Founders - The Singular Life of Rick Rubin

Episode Date: January 16, 2026

There's no one like Rick Rubin. He's a legendary music producer known for his minimalist approach and relentless pursuit of greatness. This episode is what I learned from reading ⁠Rick Rubin: In The... Studio⁠ by Jake Brown. Episode sponsors: ⁠ Ramp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ gives you everything you need to control spend, watch your costs, and optimize your financial operations —all on a single platform. Make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud ⁠⁠⁠by going to Ramp and learning how they can help your business control your costs and save time and money.⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠ Go to Ramp.com to learn how they can help your business save time and money. Automate compliance, security, and trust with Vanta.⁠ ⁠⁠⁠Vanta helps you win trust, close deals, and stay secure—faster and with less effort⁠⁠⁠⁠. ⁠⁠⁠Find out how increased security leads to more customers by going to Vanta⁠⁠⁠. Tell Vanta David from Founders sent you and you'll get $1000 off. Collateral⁠⁠ transforms your complex ideas into compelling narratives. Collateral crafts institutional grade marketing collateral for private equity, private credit, real estate, venture capital, family offices, hedge funds, oil & gas companies, and all kinds of corporations. Storytelling is one of the highest forms of leverage and you should invest heavily in it. You can do that by going to ⁠⁠Collateral.com Some of my favorite quotes from the episode: Less is more but you have to do more to get less. Designing a product is keeping 5,000 things in your brain and fitting them all together in new and different ways. (Steve Jobs) Rubin's most valuable quality is his own confidence. If we're going to do this, let's aim for greatness. You have to believe what you're doing is the most important thing in the world. Everybody engaged in complicated work needs colleagues. Just the discipline of having to put your thoughts in order with somebody else is a very useful thing. (Charlie Munger) The key to it is doing what you believe in, as opposed to what you think is going to work. There were never any plans to make anything happen. I just did what I liked and believed in it, and luckily it all worked out. These things that we don't understand and cannot explain happen regularly. The amateur mind possesses a valuable lack of knowledge about rules when matched with passion and gumption gravity ceases to exist and new things take flight.  To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. (Cicero) I believe in you so much, I'm going to make you believe in you. I try to make records that have a timeless quality.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I just made an episode about Rick Rubin's ideas on creativity and how to do great work over and over again for a long period of time. To prepare for that episode, I actually re-listened to an episode that I made about the singular life story of Rick Rubin a few years ago. There were so many interesting ideas and stories in that episode that I re-listen to it twice. So I'm going to replay that episode for you now. Before I do, I want to remind you about the great sponsors and supporters of founders. The first one is Ramp. Ramp helps your business save both time and money, easy to use corporate cards, bill payments, accounting, and a whole lot more, all in one place. I run my business on Ramp, and so do most of the other top founders and CEOs that I know.
Starting point is 00:00:40 Make sure you go to Ramp.com to learn how they can help make your business stronger and more efficient. The next company I want to tell you about is Vanta. Vanta helps your company automate compliance, manage risk, and build trust. Many companies won't sign contracts unless you're certified, and this is causing you to lose out on sales. that is why the average Vanta customer reports a $526% return on investment after becoming a Vanta customer. Vanta will help your company win trusts, close deals, and stay secure faster and with less effort. Make sure you go to vanta.com forward slash founders, and you will get $1,000 off. That is vanta.com forward slash founders.
Starting point is 00:01:16 And finally, collateral helps you improve the way your company tells its own story. Collateral transforms your complex ideas into compelling narratives. Collateral crafts institutional-grade marketing collateral for all types of companies by using collateral. You improve the way that your company tells its own story. Storytelling is one of the highest forms of leverage and you should invest heavily in it. And you can do that by going to collateral.com. And now here is the life story of Rick Rubin. I hope you enjoy this as much as I did.
Starting point is 00:01:45 There's no greater enigma than Rick Rubin working in record production today. His career began in hip-hop. He co-founded Def Jam Records with Russell Simmons in 1984. He produced rap's first number one album and was widely credited for launching hip hop as a viable commercial medium. Refusing to play it safe, Ruben jumped ship from rap to metal, leaving Def Jam to found another record label, Deaf American, where he signed and produced groundbreaking acts like Slayer. After his work on the hugely successful Red Hot Chili Peppers' acclaimed album Blood Sugar Sex Magic,
Starting point is 00:02:21 Ruben was only seven years into his career and already a living legend. Though he worked with legends like Mick Jagger, ACDC, and Tom Petty in the early 1990s, it was his recordings with Johnny Cash that still stand out as his most astonishing and studied collaboration. By the turn of the century, Rubin had invented, reinvented, or redefined so many musical genres that there was no way to categorize his style. Rolling Stones called him the most successful producer of any genre. But the praise and album sales didn't shake Ruben's focus as he dedicated himself to artist after artist. Grammy nominations and awards poured in, including winning producer of the year.
Starting point is 00:03:05 But Rick Rubin, workaholic and recluse, found himself too busy to attend. That is an excerpt from the book I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Rick Rubin in the studio and is written by Jake Brown. This book wasn't even on my radar. A few weeks ago, I did a podcast on Jay-Z. It's episode number 238. And in that podcast, I talked about Jay-Z studying and working with Rick Rubin. And he said something that I thought was interesting. He's like, Rick ain't normal.
Starting point is 00:03:31 He is strange by strange standards. Rick's 20 years into his career and dude has not changed. He's got his own vibe. You've got to love him for that. And so after that episode came out, a listener contacted me and they're like, hey, you should check out Lex Friedman's podcast he just released with Rick Rubin. And I started watching it and I absolutely loved it. And I realized as I was taking notes listening to things,
Starting point is 00:03:52 to that episode. I was like, I need to find a biography of Rick Rubin immediately. So I'm working off of Rick Rubin's biography, the one I just read from you, or read a part to you from. I took notes on Lex Friedman's podcast. I'm going to link all this below in the show notes, but below the link to the book, if you want to buy the book. But I used Lex Friedman's podcast. I took notes on that. Peter Atia's podcast, which I'll link to. And then I watched a three-part, excuse me, four-part documentary on Rick Rubin's studio in Malibu. It's on Showtime. It's called Shangri-La. And then I also spent several hours listening to Rick's own podcast.
Starting point is 00:04:28 I didn't even know he had a podcast. And it's actually really, really good. It's called Broken Record. And listening to him speak for so many hours actually enhanced my understanding and reading of his biography because Rick, just like a ton of the other founders that you and I have said in the podcast, they identify a handful of core beliefs that's really important to like their philosophy on work and life, and they repeat him over and over again. So I want to jump right into the book.
Starting point is 00:04:50 And one of his core beliefs is in the beautiful. of simplicity. In fact, it's repeated so much. I had this idea of Da Vinci, if Leonardo da Vinci was able to speak to Rick Rubin and say, and repeat his, one of his most famous quotes, but it's just simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. I think Rick would have smiled and nodded his head. And so we go to the first chapter. It's called production by reduction. This is one of my favorite ideas of Rick Rubin's. So it says when Rick enters the studio, his goal is to record music in, quote, its most basic and purest form. No extra bells, and
Starting point is 00:05:22 all wheat, no chaff. And then it's what he says. When I started producing, minimalism was my thing. My first record actually says, instead of produced by Rick Rubin, it says reduced by Rick Rubin. And he was producing that album when he was around 18 years old. Def Jam, the company he founds, which is probably the most iconic hip-hop label of all time, was actually founded by Rick Rubin in his dorm room at NYU. So we're going to get it to a lot of the early history because it's just fascinating. It's the exact equivalent of like the Silicon Valley starting your company out of your garage. He just happened to do it in the dorm room. Going back to Rick Rubin's quote,
Starting point is 00:05:58 It's still a natural part of me not to have a lot of extra stuff involved that doesn't add to the production and try to get to the essence of what the music is. You want to feel like you have a relationship with the artist when you're done listening to their record. And then Rick describes how he works. And when I read this paragraph, the thing that jumped out to me most was this is exactly like Steve Jobs and his hero, Edwin Land, the founder of Polaroid, how they would talk about seeing the finished product first in their mind and then working backwards from that.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Be like, okay, that's the finished state. Now I just have to go through the steps to get there. And I'm going to read a section of this famous interview. But let me read what Rick says about this. Here. He says, finding the potential and seeing how to realize it can be the best part. And then the actual work of having to get there is just going through the process. Once you hear it in your head, it's like being a carpenter,
Starting point is 00:06:53 trying to build the thing when you already know what it is. So that's the key. You're trying to build the thing when you already know what it is. And so there's this famous meeting that happens when Steve Jobs still is in his 20s. Edwin Land, I think, is in his 70s at this point. Steve Jobs borrowed a lot of ideas from other people. Obviously, he had like this deep historical knowledge, and he used that deep historical knowledge and influenced the work
Starting point is 00:07:16 in building Apple and Pixar and everything else that he was involved in. But the one person he took the most ideas from was undoubtedly Edwin Land. And so let me read this excerpt from this meeting that they were having. It says, Dr. Land was saying, I could see what the Polaroid camera should be. It was just as real to me as if it was sitting in front of me before I had ever built one. And Steve said, yes, that's exactly the way I saw the Macintosh. He said, if I asked someone who had only used a personal calculator, what a Macintosh should be like, they couldn't have told me.
Starting point is 00:07:50 There was no way to do consumer research on it, so I had to go and create it and then show it to people and say, now what do you think? And in this next sentence, I think, is the most important part, and it really, from spending an unbelievable amount of hours,
Starting point is 00:08:05 probably close to 40 hours studying Rick Rubin in the last couple days, I think this gets to his essence. Both of them had this ability to not invent products, but to discover them. Both of them said, these products have always existed.
Starting point is 00:08:20 It's just that no one has ever seen them before. We were the ones who discovered them. The Polaroid camera always existed and the Macintosh always existed. It is a matter of discovery. So back to the book, this is where Rick describes, like, what exactly do you bring to,
Starting point is 00:08:37 like you're a producer, but he's not a technical producer? And really, when he describes the role that he plays with the bands and the artists and the rappers and the musicians that he works with, I'm like, oh, he's the founder. He's playing the role of the founder. or check this out. Listen to what he says and I think it would make sense to you. He says, it's almost more like I join a band when I produce a record.
Starting point is 00:08:56 But I'm unlike all the other members of the band who each have their own personal agenda. The bass player is concerned about the bass part. Everyone else is concerned about their own part. I'm the only member of the band that doesn't care about any of those particulars. I just care that the whole thing is as good as it can be. my goal is to just get out of the way and let the people I'm working with be the best versions of themselves. And then Rick goes into the process. Like, how do I choose who I'm going to work with?
Starting point is 00:09:30 He's going to say something here that I found almost the identical thought when I read all of Warren Buffett's shareholder letters. I think it's Founders Episode 88 if you haven't listened to that yet. But he says, I like so little in the first place, meaning so little music in the first place. Very few records come out that interest me at all. very few bands do I ever see that interest me at all I don't like anything that's mediocre I like it when people take things to their limit and so that line where he's like there's just so
Starting point is 00:09:56 there's very few records that are that are great that are really interesting so Warren Buffett was talking in the shareholders was talking about the fact that him and Charlie Munger have spent decade after decade of decade of intense focus in studying of business just like Rick Rubin has spent decade after decade
Starting point is 00:10:13 of intense focus on music right so Rick Rubin starts his career in 18. He's turning 60 next year, or maybe this year, and he's still doing the same job. That's what made me, I'm interested in him in general because there's so many people that I like, admire, and respect also like and admire and respect him. So I was like, okay, it's clear no-brainer. I should study this guy. I can clearly learn from something from him. But I'm obsessed, absolutely obsessed with people that do things for an extremely long time.
Starting point is 00:10:39 How many people that you know have been working the same job or studying the same field? dedicating their life to the same thing for 41 years. That's also why Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger are so interesting to me. The fact is there, you know, 98, I think Charlie's 98 now and I think Warren's something like 93 or 92, and they're still working on the same thing they've been interested in since they were, you know, in Warren's case, a teenager. And so Warren writes, our major contribution to the operations of our subsidiaries, meaning the businesses that he owns, is applause.
Starting point is 00:11:11 It's not the indiscriminate applause of a Pollyanna. That's like an old school word. I had to look up. It's just like an excessively cheerful or optimistic person. So he's like, we're not just applauding because we're just excited or we're optimistic. Rather, it's informed applause. That was a really interesting phrase he chose there. Rather, it is the informed applause based upon the two long careers that we have spent intensively observing business performance and managerial behavior. And so Warren's saying, before I get to his punchline, he's saying, listen, me and Charlie have dedicated our lives. We've seen a ton of different businesses. The vast majority are mediocre, just like Rick Rubin saying, the vast majority of anything is going to be mediocre.
Starting point is 00:11:53 And so if Rick Rubin is admiring what you're doing, just like if Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett are admiring what you're doing, there's like an added importance on their opinion, right? And this is why. Charlie and I have seen so much of the ordinary in business that we can truly appreciate a virtuoso performance. And if you work back from what he's saying is most businesses are poorly run or averagedly are run in an average manner. Most managers, most CEOs are either poor at their job or average. So it pays to pay attention to the people that are putting on virtuoso performances.
Starting point is 00:12:30 They know something that others don't. And then two more things from the section that you and I have talked about over and over again. Love what you do or find something else. Estee Lauder, who's once said, love your career or find a number. another. That's the perfect way to describe it. So he says the bottom line for Ruben to take on any projects is, I'm falling in love. When he feels like he's falling in love with the artist, with their work, he's like, okay, this is the person I want to work with. Think about the best products or services that you happen to use personally. Their undoubtedly can be traced back to somebody that gives a damn.
Starting point is 00:13:02 They truly love what they do. And then he goes to, this is, I mean, I feel like the entire last, while on the In-N-Out, the podcast I did on the founder of In-N-Out Burger. I think, like, he just had one, essentially one thing he just repeats over and over again. I'm not sacrificing quality for anything. Not sacrificing it for a partner, not sacrificing it for employees, anybody. I'm going to pray at the altar of quality above all. Rick Rubin says the same thing. I believe in the quality of content over everything else.
Starting point is 00:13:32 This is also something he repeats over and over again in all the interviews I watch with them. So we spend, me and the artist, spent a great deal of, time working on material long before we ever think about going into the recording studio. This is so, so important. I would summarize it in the maxim that I repeat to you over and over again. The public praises people for what they practice in private. The public praises people for what they practice in private. So before you hear this album where they go into the studio and they record, and in many cases
Starting point is 00:13:59 I would go through because the book goes through an order, like from the 80s, 90s, all to 2000s. This book is still almost 15 years old, so it's missing out on like his latest stuff. but it goes through like his approach and every single project like not every single one but some of his like most his best or like classic projects like how what do what role do you play what were his thoughts all that stuff it was very fascinating so what i would do is as i would read the chapters i'd also be listening to some of the albums but that idea about how long he's like listen you can't predict sometimes it takes a few months sometimes we're working on the same album
Starting point is 00:14:33 for multiple years and so in that documentary shangra law he's talking to L.O. Cool J. L.O. Cool J wants it being one of the first people he signs. He signs L.O. Cool J when L.O. Cool J was 16 years old. Rick Ruebman was 20. So I'll get there. It's a crazy how that happens, too. There's a lot of ideas for us in that section. But they're so they're talking now as older men. This documentary just came in the last few years. And he says something to L.O. asks, like, what increases the chances of like writing a great song? And he says, just practice. Be diligent in the process of always looking. If you need 10, songs, you might need to write 50 or a thousand songs to find 10 good ones. It's like fishing.
Starting point is 00:15:15 You can't say that you'll catch a fish today, but you show up and fish every day and your chances get better. And so that is another main theme, I think, of the philosophy of Rick Rubin, is the fact that he's obsessed with simplicity. He wants only what is essential, right? But to get to to whittle down to get to that simplicity, he will encourage you to do more. He is by far a workaholic for sure. And so he's like, if I want to get the 10 most perfect songs, we might have to go through 50, 100, a thousand songs. And I think that's extremely important to keep in mind how much work is required. You cannot deceive yourself about what this game requires. That's a quote from Michael Jordan. But I think about like what Steve Jobs said. He's like, listen, when you're designing a product,
Starting point is 00:15:59 it's keeping 5,000 things in your brain and fitting them all together in new and different ways. and then I would combine that quote from Steve Jobs with another one of my favorite quotes of his. And he says there's a tremendous amount of craftsmanship between an idea and a finished product. And that's exactly what Rick Rubin is describing to us in this book. We spent a great deal of time working on material long before we ever think about going into a recording studio.
Starting point is 00:16:24 I do the exact same thing. The reason I feel comfortable recommending founders to my friends and family and people I truly care about the most important people in my life is because I know how much effort and work goes into every single episode before I sit down to talk to you, without exception. Before every single episode, I have to read at the very minimum. I have to read an entire book.
Starting point is 00:16:46 And in Rick Rubin's case, I told you, I've probably spent 40 hours, like, deeply ingesting who he is as a person, how he thinks. And you have to filter through all that to maybe get, you know, maybe I can talk to you for an hour, maybe two hours. I don't even know how long it's going to last because I'm barely a few pages into this book. I haven't even got to the beginning of the copious amount of notes I took, but I just, I really believe that with my entire soul. I think the best thing, the things that you and I most admire, they spent a great deal of time, way more of time than we could ever believe working on it before we ever get to see it.
Starting point is 00:17:19 And so I just turned the page and I ran over my own point. The note I left myself on this is Ruben's advice, do more. Ruben feels the real work of making an album is in the songwriting, but that work can be drudgery. writing is dull and unglomerous stuff. For most people, it's really pretty miserable. But if you write 30 songs, there's a better chance that the 10 on your album will be better than if you just write 10. So he's like, less is more, but you have to do more to get to less. It's the way I would describe Rick's philosophy.
Starting point is 00:17:50 And then he talks about something over and over again. He's like, listen, you need to have an open mind. He's like, we know next to nothing. So the idea you can predict, like, you have an idea of what a great product is, but the idea is, but the idea is you're going to get it right the first time. He's like, you've got to experiment, you've got to iterate. I would say this reminds me very much of, I've told you my favorite book that I've ever read for the podcast
Starting point is 00:18:09 was James Dyson's autobiography. I read two of them. His second autobiography when he wrote as an old man is very interesting, but the one that he wrote right after struggling for 15 years and finally Dyson is on, you know, somewhat solid footing. But when he published that book between then and now, his business is like probably 300 times bigger. But that book is all about,
Starting point is 00:18:30 the struggle, the early days of every single person that's trying to do something difficult, whether starting a company, trying to be a musician, whatever it is, you know that story. You've lived that story. And in that book, he just constantly talks about. He's like, listen to him and just experiment. He calls it the Edison, from Thomas Edison, the Edisonian principle of designing a product. And I think Steve Jobs would agree with that too. Or not Steve Jobs.
Starting point is 00:18:52 I think of Rick Rubin would agree with that too because listen to what he's about to say. This is one of the things we talk about at the beginning of a project. Let's try every idea and see where it takes. us. Don't prejudge it. Sometimes it still comes up where someone in the band makes a suggestion and part of me says, that's a bad idea. Let's not waste time on that. And then I stop myself and think, let's try it. Let's experiment and see what it sounds like. And very often it sounds good. So think about the lesson behind with that simple paragraph, right? It's like, you've got to try it. There's so many times in my own experience where somebody says something like, oh, that's going to suck. And then we do it
Starting point is 00:19:28 And it doesn't suck. So clearly the lesson is you've got to experiment. Just don't prejudge it. Create a demo, create a prototype, put it out to some customers, whatever your process is, and then see what happens. This next sentence is really important. I double underlined it. Ruben's most valuable quality is his own confidence. The reason that's important is because you can transfer that feeling, that confidence that you have to other people.
Starting point is 00:19:53 So every day, my form of practice is I go back and I reread past highlights from all the books. and I have over 20,000 highlights, right? And one, I just happened to be reading yesterday, which I had forgot because Steve Jobs, when he was young, he, one of his best friends had joined, like, this religious cult in San Francisco. Her name's Elizabeth. And part of the cult's rules were that you have to cut off everybody from your old life.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And Steve Jobs just shows up at the cult house, and he just completely rejected that. He's like, nope, she's coming with me, and there's nothing you can do about it. And so they wind up traveling to this apple farm, and they talk about the fact that Elizabeth was telling the story about Steve Jobs and she said something that was really fascinating and she said he had the attitude that he could do anything and therefore so can you and she talks about the fact that he helped her believe in herself
Starting point is 00:20:44 she didn't have the confidence obviously if you're really strong personality probably not going to be joining some kind of religious cold but the fact that he had this this abundance of confidence It's like, oh, I should have that self-confidence too. And I think Rick is really known for that because I listen to a lot of the people that he produced records for. And they said that. They're like, he brought out the best of me. He made me believe in myself. And in some cases, it's really crazy because people were super successful.
Starting point is 00:21:09 Like Johnny Cash said that. Neil Diamond. All these people that had remarkable careers and maybe they struggled for a few years. And so their confidence was dented, which is shocking that Johnny Cash, right, one of the most legendary musicians to ever live, towards the end of his life before he starts, I think he did the last three albums of his life, he did a Rick Rubin. He was like, oh, I didn't, I didn't think I had it anymore.
Starting point is 00:21:29 So let's go back to this. This goes back to Rubin's fanaticism with just stripping everything down to its essence. He loves minimalism, simplicity. A good test of a song's metal is stripping down to its basics. This is what he says. If a song is great on an acoustic guitar, you can make a hundred different versions of that song,
Starting point is 00:21:48 and it's going to still be great. Then he goes back to the importance of preparing before you show up, in points of practice. He says as detailed and lengthy as the pre-production process can be, Ruben's productions tend to be quite short on actual in-studio time. And that's what he says.
Starting point is 00:22:02 I often make records faster than a lot of other people. It usually has to do with how prepared we are in advance. It's the pre-production time that really makes all the difference. Sometimes it's a couple of weeks, sometimes it's a few months, sometimes it's a year or two
Starting point is 00:22:16 to get ready to go into the studio and cut the whole album in a week. my preference is always to get as much done before you go in to the studio as possible. More advice for artists. I think we can apply to whatever work that we're doing. You combine really high expectations with the belief that your life depends on this work. Ruben continues to rally his collaborators asking them to set their expectations of themselves really high. If we're going to do this, let's aim for greatness.
Starting point is 00:22:45 You have to believe what you are doing is the most important thing in the world. world. And so not only in this book, but also in a bunch of the conversations I heard him have, he talks about his role. He thinks almost like the role is like a coach or somewhat like a teacher. And so this is a little bit about that. And he says, listen, a key part of my job is simply listening. A lot of artists really like having someone to bounce things off of because it's hard to truly know. This is very similar to what, when I covered Charlie Munger's fantastic biography, damn right is the name of the book. It's episode 221. He said something in that. book that I thought was really fantastic. He talks about the role he played with Warren Buffett.
Starting point is 00:23:24 And he says, listen, everybody engaged in complicated work needs colleagues. Just the discipline of having to put your thoughts in order with somebody else is a very useful thing. So what the process Charlie is describing is the exact same process that Rick Rubin is describing that he has. Charlie has it with Warren Buffett and some of their business partners. Rick Rubin has it with the musicians that he's producing for. And then he continues describing. his process of how he works. I'm going to read you a couple highlights from these two pages. The way I would summarize the section for my own thoughts was that your work is a reflection of you. And so it says, although he's a very private person, Ruben doesn't shy away from making his professional
Starting point is 00:24:04 life very personal. I'm doing things that touch me personally and that I feel and I am moved by. Ruben is very clear on what his strengths and limitations are. I don't know how to work aboard. I don't turn knobs. I have no technical ability whatsoever. My primary asset is I know when I like something or not. It always comes down to taste. I'm there for any key creative decision. He summed up the drive behind his life's work very simply. I'm just trying to make my favorite music.
Starting point is 00:24:36 And so think about that line. I'm just trying to make my favorite music. On one of these podcasts I was listening to, he was asked, do you have any advice for young people? And he says, the only advice I have is to not listen to anyone and do what you love and make your favorite things. be the audience, be the audience, make the thing for you, the audience. You can't make something great with someone else in mind.
Starting point is 00:25:00 So then we're going to get into his early life. So he had three main loves that he discovered really early. His love of music, his love of magic, and his love of professional wrestling. So he's got to pick one, right? He obviously chose music. But his love of magic and his love of professional wrestling, he uses those influences in his work. He did it from a very young age. He still continues to use it to this day.
Starting point is 00:25:19 And so it says Rubin spent his formative years in the hard rock glory days of the 1970s. I loved ACDC, he said. The group's minimalist approach would show up years later in his sonic approach to recording rock records and even in the way he constructed hip-hop albums. And this is what he says. There's so little adornment. So going back to that main theme, simplify his push for minimalism just, I want the essence of the song and nothing more. In fact, he talks about something that's very interesting.
Starting point is 00:25:45 Let me find my note on it real quick. this is really one of the clearest ways he described on why he constantly simplifies. Like, why I'm not a producer, I'm a reducer. It's the way of thinking. I'm not a producer. I'm a reducer. That's a really fascinating thought if you sit there and think about it for a while. This is the reason he simplifies.
Starting point is 00:26:00 He says often when you're in the studio, there would be an idea that we need to add layers to make the song seem bigger. But what we discovered is sometimes the more things you add, the smaller it gets. And a lot of that is counterintuitive. You need to discover it in practice. And so back to his early life, it says, Rubin immersed himself in the world of rock and roll. He had the requisite long hair, the leather jacket,
Starting point is 00:26:22 and a position as a lead guitarist and a punk band. One part of the lifestyle, though, he avoided entirely was alcohol and drugs. And on the Peter Tia interview, they talked about that for several minutes, about why so many people, including that Rick worked with. Like, they died of drug and alcohol overdoses. And so there is a discipline,
Starting point is 00:26:44 And it seems weird because you look at the guy, maybe hear him speak, he seems kind of calm and mellow. But he has extreme levels of discipline. And part of that discipline is just avoiding things, like not trying to be brilliant, but avoiding obviously dumb things. Obviously things that are not good for your life. No one thinks, hey, heroin's good for my life. Hey, excessive cocaine habit is good for my life. Drinking all the time is good for my life. And so it says one of the part of that lifestyle he avoided entirely was alcohol and drugs.
Starting point is 00:27:12 Ruben had a discipline and focus rare for someone his age, and he just explains it very simply, like everything else, I just didn't want to give up any of my time. I was deeply into something, meaning music. So his love of music kept Rubin from the need to distract or entertain himself with drugs. Before music, his deep focus was on magic. From the time I was nine years old, I loved magic. Even though I was a little kid, I'd take the train from Long Island into Manhattan and I'd hang out in magic shops. I still think about magic all the time. Rubin's fascination with and love for magic and music was something that delighted his endlessly supportive parents.
Starting point is 00:27:47 So this is good. His mom and dad just, they were, he had dreams, not dreams. His idea is like, you can't make money music. Like, that was just going to be a hobby. So he's like, originally, he's like, I'll go to NYU. Then I'll go to law school. And the idea is like, I'll just have a day job and then I'll make music as a hobby. And the day job just allows me to fund my hobby.
Starting point is 00:28:06 And no matter what, like the fact that he, his parent, he told his parents he's going to be attorney. And he switches off. He's going to be, I'm going to be this music producer. I'm going to go to California. I'm going to do all these things. And his parents are like, okay, that sounds good to me. So says his parents were endlessly supportive, who showed the same devotion to their son as he did to his passions. Ruben's mother would drive him to concerts in New York City, wait outside the venue until the show was over, no matter how late the hour, and then drive her son home for a few precious hours of sleep before waking him up for school the next day. And then his quote for his senior year, they say his graduation quote was pretty prophetic.
Starting point is 00:28:39 and it gives you an idea of who this person is. I want to play loud. I want to be heard. And I want all to know, I'm not one of the herd. And so now we get into the founding of his first company. At the beginning of every section, there's like these quotes, this advice from Rick Rubin. This is the first one. The key to it is doing what you believe in, as opposed to what you think is going to work.
Starting point is 00:29:01 There were never any plans to make anything happen. I just did what I liked and believed in it. And luckily, it all worked out. And so the birth of him making music and him eventually founding Def Jam is because he just saw a gap in the market. It wasn't anything more complicated than that. Rubin began his career as a DJ, throwing parties in his NYU dorm room. The move from DJ to producer resulted from a dearth of good material for him to play. I didn't know anything about the record business,
Starting point is 00:29:30 but I recognized that hip-hop records that were coming out that I would buy as a fan, and the music that I would hear when I go to the club were two days. different things. What I set out to do as a fan, he repeats it, was to make records that sounded like what I liked about going to a hip hop club. So his point is, this is very, it's like, think about the top down nature of most industries, top down nature of the music industry at this time. It's like, no, this is what we're making. But that comes from like executives or other cases, like this is what we're pushing out, where what's taking place in these underground, hip hop and and metal clubs that he's going to in this is the early 80s.
Starting point is 00:30:08 that is the bottom up because as the DJ you play something you get immediate feedback from the audience the record executives are separated from what the actual customer wants right it's like no we're pushing this down the channel where Ruben's like why don't we just like why don't we just make records that we like and we know we like them because when they get
Starting point is 00:30:26 they get played at this closer and people go crazy again that's like a simple idea that you can build a part like a very valuable company around I remember hearing Elon Musk gave this interview one time there's a documentary that Elon watched and I happen to watch it too It's like who killed the electric car, I think it's called. And GM had done an electric car. And they made maybe like, I don't know, like a thousand, two thousand, some small number like that.
Starting point is 00:30:46 But an electric car had like a cult following. So much that when GM closed the program, they repossessed the cars. You couldn't own them. If I'm not mistaken, they were leasing. I could be mistaken on the details. But the punchline, I remember correctly. And so the people were so distraught that GM forcibly removed their cars from them that when they went to, like, be impounded and essentially GM destroyed the cars, they held a candlelight vigil. And so Elon said that, and I heard him in an
Starting point is 00:31:13 interview one time, he goes, when's the last time somebody held a candlelight vigil for a product? That one simple sentence. Like, clearly, there's a demand here. If I can build an electric car and make it affordable, like people will respond. When is the last time you heard of people having a candlelight vigil for a product? So I just love, I'm completely obsessed with these, like, these just basic observations. Like, oh, that's pretty simple. That can actually build a very valuable company and very, very valuable life just off that. And Rick's like, well, this is weird. I'm buying hip-hop albums, right? And they sound one way. But when I go to the club, people are going crazy for hip-hop albums that sound completely different. Why don't we just make more of those?
Starting point is 00:31:51 And so he says, I just saw this void and I started making those records just because I was a fan and wanted them to exist. So this is where he starts Def Jam. He's like, all right, so he does a song. It's called It's Yours. It's one of the first things he produced. And again, he because he's a fan, he knows what other, like what he likes and he clearly knows because he's going to the clubs what other people like. He's like, okay, I'm going to make this record. I'm going to make an album just because no one else is doing this, so I have to do it. His goal here is like, I'm just going to break even, right? I just want to cover my cost so I can keep making records. Watch what happens next. This is wild. It's just incredible.
Starting point is 00:32:26 This is another example of like one opportunity leading to the next opportunity and leads to a next opportunity. You can't skip steps. Like you've got to get that first opportunity. Then once you get to the, like, I think about it like climbing stairs or maybe climbing around. Like once you get to that next peak, you look around the corner or look over and you're like, oh, there's something else farther away. I couldn't see at the very bottom of the mountain. But now I can, then I can reach that. So it says, Ruben approached the production of the song from a fan's point of view. Ruben borrowed $5,000 from his parents to press the single imprinting Def Jam records on it.
Starting point is 00:32:53 And he says, I was planning on putting it out myself strictly for the purpose of breaking even. Making back my costs, that was always my plan. As it turned out, this record was a hit. It sold 100,000 copies in the New York area. That was a very big deal. That is insane. And then he did something smart too on the sleeve. So when you're buying a physical record, right?
Starting point is 00:33:17 It's literally a record. On the sleeve the director comes in, he put Def Jam recording and put his address. The address for Def Jam was his dorm room. And that's going to open up the next opportunity. The single sleeve listed Ruben's New York address and that launched an onslaught of demos being mailed to him, which helped fuel the fires of Def Jam. So I'm going to get to why that was so important. First, he's realizing, hey, this business is screwy.
Starting point is 00:33:43 Despite the song's success, Ruben never made a dime on the record. So this is all coming full circle because in that podcast I did on Jay-Z, J-Z talks about it. Listen, man, I studied. The reason I came in the game independent, I own my own record label, which is extremely rare when Jay-Z did that in 96, because he studied the founding of Def Jam, and he learned from it. You read that book, I think it's called Hitman, Hit Men or Hitman. And it talks about all the people that were making the music and putting the music out and doing all the work. None of those guys
Starting point is 00:34:13 got paid. It was all the record executives and the CEOs that came through. This is a tale as all this time. This is where we are in the story. So essentially, like, we're living through right now what Jay Z's going to learn from 10 years later. So it says, enter Russell Simmons. So this is going to be Rick Rubin's co-founder. This is also going to be the guy Russell, that Jay-Z talked about. He's like he was an informal mentor for me. I go to meet with him when we're getting signed a Def Jam. I'm sitting across the table from him.
Starting point is 00:34:41 It's like, I don't want to be your artist. I want to be you. I want to be the hip-hop mogul. There was no such thing as a hip-hop mogul until Russell Simmons appeared. He was the very first hip-hop mogul. So it says, enter Russell Simmons. On the recommendation of some other record owner, so some other record owner, record label owner is the one that's going to introduce Rick Rubin and Russell
Starting point is 00:35:00 Simmons. And the reason that. Rick wanted to meet with him because that guy said of Simmons, no one promotes rap records better. Ruben felt that while most of the rap records at the time weren't any good, see that same thing pops up. A lot of stuff out there's mediocre. So I'm thinking, hey, most of the rap records aren't very good.
Starting point is 00:35:17 The ones that were good always had Russell Simmons' name on them. So he's the manager of the best rap acts around in Rubin's opinion at this time. That partnership would revolutionize hip-hop began with a simple meeting. They met at a party, and Russell's talking about it. hey, that album you just produced, the one he sold 100,000 copies, I love it. He said it was his favorite record, and he was excited to meet me, and he couldn't believe that I was white. There was nobody white doing anything in hip-hop. And here was his favorite hip-hop record made by a white guy. I was really excited to meet him. He was already a mogul of rap music,
Starting point is 00:35:49 even though there was no business. It was just a small, underground scene. The two became fast friends. We did everything together. We would be together in the studio every night. Ruben and Simmons shared a love of hip-hop, a vision of where they felt it should head both musically and commercially, and one other thing. Both had hit records under their belts, but no profit to show for it. And so they both arrive at the conclusion, like, this is dumb. These people aren't paying us, so let's just do it ourselves. And so it says Def Jam was set up to overcome business obstacles. Instead of going to somebody and asking them to, this is Ruben talking, instead of going to somebody and asking them to do things that needed to get done,
Starting point is 00:36:29 done and not getting them done. It's just easier if we take on the responsibility. It wasn't going to get done unless we did it. So Rubin needed an artist to launch Def Jam, the hip-hop version of Def Jam, right? The one he's doing with Russell Simmons. And the reason I said it's the importance of like stacking one opportunity on another is if he'd never had that hit single and if he never put his address on it, he would have never met L.L. Cool J. So that's one opportunity he had to get to before he got to his next opportunity. This is the next opportunity. Ruben had just the right artist to launch the new formalized partnership, a young rapper whose demo was one of the hundreds that had been sent to his dorm room, L.L. Kuljee, who is 16 years old at this time, and Rubin's giving us context of
Starting point is 00:37:12 just, he's in the very early days of what is now a gigantic industry. The hip-hop industry is massive. He says, there were no stars in rap music. It was really just a work of passion. Everyone who was doing it was doing it because they loved it. Not because anyone thought it was a career. We just tried to do something we liked. How many times does it repeat of that? We're not even one quarter of the way in the book. And he said, I just did something I loved,
Starting point is 00:37:38 just try to focus like, I'm the first listener, I'm the first customer. We just try to do something we liked. There was no expectations whatsoever. The only hope was that we would sell enough records to make enough money to make another record. So the partnership between Rick Rubin and Russell Simmons is only going to last for a few years.
Starting point is 00:37:54 But while they were together, they actually, they were well matched because it's really important to find a partner that has the skills you lack. So Rubin is going to be in the studio with the artist making the records. And then Simmons is going to be the one promoting them. And he was really, both of them were really gifted at their respective strengths, right? So it says Rubin would then pass the baton to Simmons, whose promotional expertise pushed the fresh new sound of the music onto the airwaves of local hip hop stations and into the city's hip hop clubs. Simmons had a talent in old school hustling. So they went up selling so many of these singles
Starting point is 00:38:29 that CBS Records gets their attention and they offer a development deal with a $600,000 advance, which was more money than they could even imagine at the time. And so it says time would prove this deal to be merely a foot in the door that they would kick open a year later, but for 20-year-old Rick Rubin,
Starting point is 00:38:49 it was a major milestone. I sent a Xerox of the check to my parents. that's when this stopped being a hobby. And so then Russell Simmons has a really smart marketing push. He's like, let's make a movie about the story of the early years of Def Jam because we're just a few years into the story. That movie he winds of getting made is Crush Groove. And it was a movie, but it was really content marketing for Def Jam and their artists.
Starting point is 00:39:14 You can actually find the entire Crush Groove movie is on YouTube right now. I was actually watching it last night. And Rick Rubin plays Rick Rubin in the movie. It's fantastic. Crush Groove was a movie. marketing vehicle, Russell Simmons dreamed up to introduce their label and artist roster. So it introduced the world to people like Fat Boys, LL Cool J, the Beastie Boys, and Run DMC. And the reason I'm bringing this to your attention is the next sentence that I double underline
Starting point is 00:39:39 that I think is extremely important for all founders or anybody trying to get attention to their work, right? Russell really cared about finding new ways to expose their music to a bigger audience. It's a very creative. And the person I think did this the best out of anybody that in recent memory to me is Michael Bloomberg. And I didn't know that before I read his autobiography. It's Founders 228. If you haven't listened to it, the main reason to listen to that podcast, other than his story is insane.
Starting point is 00:40:06 The fact that he owns that company, it's still a private company, makes billions of dollars a year right now. Michael Bloomberg had a lot of creative ways to get his product in front of potential customers. And that skill is the foundation. allowed his business to grow into a large, extremely profitable business. But it's just so clever the way he thought about these things. And what he actually put into work, very similar to this. Like the idea is like, who's the other thing? Hey, I'm starting a record label.
Starting point is 00:40:35 I've sold a little bit of singles. Clubs like my music. The radio likes my music. I have, you know, four or five acts signed to my record label. All of them are going to be super famous in their own day, but they're not famous yet. And it's like, hey, let's make a movie. This is 1988, somewhere around there, 80s, like mid to the late 80s,
Starting point is 00:40:53 how the hell did you even figure out that idea? Like, that's remarkable. And so on the back of some of the success of their music that they had put out, they wind up finding a Warner Brothers studio agrees to fund the $3 million film budget. So it says Warner Brothers agreed to finance the $3 million film budget. The picture is Green Light led CBS, who they had signed their deal with, to change the terms of their original development deal. These are the people that just gave them $600, right?
Starting point is 00:41:17 Now they change. They're like, wow, you guys are getting real popular. they changed the original development deal with Def Jam, signing Def Jam to a $2 million distribution deal in what Russell Simmons described as the greatest opportunity in the whole world. And again, this is happening in 85. So they signed that deal in 85. So think about that. Like within one year, they go from $600,000, this is amazing. Can't believe this is happening to signing for $2 million and having a major motion picture studio agreed to finance $3 million of what is essentially content.
Starting point is 00:41:49 marketing in the form of a movie. And it winds up being a smart investment by Warner Brothers, by the way, because they spent $3 million in the movie, and the movie winds up making $11 million to the box office. One of the biggest hits that Rick Rubin's going to have in this point of his career, like a mainstream hit. B.C. Boys winds up being the first hip-hop album ever to go to number one, which he produced. But he does, he has the idea to do this crossover song between Run DMC and Aerosmith. And RunDMC is kind of well known at the time. Arrowsmith is like orders of magnitude more famous. And this would have never happened if Rick Rubin didn't have an excessive, excessive amount of self-confidence. This is something that is talked about over and over again by the
Starting point is 00:42:30 people he works with, that he believes so much that he makes you believe. Very similar to that Steve Jobs quote I just read to you earlier. And so I'm going to get into this. It says Rubin's desire to work with Rumd-DnC dated back to the early 80s when Ruben upon hearing the group's first music had boldly commented, this is the real shit. But I could do it better. And so that level of self-confidence, right? You need that level of some confidence is mandatory to even approach. So he's like, yeah, not only could I do it better, I'm going to convince Aerosmith, who were again, world famous, they're like operating in a completely different world than Rick Rubin. He's like, okay, well, I'm going to sell both Run DMC and Aerosmith on
Starting point is 00:43:08 walk this way. So it says Rubin sold both groups on the idea, and once they were together, it was interesting, this is what he says. It was interesting because it was two very, two very different cultures. We were all kids, but Aerosmith was already Aerosmith. They carried themselves in a different way than we did, because they were real rock stars, and we were college students. It was an all-inspiring experience for me because I grew up on Aerosmith, and I loved them. I also knew how great they were, so I became fair. And then the thing about this, how crazy it is, like I admire them. They're almost like my idols. And yet when he gets in there and running the production of this, of the music, he still applies his excessive, I wouldn't say,
Starting point is 00:43:46 control, because that's not the right word, but it's like his high standards. So he says, so I became fairly demanding with what I asked them to play and contribute. Both sides really didn't know what to make of it. And so this is another example of something that Rubin uses for his entire career. He wants authenticity, just like other humans. Like he wants it to be really simple. So his vision for the music for what they're doing with Run DMCM Aerosmith is also the vision that he applies over and over again. His vision was to capture something raw, musical and ferocious. The music that we liked wasn't glossy and shiny, he said. It sounded rough and raw, authentic.
Starting point is 00:44:23 It was raw, like a documentary. So it's like, I'm not making a movie. I'm making a documentary. That's interesting. It was raw, authentic. We used that word raw over and ever again. It's not glossy and shiny. It sounded rough and raw.
Starting point is 00:44:36 And then on the very next page, he continues to elaborate on that perspective. The music we were making wasn't slick. There's a homemade and handmade quality. it. So think about that because music is a product that gets to scale, right? It's not just one person's to listen to it. How many people have listened to Walk This Way over the life of that song? Tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions of people. So I thought that idea was really fascinating. It's like it's a handmade product at scale. A handmade product at scale. So after that, he gets the biggest opportunity, the biggest breakthrough of his early career. And that's when he's going to
Starting point is 00:45:11 produce Beastie Boys album Licensed to Ill. This winds up being what he's working. He's working, on. Why ends up being hip hop's first number one album. It's the first time it's like, oh, wow, this is the very beginning of an industry that's going to grow even larger. Think about this. 10 years later, Jay-Z is still looking at it. That's why it's so important to, like, in my opinion, to go back and study the very beginnings of industries, right? We've done this, you and I have done this together, beginning of Silicon Valley. Not only is like the computer chip industry, the personal computer industry, the software industry. I just did a podcast on the very beginning of the aviation industry. I've done like 13 podcasts on the very beginning of the American
Starting point is 00:45:48 automotive industry. There is so many things that just happen over and over again. They're all making different things. Some people are making computer chips. Some making software. Some people are making planes, cars. Rick Rubin's making hip-hop music. It's the same thing. You think it's too late. There's over and again, people are like, oh, you know, it's too late. The ship has already passed. No, these things take forever. So at this point, we're in the story. Ten years later, Jay-Z's like, hey, I can't say that I thought I was going to get rich off rap. All I knew that it was clearly, clearly going to be a lot bigger than it is now
Starting point is 00:46:17 before it goes away. And then think about the growth between 1996 when he said that. And present day, you know, 25, whatever, 25 years later. It's still growing. So he was just dead on right about that. So just want to pull out one thing from this section.
Starting point is 00:46:31 And then I want to transition. I got a ton of highlights with the book, but I want to go through my notes that I have actually written on all these talks that he gave because I think I'm going to forget. to do that and there's a lot of valuable things. So maybe I'll just give you like a stream of consciousness of Rick Ruben's ideas and then we'll jump back into the book.
Starting point is 00:46:47 So this is Rubin talking about and the reason I want to do read the notes is because this is something that he talks about over and over again. It's only done when it can't be any better. But once something's done, just like give it the time to be what it needs to be, but then move on. Like you shouldn't, he's got a really interesting way to not have regrets, which I think is very powerful for us because having regrets so detrimental to it's so common in humanity and also detrimental to us. So says Ruben maintained total autonomy over mixing the record and it was in no rush.
Starting point is 00:47:17 He says, listen, I would love for it to be done. But the reality of the creative process is it takes however long it takes to be great. Very similar kind of echoes with these fights that Walt Disney would have with his brother, his brother was his partner. His brother's running the money. Walt Disney's obviously making the products. And he says, I'll tell you what it costs when it's done. We're innovating. I don't know why these things popped to my mind when I read these certain sentences that always draws back to something else you and I have talked about
Starting point is 00:47:45 but that's what I thought of there is like listen I would love it for it be done I clearly don't want to be spending more in time of money there needs to be but it's not perfect debt it's not what I'm not happy with it and he was right to do that because he held onto it till he was ready and then he releases it
Starting point is 00:47:59 and it just opens up opportunity for literally millions of people in the future that's how crazy like that's how we you and I know if you have found a mentality Like, you know the world's not static. We can push it. We can bend it.
Starting point is 00:48:11 We can actually influence the external world. It's crazy. At this point, he's mixing and he's recording this album in a recording studio that used to be an old Chinese restaurant. And it was like this biggest dumpy place because they don't have a lot of money. And you're just able, even without the best equipment, the best resources, he's able to make something truly, truly great. I find that personally extremely inspiring.
Starting point is 00:48:35 And then before I jump to my notes, I just want to read, one sentence to you that I double underlined. I just said, listen, we're still so, so early in all these things, in the internet, in podcasts, and just a million different, in technology in general. So it says rap music as recorded work was just eight years old. Okay, so I'm just going to run through a couple, like, give you a stream of Rick Rubin consciousness. So you can download. These are, I don't even know if these ideas are really related.
Starting point is 00:49:03 I just thought they were so interesting that when I heard them, I press pause and kept Rewinding until I wrote it down. Basically, I'm reading you like, oh, I need to remember this. Like, I don't want this to just to disappear. Like, I want to have record of it so I can go and reference it in the future. And maybe it gives me an idea, you know, maybe it doesn't give me an idea today. Maybe it gives me an idea, you know, 10 years or now, five years or now, whatever is. So he has this idea.
Starting point is 00:49:24 He calls the ruthless edit. Again, his whole thing is you got to do more to get to less, right? Less is better, but you got to do more to get there. So he says, listen, you made 25 songs. You need 10. Do not pick 10. ask yourself, what are the five that I absolutely cannot live without? And then before you add anything else, ask, what could I add to these five that I cannot live
Starting point is 00:49:49 without that would make it better and not worse? So that is the idea of Ruthless edit. I love that idea. This might be my favorite thing he said, because I have this negative internal monologue that I think is absent from Rubin. And I think if I learn how to adapt, like, his. mindset more than my own mindset, I'll have a more, like I'll have more enjoyable experience for this my life, right? So he says, do you have an engine of constant dissatisfaction? Like, do you have
Starting point is 00:50:16 this constant self-criticism that, oh, I could have done better? Which is very common that I've heard a lot of people have. But his answer was really surprising. He says, no, I'm pleased with the work that we did. I'm excited to keep working. It's fun. I don't know what else I'd do with myself. I like making things. It's fun. I feel like, oh, this is so good. This is so. good. I feel like it's my reason to be on the planet. So I just keep doing it. And he elaborates, like, how do you arrive at this where you just don't have regrets? If it could be better, I would have kept working on it. If it could be better, it's not done. I have done everything I can to make it the best it can be. I can't do more than that. So there's nothing to be critical of.
Starting point is 00:51:02 And this is his framework for his music, this mental model that I think I'm going to remember and with me. My work is almost like a diary entry. Everything we make is a reflection in a moment of time. It could be a day. It could be a year. It is a reflection in a moment in time. So it's like, I can't go back. His point is like, I can't go back and listen to stuff I did 25 years ago. I'm like, oh, I do it differently now because I did it to the best of my ability as that version of Rick Rubin. It is a diary entry. It's not perfection. I like that idea. I think that's actually really, really helpful. And he also says something's really, really smart. He just nails regret. It's just a fantastic explanation of why it's something you have to do. You don't want this in your
Starting point is 00:51:48 older life, or when you're older, rather. And so they're talking about this song that he did with Johnny Cash before Johnny Cash died, and it's called Hurt. And it is a cover of the guy from Nine Inch Nails, Trent Resner, wrote the song when he's 20. Okay, so he writes a song when he's 20. It's all about regret and pain and all this stuff. And so Rick Rubin is going to say, hey, coming out of Trent Resner at 20 is one thing. Coming out of Johnny Cash when you're 70 years old, you're at the end of your life, it has a completely different meaning. And so not left myself as he, Rick Rubin just nails regret. I'm just going to read it to you.
Starting point is 00:52:18 When you're 20 years old and talking about regret, it's heartbreaking. But it's heartbreaking in a different way because you have your whole life to figure it out. When you're looking back over your life at the end of your life with regret, it's brutal. It's brutal. And I love that he repeated that, the way he ended. It's brutal. It's brutal. He said it twice. It's the thing we have to avoid at all costs. Because at that point, there's nothing you can do about it.
Starting point is 00:52:48 Here's another random idea for you. The first thing that Rick asks when he's working with somebody else is what's the first thing that got you into music. So understanding of why are you doing what you're doing? It's so important. We talk about that all time. Not only for us to know why we're doing what we're doing, but then to explain that to your customers. Customers resonate. They want to know why you're doing what you're doing. Another great line. This one comes from the documentary. He says, these things that we don't understand
Starting point is 00:53:15 and cannot explain happen regularly. And so these things that we don't understand and we cannot explain, they happen regularly. Another great line. Negativity is the enemy of creativity. Now he talks about how magical music is, why he thinks magic and pro wrestling. They all understand the same thing. And he says they allow you to understand principles of how there is the surface reality where I think most people spend their time. That's what he's saying. And then there's this whole other bigger story going on behind it. So think if you think of you watch a magic trick. You see it happen.
Starting point is 00:53:51 You can't believe. And he's like, that's what most people are like, oh, I can't believe that. That's what they're focused on. Rick is always focused on like what's the actual story happening behind it. Same thing we listen to an album. He knows I had to do that song a thousand times. Wrestling. It's almost like theater, like live theater.
Starting point is 00:54:05 you're engaged in what's happening in the ring. I'm interested in what's the story? How did they, they wrote out the storyboards, who are the characters, what roles are they're playing, what the psychological effects they're doing. And so that idea, there's always this whole other big story going on behind it. Then he talks about the importance of ignorance, of being naive before you tried something. This has popped up over and over again in the history of entrepreneurship. There's so many examples like the founder saying, hey, if I knew how hard, if I knew what I didn't know, I would never start it.
Starting point is 00:54:33 If I knew how hard this is going to be, how long it was actually going to take, I wouldn't have ever started. So he says, the amateur mind possesses a valuable lack of knowledge about rules. When matched with passion and gumption, gravity ceases to exist and new things take flight. That's just fantastic language. When matched with passion and gumption, gravity ceases to exist and new things take flight. So he talks about using what he learned from professional wrestling in the early days of his career as marketing. There's a video they played in the documentary that's happening in 1985 when he's trying to go out and promote the Beastie Boys off. and he's like yelling into he's getting an interview on the streets in New York with a B.C. Boys and a reporter.
Starting point is 00:55:08 And he's like super hype. And you hear that. And he's like, people don't realize like I was just copying the bad guy wrestler character that I grew up on. He goes, that was performance art as a way of marketing. And so he's yelling. He's talking to the reporter. And it's not like in a rude, I mean, not really like a mean. I didn't take it as like a mean way. But he's like, oh, I'm obviously talking over your head. This interview is over. Because he's like, the B.C. Boar is the most important thing to happen to music, you know, if you ever watched professional wrestling, this like, they're over the top, like, this is the best thing ever happened. Like, this is the most important thing. It's completely provocative, I guess is the point. And the follow-up question to this is interesting. They're like, well, he was asked, like, using over-the-top professional wrestling marketing efforts,
Starting point is 00:55:51 did it matter to you that a lot of people didn't understand what you were doing? So people thought, oh, this guy's a jerk. Maybe this guy's crazy. He's yelling, saying, he really believes the BC boys is the best thing ever happened to music. You know, how could you say that? There's Beatles. There's all these other people that existed before that. And so he's like, did it matter to you that a lot of people didn't understand? And he had a one word answer that was perfect. Never. Let's go back to this unbelievable self-belief he had.
Starting point is 00:56:15 They interview his college roommate. And he said, Rick was the most confident 19-year-old I ever met. Even if he didn't know. He said and acted like he knew. Another thing I love from the documentary, he has, I mean, this shouldn't be surprised to you and I at this point. He has extensive historical knowledge about his industry. So in the documentary, it shows us like this beautiful library, like this two-story library he has in his studio.
Starting point is 00:56:43 And it contains all kinds of things. Like artifacts, not only is it like he takes, he's got a lot of old books in there, music, movies. He's essentially taking, using the world as a classroom, I guess is the way to think about this. Use the world as a classroom. And then apply like all the ideas you're using to your work. And he actually has a copy of the very first record.
Starting point is 00:57:03 that ever mentions the word hip-hop, the industry that he is partially credited with founding, and he went down and tracked the record. The first time that the word hip-hop ever appeared in recorded music was in 1968, almost 20 years before the founding of Def Jam. And what I was interested in about that is in the documentary, so we already go into,
Starting point is 00:57:25 like you clearly see, he'll constantly ask his artist to go back. Like he's working with Lincoln Park at the time, and he's like, hey, go back and listen to all these records. it's records that were made like 30 or 40 years before. And what was interesting is how some people didn't. So he's meeting in 2018 with this rapper called Little Yadi. And he's a young kid.
Starting point is 00:57:44 So I'm not like at the point, I think he's like 22 or something like that when he's recording this. So when he's doing the documentary. So no shade to him. But he blew up real fast and hip-hop and has since disappeared. And it shouldn't make, it shouldn't exactly be surprising that he disappeared because this is what he says in the documentary. I don't know nothing about the history of rap. I was born in 1997. Why do I need to know about what somebody else did?
Starting point is 00:58:08 Why do I need to go research somebody else? And so this idea is like, it's normal for humans to fail to learn lessons of history. That's why people that study history that make it a part of their lives, for the rest of their lives, just have a massive advantage. This is a very old idea. Cicero, so it's over 2,000 years, almost 2,000 years ago. To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child. Little Yachty had remained a child. and his career has suffered as a result.
Starting point is 00:58:35 Going back to great ideas that Rick Rubin said, he says all the most interesting things happen when you are making stuff no one else is making. A few more great quotes from this documentary. This says somebody describing Rick Rubin, which I love this line. He's living in four different centuries at once. Another great description of him,
Starting point is 00:58:53 kind of this reality distortion field. I don't think that he's backed in reality at all, which is probably one of the reasons he's so successful. and then two more lines from the documentary, which I think is just a perfect mentality to have. My reason, this is Rick talking, my reason to exist is to be of service. And then the last thing, mainly I'm a researcher.
Starting point is 00:59:13 I'm always looking for a better way to do everything. And I never accept whatever the accepted version of something is, as, oh, that's how it's supposed to be. It is an endless search. So let's go back to the early days, still's early career. He hasn't left Def Jam, he hasn't left New York to go to kind of,
Starting point is 00:59:30 California, starts like the second part of his career. And so Chuck D, which is the main, I guess, rapper in Public Enemy. And he's like, okay, I got to sign this guy. I got to work with him. And this is really just the value of persistence. Feeling that Chuck D was the next greatest artist, Ruben had to convince Chuck D of all that. This is Ruben describing that. He considered himself a grown man with a family and a regular job. I put his phone number on a posted note on my phone, and I would call it every day and just keep bugging him, saying, We really have to make a record. It's time to make a record.
Starting point is 01:00:04 It took six months until Chuck D. said maybe. And think about the alternate reality. Because Public Energy is one of the most influential hip-hop groups of all time. They're hugely influenced to all the artists to come after them. And the idea is like, no, I didn't even, Chuck didn't even think it was possible. It's like, you know, there's no such thing as a career in rap. And then all like that, it's for, like, young kids. I'm too, I'm old.
Starting point is 01:00:25 I have a family and a normal job. And if it wasn't for Rick Rubin's persistence, there's a very real possibility. that public enemy never existed. And again, I think that's another example of him transferring his confidence, the opponent's the confidence that he has on other people. Like, that's just extremely valuable for people to do that. It's almost like a version of like an act of service. It's like, I believe in you so much, I'm going to make you believe in you.
Starting point is 01:00:48 So at this point, he gets interested in saying, hey, I want to also produce a lot of rock records. This is going to cause a split of Def Jam. But before I get there, it goes back to this, his obsession with simplicity. He says, it doesn't matter who will. I'm working with, I apply the same basic form of. Keep it sparse. Strip down the sound to something straightforward but powerful. And so this move by Rubin to go more into Rock is actually going to cause a rift. And I wrote, this didn't take long because you figure their partnership only lasted
Starting point is 01:01:18 what, three, four years, if that. So it says this shift was an indication of the growing distance between the partners of Rubin and Russell Simmons. And so what he's about to do here by instinct is something that, as mentioned a lot of times by people that admire him. He had the money, the fame, and the success of Def Jam. Who, at the, almost the peak of the popularity, he says, nope, you're causing me to compromise what I want to make, so I'll just leave it all. He leaves Def Jam. Russell still runs it. And so they wind up having a meeting. Rick says he can still remember where they went and having this conversation even many decades later. And he says, he asked Russell, do you want to leave? And he said, no. And I said, okay, fine, I'll leave. Rubin said, if I would have stayed,
Starting point is 01:01:58 it would have been completely different. I don't know if it would have been the same successful thing that it is. The reason I left Def Jam had to do with mine and Russell's vision of our company growing apart. Ruben said that he and Simmons had been stepping on each other's toes a lot and kind of growing apart creatively. They weren't communicating. I felt like my vision was being compromised and I'm sure he felt like his was too. Reflecting on this time with Def Jam and the label's influence on the hip-hop scene,
Starting point is 01:02:21 Ruben said it really was a wave. We just happened to be in a good spot on the wave. The wave was coming. And that was really interesting because the way he said, he's like, listen, I was just the right person, the right set skills, the right point in history. But that wave was going to happen with or without me. That's exactly what convinced Paul Allen and Bill Gates to stop focusing on school and going all in on Microsoft. And so this is a fantastic paragraph that's in the biography of Bill Gates called hard drive. But it says Gates and Allen were convinced that the computer industry was about to reach critical mass.
Starting point is 01:02:51 And when it exploded, it would usher in a technological revolution of astounding magnitude. they were on the threshold of one of those moments when history held its breath and jumped as it had done with the development of the car and the airplane and this is the punchline, this is the most important part. They could either lead the revolution or be swept along by it. So one of the most successful albums that Rick ever produced
Starting point is 01:03:13 was the Red Hot Chili Peppers' Blood, Sugar, Sex, Magic. I just got a couple highlights from this chapter that I think are just applicable to all kinds of great work in all kinds of fields. So the first thing is the importance of differentiating your product, So it says, they declared that the red hot chili peppers have never been part of any movement or any collective thing or any existing category. We just try to create our own categories.
Starting point is 01:03:37 Another line from this. It says it's not about being, this is Rick talking about when he was working on this album. It's not about being fancy. It's about serving the song. It's not about being fancy for our purposes. It's about serving the customer. And this is the band describing what's like working with Rick on this album. His participation was incredibly nonchaline.
Starting point is 01:03:55 He just comes by and chills out, sometimes horizontally. He's got a pen and paper and it's somewhere between a nap and a meditation. So that line's kind of funny. It's like comes by sometimes horizontally. So you'll see this in documentary. I saw this in an ad Samsung did for Jay-Z's album like a decade ago, where Jay-Z invites the producers that worked on his album. It was like Pharrell, Timberlin, Rick Rubin.
Starting point is 01:04:18 They're all in the studio in New York City. And they're playing the album. And Rick just lays down on the couch and kind of closes his eyes and taps his feet. So that's something he's been doing for a long time. They said he has an incredible head for arrangements. And again, part of that at this point, he's 20 years into his career, maybe 15 years into his career. How much music has he listened to?
Starting point is 01:04:38 How much music has he studied? Again, he has this encyclopedic knowledge, historical knowledge of his industry. And I think it's really important for two reasons. One, once you establish a space of knowledge, no one can take it from you. And two, it's going to constantly inform that historical knowledge of studying the great work that came before you
Starting point is 01:04:54 He's going to constantly inform all the work that you do for the rest of your career. And then this is Rick Rubin describing why he refuses to chase fads or trends. This was fantastic. He says the newest sounds have a tendency to sound old when the next new sound comes along. But a grand piano sounded great 50 years ago and will sound great 50 years from now. I try to make records that have a timeless quality. And so one of the things that he did that he helped red hot chili peppers was was their bassist is probably the most famous bassist at the world. It's this guy named Flea.
Starting point is 01:05:33 But what Rick is about to say here is I really think it goes back to he was talking about at the beginning of the book, the role he plays. He's like, listen, every band player, every person on the team is focused on their role. I'm the only one that's not concerned about your role, but how your role affects the whole. So it says Rubin described the evolution that occurred. Up until that time, Flee's bass playing was a particular style. He was famous for it. He was considered one of the best bass players in the world because of his style. But when we started working together, that bass playing that made him one of the best
Starting point is 01:06:03 didn't necessarily serve the songs in the best way. This reminded me of when I read that gigantic like 600-page biography of Michael Jordan. And Michael was a fantastic individual basketball player. But he couldn't get past the Detroit Pistons in the playoffs. And he failed year after year. year. It wasn't until he learned how to be the best teammate, play as a team, not just an individual person that they actually got, were able to get to the next level. That same process is very similar to what Rick is describing us here. He's like, listen, he's well known.
Starting point is 01:06:34 At that time, they thought Michael Jordan was the best basketball player in the league, but he hadn't win a championship because the best players don't win, the best teams do. But when we started working together, that bass player, that base playing, that made him one of the best didn't necessarily serve the songs in the best way. It was more about the bass being great. It was more about Jordan being great. And the song is more important than the bass. And the team is more important than the player. So that's me obviously trying to tie that all together.
Starting point is 01:06:58 Starting with that record, Flea changed the way he played. And so he says, this is what Flea said about that. He goes, I consciously avoided anything busy or fancy. I avoided saying, hey, I'm Flea, the bitch and bass player. And then he said, he goes, I tried to get small enough to get inside the song as opposed to stepping out. The focus is not on. me. So one thing I really admire about studying Rick Rubin was that he doesn't rest on his laurels. He's always looking for the next challenge, right? You could just say, I'm going to produce the same
Starting point is 01:07:27 rap records over and over again. I already had some hit rock and metal albums. Let me just do that. He's like, no, no, I need another challenge. I need to keep, and challenges how you keep growing and adding more skills, right? So in 1994, he's like, I'm going to work with Johnny Cash. And the way he decided to do this is fascinating. So since in 1994, Rick Rubin was focused on a great challenge. resurrecting the career of country music legend Johnny Cash. With Rubin's trademark production by reduction approach, the albums would bring the legendary Johnny Cash, his first platinum success in years,
Starting point is 01:08:03 and showcased a more raw side tim. Ruben explained how he came to work with Johnny. He says it seemed like it would be a fun challenge to work with an established artist, but I wasn't interested in working with a legend at the top of their game. I'd been thinking about who was really great, but not currently making really great records. What great artists are not in a great place right now?
Starting point is 01:08:25 So Johnny and Rick meet and Rick tells Johnny his blueprint. Ruben had a real simple plan. Wherever the magic is, we will follow it. And so this is the first of their hit albums together. It says it was recorded in Rick Rubin's living room. Cash recalled there was no echo, no slapback, no overdubbing, no mixing. It just goes back to the production by reduction, right? No overdubbing, no mixing, just me playing my guitar and singing.
Starting point is 01:08:52 I didn't even use a pick. Every guitar note on the album came from my thumb. And this is just, this is just great. I just love that this happened. So it says we had nothing to lose and everything to gain, or excuse me, Johnny Cash had nothing to lose and everything to gain in wearing his heart on his sleeve. I know I'm 62 years old and I've been around twice,
Starting point is 01:09:11 and now it looks like I might have a third shot at a new audience. He found Rick Rubin help him find that new. audience. So MTV ones up putting Johnny Cash's video for the first song and it becomes really popular to an age group that probably didn't even know who Johnny Cash existed or much less all the hits that he had, you know, 20, 30, 40 years earlier. And the album won a Grammy. And then this is the crazy part. What I mentioned earlier, how Rick can just imbibe, like he can he could take the confidence that he has. And again, I think it's like you can clearly transfer your emotions both good and bad to the people around you, right? But this idea where you have a legend, somebody,
Starting point is 01:09:47 that it had already got to the top of their profession and still having doubts about their ability. Rick made me have faith in myself again. He made me believe in myself and my music, which I thought was gone forever. He's working with a different band. I just want to pull out one sentence here because I thought that was fantastic.
Starting point is 01:10:10 And he's describing, this guy named Williams is describing what it was like working with Rick. Williams described being put to a recording regimen wherein Rick Rubin made us record every track about 50 times each to obtain the good dynamics. That is a main theme that we should take away from Rick Rubin. Less is more, but to get there, you have to do more. He uses that same idea over and over again. I moved ahead to another project.
Starting point is 01:10:33 This guy Donovan that's in this band says, what you hear is 14 songs, but there's 86 songs that you haven't heard. Once the project began, I started writing daily. I wrote 100 songs over a period of a year. So again, the public praises people for what they practice in private. They are praising these 14 songs. They didn't see the 86 others that I had to do and never use just to get to the right 14. And then there's just some great stories in the book.
Starting point is 01:11:03 Like he decides, hey, I'm going to get together Tom Petty. So there's a fantastic picture in the studio of Tom Petty, Rick Rubin, and Johnny Cash. And so this is the album, I think, that song is on. They played on the Lex Freeman podcast. I thought was fantastic. Just to watch Rick listen to it was really interesting to me. So it sounded very different. And, you know, Johnny's like, Johnny's known as a country, as like a country, like music legend.
Starting point is 01:11:29 And yet because his sound had evolved, he wasn't getting the, like, the attention or the support of his industry. And so this just made me laugh out loud. So it says the music got major airplay on college radio. alternative rock stations upon its release, but no love from traditional country radio. But the rest of America loved the album. Ironically, the album won a Grammy Award for Best Country Album. Celebrating the achievement in the fuck the system fashion, Rick Rubin ran a full-page ad in Billboard featuring the classic photo of Johnny Cash, middle finger aimed at the camera, with a caption that read, American Recordings and Johnny Cash would like to acknowledge the Nashville
Starting point is 01:12:06 music establishment and country radio for your support. And so Rick Rubin talks about the importance of selecting the people that you work with. You have to make sure you like them. You have to make sure you admire them. There's no point in working with somebody that you don't like admire or trust. And as a result, it's not just, this is not, oh, this is business. Like that's, no, it's not true. This is extremely personal.
Starting point is 01:12:27 What we're doing is extremely personal. And so there's a, there's this band called System of a Down. And one of the artists in System of a Down talks about, like, what was it, what's it like working with Rick Rubin? He gives you his whole self. And so says, production with Rick doesn't mean you're going to sit in the studio. It might mean you go to a record store or you go to a beach or you go for a drive. You bond as people first and then you put these songs.
Starting point is 01:12:49 And Rick's like the song, Doctor. If you play something for him, it's like going in for a checkup. He's like, here, take a couple of these vitamins and see how you feel. And the songs always feel better after his suggestions. And so you do. He's just so easy to be around. That's why people keep going back to him. And so one of the groups that kept coming back to Rick Rubin were the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Starting point is 01:13:09 And so they're doing the album Californication at this point in the book. And one of the guitarists had left the group and then he came back, but he wasn't playing as much. So this is going to remind me a few weeks ago. I think it was what, maybe episode 240, biography of Mozart that I did. There's a line. There's something that happens to that book that I don't think I'll ever forget. And it's the importance of not really trying to find the most efficient way. Like sometimes just exposing yourself to hours after hours of hard work,
Starting point is 01:13:37 like that's going to build up skill sets that other people that have not gone through all that time lack. And so he's coming back. I don't know how to pronounce his name, so I'm going to call him F. F felt somewhat rusty. I hadn't spent too much time playing guitar over the last few years, so my hands were weak. They didn't really get extremely strong until we almost finished recording. So that had an effect on my style of guitar playing during the recording. I was playing guitar constantly.
Starting point is 01:14:03 I would go home and play for five hours after a 10-hour recording session. But the main takeaway there was the fact that his music, what he's saying, is like the music got better, the stronger my hands got. The only way to get your hand strong is to actually put in the hours, right? And so that's exactly what happened to Mozart. There's this some kind of instrument called like the viola or something like that. And if I remember correctly, he needs like extreme right hand strength. And so a lot of Mozart's competitors that practice less than Mozart
Starting point is 01:14:31 couldn't actually make the instrument perform to its best of its ability because they lacked the hand strength because they didn't practice. Mozart practiced. Mozart had the hand strength. Mozart then applies that talent that the people that don't practice lack. And he's able to get magic out of an instrument that his competitors did not. And then in just a few sentences, I really feel we get like this kind of blueprint that Rick Rubin, like the blueprint of how Rick Rubin works and that we can then apply.
Starting point is 01:14:58 to so many other things. And there's four things I picked out. This is how Rick Rubin works. Number one, he works on one thing at a time. Number two, he gives it his undefided attention. Number three, he only works with A players. His job is not to motivate you. A players motivate themselves.
Starting point is 01:15:14 And number three, he tries to get his thinking as clear as possible. We found that for us, we need a producer to be devoted to us for a few months. That's what Rick does. We've got his undivided attention. He doesn't do any disciplining. We do it ourselves. I love making music and I love writing music and nobody needs to push me to do that. He's not the kind of person that gets distracted or comes to the rehearsal studio with something else on his mind.
Starting point is 01:15:37 Or are carrying his personal life into the studio. He is very focused. He's got a clear head about everything going on. So again, work on one thing at a time, undivided attention, only work with A players and get your thinking as clear as possible. One of my favorite and funniest lines that comes from David Olgavey talks about, hey, all great companies, great institutions. They're run by a single, formidable individual, and he has a better grasp of language than I do, but he says, search all the parks in your city. You'll find no statues of committees. Johnny Cash is talking about why some of the last albums he ever did were so great. The common theme
Starting point is 01:16:12 I see in these albums is they were not made by committee. They were made by Rick Rubin and I. The guitarist from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, that guy F, I just told you about. Together F and Rick Rubin explored another genre of music to find inspiration. Me and Rick would work together every day and he's got me and rick would get together every day excuse me and he's got these CDs of hits from the 60s so right now at this point in the book where we are in in time they are using ideas from work done 40 years before they are meeting that's another one of rick's standard mo's he's constantly saying hey i know we're working in 1995 i know we're working in 2005 go check out what was done in the 50s go check out what these guys were doing in the 70s go check out what these guys were doing in the 70s go
Starting point is 01:16:57 check out this other thing. And so we're going to see Rick Rubin used two parts of his philosophy here again, persistence and then production by reduction. And so at this point, he's going to do the exact same thing. He's like, hey, who else was really good at one point? It's really capable of doing great work, but hasn't yet, like hasn't shown that they can still do great work. So he goes and and tries to work with Neil Diamond and he just does it relentlessly. Rubin was eager to work with Diamond and unabashedly described his pursuit of the artist at stalking. At first, Diamond, Diamond found Ruben's enthusiasm a little scary. I didn't know what to make of it.
Starting point is 01:17:31 So eventually his persistence pace off. They start working together. And it says once they began working together, Ruben insisted Diamond track all of the album's songs playing acoustic guitar while he sang. That's exactly what he said. He's like, listen, a person with just strumming a guitar and singing sounded good 50 years ago,
Starting point is 01:17:48 just like a piano sounded good 50 years ago. And if it sounds good 50 years ago, it'll sound, if it survived that long, that idea, that format survived that long. It is more likely to survive 50 years ago. years into the future. So he's like, all the other crap that your producers had you do with the bells and whistles, we're getting rid of all that stuff. It's not necessary. And so says the singer hadn't recorded like that since the 1960s, and he was reluctant to try it. Diamond would later
Starting point is 01:18:11 concede that Rick was right. Rubin wanted to bring back the Neil Diamond who made those old records great with a stripped down sound. And then the way Neil Diamond describes Rick, I'm only including this because it made me laugh. It says despite his appearance, which can be really intimidating, Rick is a big, lovable bear of a man. The only problem I had was with his habit of hugging. At first, I was taken aback. After a while, I got to like it.
Starting point is 01:18:42 He's like Father Earth taking you into his pussum. I don't know why that made me laugh. That's funny. And then towards the end of the book, I just realized as I'm reading this, I was like, oh, he's developed a very personal business philosophy. Ruben wanted freedom and not to have to punch a clock or work in a traditional corporate way. Ruben has always kept a full vision of a project in mind as part of his work. He thought about the artwork, the marketing, videos, brand building, and so on.
Starting point is 01:19:11 The panicked music industry may be focused on how to sell music, but Rick Rubin has always been focused on making great music first. He is driven by what is really great. He's very hard to please. Having someone around you like that makes you want to bring something in that's fantastic and not just mediocre. And the effect of this very personal business philosophy is summarized here. Ruben attributes his success to very simple core principles. Try to understand culture as well as music.
Starting point is 01:19:48 Surround yourself with people interested in music for the right reasons and be true to the things that you love. His great love and fandom for music has led to honesty and purity in his work. His impact has been felt by a generation of music fans who would credit Rubin with producing the soundtrack to their lifetime. And that is where I'll leave it. I absolutely loved this book. I loved going deep on Rick Rubin, the mind and the philosophy of Rick Rubin this week. I'll leave a link down below if you want to buy the book at Sports Podcast at the same time. That is 255 books down, 1,000 to go, and I'll talk to you again soon.

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