of them are featured in dozens of movie soundtracks because unlike many artists they have always been an automatic yes to anyone who wants them on a soundtrack.

    • @matseriksson8177
      @matseriksson8177 Pƙed 26 dny +12

      And CCR basically did what they did in just 2 years and 5 months.

    • @anthornn9893
      @anthornn9893 Pƙed 18 dny

      All the listeners are going to die before 2100, nirvana or something is still gaining young listeners and will keep it alive past 2100

    • @ricardo_miguel13
      @ricardo_miguel13 Pƙed 18 dny

      @@anthornn9893 The Beatles had 30m listeners some monzhs ago. They gain a lot aswell. I am student in Vienna and everyone likes the Beatles here, they are defending popular.

  • @BadBehaviorFilms
    @BadBehaviorFilms Pƙed 27 dny +8

    Always clarity. Thank you, Rick!

  • @Biboche23
    @Biboche23 Pƙed 19 dny

    Love this list! Rolling stones should be on there too! Saw them 11 yrs ago finally! That was on my bucket list since i was 7yrs old. Im 33yrs old now and i never thought i would ever see them live, but those chaps were rocking and kicking and honestly one of the greatest live shows ive seen. It was an emotional experience to say the least I so wish i had seen the Beatles, Queen or Nirvana in my lifetime. Joy Division/ New order too. ❀

  • @SheaPodmore
    @SheaPodmore Pƙed 19 dny +1

    Would love you to interview Paul

  • @agricolaurbanus6209
    @agricolaurbanus6209 Pƙed 28 dny +105

    "We Are the Champions!" will be played forever at sports events!

    • @ford289cid7
      @ford289cid7 Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Yeah, but so will Rock & Roll by Gary Glitter and I don't think he'll be forever remembered.

    • @sierrabianca
      @sierrabianca Pƙed 28 dny +2

      @agricolaurbanus6209 Don't bet on it, it's already been largely replaced by seven nation army in recent times unfortunately.

    • @agricolaurbanus6209
      @agricolaurbanus6209 Pƙed 27 dny +2

      @@sierrabianca What are the "Seven Nations" btw? The G7 ??? I heard that is not a winning team. I would bet "We Are the Champions" will make a comeback!😉

    • @sierrabianca
      @sierrabianca Pƙed 27 dny

      @@agricolaurbanus6209 Here's hoping..

    • @Sherwoody
      @Sherwoody Pƙed 27 dny +3

      Not from a band, but I do remember seeing a crowd singing, “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life” (from The Life Of Brian) when the home team was getting clobbered.

  • @lavatar3562
    @lavatar3562 Pƙed 27 dny +11

    All 4 artists had a unique sound and style at a time when the world was changing and ready to appreciate it.
    The Beatles broke the mould so these other unique artists got through. Fab4forever

  • @alrivers8458
    @alrivers8458 Pƙed 22 dny +1

    Fair enough Rick, defining that idea up to year 2100 considering how many times a song has been "approached" by Spotify users.
    How many years from now, the criteria would be "How many people's hologram has been attending a Virtual Concert? đŸ€” 😊

  • @j.d.belanger9036
    @j.d.belanger9036 Pƙed 18 dny

    Ok, question for you I'd love to see a video on.
    What qualifies a song to be the "greatest song in the world" to quote Tenacious D!
    My buddies and I all have our favorites, and pretty much all of the songs in our lists can't really be argued with. But I want to know not what your list is, but more importantly, what you think makes these songs so important to us?
    I know you can look at popularity, or monetary stats, but I don't really believe that that explains it. I'm sure their are songs out there right now that get more play and make more money then B.O.C ever did, but will they live on for years to come? Longevity and new listeners has to count for something?
    How is it that some of those bands you just mentioned continue to pull in new listeners? What is the magic ingredient to you, that makes epics like Stairway to Heaven, or Comfortably Numb transcend generations? I remember hearing Smells like Teen Spirit the first time and feeling like I was hearing the anthem of our time, so how is it resonating as much in this day?
    We don't even get exposure to songs and artists the same way anymore, so I got to believe it's something about the music itself.

  • @AndreaLivieriPhoto
    @AndreaLivieriPhoto Pƙed 27 dny +11

    Your reflection is incredibly spot on, Rick! đŸ”„

  • @chaffsalvo
    @chaffsalvo Pƙed 27 dny +14

    Many of these songs dont automatically "date" by their sound or feel if you werent aware when they released, which is why i think they resonate. My 18 y/o grandson clued me to this when he said Asia's Heat of the Moment didnt seem like early 80s a few days ago. Musically, we have certainly lived in interesting times. Thank you Rick!

    • @Bramble451
      @Bramble451 Pƙed 27 dny +3

      I hear and think this most about Pink Floyd. They're one of these few bands that every other band seemed to say, "Yup, that's them, that's perfectly them, I ain't touchin' it!". So they don't sound attached to a particular era's sound. Even Gilmour said that Waters pushed hard to make sure their music didn't sound like a particular period, and that after he left, they produced albums that Gilmour thought, "Oh Waters was right... this sounds so '80s!" (paraphrase)

    • @SO-ym3zs
      @SO-ym3zs Pƙed 27 dny +2

      Interesting point, though, much of the Beatles' catalogue sounds very much of its era to my ears--production, tones, style, etc. (and I say that as a fan). Nirvana sounds old-fashioned to me now. Queen, though, tend to be so sui generis, with their free mix of styles and genres and influences, that they don't sonically register as of a particular era as readily.

  • @ImjaTse6189
    @ImjaTse6189 Pƙed 22 dny +3

    Queen... simply ageless. And you are right
    Rick, when you think about Freddie Mercury, you see this unstoppable character on the Live Aid stage. He will be this extremely talanted young man forever.

  • @ac-6569
    @ac-6569 Pƙed 21 dnem +1

    I thought you were talking about real rock bands, my subjective list would include: Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles, Queen, finally The Eagles (I know Long road to Eden 2007) with AC/DC, again I know Black Ice 2008 and Rock or Bust 2014. I can guarantee that these bands music will be around for a LONG LONG time. These are true Icons of Rock and Roll!!!

  • @arthursmall77
    @arthursmall77 Pƙed 27 dny +25

    Remember Bach was almost forgotten as a composer after his death and was only revived in the 19th Century. There's hope for Freddie and the Dreamers yet!

    • @pepmasters-999
      @pepmasters-999 Pƙed 27 dny +5

      Vivaldi similar.

    • @OlivierVerdys
      @OlivierVerdys Pƙed 27 dny +2

      Thank you Felix Mendelssohn!

    • @thepostapocalyptictrio4762
      @thepostapocalyptictrio4762 Pƙed 26 dny

      Calling the Freddy and Dreamers revival. At some point, society will need a singer that hops around and acts strange.

    • @JamesBrown-py8kq
      @JamesBrown-py8kq Pƙed 25 dny

      @@pepmasters-999Vivaldi would be better left forgotten
.

    • @QHarefield
      @QHarefield Pƙed 19 dny

      @@OlivierVerdys Absolutely!

  • @Honolulu-Blue
    @Honolulu-Blue Pƙed 25 dny +7

    It's always nice to hear about my favorite band in a context like this. Thank you.

  • @full420jacket
    @full420jacket Pƙed 20 dny

    Beatles, Pink Floyd, Led Zepplin and Rush ( I know Rush had the last album not too long ago) but all 4 of these bands are so unique, that they will be the Mount Rushmore in Rock History I think.
    Plus what are these stats on other platforms besides Spotify? You can hear the same song play on Spotify 3 times in the hour. I think the numbers might be skewed a bit?

  • @laurencehulme173
    @laurencehulme173 Pƙed 21 dnem

    Rick we need your low down on the 620 songs that have over a billion streams on Spotify - there’s about 3 songs that get added a week
some really surprising ones too

  • @boxingpuppet
    @boxingpuppet Pƙed 27 dny +7

    Great stuff Rick. What you are talking about here is MELODY. If you look at these timeless tracks you will see that what they all have in common is incredibly creative melody. This is in STARK contrast with the cookie cutter junky 1,5,6,4 disposable stuff released today. Look at the chord structures too, and youll see that all but one (every breath) have beautiful original progressions. This promotes clever and creative melody writing that stands the test of time. Yesterday, oh my word.
    Love your work, J

  • @gavindadds4414
    @gavindadds4414 Pƙed 25 dny +12

    Queen was my favourite band as a kid and it's great to see their music is still relevant and appreciated. I think they should try to do an album of new music with Adam Lambert who has been so amazing as a front man and keeping them going as a touring entity.

  • @lbbeasley
    @lbbeasley Pƙed 19 dny +2

    I think Rick makes a great point about having a limited discography -- to the bands he mention I would add Creedence, Joy Division, and probably the White Stripes. And had U2 not released the mediocre albums of the 21st century, they would probably deserve inclusion in Rick's list: 21 monthly listeners, 1 billion listens for With or Without You... seriously, their last big single was 2004's Vertigo, and I'd say their last great song was the buried Songs of Innocence bonus track Crystal Ballroom from 10 years back.

  • @stephenmcgaughey8682
    @stephenmcgaughey8682 Pƙed 22 dny

    Mr.Beatos:
    An interesting version of "The Beatles " song "Blackbird" is sung by Emma Stevens in her native language of M'Kaq (MiK MaK) from New Brunswick. It is on CZcams. Rumours are that it impressed Sir Paul so much he contacted her.

  • @secularZoo
    @secularZoo Pƙed 28 dny +36

    I love these hypotheticals Rick, keep em coming!