Are You a Music Snob? Find Out Here!

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  • čas přidán 16. 11. 2019
  • Are you a Metal guy, a Jazzer, an Indie Rock Hipster who only plays center hits on the snare? In this episode Me, Dave and Keith (Five Watt World) discuss what you get and what you miss by being a music snob. Find out if you are one.
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  • Hudba

Komentáře • 2K

  • @davidberends6174
    @davidberends6174 Před 4 lety +304

    "There are two kinds of music. Good music, and the other kind." -Duke Ellington

    • @josephzdyrski
      @josephzdyrski Před 4 lety +3

      Duke Had it right!!

    • @todd1771
      @todd1771 Před 4 lety +18

      Also Duke "If it sounds good, it is good."

    • @williampatterson1795
      @williampatterson1795 Před 3 lety

      oh man, this discussion starts off pretty great! how long before I know if I'm a music snob?

    • @jeambapt
      @jeambapt Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the credit, i thought it was captain obvious’s

    • @stevebodner3729
      @stevebodner3729 Před 3 lety

      Yep, I've always loved that quote. Pretty much would've come up with a similar line if he didn't. thanx!

  • @toddhamby
    @toddhamby Před 4 lety +539

    Rick is the quintessential 14 year old kid in a record store from the 70s that never grew up. I love that.

    • @bgtube
      @bgtube Před 4 lety +11

      Isn't that America ?

    • @boroluitmaster5288
      @boroluitmaster5288 Před 4 lety +17

      We all love him for that. I like it.

    • @Simonknowsall
      @Simonknowsall Před 4 lety +21

      I am a 24 -year-old kid from 2000s and I listen to 60-90s music and I am not planning to stop

    • @jerryjazzbo2845
      @jerryjazzbo2845 Před 4 lety +6

      I'm not a musician, but I am similar to that guy you described. Musicians would hang in my place because I have a music collection, and It was me who would open up their limited minds...hahaha.

    • @craigusselman546
      @craigusselman546 Před 4 lety +5

      I do as well I was born in 1980 and 2019 music repels me I think Ricks innocence is wonderful.

  • @johnspringer8196
    @johnspringer8196 Před 4 lety +129

    Am I a music snob? I'm subscribed to Rick's channel aren't I?

  • @2und2sind4
    @2und2sind4 Před 4 lety +66

    I love the auto-captions for this one :D "Hey everybody, I'm Rigby Otto"

    • @FahlmanCascade
      @FahlmanCascade Před 4 lety +7

      Eleanor's kid brother!

    • @sindead28
      @sindead28 Před 4 lety +14

      Brick Piano will forever be my fav

    • @napomania
      @napomania Před 3 lety +1

      @@sindead28 not prick? 😂

    • @sindead28
      @sindead28 Před 3 lety +1

      @@napomania guess i have a new favorite now

  • @PbPomper
    @PbPomper Před 4 lety +326

    "You gotta have the music before the production." 100% agree.

    • @skyblazeeterno
      @skyblazeeterno Před 4 lety +14

      Production is an ARTFORM...overall sound changes a song dramatically

    • @jonathanettinger6970
      @jonathanettinger6970 Před 4 lety +5

      Depends on if you're making a song or a sound. In the latter, production is part of the construction, not just the means to capture and distribute.

    • @craigkendall1754
      @craigkendall1754 Před 4 lety +6

      Don't forget the dance moves and the costumes!

    • @allanwilson8878
      @allanwilson8878 Před 4 lety +7

      The “the production is great” defense of modern music seems to me to overlook the fact that there has always been great production.

    • @PeteS_1994
      @PeteS_1994 Před 4 lety +3

      Allan Wilson The production has always been great but now their are more possibilities with production that it’s sometimes like it’s changing a what music is a bit. For example, percussion can be foley samples, the sound design is more flexible with DAWs opposed to instruments. You have more access to sample and synth manipulation.
      It’s like what traditional instruments were used for in music can sometimes be replaced by a different type of sound, I’m not an expert but hear it in music I listen too.

  • @anndeefam
    @anndeefam Před 4 lety +40

    Watching Rick Beato makes me less of a snob. Listening to Rick makes me listen to music better.

  • @victorfloresjr.9429
    @victorfloresjr.9429 Před 4 lety +39

    When I was in the Metal Phase of my life that was all I listened to. Then I picked up the guitar and started playing with other guitarists it broadened my musical perspective. Now if I find the song good it didn't matter what genre it came from.

  • @YourLoyalDeserter
    @YourLoyalDeserter Před 4 lety +9

    Sophisticated does not equal good. Simple does not equal bad. Ted Hawkins, one of the greatest musicians ever, tuned his guitar to open E and barred the strings to make chords. Some of his best songs have two chords and basic strumming. Emotion is the only thing that matters. Every technique and style of production exists to create a certain feeling.

  • @JamoboBorg
    @JamoboBorg Před 4 lety +477

    Being a snob about what you listen to is usually fine, but being an arsehole to others who listen to Pop (or whatever genre/artist) should be avoided

    • @jimfromoh8944
      @jimfromoh8944 Před 4 lety +34

      I agree, you like what moves you. I like rock, I don't like all rock. I like jazz, I don't like all jazz... on and on... I play in a band and I don't "like" every single song we play, but enough to play them and move other people.

    • @nickcormier
      @nickcormier Před 4 lety +12

      This needs to be said by someone like Rick in a video. This is the point right here - You do you, dont diss others for what they do

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld Před 4 lety +1

      I agree Jacob. Everyone sitting there respects everyone's musical preferences.

    • @DJ-dw3gl
      @DJ-dw3gl Před 4 lety +14

      I know. But I work with kids who don’t even know who the Beatles are. No I can not name one Ariana Grande song. But come on! The Beatles!

    • @jamesbarisitz4794
      @jamesbarisitz4794 Před 4 lety +12

      Just say-" My toddler dances to that song." Or, " My dog sleigh rides across the carpet on his ass when that song plays"

  • @jkbaca41
    @jkbaca41 Před 4 lety +213

    Short answer: Yes.
    I try not to be, though. There's just some stuff that I can't stand!

    • @ApolloSuns
      @ApolloSuns Před 4 lety +1

      Absolutely. Try to be subjective as well

    • @jkbaca41
      @jkbaca41 Před 4 lety +9

      I think it's the overuse of autotune and the samey-ness of the productions. I mean, I love some old top 40, Olivia Newton John is my girl from about Totally Hot to The Rumour!
      They had a good point about the top 40 of the 70s compared to the 2000s. I don't think there's anything that doesn't follow a pattern or formula.

    • @ApolloSuns
      @ApolloSuns Před 4 lety +10

      @@jkbaca41 Very fair. I would agree that TOP 40 from the 70's has a little more substance

    • @guitarjonn7103
      @guitarjonn7103 Před 4 lety +11

      Same boat. Gave my notice to my band when they started covering way too much of the modern country stuff around today. Most of it is the cliche' "3 chords and a story" formula and completely unsuitable for my ears. It's hard not to think people are missing out on music that could give them a more profound experience, but they're probably not looking for it in the first place, unfortunately.

    • @ApolloSuns
      @ApolloSuns Před 4 lety +3

      @@guitarjonn7103 Yeah. It's tricky to play music that you're not into...at least play passionately anyways

  • @keroflobs
    @keroflobs Před 4 lety +81

    I worked at a grocery store for a year, and the music drove me insane that I ended up quitting with that being the backbone reason

    • @Skelterbane69
      @Skelterbane69 Před 4 lety +12

      There was finally a bunch of store employees that were ready to go on a strike, here,
      last year, cause of the christmas songs that looped over and over and over.

    • @geraldhenrickson7472
      @geraldhenrickson7472 Před 4 lety +3

      Where I worked it was so bad...I had to wear earplugs. My employer said no...I said yes. Well...I lost in one sense, claimed victory in another.

    • @RichRobinson
      @RichRobinson Před 3 lety +4

      I don’t blame you, dude. Respect!

    • @iloveamerica64
      @iloveamerica64 Před 3 lety

      LOL

    • @dimasstazik3325
      @dimasstazik3325 Před 3 lety +2

      1rst world here

  • @TheOwl
    @TheOwl Před 4 lety +8

    The jazz coma, LOVE IT!!!!!! I'm a rehabilitated jazz snob who now can listen to a wider variety of stuff now. Elitism is a killer.

  • @FahlmanCascade
    @FahlmanCascade Před 4 lety +93

    Before listening to the conversation: my answer was yes.
    After listening to the conversation: my answer is -- still yes.
    But it's absolutely not about vacuum tubes for me. I love the digital audio tools. It's about the songwriting.
    I too have noticed that audio production sounds great these past few years. But applying high quality production to an uninteresting song is like putting lipstick on a pig. On another Internet forum, I read a dialogue between a college music professor and one of his students. The professor told his student that he was a composer. The student answered, "oh, so you make beats?" That's the dividing line.
    Concerning women who play guitars: while there may be several new artists, let's not forget Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart, who run circles around most modern players.
    Concerning songwriting in 2019: there are still many musicians who really do care about every note they write and play. They're not getting any press. 99 percent of the public has no idea who they are. But I am very grateful for them.
    And finally, in the closing few minutes, you guys hit the nail on the head: playing live with groups of musicians is SO valuable! This is something that ordinary adult life can take away from you, and I miss it.

    • @tylertaylor5490
      @tylertaylor5490 Před 4 lety +10

      a lot of people overlook that closing part. Just because none of the music we want to hear isn't on the radio doesn't mean it isn't there. Radio sucks, and I'm glad rock music isn't on it much anymore, rock music is about having balls. I'd rather just go to some local shows or listen to the underground stuff on the internet. That's where the guitar music flourishes.

    • @bgtube
      @bgtube Před 4 lety +8

      Impassioned... "putting lipstick on a pig"... unfortunately some people are into that. LOL

    • @frankspikes4867
      @frankspikes4867 Před 4 lety +6

      Beautifully spoken. Nothing beats playing live. As far as production is concerned I'm glad we have it. I believe in the old rule : don't record something in the studio that you can't play live.

    • @GCAT-zv9in
      @GCAT-zv9in Před 4 lety +6

      Live music is really the real deal. When you are in a little club or your living room hearing a song being shared for the first time...it is like witnessing a birth.
      In physic the explanation of vibration creating our perception of reality brings another dimension to the topic of music. Whatever camp of theory we find ourself in it can not be denied that we may not be able to adequatly describe what makes something great, but we know it when we hear it.
      ...and that is a beautiful and woderous experience.

    • @GCAT-zv9in
      @GCAT-zv9in Před 4 lety

      @@tylertaylor5490 Radio is just another form of media to control us and sell sell sell. Music is to share the human experience.

  • @toothpastehombre
    @toothpastehombre Před 4 lety +137

    "Their first album is their best though, before they sold out"
    "I don't know any popular music, I only listen too *insert complicated, cerebral genre with (unfortunately)elitist following"
    "Drum machines killed real music"

    • @alantaylorfc
      @alantaylorfc Před 4 lety +31

      "I only listen to post-psychedelic math rock"

    • @ApolloSuns
      @ApolloSuns Před 4 lety +5

      Hahaha totally

    • @victorborbalima
      @victorborbalima Před 4 lety +37

      I only listen to post industrial scooby doo chase music

    • @garanceadrosehn9691
      @garanceadrosehn9691 Před 4 lety +55

      I remember Blondie's album "Parallel Lines", which had "Heart of Glass" on it. I read a review in one magazine which said it was the greatest album ever done by a New Wave artist, and that it was a pity that they'd never get the airplay they deserved. A few weeks later "Heart of Glass" took off as a huge hit, and in the same magazine I read a review saying how pathetic it was that Blondie had sold out to disco, thus losing all credibility.
      I thought to myself, "isn't this the same magazine which said this was such a great album?". So I dug through my pile of old magazines and found the original review. And not only was it a review in the same magazine, but both reviews were WRITTEN BY THE SAME PERSON!

    • @garanceadrosehn9691
      @garanceadrosehn9691 Před 4 lety +25

      I also remember someone coming into my office at work sometime around the time when Pink Floyd was crushing album charts around the world with "The Wall". Someone visiting me noticed a page about Pink Floyd that I had tacked up on my bulletin board (a full-page ad from Billboard). He said "I used to really love them, before they sold out to pop radio and released 'Dark Side of the Moon'.". I felt like throwing him off the top of the building.

  • @3top5
    @3top5 Před rokem +6

    Rick has shown us some new and different and good music. That’s what I like.

  • @cariwaldick4898
    @cariwaldick4898 Před 3 lety +12

    There's another thing to consider: When we say "today's music" we're talking about the current top ten. When we say "older music" we're talking about the last fifty years. Not everything produced in those fifty years was stellar. There was a LOT of crap put out each and every year, that landed on the top ten. The eighties had tons of synth music untouched by real instruments. The sixties gave us Jim Croce and Paul Simon--and Neil Sedaka and Pat Boone. With fifty years to choose from, you're bound to have some downright incredible music--which stands the test of time. This generation of music will have some stand-outs....eventually. Maybe it's not on the top ten. Maybe it'll need a re-imagining and rerelease. (Proud Mary, Sound of Silence, I Will Always Love You)

    • @Phibbus
      @Phibbus Před rokem +3

      I'm not sure I agree. I recently browsed through the top 40 week-by-week for the entirety of the '70s, and while there was certainly stuff I didn't like, there was very little I could call outright crap. With the top of Spotify now, there is almost nothing in which I can find any saving grace at all.

    • @Vigilante311
      @Vigilante311 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@PhibbusI agree with you, most of what's on the charts now is barely even music, I'm 28 by the way so I'm not a sour old person reminiscing about the past, good music never existed at the same time as me, music is subjective to a point, but I can't remember the last time I heard a modern song even with an interesting chord change that I didn't expect, even the so called good artists of today haven't got a patch on the 60s and 70s artists, that's the point

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb Před 4 měsíci

      In the past, good music was generally recognised at the time, even if it had to share the top 40 with the banalities of the moment.

  • @Skradgee
    @Skradgee Před 4 lety +20

    I don’t need a video to find out I’m a music snob. I’m subscribed here!

  • @stevenvicino8687
    @stevenvicino8687 Před 4 lety +15

    My very first concert was Yes in 1977 in St. Louis. I remember I was just old enough to drive. My head is still reverberating. Jon Anderson and company still color my world. RIP Chris Squire, one of the best bass players ever.

    • @gibsoneb3
      @gibsoneb3 Před 4 lety

      Steven Vicino I was prolly there - Donovan opened i think

    • @corvidophilm5301
      @corvidophilm5301 Před 4 lety

      Yes, RIP Chris Squire. "Heart of the Sunrise" one of my favorites.

  • @chroniclesofbap6170
    @chroniclesofbap6170 Před 4 lety +31

    I'm an awful music snob, but I think it's because music is so important to me and central to my being.
    I worked for a guy once and the moment he told me that music was just a distraction that meant nothing to him, he became a zombie to me.

    • @stevebanning902
      @stevebanning902 Před rokem +4

      You'll grow out of it

    • @lesflynn4455
      @lesflynn4455 Před rokem +1

      I would have had the same reaction. The guy's attitude sounds very snobby, but not in a musical way.

  • @Dave-bo8ry
    @Dave-bo8ry Před 4 lety +73

    Country anyone? I've lived my entire adult life west of the Mississippi among the country demographic, between sagebrush and dirt roads, surrounded by bars where NashVegas country dominates the jukeboxes. I can. not. stand. it. The lyrics are cliched and chord progressions simplistic. I won't argue with sales and airplay, and I won't begrudge anyone who likes it, but I can't warm up to it. I will spin on my heel and walk out of the aforementioned pub at the first mention of a pickup truck or a dirt road.

    • @SammyRebbo
      @SammyRebbo Před 4 lety +4

      So no pickup trucks or dirt roads for you. But at least you can still tolerate tractors!

    • @timanderson6499
      @timanderson6499 Před 4 lety +3

      The bro-country of today is utterly ridiculous, with predictable chord progressions and sappy, emasculated lyrics. I grew up on classical music & Megadeth, Slayer and Anthrax, in the middle of rural cowboy country......not exactly sure how that happened, but thank god!

    • @saberdogface
      @saberdogface Před 4 lety +1

      If the pick ups don't have a gun rack and a bale of hay in the back, not interested.

    • @greenflagracing7067
      @greenflagracing7067 Před 4 lety +2

      that'll teach 'em. but you've got to be a stone cold moron to walk in a bar and not know the kind of music they're playing.

    • @cariwaldick4898
      @cariwaldick4898 Před 3 lety +8

      There are some great country songs--even with trucks and dirt roads. What country has that is often missing from other music, is the storytelling, and lyrics. Mainstream country is cliched, and panders, but there are some gems.

  • @Markstun
    @Markstun Před 4 lety +123

    As a guitar teacher I can understand the anti pop music bias. Lots of my younger students request modern pop songs. I pull the song up on CZcams " Ok the first part goes Am, F, C,G. The second part goes Am, F, C, G. Then stop playing during the rap. The 4th part goes Am, F, C,G but louder". (I never criticize the song to the kid)I don't find production interesting no matter how well done if the tune of the song sounds like a nursery rhyme and the background repeats thru the whole song.

    • @swissarmyknight4306
      @swissarmyknight4306 Před 4 lety +13

      Try writing a pop song. Try writing a "nursery rhyme" melody *that people like*. It is incredibly difficult to do well.

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 Před 4 lety +15

      I'm sure people though Yeah Yeah Yeah by the Beatles was the Gucci Gang (which is also the lyrics to the whole song) of the time.
      Country music was known as three chords and the truth. Punk was made fun of for its three chord progression. Old blues had the AAB vocal pattern to a I IV V chord progression.

    • @Markstun
      @Markstun Před 4 lety +23

      Not complaining about the number of chords or simplicity there are plenty of genius 3 chord country and blues songs. "Get Up Stand Up" by Bob Marley has 1 chord and is an amazing song. To me a guy making a 4 chord repeating loop on a computer with auto tuned vocals is just not is good but That's just my opinion

    • @bluetopguitar1104
      @bluetopguitar1104 Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you! Same here. Trying not to offend my students but geez!

    • @bbarrera86
      @bbarrera86 Před 4 lety

      @@Markstun isnt that song using the root but moving along a scale anyway? i mean a lot of songs that are 3 chords and more popular music use more chords but dont use their respective scales to create a more wholesome sound. Not sure if i'm screwing up some fundamental music theory with what i said.

  • @MaurizioMezzatesta
    @MaurizioMezzatesta Před 4 lety +334

    "I'm not a music snob, that crap you listen isn't music" lol

    • @FahlmanCascade
      @FahlmanCascade Před 4 lety +9

      Well, to be fair, it isn't. :^)

    • @MaurizioMezzatesta
      @MaurizioMezzatesta Před 4 lety +33

      @@FahlmanCascade haha that's why I always liked this expression. I believe there is SOME merit to being a music snob, they're just guardians of the artform who have high expectations.

    • @toothpastehombre
      @toothpastehombre Před 4 lety +3

      This is the real comment Haha

    • @ER-yq1lc
      @ER-yq1lc Před 4 lety +42

      "What kind of music do you like?" "Rap." "No, I asked what kind of MUSIC do you like." Kids hate it when I do that.

    • @jpabcede5016
      @jpabcede5016 Před 4 lety +10

      @@ER-yq1lc You just intentionally want to incite people? OK, kids.
      Thing is, rap is a wide spectrum. There's Eminem, there's Machine Gun Kelly. There's a lot of in-between there.

  • @TraneFrancks
    @TraneFrancks Před 4 lety +25

    Snarky Puppy is one of the best things to ever happen to collaborative music. 😍

    • @mr.groove5352
      @mr.groove5352 Před 4 lety

      Ghost Note is pretty good, too.

    • @christophermeggison2986
      @christophermeggison2986 Před 3 lety +1

      You might like Vulfpeck or Thundercat

    • @TraneFrancks
      @TraneFrancks Před 3 lety

      @@christophermeggison2986 With Vulfpeck, I like their heavy grooves, e.g., Tesla from Live at Madison Square Garden. The pocket is deep there. For Thundercat, I'm only familiar with The Golden Age of Apocalypse. Some interesting stuff there to be sure. Songs such as Fleer Ultra and Boat Cruise are standouts on that album for me. Haven't heard much beyond that, though.

    • @thenextgreat8652
      @thenextgreat8652 Před 3 lety +1

      They’re always so in tune 🤣

  • @arklowrockz
    @arklowrockz Před 4 lety +10

    I'm glad you gave "Black Gives Way To Blue" a mention because it is a very worthy addition to the AIC catalogue

    • @smithmann5616
      @smithmann5616 Před 3 lety +1

      It's a great album. It's not "2000s good", it's "90s good".

    • @Alfgunnarp
      @Alfgunnarp Před rokem

      My fave AIC record :)

  • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
    @PaulMcCaffreyfmac Před 4 lety +166

    I'll listen to anything but not always more than once.

    • @raphaha1273
      @raphaha1273 Před 4 lety +6

      hey, I get it, I don't agree, but I totally get it

    • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
      @PaulMcCaffreyfmac Před 4 lety +4

      Cool....though to be honest I'm not sure what you disagree with.

    • @interpolagent9
      @interpolagent9 Před 4 lety +4

      I wholeheartedly agree. I'll listen to almost anything once.

    • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
      @PaulMcCaffreyfmac Před 4 lety +4

      I'm sure we all have music that we will listen to without ever tiring of. I wonder if you think I meant that I only listen to everything once....... Not at all. I try to listen to everything at least once but I've probably listened to Sgt Pepper for example ( the first lp I bought) at least 7,000 times and will never stop listening to it from time to time. When it was the only thing I had I was on it 10 times a day...Hahahaha

    • @johnvcougar
      @johnvcougar Před 4 lety +3

      I put slightly differently: I try anything once, good things more often. But, yeah, same gist.

  • @BecomeTheKnight
    @BecomeTheKnight Před 4 lety +179

    Yes.......yes I am

    • @mitza420
      @mitza420 Před 4 lety +4

      Aand that's why we love you haha

    • @antioche6276
      @antioche6276 Před 4 lety +6

      I was gonna tag you on this video, but you came on your own, and before me. Anyway, rock on

    • @Hevvvyyy
      @Hevvvyyy Před 4 lety +8

      Mike "the doors are my favorite band" kupris

    • @manuelcalderonmusic
      @manuelcalderonmusic Před 4 lety +3

      I was looking for you

    • @samuraiguitarist
      @samuraiguitarist Před 4 lety +17

      Came for this comment

  • @n2space4u
    @n2space4u Před 2 lety +31

    Being open minded to all kinds of music is the mark of a true artist

  • @ADRIAN-gp8gp
    @ADRIAN-gp8gp Před 3 lety +2

    Love the Alan Parsons drop
    “ l wouldn’t wanna be like you “
    That’s one guy with a solid catalogue! Great videos Rick!

  • @eseguerito2629
    @eseguerito2629 Před 4 lety +35

    None of the modern innovations are inherently bad. It’s just that the tippy-tippy-top of the most succesful music right now is more like a fashion show or multi-media marketing campaign first and foremost, and the music itself is just feels the soundtrack accompanying it. The part with the least effort.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před 4 lety +3

      As Neil Peart wrote:
      _All this machinery making modern music_
      _Can still be open-hearted_
      _Not so coldly charted_
      _It's really just a question of your honesty_

    • @eseguerito2629
      @eseguerito2629 Před 4 lety +3

      Mal-2 KSC Well put. They are tools and can be used to make an honest peice of art.
      Saddly people chose to support superficial trash like Cardi-B.

    • @smjames4808
      @smjames4808 Před 4 lety +3

      Sometimes it feels like the music videos took more time and energy to create than the actual song.

    • @ChristopherNeill
      @ChristopherNeill Před 4 lety +1

      If you want to take a long view of things, the guitar is a modern innovation.

    • @stevenmaginnis1965
      @stevenmaginnis1965 Před 4 lety +1

      @@shitmandood: People go to Madge's "concerts" the way NASCAR fans go to a track to see someone slam into a brick wall. They're there to ses a spectacle.

  • @thumbthump
    @thumbthump Před 4 lety +124

    I managed a music retail shop for years. Everyone is a music snob in some form or other.

    • @bizzjoe
      @bizzjoe Před 4 lety +1

      This is true

    • @TheRealCowlick
      @TheRealCowlick Před 4 lety +7

      It's more of openly disowning and degrading what you personally don't like in social situations. Don't know if I would call that snobbing.

    • @bizzjoe
      @bizzjoe Před 4 lety

      @@TheRealCowlick Good point

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq Před 4 lety +2

      It's called taste.

    • @annala2956
      @annala2956 Před 4 lety +7

      Remember the scene in High Fidelity where Jack Black teases the customer for wanting “I just called to say I love you”? That made me sad but apparently it also made Jack Black sad because he understands liking the song that wasn’t cool. I do too.

  • @jpgv8090
    @jpgv8090 Před 4 lety +8

    I started listen music with the dangerous album of Michael Jackson, I listened everyday, then I became a fan of the Rolling Stones with the voodo lounge album ... Then I started playing glockenspiel in the school orchestra so I felt in love with chamber and orchestal art of music; I love Oliver Messian, Stockhausen, Varese, Stravinsky, Revueltas, J. Carrillo of cousre Chopin, Vivaldi etc... ; but, when a friend took his bass guitar to the school I felt so in love with that instrument than I decide to became a musician for the rest of my life ... I started to listen all the greatest bass players and the greatest bass rock and jazz songs ; also modern electronic music like PVD, oakenfold , aphex twin and others heavy POP culture... I started focus all my day to the bass sounds ...Hehe ... Studying bass teach me so many things in my life ... So I like all kind of music if it's made from the heart and soul ... The copy/paste no risky pop or even worst the tough reggeton sex for money music of the last years I think it's boring boring boring and I could say I hate it ... It's like tortue all that of massive produced and hyper masterized inert sounds .... I really hate that... songs?? ... ??? .... ..... ..... Peace

    • @williameudy6615
      @williameudy6615 Před 4 lety

      Many women have long dexterous slender fingers and the physical potential to be wonderful guitarists.

  • @RoxxHoffner
    @RoxxHoffner Před 4 lety +3

    I like when all three of you laughed after saying you were joking about being music snobs. I laughed too because I've been known to snob out on certain music. I'm more open minded with music these days. But it's just like you said, music is at it's finest when musicians are interacting together, live. When it's performed right there's a magic that nothing can top. Great video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @dominiccrimmings6925
    @dominiccrimmings6925 Před 4 lety +8

    FYI I''m 49.
    I love pop music. I love Duran Duran (John Taylor as a bass player is an influence). I love a lot of things about 80's pop as I was growing up on it. Early Madonna etc. I loved bands like Human League.
    At the same time I also loved guitar bands likes The Smiths, Simple Minds and lots of others.
    I was also listening to and heard a huge amount of prog rock (via my elder brother) - Yes, Rush, Floyd, Zep. And other stuff like Sabbath, Neil Young.
    Then I discovered The Who in the 80's, then Supergrass in the 90's along with Radiohead and I still and won't apologise for liking a lot of Sugbabes singles and a lot of TLC.
    I also have a huge admiration and I have a compilation of various composers of movie theme music on my phone - Zimmerman, Silvestre, John Barry, John Williams.
    I have a huge and varied love of all types of music.
    But they all have one thing in common - the music they made was not only melodically nice to listen to,, it was interesting and made me feel something. Most of the modern artists (especially "titular" artists who aren't necessarily a band but a singer / songwriter with a backing session band or engineer), like you said, in the charts all sound the same. When I do hear something that's a bit off beat (pardon the pun) or interesting, I will listen to it and like it.
    It's very subjective, but yeah, a lot of the top 40 stuff (I live in Ireland but mostly imported stuff anyway, no Irish artist in the top 40 at the moment) is really boring and repetitive and when I hear that certain songs from the last 4 or 5 years ( a lot of top 20 /10 songs) have been co-written by a committee of 8 or 10 or 12 writers does explain why these songs sound the same and it does make me wonder if the artistry of musicianship and songwriting organically is being lost to a new generation.
    Thanks Rick for another great video, really enjoyed that discussion
    Dom
    PS. Was in a band, had a top 40 single (UK), bass player and music lover, still play, still not a snob - just musically educated

  • @b3nji777
    @b3nji777 Před 4 lety +60

    Great discussion!! It's hard to listen to a lot of pop music when your ears are trained. My dad was a professional muso and like Rick did with his son, I was ear training at a young age. My first gig was when I was in kindergarten and the band was the Sydney Symphony Orchestra because dad was in the pit playing and we couldn't afford a babysitter. I listen to all kinds of music, from Manson to Mozart, but pop has changed over the years as technology has advanced. Nowadays all the edges are rounded off music, it is highly polished and what we are hearing is a kind of artificiality. Tempo's are strict, the same snare sample is used through out, and the vocals are processed to the point it is almost like a robot is vocalising. If a song is going to grab me, it has to have a sense of authenticity to it and that is what my ears are searching for. I love 90's hip hop like Dre's the Chronic, but when I compare that to modern Trap, it just doesn't give me the fizz like those earlier recordings. Instead of listening to a hot drummer and thinking, man that cat can play; I am thinking about how quantised everything is and focusing on the production instead of how the music makes me feel. I think I just want music to be dangerous again, I want it to make a statement and I long to hear the interplay between a great band and a talented producer. Having said that, it is all G if one is a music snob or a casual, each to their own. Thanks for the awesome content guys!

    • @UnbeltedSundew
      @UnbeltedSundew Před 4 lety +1

      I'm a visual artist so I tend to make visual comparisons and what you said reminded me of the 90's and early 2000's when the first CG movies and shows started to be made, and everything was too perfect, lighting was too strict, edges were too sharp, characters were too symmetrical, and surfaces were just too smooth. It was all just too perfect, and false and fake, and now one really liked it very much. It made things seem childish and flat and boring. It seems to me that many people feel that is the way pop music is becoming, which to me is a strange direction to head for the music industry, especially since thanks to the internet it is so easy to find interesting stuff to listen to and for artist to find alternative means of making good stuff and to get paid for it.

    • @PeteS_1994
      @PeteS_1994 Před 4 lety

      Interesting take, I like some Trap, actually the more experimental future beats as it’s experimental with sound manipulation. I think trap has evolved hip hop but the sound would probably change in 10 years or so because it does kinda have a really formulaic sounds sometimes.

    • @loud6037
      @loud6037 Před 4 lety +4

      It's formulaic, repetitive, very derivative, there's little creativity or experimentation within popular music because record companies are about making money for themselves, and they're not driven by passion for the music. It's a product designed to sell to as broad an audience as possible now, not a craft. I think it's missing the love put into making it. Even the artists themselves became products.
      I think mainstream artists are not necessarily untalented, but are very limited in their artistic freedom to what will sell in the mainstream. Their music is factory made music, fast food culture.
      That's why I love the underground scene. It's so much more alive (even though you still get a lot of crap) because there's so much more freedom of expression in the music coming from there.

  • @sapporobysunrise3787
    @sapporobysunrise3787 Před 4 lety +4

    I love Black Gives Way to Blue and I get all kinds of slack for it from other AiC fans. I'm so glad to hear that you liked it too Rick. That album has made me cry more times than any other.

  • @jackjurn
    @jackjurn Před 2 lety +2

    RICK, thank you for saying this about Black Gives Way to Blue. Its a great album

  • @SonnyGreenwichJr
    @SonnyGreenwichJr Před 4 lety +25

    "I hated it, but not enough to listen to it again to figure out why," quote from the movie Yesterday

    • @skyblazeeterno
      @skyblazeeterno Před 4 lety +1

      people shouldny have to justify why they hate or like certain music BUT they shouldnt hate or like someone just because of their taste in music

    • @stretchopotomus2385
      @stretchopotomus2385 Před 4 lety

      @@skyblazeeterno That makes less than no sense. (1) I'm gonna be the last person on the planet who feels like I have to justify ANYTHING to another human being, so take it from me: This is just a geeky conversation. (2) If one's taste in music doesn't determine... *what music one likes or doesn't*, please tell me what should???

  • @bleedingrevenge12
    @bleedingrevenge12 Před 4 lety +12

    I feel like there's a progression of music snobbery:
    In the beginning it's easy; you don't know anything about music, but you know that you like some and don't like others based on visceral, automatic responses.
    Then, if you're inclined, you start to figure out why you like certain things and don't like others. You begin to learn about music and the standards and rudiments we've settled on as a society that separate "good" music from "bad" music in a general way. You then learn to branch out and listen to things outside of your comfort zone because your definition of "good" music has expanded. This stage lasts the longest and, for a lot of people, the last stage of their musical evolution, but there is another.
    I believe that once you reach a certain stage you realize that the only real difference between "good" and "bad" music is authenticity, i.e. is this music a passionate expression of real human emotion or is it a shameless, focus-grouped, mass-produced cash grab? Or, if it is a mixture of the two (as so much modern pop music is), to what degree is it one or the other and how much can you tolerate.
    There are, of course, many other factors contributing to modern Top 40 being the way it is: economic, technological, sociological, etc... I would say, in vastly oversimplified fashion, that predatory capitalism has turned people away from "the music business", but technology has made it cheaper and easier than ever to consume music or even produce your own. Most people nowadays have so many different avenues through which to listen to music that not being a snob, not having a high bar as to what is acceptable to listen to, only serves to overwhelm you with the sheer scope and scale of available music. Also, back in the 60s, 70s, and 80s, Top 40 was, by definition, whatever happened to be popular at the time, regardless of genre. Maybe it's a prog-rock odyssey, maybe it's from a movie soundtrack, maybe it's a folk duet. Over time, a sort of distillation occurred where music stopped reaching the Top 40 incidentally and instead was designed to do so, which is where the "Pop" genre came from. Think about it: Pop is short for popular, as in music that people like. Except now, that isn't true. Pop is its own genre complete with its own set of common practices and expectations born of the feedback loop of producing music designed to appeal to the most people possible - the lowest common denominator - in service of making the most money possible.
    My final point is that music snobbery is a luxury. Consuming music, while cheaper by the day, still costs money. Sure, Spotify and whatever are free, but only if you have a device capable of utilizing such things and can afford access to the internet. Thankfully, the entry barriers are as flimsy as ever to that level of consumption, but they do exist. As such, saying you are a music snob is effectively saying "I can afford to find and listen to the music that pleases me". I, for instance, haven't actively listened to the radio since the early 2000s when I got my first Walkman, then iPod, car stereo w/cd player, and now smart phone. Early access to computers, the internet, Napster, Limewire, and the like gave me the tools to procure and create my own mix CDs and playlists, allowing me to largely circumvent the radio. Now, when I'm forced to listen to the current Top 40 stuff, whether at work or driving a car with limited connectivity, even if it's a song I like, the presence of advertising and the fact that I have very little control, if any, over what I'm listening to is enough for me to prefer listening to my own thoughts.

    • @stefanomatic
      @stefanomatic Před 4 lety +1

      I have nothing to add other than this is a very well thought out comment, and rings true.

    • @keroflobs
      @keroflobs Před 4 lety

      stefanomatic lol agreed. A bit long for a CZcams comment eh? But I respect the topic

  • @AugustinasBeksta
    @AugustinasBeksta Před 3 lety +1

    Rick, I'm literally binge watching your channel. Thank you for making this great content!

  • @SudsRegal
    @SudsRegal Před 4 lety +1

    There is something massively inspiring about Rick Beato's enthusiastic open minded approach to all genres, even the most repetitive, technology drenched modern pop tunes! This CZcams channel is pure gold to me. Thank you so much Rick for creating this extremely informative and passionate music channel! You provide insight from all angles and your theoretical knowledge of music is just outstanding...
    Somewhere around age 12 music became more than just a light form of entertainment and thanks to my brother and many music loving friends/family around me, I was surrounded by all genres and styles of music. I started dissecting the instrumentation of my favourite bands from an early age and separating the different instrument's parts while still being able to appreciate a song as a whole. Unfortunately playing bass for 25+ years and analysing music so intensely meant when I heard themes and influences that were repeated time and again, I slowly started to get a little jaded with anything new that sounded far too close something to something I heard before. Usually it lacked the original spark... Up until the mid 2000's it really seemed like music across the board was evolving in some capacity to some extent but really nose dived as far and quality verses quantity in recent times....
    Now being in my mid 40's and having an absolute passion for music since my pre-teens, the conversation between you three is insanely relevant to me because over the last 15 years as I have found myself extremely cynical and dismissive of most mainstream modern music. I realised I started missing some real magic outside the box because I convinced myself that everything under the sun has been written/played in music and it was all getting dumbed down with the "overuse" of technology at the cost of musicianship and the organic songwriting process. The bottom line is that I was just looking/listening at the wrong platform for new and innovative music. In Australia at least, the once reliable radio stations that launched some of our best and most innovative acts have become ultra generic and air playlists that are so devoid of originality or character. Most of the young artists coming up have such limited influences and their music is just bland, 1 dimensional or just primitive yet it seems to be celebrated as something super creative. I just don't hear it... Anyway, the only way to discover music that actually pushes the envelope and offers something new is through online platforms such as CZcams and recommendations from friends who are adventurous in their musical tastes.

  • @mannyprego9013
    @mannyprego9013 Před 4 lety +84

    I think it's relative. Liking jazz automatically makes you a "snob" in some circles, not being into opera and classical makes you a troglodyte in some. It's such a personal preference. My wife thinks I'm a music snob, because I call "new country" pop with a slight twang.

    • @markdrum2392
      @markdrum2392 Před 4 lety +11

      Tom Petty called modern country: "Bad rock and roll with a fiddle.". That really sums it up.

    • @underpaidlocator
      @underpaidlocator Před 4 lety +9

      Just using the word troglodyte makes you a snob.

    • @blazer6248
      @blazer6248 Před 4 lety +1

      Once they took the clap track from R&B, it turned into something other than country music.

    • @remoevans2793
      @remoevans2793 Před 3 lety +5

      I call it hick-hop, probably only a handful of “real” country songs have come out of Nashville in the last 10-15 years or so.

    • @Goffix2009
      @Goffix2009 Před 3 lety

      The fun thing about the variety of music is that someone will enjoy it!

  • @edphaze6550
    @edphaze6550 Před 4 lety +131

    I’m not a music snob, I just don’t like inferior music.

    • @lamper2
      @lamper2 Před 4 lety +2

      you came to the wrong place-his lousy taste astounds me but I still like it here

  • @kpkmisfit
    @kpkmisfit Před 3 lety

    This is an awesome channel and love the programs! Especially the top 20 and the conversations...

  • @spokebloke1
    @spokebloke1 Před 4 lety +1

    Memory plays such a huge role in our enjoyment of music. I have a playlist on my phone of the songs I heard as a kid growing up, and a lot of them I'm actually not fussed by the song itself, but when I play it I'm transported to specific times and places from my childhood/youth.

  • @daveshults1297
    @daveshults1297 Před 4 lety +54

    Dont like modern auto tune quantized crap... So Yes

    • @ChristopherNeill
      @ChristopherNeill Před 4 lety +5

      Auto-tune™ is 22 years old, but similar technology and techniques have been used long prior to that specific technology (for instance, altering Madonna's natural vocal range by speeding up the playback on songs like "Like A Virgin"). Auto-tune™ that we know (and love or hate) today happened as a glitch that piqued the interest of recording engineers and was made famous by Cher in 1998 ("Believe"). Guitar distortion is also a glitch that gained popularity, as well as feedback. All of these effects, now part of the recording canon, were initially rejected - heck, the electric guitar was originally considered an inferior product that would never gain acceptance... going back even further in time, there was a lot of resistance for an instrument that originally competed with the harpsichord called the "piano-forte". As with just about anything else, I try to employ the 90/10 rule: 90% of everything is crap, and 10% of it is brilliant. There are margins that can slide either way, but you can't discount Auto-tune out of hand. Except for modern pop country, which is terrible.

    • @Gluttonforpeace
      @Gluttonforpeace Před 4 lety +3

      Chris, you had such a good point until you kicked yourself in the ass with the country comment! 90/10 buddy. Maybe 99/1.

    • @daveshults1297
      @daveshults1297 Před 4 lety

      I currently play fretless bass mostly in tunr and sing occasionally in tune... I try... Jusy the way i love it!!!

    • @A.J.K87
      @A.J.K87 Před 4 lety +7

      For me the problem with autotune isn't it's use as an effect, like distortion on a guitar. What I hate about it is that it is used to cover up a bad performance by the artist. Yes, it makes it perfectly in tune, but it also levels out all the nuance in the performance, making the song sound lifeless and dull. Artists aren't pushed to give their best performance anymore. Instead we get an attitude of ''eh good enough, we'll fix it later on the computer.''
      I think autotune also opens the door to the music industry to people who have no business being there. Actual talent takes a back seat to a pretty face and marketability.

    • @ChristopherNeill
      @ChristopherNeill Před 4 lety +1

      @@Gluttonforpeace I love country, I just hate pop country... Give me real country music all day!

  • @backspin6698
    @backspin6698 Před 4 lety +13

    Yes, I'm a music snob, and proud about it. But, if something is good, it is good. You have to be big enough to admit that, no matter what kind of music it is. Love Keiths vids about guitar history.

    • @swissarmyknight4306
      @swissarmyknight4306 Před 4 lety +6

      Art is subjective. There is no "objectively good" music.

    • @elkalabaw7665
      @elkalabaw7665 Před 4 lety +2

      @@swissarmyknight4306 "disco duck" was objectively bad.

    • @jamalamirihamed442
      @jamalamirihamed442 Před 4 lety

      @@elkalabaw7665 FACTS! 😂😂😂😂

    • @fattyjaybird7505
      @fattyjaybird7505 Před 4 lety

      You know that movie based on a true story about the tone deaf opera singer who wound up becoming world famous, Florence Foster Jenkins,... or any sort of crazy avant-garde jazz, Pollock paintings.... art is definitely objective, theres a time and place for everything

  • @LarryHovis
    @LarryHovis Před 4 lety +21

    I'm a live snob. I don't give two flips about "production". What is it going to sound like live? That's what I'm after - always have been.

    • @trishg_79
      @trishg_79 Před 4 lety +1

      That has been the major difference with bands- any person who plays somewhat can be made to sound good in a studio with enough production. But if you can’t stand on a stage and PLAY, you’re not a musician, you’re an entertainer.

    • @happygster922
      @happygster922 Před 3 lety

      @@trishg_79 There are lots of groups out there that sound good live. Vocals in particular.

    • @The_ScapeGoat
      @The_ScapeGoat Před 3 lety

      Rhcp has to be the best example of a great live band. Their studio work is great, but watching them live is on another level completely.

    • @Junkiescum
      @Junkiescum Před 3 lety

      @@The_ScapeGoat what’s your opinion on Keidis’s vocals? I’ve heard mixed reviews on his live performances but I’ve seen some really strong live vocals.

    • @thenextgreat8652
      @thenextgreat8652 Před 3 lety

      @@Junkiescum He can be vocally inconsistent at times playing live.

  • @hawaiirealmedia5610
    @hawaiirealmedia5610 Před 4 lety +3

    Completely agree with all three of you guys. New music is mostly missing something.

    • @ChristopherNeill
      @ChristopherNeill Před 4 lety

      RB - I would love it if you gave Emily Keener a shout out for her birthday.

  • @DavidKirtley
    @DavidKirtley Před 4 lety +23

    Everyone wants to chop music up into micro genres and say how "their" choice is the true music. I can't see being that limited. There is just too much fun and interesting music to listen to.

    • @orlock20
      @orlock20 Před 4 lety +5

      I believe people that most people that say modern music suck aren't looking hard enough. Even back in the day, A&R guys were listening to hundreds of recordings a day from people sending in their works in the hopes of getting signed. People don't want to go through all the dirt to find the diamonds even with the help of the internet.

    • @samjohnsonkb
      @samjohnsonkb Před 4 lety

      @@goodun2974 The beauty of the modern age, to me, is that I *have* to sift through the dirt to find diamonds. Think about how many artists you did not hear because a radio DJ didn't like their sound! Now that power is in the hands of the listener, so finding a really specific sound you like, or really any sound in general, is much easier and gives that awesome feeling of finding a gem and spreading it to your friends. I'm a child of the modern age though, so I can't really contrast it with the experiences of the 70s and such, but I really like the modern way of things

    • @remoevans2793
      @remoevans2793 Před 3 lety

      There are new songs that have catchy hooks and great production. There is no creativity or feel, but it’s a business and repetitive formulas equal downloads.

    • @MrStephen182
      @MrStephen182 Před 3 lety

      @@remoevans2793
      Someone not trying hard enough to find great modern music. Jinjer fans would disagree with you. Look harder and stop being closed minded.

  • @anthonysilva5312
    @anthonysilva5312 Před 4 lety +35

    Rick is very generous. Most pop I hear is “meh” at best.

    • @Emogal1991
      @Emogal1991 Před 3 lety

      I know this is an old comment, but that's what I love about pop these days, for the most part it's meh, so it's down to me and my instrument to make it more exciting to me.

  • @BrandochGarage
    @BrandochGarage Před 4 lety +1

    Thumbs up for a story never told! And I'm glad I heard your ideas about the lack of jazz bands and community. some interesting ideas, there.

  • @adamplaisance2033
    @adamplaisance2033 Před 4 lety +9

    In think the reason I was so pulled into punk music had mainly to do with the lyrics. I.e., Bad Religion and D.K. I mean...they really had something to say

  • @gregwolf787
    @gregwolf787 Před 4 lety +38

    Dead Kennedys! You should do a "What makes this song great" for them

    • @TheOwl
      @TheOwl Před 4 lety +3

      California Uber Alles
      Lets Lynch The Landlord
      Your Emotions
      Stealing Peoples Mail
      Drug Me
      Tons more to choose from

  • @DemoDick1
    @DemoDick1 Před 4 lety +15

    Before I even watch: yes. I am a music snob. But I keep it to myself, and don’t believe anyone is qualified to judge music as “good” or “bad”. There is only what *you* like or dislike, and why. Let’s see how the video shakes out now. 😎🎸

    • @carlosparra8976
      @carlosparra8976 Před 4 lety +1

      You should share your snobbery more and be shameless about it

    • @balaclava__music
      @balaclava__music Před 4 lety

      Everyone is qualified to judge music as good or bad

    • @niclastname
      @niclastname Před 4 lety +2

      @@balaclava__music I believe he's saying that you can't judge it as _objectively_ "good or bad". Obviously everyone is qualified to judge if the like it or not, but it's just subjective and personal.

  • @jamescarswell450
    @jamescarswell450 Před 4 lety +2

    I've been a singer/musician/song writer for most of my life (I'm 51), and have been profoundly moved by iconic rock bands such as Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, and the Rolling Stones just to name a few. The truth is, I also listen to wide array of music and always have. I take something away from almost everything I hear. Ariana Grande has a incredible voice. Justin Timberlake is infectious, and ultra smooth. It all depends on my mood and what catches my ear. The "surprise" as you referred to. The "muse" of the song if you will. Thelonious Monk happens to be in the backdrop tonight. The ambiguity and subjective facet of music in itself makes it incredibly enjoyable. Great discussion! Cheers

  • @Chunda8
    @Chunda8 Před 4 lety

    Hey Rick watching your channel inspired me to get back to music after an 11 year hiatus- thanks for that. I was a classical musician trained in a conservatory. My Dad got a piano and played Mozart, Chopin, Beethoven and Bach. My mom bought us Simon & Garfunkel, Journey, and the soundtracks to Broadway musicals. I got involved with choir at church and school and learned that huge history of choral masterworks and symphony and opera. Kids at school played me Rush, Boston, Styx, Kansas. Of course Beatles, ubiquitous in the 70's. Too long story short: you know what is good when you hear it. The last bands I bought were Rammstein and WolfMother... So I'd say yes I'm a music snob. Last night I was listening to the Gorecki 3rd symphony that could make the devil cry. I got your book but it's rough sledding for me... I'll keep at it.

  • @josiek5989
    @josiek5989 Před 4 lety +3

    Hey a Big Wreck shout out! They are fantastic - new album is great. Seeing them soon.

  • @mvunit3
    @mvunit3 Před 4 lety +3

    At 56, simply . . . yes.
    I've lived through a "different" age of Pop music, it was filled with; The British Invasion, R&B/Soul, vocalists (1963 thru the 70's), the music of my Parents generation and Latin music because of my family background. The late 60's and 70's Rock music I may have heard bits and pieces of, but didn't pay closer attention till 1977 on, going backwards in the history to really hear what I missed, so I became a "Rocker" 1st, because of AOR/Radio from the mid 70's to 1997.
    I eventually became a Progger and a Metalhead, but it was because of these musics I got into; Classical, Jazz/Fusion, Blues, Soundtrack Scores, World Music and more. But I stopped listening to FM AOR/Radio in 1997, but a few years before that, I started to listen to "College Radio", it opened a whole new world (even for New Wave/Alternative), and I still occasionally listen in, but more-so, I'm discovering new music on CZcams or fan groups/forums online (and an Internet Prog station from 1999 thru 2012).
    But I've worked for 3 music/record stores, had to hear contemporary "Pop/Hit-singles" everyday and various electronic dance musics (this was in the late 90's thru 2005). And before that, worked at various places where I was surrounded by people who only listened to the radio and LA Pop stations that drove me insane :/. To this day, if I'm in a market, mall, restaurant, work, etc. and I hear this . . . muzak, I'm paying attention to it, it's not "background noise" to me like it is to all around me, I HEAR it and its excruciating! Yes, "Music" is subjective, but music to me is sacred (people _blessed_ with a gift, and worked hard to perfect those skills), that it has to have some kind of "craft" to it. I would have to get into depth and detail what appeals to me, even for the more simple and/or melodic pop or underground song (or quirky). I appreciate musicians and well crafted music, but that "craft" is _specific_ and again, I'd have to describe EACH band, musician, vocalist that appeals to me and why. Each has its creativity and nuance.
    I can't say I'm a musician (I used to "play" guitar), but for all the knowledge I learned about the craft, recording/engineering, production and techniques used in playing most instruments (some hands-on, or just ear knowledge and reading/watching), it gave me an "ear" and huge appreciation for the craft. This all had me understand the power of musicianship and creativity put into it, as well as how HARD it is for these guys to survive in the industry, when you may be ASTOUNDED by their sound and creativity, and you wonder why they are not successful, or they don't play bigger venues, can't play world tours or release albums more often. And I usually care about bands/musicians that create ENTIRE "Albums", not just "hit singles". I too love the intermingling of musicians playing instruments and working out ideas. Even with in-fights and tension, it has produced some incredible music.
    As I am struggling with an Art "funk" (as a Conceptual Designer), writing about and _listening_ to music, and when my creative mojo was turned-up to 11, it went part and parcel with each other . . . I could NOT be a music snob, and just "going with the flow". Hell, I never grew up :p. Music is a HUGE part of my life and has gotten me through a lot.
    Btw - It is sometimes VERY hard to not be "opinionated", but I've gotten better about keeping my mouth shut, but it may be telling that you may see an _expression_ come over my face ;).
    - Great discussion guys! \m/

  • @TexanUSMC8089
    @TexanUSMC8089 Před 2 lety +2

    Rick Beato is one of those rare people that can have a conversation about any kind of music. Then he goes a step higher on the scale and can tell how they do it and can then play it himself. He would be a great person to know. I can probably pick my favorite kinds of music or bands and he'll know more about it than I will. lol

  • @SOLDbyYOU
    @SOLDbyYOU Před 4 lety +1

    Dear Rick et all.... I put on the Golden Handcuffs quite a few years ago and walked away from a "right place right time" opportunity that I will NEVER be able to buy my way back into... even with all of the Gold I got for trading away my soul... and thirty years.
    Soon I will be less employed ( mostly retired ) and then I can get back to doing what really made me smile...
    A few years ago I put a post on Craig's List
    "Good Music, Great Players, A Really Fun Time, or good pay..... give me two in that list and I'm interested"
    Thank you SOOOOOOO much for your conribution.

  • @dpa103304
    @dpa103304 Před 4 lety +8

    Taylor Swift really plays her guitar. Check out her NPR Tiny Desk appearance. Great timing, accenting, baseline runs while singing. So the guitar isn’t just a prop to her. I’m not really a fan of hers except for a couple of songs but she is a real musician.

    • @stevebanning902
      @stevebanning902 Před rokem

      I can play all the basic chords on a piano too but I would never call myself a pianist

    • @badbasic
      @badbasic Před rokem

      ​@@stevebanning902 The difference is she uses the instrument to come up with songs, as well as perform live. I don't think anyone considers her a guitarist, herself most likely included, but playing chords and singing in front of crowds is still waaay better than lipsyncing without playing anything in the same scenario.

    • @davidmiller9485
      @davidmiller9485 Před rokem

      @@badbasic ah just what we all need, another break up song... Which is why i don't listen to her. I can get that in Country.

  • @TheChadPad
    @TheChadPad Před 4 lety +4

    It really says a lot about these songs when all you can say is "man, that production quality sure is incredible"

  • @Lantanana
    @Lantanana Před 4 lety

    I am with you, Rick. I love both the old music and the new stuff! The live stuff and the studio stuff! I am not a person who's musical interests froze when I grew up.

  • @26theband
    @26theband Před 2 lety +2

    This was great and all absolutely true… my teenage daughters are right into their music and have continually gravitated backwards into “my/60’s/70’s/80’s/90’s” music… they genuinely think it’s way more interesting! I put it down to better songs at the core, more interesting progressions, multiple “voices” in the group (players), collaboration, most importantly UNIQUE !!! A perfect example is the first time I played them, ‘Call Me Al’ or ‘Sledgehammer’ or ‘Golden Slumbers’…. Their reaction was ALWAYS the same…. “DAD…WHAT’S THIS?” Another great example was when the Queen Movie came out… they’d regularly say…”music isn’t this interesting anymore”

  • @paulambry
    @paulambry Před 4 lety +15

    I'm a musical snob... I love the best from any and every genre.

    • @canismajoris6733
      @canismajoris6733 Před 2 lety +2

      Highly doubt it.

    • @robertkennedy8503
      @robertkennedy8503 Před 2 lety

      @@canismajoris6733 You must really know him to make that statement.

    • @callejarvholm
      @callejarvholm Před rokem

      @@robertkennedy8503 Paul must really not know himself to make that statement

  • @saadidrissi3181
    @saadidrissi3181 Před 4 lety +27

    Poke:Mike the Music Snob

  • @boeliewinter7492
    @boeliewinter7492 Před rokem +1

    We all have different ears, not snobby but different. I listend to vinyl at the age of 3 and music never left me. Its the passion that
    catches you.
    It cought me, now I'm almost 63
    and try to teach music with passion.
    From Abba to Zappa.
    We've had a "Golden Age " of wonderfull music, Blues, Jazz,
    Rock, Soul and everything in between.
    Let them hear everything, with
    respect.
    With passion.
    I try to!

  • @tbluesboye
    @tbluesboye Před 4 lety

    Hey Rick, Dave & Keith. I'm a 66 year old guy who started in rock bands courtesy of the British Invasion, but growing up in metro Chicago area found where it all started, The Blues! Played with all kinds of the real guys in town and on tour, had enough road stories to break up several homes, and I still play with some of the guys I met 40+ years ago. We're still standing, and we play together almost by osmosis. The thrill will never be gone.
    Hey Rick, love the channel cause I'm still working on my craft. (just got the ear training course)
    Keith, like your 5 watt world thing too. I fall in the middle of you guys with gear. Probably cause my kid is in college. Great stuff. Keep up the good work.

  • @ohwhen7775
    @ohwhen7775 Před 4 lety +23

    The problem I have with pop music, especially of today, is that they're not drawing any influences from actual music, it's mostly about superficial lookism and/or the appearance of wealth and freedom to behave in any way you want. This shows in both the music, lyrics, and the videos, which influences youth in detrimental ways. I literally think it can affect the way young people behave towards others and perhaps also affect their view on life in general.
    Back in earlier decades, hell even in the 90's, I don't really get the feeling that popular genres back then were _really_ trying to be something they're not, I don't get a _trying to be the next this or that for the sake of success_ type vibe from the bands back then, they were just doing their own thing and you could find so much music that sounded sonically original and interesting harmonically too, even within one sub genre alone, like alternative rock.
    Nowadays it's banging out hits with complete and utter disregard for real musicality & authenticity, lookism & beauty are essential to the mix, lyrics often fowl... man I don't really wanna keep typing so I'll stop.

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld Před 4 lety

      Owen Great comment. Is the icon pic Lyle Mays from Metheny’s band or do look just like him?

    • @ohwhen7775
      @ohwhen7775 Před 4 lety +1

      @@fivewattworld ​Hi Keith and thanks. Yeah it's Lyle Mays.

    • @remoevans2793
      @remoevans2793 Před 3 lety +1

      Video killed the radio star

    • @MrStephen182
      @MrStephen182 Před 3 lety +3

      Elvis only got singed because he had a black sounding voice in a white man's body, He never wrote a single one of his songs, he was just the pretty boy that could sell music with this looks and dancing. He was only singed because he was pretty and white. If you think using looks to sell music is only a modern thing in pop music then your really dense and really not that bright. It's be going on sense forever as most pop music is sold to the youth and the youth are pretty shallow and value looks above all else. Take off your rose tinted glasses because things were not better in the past.

    • @ohwhen7775
      @ohwhen7775 Před 3 lety

      ​@@MrStephen182 ​You're not wrong that pop music in general focuses on lesser things even in the earlier decades, the likes of Pat Metheny & Frank Zappa have openly scorned pop music in 80's interviews saying it was never about the actual music being played, and more about appearances etc.
      Even now that I'm older I'm man enough to say that one of my favorite bands Led Zeppelin, while I think they have some obviously great songs, particularly the more acoustic ones, I can say that if we're to judge music objectively, the overall music quality of say Keith Jarrett, as a completely different musician but still, we're talking about music here, is far superior to that of Led Zeppelin, again I don't care that the styles are different, as I get older Keith Jarrett is who I'll be listening to more than LZ.
      The point of me saying this is to recognise that LZ to a degree, were a part of the pop image in comparison to that of Jazz music which wasn't as popular, yet the quality was objectively higher.
      I never implied that pop music wasn't about shallow things in the past, but if you were to pay attention to the lyrics and their meanings in some of today's popular music, it's absolute night & day in terms of the sheer level of degeneracy and gestural expression. Sure maybe throughout the decades it was getting more and more lewd and open anyway, hell even Frank Zappa who I mentioned before is an example of making terrible music with awful lyrics as a way of just not giving an F and rebelling against his parents/elders/generation at the time. Yet he could also write music and was influenced by classical composers, so had a framework to work with. The Beatles while popular in a similar way and level to Elvis were capable of writing actual good tunes. Yeeeeeeeah not many kids in the pop scene today are capable of doing the same thing my guy, playing a few chords on guitar or piano doesn't exactly cut it. Also Elvis I'm pretty sure got his whole style from Little Richard, who even later Prince adopted with the makeup and fashion sense.

  • @artturnerjr
    @artturnerjr Před 4 lety +17

    I'm with Dave: the reason I listen to most music - the thing that gives me the most pleasure - is hearing musicians interact with one another in real time. If that is absent, then the pleasure of listening to it is generally lost on me. If that makes me a snob, then so be it.

    • @cgiunta6542
      @cgiunta6542 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you only listen to live albums then?

    • @artturnerjr
      @artturnerjr Před 2 lety

      @@cgiunta6542 I generally prefer live recordings, yes, or pre-1980s studio recordings, when the basic track (rhythm guitar, bass, and drums, at least) were generally recorded live, a tradition which, while not altogether lost, is hardly the norm in modern recording.

    • @tahamohammedi5898
      @tahamohammedi5898 Před 2 lety +1

      @@artturnerjr I would say live instruments recordings were still prevalent well into the 2000s

  • @mountainpeakcloud8442
    @mountainpeakcloud8442 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for giving “Black gives way to blue” the props it deserves. I’ve been a diehard AIC fan since Facelift dropped in 1990, and I absolutely love their Devall era stuff. I actually find myself listening to the new era more, not because I like it more than the early records, but because I’m just so familiar with everything in the old records, and there are intricacies and complex structures in the new records that are just gold. “The devil put dinosaurs here” is my favorite from the new era and it would be cool to do a video on the new AIC material.

  • @craigkendall1754
    @craigkendall1754 Před 4 lety

    Kudos to Rick for seeing value in everything!

  • @dentoncrimescene
    @dentoncrimescene Před 4 lety +23

    Listened to lionel Ritchie the other day and it had about six distinct parts in it. Pop music doesn't have to moronic.

    • @StratMatt777
      @StratMatt777 Před 4 lety +1

      Hello?

    • @splashesin8
      @splashesin8 Před 4 lety +1

      Lionel Ritchie wrote a lot of things for an interesting assortment of people, and finessed them to work in the genre the people were in.
      That said, even though I liked the Hello song, as a sightling when it first came out, and still like it now, as a song, I become overwhelmingly embarrassed and mortified when it comes on like this morning in the grocery store and I can't hide, (as a blind person). I was on my way to the checkout when it came on, and I thought, "Oh no. I cannot stand in a line of people while this plays. 😳 I took a hard turn and went to the automotive section on the aisle not very many people go into. The video is so much more controversial now. It makes it feel cheesier than it is.

    • @jonathanhandsmusic
      @jonathanhandsmusic Před 4 lety

      I like pop music from the 1960s!

    • @mhstrawn5217
      @mhstrawn5217 Před 4 lety +1

      1,000 times this. My daughter was like 4 when Frozen came out. I was mezmerized by "Let it go". That is a perfect song IMO (and I generally do not like that kind of music at all). But every element of that songs is wondrous: the lyrics, vocal performance, the way the music tells a narrative through emotion, the cresendo an release; the massive variety of instruments all combined to a greater whole.
      Most of what I hear on the radio today reminds me of being in someone's garage when I was 13 and they were trying to figure out how to play: simple, repetitious and lacking ambition.
      Yeah, I'm a snob.

    • @randyvanvliet226
      @randyvanvliet226 Před 4 lety

      @@goodun2974 But that's Jackson Browne. It's just Lindley on Slide, is it not?

  • @MrFtoudalk
    @MrFtoudalk Před 4 lety +19

    Genesis Firth Of Fifth, talk about a mini symphony... just sayin'

  • @ElrohirGuitar
    @ElrohirGuitar Před 4 lety

    I really enjoy listening to you talking about music. That was one of the things I enjoyed so much when I was in college in the late sixties and early seventies. We would talk about what really affected us and it would span rock, folk, motown, country, pop, and other things. Lyrics were important, bands played without elaborate settings, singers actually sang. I have always liked music that just grabbed me; music that resonated with me and my body. Sadly, jazz, most newer country, and Pop just don't interest me much. I am mostly stuck in the sixties and seventies, but luckily, there was so much great music then that I'm happy. Through the years I have found bands like AC/DC, Tom Petty, The White Stripes, and others, but their music is also rooted in my favorite time period. I just like what I like.

  • @therocknrollmillennial535

    I don't normally comment on your videos, Rick, because, frankly, 99.9% of the discussion goes so far over my head that I'm embarrassed to say something idiotic. (I do see how that's entirely on me.) I wanted to comment here, though, because I don't think finding comfort in a style of music is snobbery. What borders on snobbery is a suggestion that the only music worth listening to is the music you personally enjoy, and I'm not for that. Personally, my music tastes jump wildly between genres and decades so quickly that it's difficult to keep track. I personally like what I like and that covers a wide range. But, to reiterate, I don't believe being comfortable with a music style you enjoy is snobbery.
    Thank you for the excellent videos! Cheers.

  • @nilentropy
    @nilentropy Před 4 lety +6

    I hit that like button the moment "Big Wreck" was mentioned. Hope Rick does a "What makes this song great?" about Big Wreck.

    • @yrmthr
      @yrmthr Před 4 lety +2

      Ian Thornley might be THE most underrated guitarist/singer/songwriter of the past 25 years

  • @MarkPritchardGuitar
    @MarkPritchardGuitar Před 4 lety +27

    I’ll listen to anything and if it’s good I’ll like it but it seems everything that I like has a guitar in it and is at least 20 years old.

    • @GCAT-zv9in
      @GCAT-zv9in Před 4 lety +1

      Real drums, a drivimg bass line...

    • @1982pencil
      @1982pencil Před 4 lety

      Then my guess is you aren't into the indie scene at all. There's PLENTY of excellent guitar-driven music that's come out in the last 20 years. Wolf Parade's Apologies to the Queen Mary album is a good start.

  • @AlbrechtHMaas
    @AlbrechtHMaas Před 3 lety +2

    Hello Rick, I love this discussion and I think you are totally right! There's one Idea I want to ad to this: What we all are missing is the interaction of several musicians, either on a record and of course on stage. And many people do miss this too. You can see that, because there are a lot of 'dinosaurs' that still play their music live and then people come to this concerts, because there are this interacting musicians, who make music living thing! And I think, this will go on as long as there are good bands who play their music live.

  • @joerobinson2538
    @joerobinson2538 Před 4 lety

    I’m exactly like Rick. I can appreciate something in every song whether it be musicianship, composition, production, mix, instrument tones or performance.

  • @GaryGreene1977
    @GaryGreene1977 Před 4 lety +24

    While production is immense in the genre, musically, the main reason I keep gravitating away from the American pop music and scene is that most singers/pop-artists in the genre don't know when to melodically _stop_. If you look at the majority of the pop music on the top-40 list, there is very little melodic "structure" nor rest. Everything is one, run-on line that gives no breathing room, which makes it exceedingly boring for me. Basically, the songwriter teams have forgotten that the best melodies are like conversations, they have a flow with starts and stops, variation of pitch, and rhythmic interest.
    To add to it, for me, I want to hear a section stripped of vocals and hear the layered keyboard or bass, or some interesting rhythm in the percussion, or SOMETHING other than the main vocalist yammering on about some overused tired tagline or lyrics that are rubbish, putting it nicely and not giving up the floor for other instruments to "speak". As again, it leads the song to be a "conversation" of tones.

    • @skyblazeeterno
      @skyblazeeterno Před 4 lety +1

      @@goodun2974 story type songs with interesting lyrics DO seem to be lacking.
      I disagree about lack of space for other instruments to come through...I think its FAR better nowadays as it tends to be more minimalist

    • @mhstrawn5217
      @mhstrawn5217 Před 4 lety +1

      Feel like a lot of songs today are little more than song ideas that don't get fleshed out. Instead, they just repeat the little snippett over and over for 3 and a half minutes.

  • @jakeholt446
    @jakeholt446 Před 4 lety +8

    Rick I appreciate your videos. Your doing a lot for people. And it’s a great medium in between all the bullshit in the world. Thank you

  • @hectoriii8603
    @hectoriii8603 Před 4 lety

    i am very open to a lot of music now that I'm older. I respond to music as long as it makes me feel something. It can be EDM, jazz, classical, country, etc. It's kind of like American Bandstand "it has a good beat" kind of situation but more along the lines of how I "vibe" with it (great run-on sentence!). Rick I love what you do and how open you are to music! Peace.

  • @legod1717
    @legod1717 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey Rick. Love your videos. I am a jazz musician that also likes pop music. I taught music for 30 years and am the same age as you. Growing up I was exposed to a lot of different music and still feel the same. I play with big swing bands, small groups, pop groups and and currently doing pit work for a musical. As a drummer / percussionist I am always curious to hear new things. Keep up the good work!

  • @grigno97
    @grigno97 Před 4 lety +5

    Hi Rick! This was very interesting to watch as a younger, contemporary music listener who started out playing music listening to rock from the 70's and 80's. Wouldn't it be interesting to have a conversation like this but with people from older and younger generations, to have different points of view?

  • @grizelda4526
    @grizelda4526 Před 4 lety +18

    You’re going to have to get Keith a black T- shirt. Love when he’s on.

    • @deviltoys2000
      @deviltoys2000 Před 4 lety

      look under his blue jean jacket....for sure its a Black t-shirt lol

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld Před 4 lety +2

      Dave tells me that the "Dojo Guitar Repair" shirt is in the mail.

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld Před 4 lety +1

      Navy, it's navy.

    • @peterk2455
      @peterk2455 Před 4 lety +1

      He only shows the T after he steps into a phone booth...so doesn't happen that much these days

  • @mellotronin54
    @mellotronin54 Před 3 lety

    Great chat. Enjoyed it all.

  • @jaggillar6680
    @jaggillar6680 Před 2 lety

    Good show! My dad played big band and jazz stand up bass and trombone in the 40s and later. I learned to love more complex interplay between the musicians and the solos. Explains why I miss old rap and the Beastie Boys, true alternative, prog rock and fabulous full sound of bands like Steely Dan.

  • @Sai_Saracen
    @Sai_Saracen Před 4 lety +3

    The issue with the current music is Artists themselves they are fast food in comparison to the fine dining we got in the 60s till 90s ... All the great bands of the past served a few years of apprenticeship touring and gigging, which enabled them to come across like-minded people hone their craft and writing... Now they don't even leave their bedroom and just upload a video... suddenly become a global phenomenon in an instant... I don't think we will see anyone with the artistry of a Pink Floyd or technical ability of Led Zep or musicality of an Oasis

  • @richb313
    @richb313 Před 4 lety +3

    The "Gumbo" reference was absolutely perfect on so many levels.

  • @libbycampbell2557
    @libbycampbell2557 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m very much a music snob!! I LOVE real singers, and musicians, who don’t rely on autotune and processed music!! Having been born in 1963, i grew up in the best time for original music with a wide variety!

  • @w.t.samhell9313
    @w.t.samhell9313 Před 2 lety +1

    LOL Rick!!! You hate the auto tune, that's an amazing realization for me, that I'm not alone among rockers. Appreciated!!
    I'm a music snob FOR SURE! Blackberry Smoke lately were incredible, and Clutch on tour, 22!! Whaaaa? Thank Clutch, so Much!

  • @JohnW852
    @JohnW852 Před 4 lety +4

    Will I'm here... Let Me throw this musician and Her music out there. Tal Wilkenfeld and Her album 'Love Remains'. What do You 'Guys' think of Her music? I just love it. Although as the fellas were saying in the video, You have to listen to a it few times to get it. Especially Her vocals sometimes are some what 'different'. I can listen to it now over and over again it's so good.

  • @trygveknudsen3809
    @trygveknudsen3809 Před 4 lety +8

    All music is good music, as long as it COMMUNICATES something to someone.

  • @frozencloudmusic
    @frozencloudmusic Před 3 lety +1

    Love Jazz. But I'll admit it wasn't until recently (the past five years or so), that I've really grown and appreciation for it. Most of my life Classic Rock of the 60's 70's 80's & 90's has been my main listening. Everything from the Beatles and Bob Dylan to REM and the Cranberries. Although I also like Classical, Old school country, and even Rat Pack music. Sinatra, Martin, Sammy Davis, etc. Stuff my Dad listened to. But I've built up a nice Vinyl record collection of Jazz lately: Miles Davis, Coltrane, Lee Morgan, Sonny Rollins, Chet Baker, Gordon Dexter, Charles Parker Bird, Eric Dolphy, David Brubeck, Art Blakey, etc... Amazing musicians, such an awesome listening experience. Opened up a whole new world of music for me. But I've been saturated in great music ever since my Mom put on that first Beatle record when I was only 3 yrs old. I feel I grew up in the Renaissance of music. The greatest time for music ever Imho.

  • @alfredditomasso5355
    @alfredditomasso5355 Před 4 lety

    You're videos are the best Rick !!!

  • @kadourimdou43
    @kadourimdou43 Před 4 lety +13

    Sometimes there are songs that don't withstand a few listens. There is no depth to them, and they sound like they were made by a machine with no one behind it.

    • @tangogrrl
      @tangogrrl Před 3 lety

      Yea. "Watermelon Sugar High" killed my ear worms.

  • @zackguitar07
    @zackguitar07 Před 4 lety +9

    Before I watch the video, I’m going to just say yes. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a music snob haha

  • @maryphillips3140
    @maryphillips3140 Před 2 lety +2

    Agreed, but it isn’t only pop and jazz, per se, where I see a dearth of interesting music. It crosses most genres these days. That is why what you do is soul nourishing, Rick. You might say, too, your analyses of music and everything, press the reset button on reality. Reality is when people enjoy good music and surreal is when we live in an unmusical world. Your channel and Brandon Acker’s are what inspire me most on You Tube. Thank you.

  • @samswank
    @samswank Před 4 lety

    Whatever that clip was at the very end was hilarious after the great discussion you guys had.