Lex Fridman Podcast - #275 – Rick Rubin: Legendary Music Producer
Episode Date: April 10, 2022Rick Rubin is one of the greatest music producers of all time, working with many of the greats including Beastie Boys, Eminem, Metallica, LL Cool J, Kanye West, Slayer, Tom Petty, Johnny Cash, Dixie C...hicks, Aerosmith, Adele, Danzig, Red Hot Chili Peppers, System of a Down, Jay-Z, Black Sabbath. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Lambda: https://lambdalabs.com/lex - Theragun: https://therabody.com/lex to get 30 day trial - ROKA: https://roka.com/ and use code LEX to get 20% off your first order - Onnit: https://lexfridman.com/onnit to get up to 10% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: Rick's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RickRubin Broken Record Podcast: https://bit.ly/3j7BFXZ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:46) - Nietzsche and music (18:47) - Rick's approach with artists (30:10) - Beautiful simplicity in music (33:54) - Marvin Gaye (43:09) - Best album of all time (47:02) - Paul McCartney (49:08) - Ideas (51:30) - Rebellion and conformity (56:18) - Fitness (59:27) - Johnny Cash (1:09:23) - Tom Waits (1:14:01) - Lyrics vs rhythm (1:18:48) - Johnny Cash continued (1:20:47) - Beastie Boys (1:27:09) - Depression (1:31:31) - Art vs Business (1:40:18) - Art of conversation (1:56:52) - Rick's podcast (2:00:02) - Advice for young people (2:04:07) - Mortality (2:06:42) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation with Rick Rubin, one of the greatest music producers of all time,
known for bringing the best out of anyone he works with, no matter the genre, music,
or even the medium of art, or just the medium of creating something beautiful in this world.
And the list of musicians he produced includes many, many, many of the greats over the past 40 years including the Beastie Boys, M&M, Metallica,
LL Cool J, Kanye West, Lair, Tom Petty, Johnny Cash, Dixie Chicks, Errol Smith, Adele, Danzig,
Red Hot Chili Peppers, System of a Down, JZ, Black Sabbath, I can keep going for a very long time here.
Most importantly, Rick is just an amazing human being. We became
fast friends, which is surreal to say and is just an incredible honor. I felt truly hurt as a person.
When I spent the day with him eating some delicious Texas barbecue, talking about life,
about music, about art, about beauty. This was a conversation and experience.
I'll never forget.
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That's expressvpn.com slash Lex pod. This is the Lex Readman podcast and here is my
conversation with Rick Rubin. How are you nervous?
I'm not shaky but I would say I feel uneasy and I feel like soon we start talking, the
more relaxed we'll get.
Yeah.
Well maybe we should sit in this moment and enjoy the nervousness of it.
Let me start with Nietzsche.
He said without music life would be a mistake.
What do you think he means by that?
Let's talk some philosophy.
Let's try to analyze Friedrich Nietzsche from a century ago.
It seems like music has the ability to bring us so much depth in our soul that's hard to access any other way.
And without it, there would be a loss beyond, beyond the pleasure of it.
Feels like it's a window into something else.
Something that no other medium can express quite the same way.
I would say not as automatically.
Something about music can do it automatically.
Maybe poetry or maybe certain abstract forms
can get us there.
But there's something about music
that really can get us there quickly.
But it's also the time to place the history.
There's something about, like a lot of my family's film Philly,
there's something about driving through Jersey
and listening to Bruce Springsteen.
And then you just, I'll get emotional.
Like, listening to, like, I'm on fire.
That, like, one of my favorite Bruce Prinks in the songs, there's a,
there's a haunting kind of strumming to it.
It's not a strumming.
It's actually picked as a country feel to it.
Almost like a Johnny Cash feel, actually.
And it, I don't make me feel, so for people who don't know, I'm on fire.
I don't know, it makes me feel, so for people who don't know, I'm on fire. That song is, I guess, a love song to a woman that you can't have because she's married
or she's with somebody else, which I guess is quite a lot of love songs.
But there's something about the haunting nature of the guitar and then it has to be driving
through Jersey.
And I feel like everyone has fallen in love with the Jersey girl at one point in their
life.
I don't know if that's true for her.
But I feel like that.
I haven't either, but I just feel like that.
I feel there's something about Bruce Springsteen's like, yeah, I've been there. I, you know, and that just takes you to a place of emotion that you just, that captures
love, that captures longing, that captures the heartbreak of just the way time flows
in life.
And in fact, it's finite and just all of that and a single, single, simple song.
Like, what else can capture that?
Yeah, I don't know, but it's true that there's a connection both between time and place and music.
And I, certain music growing up on the East Coast didn't really resonate with me until I spent time
on the West Coast. Eagles being an example. When I lived in New York, the Eagles didn't really
speak to me. ZZ Topped didn't really speak to me.
And then when I started spending time in California and driving through Laurel Canyon, all of a sudden
the music of the Eagles felt appropriate somehow.
And I started listening to it more.
God, it's so not until you went out west, can you understand the sounds of the West?
So it's really like New York has a sound.
What are the places of a sound in the United States?
I think every place does.
At Matt said, sometimes we can get an experience
through music of a place.
Like we can resonate with the music and not understand why.
And then maybe when we go to the place
where it was created, it's almost like we have
a knowingness of that place.
It's not a strange place anymore.
Yeah, Steve, very vaude with blues and Texas blues.
You can just listen to Texas flood and just, again, there's this, like the woman you're
missing, a broken heart and somehow that connects to the place.
The Eagles, what song would the Eagles connects with you?
We're talking about like, take it easy or are we talking more like hotel, California?
I'm thinking take it easy, but, but both are great.
Yeah, there's certain songs when I started learning guitar when I was young.
That's like, I would like to be the kind of person that not only knows how to play this song
but understands this song and like have that song be something I played 20 years ago.
And I've lived with that song for a while. A Kotelka, if one is, is an example.
Obviously there's the solo, but there's also the soulfulness of the lyrics,
which I still don't understand.
And it could be about anything. And as you get older, I feel like the meaning of the song could be
anything. Yeah, I think that's true. I think that's the beauty of them. I think when the person wrote
them, they may have had one interpretation, but it's not contingent on us getting that interpretation to like it or resonate with it or feel it.
In some ways, the best art is open enough where the artist gets to have their experience
when they make it and then the audience gets to have their experience when they listen
and they don't have to be the same.
And then it connects thousands or millions of people together.
There's a togetherness of music when you share that music when you're listening to stuff
together, like in a car.
First of all, the car is a sacred place.
So I work in part on autonomous vehicles.
And you start to think, what are the things you lose when the car stops being the central
part of American life, the car ownership.
It just feels like the car when you're alone, it's like a therapist thing session because you get
angry at other humans, you get to, and then you get to like, sit in your own anger and emotion you get to listen to the song on a long road trip and
And remember like run to your memories the heartbreak
I don't know one that got away, but also like the beautiful moments all of it
Yeah
And all of that in the car
Yeah driving also serves another purpose and it's a it's one of the things that we can do that
We have to pay attention enough not to crash
But typically can
Essentially run on autopilot enough where we could be thinking about something else or
Concentrating on something else and the difference between concentrating on something or trying to solve a problem,
when you're solely trying to solve a problem versus when you have some little task that's keeping you occupied,
I find if I have some slight, something slight to take care of,
it frees a more creative side of my mind to better self problems.
You know, I'm kind of jealous of people that found that in painting, for example, they'll
be drawing or painting and listening to it.
So that's the small task you do.
You're coloring in the lines.
It's like this gentle, peaceful, slow process that requires just a
small fraction of your mind, and then you can listen.
Some people listen to podcasts that way.
Some people listen to music that way.
Yeah.
How do you do it?
How do you free your mind?
Running is one of them.
There's a process.
So the most freeing of the mind for me has to go through a process of a bit of pain for
a bit.
So doing something difficult, it's just like an airplane taking off or something.
So that's, like, for example, running the first few miles would just be just
first of all the physical aspect, which is like, you're so fat, you're out of shape, you're this
is this is to get an old, this, that, okay, that slowly dissipates. And then the demons come in
who are like, you should be, you should be getting this and that and this done. You haven't gotten it done.
You're like breaking promises, all those kind of voices coming in.
And after that, maybe mile four, it's like, fuck it.
He just run with the wind at a very slow pace, but with the wind.
And then you could think.
So the footsteps, the physical activity,
then you could deeply think about stuff.
Ideas sort of design, whether it's program design stuff
or like high level life decisions, all those kinds of things.
I would say running.
I used to build bridges from toothpicks.
I used to be a thing.
It's an engineering.
I guess some people like glue together airplanes and stuff
like that. But the bridge is such deeply honest work because at the end of it, you're going to have
to test that bridge and you're going to see how good your work was. The little details,
but also the big picture. Do you use glue or no? Yeah, use glue. So it's not pure physics. It's
it's it's a materials engineering too. There's a the way you want to do it is you
actually split the wood as thin as possible and then glue back together because
the glue is really strong except for the arches and things like that. So you're
building arch bridges which is a whole
another skill because you have to bend the wood. And it's so cool because the thing can hold
thousands of times its weight. And then you get to watch it explode at a certain point
from the pressure. And when you do a really good job, it doesn't explode in a kind of
when you do a really good job, it doesn't explode in a kind of some weak point that you did anticipate just kind of starts cracking.
It's everything cracks, everything explodes.
It's just pieces fly everywhere.
And it's literally hundreds of hours of work just explode in front of you.
And that's a metaphor for life, maybe.
And it's all for nothing. Except for the journey
that you took to get there. And no one understands. Speaking of which, back to Nietzsche, these
questions are ridiculous. So you're going to have to try to figure out what the heck I'm
trying to do here. So Nietzsche also said, Alaina love, which
is, and those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear
the music. Do you, Rick Rubin, ever feel crazy? Or maybe you're the one who's sane and
everybody else is crazy. You know that the dancing, the joy of the music, of just feeling
the music and everybody else just doesn't understand. And this does not have to be literally about
music. This is about art, about creation. I would say I feel different and it's hard to say it's like
And it's hard to say, which side of the equation is crazy. Did you ever find a group of people that you get that get you?
Yes.
Is that what producing is essentially?
You try to find the moments when you just get each other?
No. know, I would say they're definitely certain artists with certain temperaments, when
you're around them, it feels like you can finish each other's sentences, you know, just
see the world the same way.
Comedians as well.
And that's not essential for the two of you together creating something special.
No.
So it could be attention too.
It could be any, there's no rules.
It'd be like, think of it like a coach.
A coach could bring what they have to bring to any talented individual and help them find their way.
And sometimes the right coach for the right athlete really works and other times there's a mismatch.
Have you seen the movie We're Plash?
I did. I saw it when it came out so I don't really remember it well, but I did see it. So there's a coach type of figure who is pushing a drummer to create, to grow as a musician,
but also to create something special. I don't know if it's even special music, skill-wise,
it's a special moment. I don't know what he's trying to create. From one perspective, it's
just an abusive, a person who selflessly gets off on being abusive to those he's with.
But from another perspective, the way I saw that movie, it's just the two right humans finding each other at the right moment in life,
and risking destroying each other in the process, but maybe something beautiful will come of it.
Do you think that's a toxic relationship? Or is there
some of that movie resonate with you as that's sometimes is required to create art? That
kind of stuff.
Yeah, it doesn't. Well, they're suffering, but not that kind of suffering. Not for me. There are some people who, that's
their process and that's whatever works. There's no right answers for anything involved
in art. We're all trying experiments to find a way. And even for the things that I work
on, I don't have a set way that I do anything. I come to every project blank and see I really listen to what the artist plays
and says and through what they explain they want to do help find the best way to get there. Was it implicit in the movie that the mean teacher
liked being a mean teacher? You said the way you described it was that he got off on
treating people this way. Do we know that to be the case? I don't remember that in the
movie. We sometimes project that onto people, people who are really rough on students.
You start to think, well, maybe that is fundamentally who they are, and if it's fundamentally who
they are, that there must be some pleasure in it, or it's an addiction of some sort.
But it could be also a deliberate choice made by the teacher.
It also could be a lineage like, you know, in Zen tradition, they're sort of the mean
roshis who, if you do something wrong, take a physical action, and it's just in the lineage it's considered. That's how you teach.
I didn't come from that lineage. So I'm much more of a, I feel like it's more of a
collaboration between people working together to make the best thing. It's not a, it's not a boss
the best thing. It's not a it's not a boss slave relationship at all. It's much more of a let's find our way and and we agree at the beginning of the process that if either of us or any of us
don't like what's happening, we say it and the goal is to keep working until we get to a point
where we we're all really happy with it. It's like if we make something that an artist likes and I don't like
or if that I like and they don't like, we haven't gone far enough.
In terms of lineage, the ones that seek destruction and the ones that seek happiness
all come from the same lineage, well it came from fish.
So somewhere in you, deep down there, there's the other stuff too.
It's just that you haven't been
yet, by the way, because you said every new project, including maybe starting today,
is an opportunity to channel to plug into something that was always there and you haven't gotten
a chance to plug into. You mentioned listening, how do you listen to a person? How do you hear a person when you first
Come in like we just met
What's the analysis happening?
But I mean with me is one thing. I'm an artist of sorts. I program and I
I'm just I'm human. I guess I guess we're all creating art. How do you see, like, how do I bring up? So for people who don't know, I mean, obviously, everyone
knows that you've produced some of the greatest records ever.
But the way I see that is you just brought out
the best in a lot of interesting artists.
And so in order to bring out the best in them, you have to
understand them, you have to hear the music of their soul. Hopefully not being
too romantic here, but just like, is there something you can say of how
difficult that is if there's a process, if there's tricks, if it's luck.
I think it starts with this again coming in blank, like not having any preconceived ideas,
being open and really listening, listening and not thinking about what you're going to
say next or what your opinion is or any, you know, not ha- basically being a recorder and just hearing what comes in.
And then, once you hear what comes in processing that information,
and I'm trying our best to do that without any of the beliefs
that we might have to impact what that is.
You know, if I- if I ask you a question, I don't want to hear what I don't want to listen
to you and have any reaction happening when you're speaking. I want to be as neutral as possible.
For me, my goal is not to form an opinion, it's to understand. So if anything,
to form an opinion, it's to understand. So if anything, I would draw you out further and just ask questions to really understand. And if you say something that I, that somehow
triggers me in a way that that's a, you know, I wonder how he came to that. I would
ask, I would challenge you. I would ask, like,
how do you find that? You know, how did you get to that place?
From a place of curiosity. You would try to figure out, yeah, I want to understand who
the person is. And through questioning, we can usually get there or through just spending
time together, you find out who the person is.
What about finding out and figuring out how
to then take the next steps of bringing out the best in them? Like, is it just trial and
error? Let's try this. It's definitely trial and error. It's always trial and error.
You're afraid of making a mistake? Like, let's, let's add this instrument, let's remove
this instrument. Let's try. Let's try. Add this instrument, let's remove this instrument. Let's try.
Let's add this line, let's remove this line.
Let's try.
And let's be open.
So one of the rules, we don't really have rules, but one of the agreements in the studio
is any idea that anyone has will always demonstrate it.
We'll always try it because I can describe to you an idea and you can think
that's terrible idea. Let's not do that. And then I can play you the idea. And then you
can say, oh, that's really good. And it's completely different because when we're told
something, we have to imagine what that is. And the way you see something and imagine it, the way I see something and imagine it, and the way I see something
and imagine it are completely different.
So you say thing and now there's two humans
that play that thing in their mind differently
in their imagination and then there's a cool creative step
and when you actually do it to see how it differs
in the imagination and then the difference
or the commonality will be like an exciting little
discovery together.
Well, so many, so many groups of people making things together in a room, one person will
suggest something and someone else in the room say, that doesn't sound like a good idea.
It's not do that and then they move on.
The testing of every idea is really important.
And that's how you get to see, oh, that's not at all what I thought it was going to be. Happens to me all the time. I know because someone
will suggest, why don't we do it like this? And I'll think, that sounds bad. And then
I'll think, okay, let's try it. And then we hear it. And then, you know, eight times out
of ten, it's nothing like I imagined and great. And then you try not to have an ego about the fact that you thought it was not a good idea
in your head.
There can't be any ego in this.
It doesn't.
If everyone's there with the purpose of making the best thing we can, there's nothing
else.
There can't be any boundaries to that.
So there's a moment I saw with, I know you don't love talking about previous things you've
done, but it's cool to dive in there.
I'm fine to talk to Sample.
The sample anything.
We'll see.
I have this pain.
I got to talk now.
I think of something ridiculous
that would make you change your mind. You mentioned I saw a video of you with Jay Z. It worked
on 99 problems where you suggested a kapa'la opening the song with a kapa'la. Just no instruments, just voice. That to me, I mean, that's one of the characteristics of
the things, of the ways you've brought out the best and artist is doing less. Sort of
the tending towards simplicity in some kind of way. So that choice of acropolis is really
interesting, because I can see a lot of people think that that's a bad idea, but it turned out to be a really
powerful idea.
Can you maybe talk about the simplicity, how to find simplicity, why you find simplicity
is beautiful?
It does appear to be beautiful.
What is that?
Yeah, I don't know where it comes from.
It has been with me from the beginning of my work, the very first album I ever produced, the credit I took was reduced by
me instead of produced by me for that reason. Like, I like the idea of getting to the essential.
And I have a better idea now that I've done it for a while, but at the time it was purely an
instinctual thing. And part of it is a sonic, there's a sonic benefit,
which is the less elements you have,
you can hear each of the ones that are there,
and they can sound better.
And the less there are, the more space
they could have around them and the more you can hear
their personality.
If you would record 10 people playing the same guitar part and you listen to it, it would
sound like guitar.
And if you record one person playing a guitar part, it sounds like a person playing the
guitar.
It's different than just guitar. And the often in the studio, the idea of building
upon things and adding, adding layers to thicken to make it sound bigger,
sometimes the more things you add, the smaller it gets.
So it's a, it's a, a lot of it is counterintuitive until you just in practice,
see what, what works.
Try it.
Try removing stuff until it's just right.
It's the Einstein thing.
Make it as simple as possible, but not simpler.
That's such a finding a stopping place.
Just keep chopping away.
And chopping away.
Yeah.
There's something we also like to do called the Ruthless edit, which is, let's say
you're at a point where it can work for anything, but I'll give you the example with an album.
We've recorded 25 songs, we think the album is going to have 10.
Instead of picking our favorite 10, we limit it to what are the five
or six that we can't live without.
So going past even the goal,
to get to the real like heart of it,
and then see, okay, we have these five or six
that we can't live without.
Now, what would we add to that, that makes it better
and not worse.
And it puts you in a different frame
when you start with building instead of removing.
And you might find that there's nothing you need to add.
Sometimes, sometimes something happens
when you get to the real essence.
Then when you start having things back, it becomes clear that it was just supposed to be this, this tight little thing.
Can I ask you like a therapy session question?
So you mentioned somewhere that one way to kind of think about music to get into music is is to look at the top like hundred albums of all time
and just go down the list and like,
just take it all in like a one piece of artwork.
So I was doing that for a while.
It's a cool experiment because unfortunately I have to admit,
I've gotten lazy and stopped taking in albums as albums.
And I looked at one interesting top hundred,
let's top 500 actually, which is put together by Rolling Stone.
And they put the therapy session part. And this has to do with simplicity too.
They put Marvin Gays what's going on at number one, spoiler alert.
So I like to maybe get your opinion on that choice that the reason Marmigay is really interesting
It actually be cool to play what's going on in a second, but
When you just listen to his like acapella
Just listen to his voice. It is really good like people
It makes me wonder if it's possible to pull off like most of his songs with no instruments like
In many parts there's so much soul in
just
Mercy mercy me what's going on? There's so many songs that you could just be like I wonder if you could just like
Just go raw or maybe in parts or maybe do what you do with JZ just open up with nothing anyway
There's something so powerful to a great soulful voice
It did my for I played real quick. No, please
There's a problem one of my favorite songs. I mean it's up there That voice.
There's some just very subtle backing vocals.
This one hurts. Father, father, we don't need to escalate.
When did the father he's talking about is?
Oh, that's interesting.
I mean, I have, so for people who don't know his own father
ended up killing Marvin Gaye.
Yeah.
I mean, that one is really pain.
I mean, for a lot of people, your relationship
is your father.
I mean, there's different dynamics.
But there's almost like part of life
is resolving some kind of complex puzzle
you have with the people you love, the people close to you, or the people who were not there, all those kinds of things.
That's so much pain in that we don't need to escalate, Father, Father. I never thought if it's, I always thought it's his father directly.
Yeah, I don't get that. It could be, but I don't, I feel like it's some more
or masculine spirituality. Like a father figure or just broadly
some kind of spirituality.
It could be like God, father God, mother God.
You know, like could be, I don't know.
But there's so much, it's like both hope and melancholy.
You sing wars, not the answer.
It's like you don't tell your father wars,
not your blood father wars, not the answer.
It's strange conversation.
It's a bigger conversation than that personal.
Don't you think it feels like war,
if one is personal?
What's the difference between,
is the war is personal too. It's only leaders think about war and
a geopolitical sense. When people that fight wars, you lose your brothers. You lose,
I mean, death is just right there. It might feel just like that. But yeah, there is a dance
between like the personal and like talking to the entirety of the society. It's like John Lennon imagine like
also a song where is that is that hopeful? Is that cynical? Is it like
melancholy? Like hardbroken like you hope you wish things would be a certain way and they're not.
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. John Lennon is giving up on the world, you know, imagine. Yeah, I don't know. No, it's a, it's an interesting question. There's another John Lennon lyric in, let me think of what it
is. Take me a second. And different songs keep coming into my head.
And I'm the one that I'm looking at.
And you keep pressing next.
Across the universe, nothing's going to change my world.
And when I hear that, I hear it as hopeless.
But I don't think, I don't believe that that's, well, it may be how he meant it, but I don't
think that's how it's normally taken.
And it's also the taker is important.
I'm generally optimistic and hopeful.
Say, I always like look for the hope and the actually the harshest love
Heartbreak songs always somehow hopeful to me. That's a love song
Did to me like a song about losing love?
It's is a song about the great capacity for love in the human heart. That's what I hear. Yeah, to me losing love is exciting
for love in the human heart. That's what I hear. So to me, losing love is exciting.
Because it's like, that means you really cared. That means you felt something and you feel something, you can sit in that pain and that pain is a reminder of what it means to be human. When you're that,
what is it? We're just listening, the only man who could have reach me as a son of a preacher man. So it's like that early love or something or partially sexual or whatever.
That's not as interesting to me.
It's fun.
It's great.
It's that heartbreak.
That's their mind or they can go deep.
Although that's damn good song.
Have you ever heard the Detroit mix of the Marvin Gaye album?
No.
Call it up.
I'll hold you.
By far better.
Mind blown. I just heard it recently.
Blume my mind.
Oh wow. Reverb.
Distant.
Interesting. distant Physic is all around the room more more
more voices more voices I don't bother him
he's layering his own vocals.
Just like there's multiple people singing. Yeah, that's beautiful.
Seems to have more energy.
If you listen to the whole album, even though you just said, you don't listen to albums anymore,
Detroit mix of the whole album
changes the album a lot. I mean that that felt so that's the opposite of acapella I would say.
Yes. Because it's it's it's there's layers there's and and it maybe I don't know if you remember
if memory says me correct here, he produces this own album
here, Marvin Gaye, was the producer on this, I believe.
I believe so.
And this one sounds more like it's a get together.
And the whole album sounds more like a get together, which a group of people in a room
playing music together, whereas the album version sounds more like a recording.
This sounds less like a recording and a little more like a party.
Now, you had a series of conversations with Paul McCartney, which is amazing that people
should watch.
But is there, this is continuing our therapy session, is there a case to be made that what's
going on is number one album above the Beatles,
white album or Abbey Road above Pat Sounds.
Can you still manage case?
These are there's always a case.
I mean, there's always a case every there's no in reality in art.
There is no, there's no metric that makes sense.
So you could put numbers on things,
but it's like, is this apple better than this peach?
Like, it's not really a fair comparison.
But if you just had to keep one to represent
the human species, that's the way I think
to the only...
So I think it's a very personal decision.
I don't, I think you can make,
you can make your choice to represent
the human species and I'll make mine, you know?
Well, I would pick the Beatles over the Beach Boys.
So that's my, if I became dictator of the world,
I was talking to the aliens,
but I don't know the full historical context
to the impact of the music.
I don't know if that's something to consider,
like this kind of thought experiment
of imagining what it was like back then to create,
to go into the studio to do such interesting work in the studio, as opposed to like listening
to just as a pop song almost from, because I've never been able to understand Beach Boys got only nose.
The song got only nose?
Got only nose, but all of it, the album, the pet sounds,
just in my room.
In my room?
Pet song.
Is that what's your favorite on the album?
That the pet sounds album?
Pet sounds.
The opening track.
Do you mind for a play?
Please.
It's too fun.
That's part of the trip though.
You open the heart with the fun.
It's possible.
Original, mono and stereo mix versions. I don't know. What's the opening song? Wouldn't it be nice if we were older and we wouldn't have to win so long
And wouldn't it be nice to live together in the kind of room where we belong?
No, it's gonna make it that much better when we can say goodnight
This part is great, yeah. And then back to fun.
Yeah, we could say good night and stay together.
Wouldn't that be nice?
We're gonna be nice, wake up together.
But we're not.
There's part break in this one too.
Still, to me, like, George Harris, like, is that the way that album, while my guitar gently
weeps?
I mean that the Beatles are so hard to,
depending on the day, I'll say a very different song,
that's my favorite song, but I often return to
while my guitar gently weeps, that's my favorite song.
It's spectacular.
It's spectacular.
Anything George Harris in honestly,
something, something in the way she moves.
The, what would you classify that? There's like several Beatles songs, a category is a Beatles song.
So that's like the melancholy love songs or ballads or something like that.
Yesterday, let it be. What's do you have favorites?
So for me, how have you changed as a man, a human being as a musician and music producer ever having done that lengthy interaction with McCartney?
Hmm.
Any time you're around someone who's such a hero and you spend time with them and they're a human being, it helps put perspective on everything.
You know, they're just human.
Well, obviously.
I mean, everyone's just human.
And, but I remember the first time I got to see Paul McCartney play live, it was in a stadium
of 70,000 people.
And he started playing and I started crying.
And I couldn't believe I was in,
even with 70,000 people, I couldn't believe I,
that this man walks the earth,
I met him in the same place as him,
and he's the person who wrote that and played that,
and now he's here, playing it for us, mind blowing.
That's the voice.
That's the overwhelming.
That's the voice
That's the I it's overwhelming is it inspiring or is it
like because sometimes when you have and I've gotten a chance
To me I mean I love people in general like every every person is fascinating to me But yeah, when you've been a fan for a long time and you meet a person
Sort of I'll just remove
present company.
It's like, oh, they're just human.
So there's both.
It's both inspiring that just a simple human can achieve such beautiful things.
But it's also like almost wishing there were gods moving around us. It's somehow peaceful. It's more
comforting to know that there's bigger fish. I'm just a small fish and then there's bigger
fish and it will take care of the ocean for us.
I think we're all capable of being big fish. I don't think that there are special people.
I don't think it's like that.
I would make a case.
So the variety of artists that you worked with
and brought the best out of,
it does seem the year out of this world.
So do you think you would know,
world. So do you think you would know, like, if you're the same kind of species, maybe you're just a meat vehicle and you're channeling ideas from somewhere else.
I feel like I'm channeling ideas from somewhere else 100%.
But I think I've asked questions about where from.
I believe we all are though. You know, I believe we are,
we're vehicles for information
that when it's ready to come through, it comes through.
And the people who have good antennas pick up the signal.
But if I'm sure you've had an experience in your life
where you've had an idea for something
and you've not acted on it and
Eventually someone else does it and it's not because they're doing it because you had the idea and they stole your ideas because
The time has come for that idea
And if you don't do it someone else is gonna do it. It's being broadcast by whatever the sources whatever the source is
Yeah, I don't do
Yeah, I tend to see humans as not quite special in that way. It's different kinds of antennas walking around, listening to ideas.
And ideas are, I like the notion of Richard Dawkins of memes.
It's kind of the ideas of the organisms.
And they're just using our brains to multiply, to select, to compete, to evolve.
And humans, we really want to hold on to the specialness of our body, of our mind, but
it's really the ideas.
So for a group of members born two centuries ago, you wouldn't be a music producer.
Or, I mean, maybe, but you have an antenna. And if no signal is coming in,
or you'd be hearing a potentially a different signal.
Is there, I think we all have our own antenna for whatever it is that we, you know,
maybe not everyone has tuned into their antenna to see what it is that their strength
and bringing through is.
I'm lucky in that it found me because I didn't know that it was a, I didn't even know this
was a job.
I sometimes wonder, I mean, a lot of young people, a lot of people wonder, like, what's
the purpose and the, the specs of my antenna? What am I put on this earth to do?
Like if you know I can live a thousand lives, there's so many trajectories and imagine the greatest
possible trajectory that reveals the most beautiful thing I can possibly create in this world, live in the most beautiful way. What is that?
I feel like that's a good exercise to think about because it's also liberating to think that
you can do anything. I mean that more and more, I suppose that's kind of life. Society is
pushing conformity on you.
You know, I thought I had my own flavor of conformity. I thought I'm supposed to be
following. And then early on, I would say like in the late 20s, you realize, wait a minute,
you don't have to tell, you don't have to do what teachers tell you to do, what parents
tell you to do, what society tells you to do. You can, like, I would never wear a suit.
If I listen to like my colleagues and community
who think a suit is like the symbol of,
what is it?
A symbol of conformity, actually, which is hilarious.
But it's actually a kind of rebellion
and everything else like of that nature
doing these silly podcasts.
I have a question I have to ask.
Sure, because you brought up the suit.
Yeah.
Do you wear the suit?
Is this your daily uniform outside of podcasting?
So for the longest time it was some kind of suit
and then recently
I mean coinciding with going to Texas. There's a I'm such a loner. I'm an
introvert and there's a bit of a hiding from the world when I wear other
stuff. I really want to not make fame recognition, money, all those things, a motivation at all. And the
world kind of wants you to make those motivations. Not the world, but I was saying maybe the Western
world, maybe America, maybe a capitalist system does. But that's a choice to buy into that or not. Right. It takes a
brave person, a person of character to not buy in. And I'm like a like a baby deer trying to find
its legs, you don't have to buy in. Because I love people. And I think I'm kind of an idiot. And so
when other people say, do this and do that,
there is a pressure there. It's actually very difficult to not listen necessarily
to the advice of others and yet keep yourself
fragile and open to the world.
It's easy to be like, I'm always right,
just kind of sticking a ground.
But if you want to be like vulnerable,
if you want to connect with people and just wear your heart and your sleeve, then you
go and listen to them. I mean, that's the double edge sort of it. And then again, that
pain, like if you don't let it destroy, you can grow, grow from that. Has fame affected you at all?
Did you unplug from the system at some point?
Same. I've always been sort of removed. I don't feel like I'm part of any system.
Do you feel famous? I'm aware that when I go out people, you know, say nice things to me, which is great. But that's about it. That's about as far as it. But it doesn't affect your art about
your creativity or your thoughts. Like when you're sitting alone and thinking about the world, it can't.
It's a destructive force. The thing, the reason that you're who you are and the reason that you're
finding the success you are finding is because you've been true to yourself to get to that stage
So to start changing that
To conform to either conform
To someone else's idea what you should be doing
It just seems like it doesn't make sense. Do you have a sense of who you are? I don't necessarily have a
I don't know I know that I really like making good things and I know that I'm crazy about
it in that it's like an obsession and I want things to be as good as they could be whatever
it is. And if I'm, if I finish a music project and I have a window of time where I'm not working
on music, I might be moving the
furniture around in the house. I'm always looking for a creative outlet to find a way to make
something better. Or there was a period of time where I was in a weird corporate situation that was
that didn't allow me to flourish. And I turned, I focused the creativity in on myself. And I lost a bunch of weight and changed my life.
So that was the kind of art, like you've gone through a whole process of losing weight,
getting a shape, getting healthy. That was a kind of creative act.
It certainly was. It wasn't an intentional creative act, but I had a lot of energy.
And I just, a series of events happened.
I read a book.
At the time there was my heaviest.
I weighed about 318 pounds.
And I'd never been, I'd been sedentary in my whole life, basically laying on a couch,
working on music.
So I've never been physically active in my life. And I read a book about a guy
named Stu Middleman, a runner who ran a thousand miles in 11 days. And I thought, wow,
I, you know, get out of breath walking to the corner. And another human being can run
a thousand miles in 11 days. I feel like I have bad information. You know, I'm, clearly
I'm doing something wrong. And I reached out to a person
that Stu mentioned in the book, Phil Maffertone.
It was a legend. I really appreciate him as well. He's Math 180, Math Adulis. He's such an
interesting. I think he focuses on. Part great training. And he was the first person to talk about
And he was the first person to talk about essentially a... Low carbs.
Paleo.
Yeah.
Keto diet.
40% 40%.
40% 40%.
And for a person who's going to be healthy, who can exercise, and actually perform at an
early level, he's the first person when I, about heart rate training him and other endurance
athletes he influenced.
He gave me permission to run slower.
Yeah.
It's the first time I realized, oh, I can run long distances if I just run slower and then
take that seriously.
I actually fell in love with running very much so because for me, everyone's different,
but for me,
the love of running happens in the longer distances.
Did you read one to run?
Great book. Amazing book. There is something special about running.
And everybody has their own journey with it. And even ultra marathon running, those kinds of things.
Thon running, those kinds of things. It's a, it is like many journeys, one that can pull you in, like you won't be the same person after. And I try to be delivered about making,
deliberate about making choices, after which you'll not be the same person. And so I'm
nervous about like the ultra marathon running world. I have to talk to you about Johnny Cash.
I mean, when people ask me what very difficult question to answer, of course, but I'm pretty quick.
If I'm not allowed to pick anything by Tom Ways, I'm pretty quick to say, hurt by Johnny
Cash, the performance, the whatever you call it, whatever the heck that is, because that's not just a song covered
by an artist, that's a human being at the end of their life, that the rawness of that,
the, I mean, just, there's also a music video, which for a lot of people adds a lot to it. For me, just the musical loan is, I mean, the guitar,
every choice on that, see, the few things I've heard about it, it seemed like almost accidental,
I mean, like little subtle choices here and there. Can you maybe comment on that
to the degree? I think you had a huge role in sort of bringing Johnny Cash back from
a different part of his life.
It's like bringing something out that wasn't there before and it was incredible.
It was a celebration of a really special musician and it's totally new kind of celebration.
Now Hurt is just one of the songs that's an amazing celebration
of Johnny Cash, but Hurt is like at the peak of that. So what was that like putting that song
together? Maybe it might be nice to listen to it because I freaking love that song. And as a guitarist,
And as a guitarist, I just the simplicity of it. It seems like every choice contributes to the greatness of the song.
Simple is crisp, but dark too.
It's one of the greatest opening lines of any song.
And that's that.
Yeah, I'm talking about the lyrics.
I don't even mean the performance, the words.
But those words are not the same. They have a different meaning coming out of Johnny Cash's mouth. I'll go away, but I remember everything.
What have I become? What have I become?
Written probably for a young man.
I think he was 20 when he wrote it to me. Trent.
Anger, regret, pain. I will let you down I will make you lose
The way the guitarist played the choice of instrument the layers there
the freedom to give him to use the voice that's fading.
It's not fading, it's changing.
Maybe he's losing some aspects of his voice.
And it's almost like shaking a little bit
and it's a little bit out of tune in parts.
How much of that was deliberate? How much was, like, how do you give Johnny Cashler freedom
to do that?
How do you find that together?
Is there any insights you can give?
I think it's a case almost of like the right pairing the right role with the right actor
you could say. The song lyrics, the reason we chose the song
was because of the lyrics, purely about the lyrics. And at that point in time, both Johnny and
I would send each other songs of possible ideas to record. And that was one that I sent
him, and he didn't respond to initially. I I would send him see it that time We would burn CDs and I said them like CD a 20 songs or 25 songs and then and he would send them to me
He burned us a day for Johnny Cash and he said him of different songs of like songs to consider recording yeah
And we would send these back and forth and then
That I had hurt on one of the ones that I sent him and he didn't respond.
And usually if he didn't respond, we didn't go back to it, you know.
And that one, I remember I sent it again and I put it first on the next CD.
And when we spoke about when he listened to CD again, he didn't respond.
I said, check out that first song.
And I really feel like that one could be good. What did you see in that song?
It's the lyrics. It's the lyrics. Because I feel like nobody, there's very few
people in the world that would see these lyrics in Johnny Cash's mouth and
think this is a good idea, including prep rest personal. Yeah, I know that Trent had trepidations in the beginning.
Yeah.
But if you listen to the words, if you forget the music and if you get what, if you
forget what Nineish Nell sounds like and you just read it like a poem and then you
imagine a 70 year old man reading these lyrics, it'll be it'll be profound. It's profound. So that was the
based on lyrics that started the journey. And then at this point in time, Johnny was not in great
health. And sometimes I would go to Nashville and record with him at his house. Sometimes he
would come to California, but he was coming to California less regularly.
And because there were so many songs we wanted to try, he would start sometimes recording
just a straight acoustic version, like you'd have someone play guitar, he would sing,
and they would send those to me, and we would discuss, like, is this one to build on?
And that was when we said, I don would discuss like is this one to build on?
And that was when we said, I don't wanna record this one into a word together.
I feel like we should do this one together.
So on the next trip to California,
we recorded it at my old house.
And...
I mean, all the songs we recorded felt special. So I can't say this one felt special, but lyrically, it's more the lyrics have such a profound
sense of regret for what have I become.
Yeah.
And to hear, when you're 20 years old talking about regret, it's heartbreaking,
but it's heartbreaking in a different way because you have a 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. So that was the initial spark of doing it. And then when we recorded it, I believe
it was two guitar players, if I remember correctly, maybe even three, smokey-horned male,
Matt Swini, and Mike Campbell, I believe. And Ben Montent was playing the piano in my living room as we were doing it.
And we cut the basic track and with Johnny singing. And then Johnny probably sang over that
basic track a few more times. And then we come to vocal and then built up the drama and you didn't get to the part, but at the end of the song, it
gets very loud.
The music gets very loud.
It's subtle because it's not anything that takes your ear and the vocal is so powerful
that you don't really think about what's going on.
But it's building the whole time.
It's building and it even gets distorted at the end.
It gets really like over powering.
And that's part of the emotion of it.
It's a...
I will let you down.
I hear almost the anger and frustration. And it just rings out the clean vocal.
I mean, it's so simple, so incredible.
And it's interesting to have a young man's lyrics in an old Johnny Cash voice and heart
and mind.
Are you a fan of Tom Weitz?
Of course. Tom Weitz was younger
had his this song called Martha but there's a bunch of songs he's written when he was young
was like how does a young man have that like melancholy wisdom. The song Martha is about
uh an older man calling a woman he used to love that she's not married and he's married
and they're having that conversation they haven't spoken for 30 years and they realize that
they're still loved there and it could have been a different life a different world or they could
have been together and here's like a 23-year-old Tom Waititz writing so beautifully about something that's very, I've had a lot of people
like tell me how real that as an older person looking back at that love that you had and realizing it wasn't,
it was really, it's still there, inklings of that love is still there. I think there's a,
when a young person writes a sad song,
they almost seem more willing to go to a more hopeless place because they have a lot of time ahead.
And older artists tend to wanna look
at the bright side of things, which
also I think comes from the wisdom of aging. It's a more realistic position. So it's not
uncommon for younger people to write. I think even in the Beatles, you'll see like they're
very heavy lyrics, middle to late era Beatles, is still you know they're in there
20 you know early 20s I guess. Well that's hard to think about so much
accomplished. Unbelievable. And they they went to the full journey from fun to
darkness. It has been in a few years. You mentioned lyrics. So you've obviously produced albums with incredible lyrics.
I think you've mentioned the interesting characteristics
of hip hop of rap is that you're writing poetry
to rhythm versus writing poetry to melody.
So that's like one way to think about it. And I'm a fan, I mean Tom
Waits, let her call it, I'm a fan of poetry period. Is there something about
highlighting the poetry of it, the power of words that you did with with heart?
If I have to play, it's's one of the tongue-weight songs
that's less than a minute long.
I've always go back to, it's what I really love,
and it has just a few lines.
It's called, I want you.
All it is is him saying, I want you. this is a 22 year old sound weights Oh, I won't with you Give your stars above
Son on the brightest day Give it you all my love You are alone, only you would say, and I want you, you, you.
Oh, I won't, is you, you, you.
And then you hear hums for 20 more seconds.
Beautiful.
So, so some, man, that young man, like, love, and, but for people who don't know Tom
Wates, you should definitely listen to him and his voice sounds very different now.
And it's interesting to see the evolution of a human voice, the, the artists over time,
because that's a young, like, boy-like voice, hopeful, less clever, less woody, more simple, that simplicity is there.
And he's not, I mean, that takes guts to be so simple, I would say, lyrically and musically.
Is there a sort of laying that out on the table? Is there a way that you like to highlight the voice,
table, is there ways that you like to highlight the voice, the lyrics, or is there no one rule? So, what is the thing that makes music special? Is it the rhythm, the melody, or
is ultimately the lyrics are always there, or the idea?
You just ask me five different questions.
I don't care. I'll just get that. It's not about you. You don't want the answer. I don't want to have.
I'll listen. I look forward to your comments the internet. Okay. You have the greatest producer of all time in front of you and you can't shut the hell up.
That's right, friends.
But you do value lyrics.
Is there a way to celebrate lyrics?
I value lyrics if the lyrics are important.
I'm not a lyric person.
I'm very much whatever the thing that makes the thing good is the thing that I'm drawn
to for me.
For a long time, lyrics meant very little. I would say from the
really beginning. Yes. From the earliest days. Fight for your right to party,
Beastie Boys. Yeah, it was fun. I thought there were good lyrics, but it wasn't what was important.
I mean, it wasn't in a, in a almost a novelty way, not in a serious way.
Early in my career, I was much more focused on the rhythm, first the rhythm.
And I would, if the lyrics weren't good enough, I would be aware of it, but it wasn't the driving
force for me. And eventually over time, then melody became an important piece, which it wasn't the driving force for me. And eventually over time, then melody became
an important piece, which it wasn't in the beginning. And then, lyrics became more important
over time, but it's always been a, always changing what draws me in. And one of the things
I found as it relates to lyrics that can give a lyric a different power has to do with
rhythm where if there's no drum, the lyrics tend to mean more.
So earlier what you were saying about if it was just a cappella, you felt Marvin gain
a different way hearing the a cappella, you felt Marvin Gaye in a different way here in the acappella.
Can you comment on, I mean, in terms of one of the greatest albums ever?
Why does this sound so raw? Her voice, she's just a great singer. But this is that you're not doing anything else.
You're doing the strumming and then there's just a single beat. And then it builds.
This gets simpler but it feels like it's a giant orchestra. There's back in vocals.
The anger. I love it.
Like, there's something about such a powerful voice and the instrument is not getting in the way. I mean, the same with her and Johnny Cash.
Is there, what does it sound so like raw?
It's the same as the heart.
It feels like you're in the room with them.
It feels like they're not even singing.
They're literally freshly mad and angry.
I think those are the things that make great singer sound
like great singers.
It's not anything that's happening in the studio.
I mean, I would say the only thing that us in the studio
can do is kind of get out of the way and not ruin it.
You know, it's like that's that's what comes through of these these people. I
should also before I forget there is a lot of song choices on that CD. I'd love to see the full options on the CD
that you sent to Johnny Cash that I love. So solitary man is one of my favorite choices made there.
Is that a Neil Diamond song?
It's funny to talk about the Missiles because I tend to
I tend to listen more to albums than songs. So
Is he really that's what you're doing in your head. You're pulling up the album essentially.
No, I'm like I'm going to that song, but I don't know. I've never listened to that song,
but I know that when that when that song comes up in the sequence of the album, it has a really powerful effect in me. Let's see what it does if you just start it. Oh, so interesting.
Wow. about a ghost from a wish and well
and a castle dark
are a fortress strong
with chains around my feet
you know that ghost is me
and I will never be set free
as long as there's a ghost that you can't see.
That's beautiful. That's a beautiful choice.
Beautiful I melody, such a was born in Soviet Union. When you're
growing up, there's a few bands that kind of, I mean, they're probably for
Bidden still, but they see Ben and get like a bootlegged and they somehow take over the culture of the young folks,
such as myself.
So on the metal side, it was Metallica and Iron Maiden.
And on the, I don't know what you call them, but Beastie boys. I remember hearing a fight for you, right?
And it was just like, for some reason that stuck,
as it did for a lot of people in Russia,
it's like, wow, America is when you get the safe fuck you
to the man, the rebellion, the freedom.
I probably heard it a few years after it was released
because it kind of dissipated the
culture, you get the bootleg, it means hard to get your hands on.
But I just remember, I wanted to kind of bring that up because it was such a personally important
song to me.
And yet probably you didn't even think of that.
You probably thought of it as its role in the culture here in the United States, like terms of musically, but it was, you know, 2020,
when he was a old and we just, well, you were that kid, dude, right?
We're just making fun songs for our friends. There was no, there was no, uh,
expectation. That's just a fun song. Yeah.
No one thought we would never imagine anybody would like any of it.
One of the greatest albums ever.
I have to, I love this so much, I just remember.
This is America.
I didn't even understand lyrics to the piano.
And the lyrics are ridiculous. So here in that and here in Metallica Masterpuppets, I was like, I knew I'm gonna have to end up in America one day.
I mean, maybe now that I'm more mature or maybe a little bit more mature, I realize like that was kind of the longing for freedom.
It felt like at least at the time, if this is allowed, then anything is allowed.
Yeah.
And I think that the rebellion of it,
the, I guess it's also fun.
I just, I just loved it.
Is there, if you look back to that,
cause you're, you're a, I mean, you were that person,
not just the producer, it feels like,
well, yes and no, like it was, even to us then, it was still like satirical.
You know, it was.
It was. Oh, absolutely.
But isn't like music in part, like you're dancing in the line, it's parts satirical,
parts serious in a sense, like you're losing yourself in the satire.
Like when you have any time you go over the top,
isn't that part of the,
or is it explicitly satirically,
you make it find, I mean, girls,
and there's a lot of ridiculous songs in that album.
I don't know, I just think it was definitely
to make each other laugh,
like we were trying to make each other laugh.
We weren't trying to make a point,
we were trying to make each other laugh. We weren't trying to make a point. We were trying to make each other laugh.
But that person, how's that person different
than the person today in you?
The person that produced that,
I wouldn't say so different.
So it really is that I like things that make me laugh.
I like ridiculous things.
This is the same person still.
I think so.
Is it strange to just how many incredible,
I mean, I don't think I would make that today,
but I understand why we made it when we did.
It's in the vocabulary of ridiculous
that would make sense to do.
You know, for the right artist today,
could make something ridiculous and gives you that feeling.
I mean, there's just a sense when you make so many different albums, then you look back
at that creation, it can feel like a different person created that.
But you're making it seem like if you travel back in time, I'd maybe do a memory replay. You'd be able to hang out
with the teenage and the 20s recruitment. I don't think I was so different, honestly.
That's hilarious. It's funny. I ran into someone recently in Costa Rica, who I hadn't seen in a long time and who I knew from the New York days when
those days, and we spent a couple of hours talking and she said, you're exactly the same person
that you were then. So I have a short, you know, a recent confirmation. That's the case.
That's beautiful. Was it Tim Ferriss asked you about like who's the case. That's beautiful.
Was it, Tim Ferriss asked you about like,
who's the most successful person, you know?
That's the definition of success, I would say.
It's the exact same person.
You haven't lost yourself.
Or rather, you found yourself early on.
I would say there are aspects of me
that have changed for sure.
But I can't say that it's necessarily better. It's different.
I would say at that time, I was more confident than I am now. And I'm very confident now. But then I had an unrealistic confidence. And I think now it's a little more based in reality.
At that point in time, I had never been depressed.
And then once you go through a depression,
you're, well, some people I know, in my case,
I went through a depression afterwards.
I was a different person than I was before.
And I feel more grounded now than I did then. And I
probably relate to the artists who so many of the artists I work with suffer so many
artists suffer because that's part of what makes an artist great is their level of sensitivity.
That the same thing that makes an artist uncomfortable, other people
don't feel at all.
The time you were depressed, what was the darkest moments of your life?
What took you there?
How did you get out?
I was triggered by a person making a comment about something to do with work that didn't
matter.
It was like to anyone else, they would hear that and it would just be like, okay, we'll
deal with it next week, whatever.
But for some reason, I took it in a way that I felt like the rug had been pulled out from
under me.
Even beyond the rational part of it, of understanding,
you know, even after that problem that came up was solved, it somehow undermined something in me
and made me feel very vulnerable in a way that I hadn't felt before.
And it's spiraled. How did you get out?
I did a lot of different kinds of therapy.
I did starting with alternative therapies.
I was seeing, I would say, between seven and eight doctors
and ortho therapists a week.
Acupuncture, talk therapy, herbs, any possible modality, tried everything for a long time. have an impact and then finally, I'm wary of taking any Western medicine. I'm not a drug
taker or drinker or a partier in any way. And I found a psychopharmacologist who was a psychic,
a psychopharmacologist who was a psychic, but because she was a psychic, I was okay to see her,
because I'll listen to a psychic,
but I'm not gonna listen to a psychopharmacologist,
but the fact that she had the psychic
that made her fit into my worldview.
And she recommended an antidepressant,
which went terribly wrong in the first night that
I took it.
And then that set me on a journey of looking for the right antidepressant, which was a
long, painful process.
That's the heck of a journey.
Everyone that I took made me sick, everyone.
And then finally, I don't know, five months later, six months later, I found the magic
one that worked for me.
And it, um, it shifted me out of the depression. I took it for, my camera was six months
for a year, and then weamed off and was okay. And then I had another event some years later.
I think I took it again for a short period of time and got out of it and I've not needed
it since.
Were you able to kind of introspect the triggers that led to the events?
Is there something or is it random events of life?
I think it's more that because of the way that I grew up, I never had to deal with much controversy.
And when I was challenged,
I didn't have any ability to deal with it.
It's like Jonathan Height talks about, it's like that.
So you've actually also mentioned business
sometimes gives you stress.
So this was business related stuff.
Yeah.
It was a business related thing.
It just made me feel bad.
It's one of the sadder things about art and music is that it's often inter-leaved with
business folk.
I suppose that's the way of the world if you have a capitalist system, but it makes that
business folks rubbing up against artists can sometimes destroy a fragile mind and soul.
Like, uh, to me, like one of the best representations of an artist, honestly,
Johnny I have the designer from Apple.
And he's just so fragile with his ideas.
And you talked about like when he has ideas, he really wouldn't show it to Steve Jobs or anybody,
except for a small design team, because he was so nervous that it would, it would break.
I'd give it a chance, let it give it a chance to grow.
And it seems like the outside world, business people, PR people, people that kind of
have not lost themselves in the passion of creating, but instead are kind of representing or
making deals, all that kind of stuff. They can kind of trample on those little ideas.
And it's sad to see. It's really hard breaking to see because you know how much trampling there's going on.
It's one of the main jobs.
My job as a record producer is to keep the voices away from the artist from all the people
who are really on their side, but don't know. You know, like the, whether it be people, anyone on the business side who doesn't
make things, they're excited to do their part. You know, they're excited. If when you deliver the
thing, the art that you make to me, then we can start the project. But there's nothing to
sell if the art doesn't happen in the right way. And it has to be protected.
And it can't happen on the same kind of a time table
that business can.
It's just a different thing.
It doesn't, art doesn't come in a quarterly way.
And that doesn't apply just to music or it applies to art
or it applies to all creative pursuits.
Like this is generally the case, like at MIT,
it's just, there's the administration.
And then there is the professors and students.
And the professors and students are the creative folk.
They create stuff, they dream, they have wild ideas
to go on tangents and so on.
They have hopes and they go with those and they
get like on these weird passionate pursuits and then administration can often just trample
on that.
And they set up bars on all kinds of ways that you think you're not actually hurting, but
you really are.
And you know, I won't mention why, but because this happens to everybody, and I have a large
amount of leverage in my T-Now, but even I get a little bit of pressure in such stupid
ways to like, don't, like, be careful.
Be careful, Lex.
Like, we really want your career to succeed.
Be careful, Lex. We really want your career to succeed. Be careful.
And that little pressure to an artist,
do you want to go acapella,
do you want to go to a country record?
Be careful.
We're already a superstar. Be careful.
And in that way, you push people
flock a fish into one fish tank
where they're all the same. It. And it's sad to see.
And it's obviously in the modern world,
there's nice mechanism to protect,
to let artists flourish a little bit more,
because they get to put themselves to the world,
and get a little bit more confidence,
maybe different funding mechanisms,
all that kind of stuff.
What?
A tremendous problem, the voices that don't understand
and fear where the process
is huge, the other side of it is, in success, there can be a lack of reality where all of
the people around the successful person just tell them everything they do is great. And
then they don't have anything to bump up against anymore or have a realistic sense of what's what how things work or how it how the
how things measure, you know. So both sides are really important both both
avoiding the voices getting in the way and having a trusted group of, you know, a song, a group of people who can say,
you know, I don't know if that's as good. And you can still, you know, say, I don't care
what you think, that's fine. But it helps to hear it, you know, it helps to have, if someone
who you respect tells you something isn't good enough, it's helpful.
When you know a comfortable place of love, when it comes to a place of wisdom, and not from a place of fear,
not from a place of, oh, this doesn't sound like it's going to do as well as your last thing.
That's not the point.
The point is on this quest for greatness, are you living up to your ability?
By the way, is there something interesting to say about your world view?
Because you mentioned psychic and sort of the ways we can be healthy, the ways we can
can grow and how much maybe medicine or science has the answers. Is there some interesting way to describe that world view?
I would say I'm open mind.
I believe anything is possible.
And if I was going to trust in any practical information, it would be something thousands
of years old.
There's wisdom in that history. Yeah. Well, it's more tested.
It's not always right, but at least it's been somewhat tested.
So science is also tested. The thing I'm a little bit skeptical of sometimes is just the
hubris that often comes with the modern, with the latest, the newest, the feeling like you figured it all out, everything that's
been done in the past has no wisdom.
And we basically solved every problem.
You know, there's nothing else to be solved.
I mean, that's the defining characteristic of any age.
It's like, we've solved all the problems there are, we've have the final answers, and
our parents are all stupid
That kind of energy. Yeah, and that you have to be extremely extremely careful with that when it talks about when you think about something as
Complexes the human body or the human mind it to be very
Very very we know
Close to nothing. Yeah, exactly close to nothing. That's about anything
About anything about About anything.
About anything.
That place of humility is a good place to start to figure, to figure it all out.
And in the end, we'll still know almost nothing.
Yeah, I don't think we need to know.
It's like we need to see what works.
So we need to see what works for us.
It's interesting to know.
I know on the art side, knowing how it works isn't what makes it work. You know,
isn't the magic of it, isn't how it works. The magic is the magic. And the magic happens
in a way that's intuitive and accidental at times or incidental where you're trying many
things all of a sudden something works. And you don't know why and it's okay not to know why it doesn't matter
It doesn't really matter why as long as it does the thing that you want it to do whatever that is
Yeah, that's so weird when you know the components, you know
You still yeah the magic. What's the magic? Where's the magic like we know the components for stuff?
I care about artificial intelligence. We's the magic? Where's the magic? Like we know the components for stuff I care about artificial intelligence
We know the components of a powerful computing machinery. Where does consciousness come from?
What is that?
What is the
brilliant
Moments of insight come from what's that when I Even in simple games of chess or in simple, word
of those breakthrough ideas of taking the big risk that doesn't make any sense and it
all said it becomes something beautiful. Yeah, we don't need to understand why. It just
happens. It just happens. And often the things that end up breaking through, don't break
through in the way we thought or turn out to be a third iteration of
something that we thought was an entirely different thing or we don't know.
You know, and I think it's if we embrace that not knowing we'll have a healthier
experience going through life. You made a lot, it's not just music, everything.
We're arranging the chairs, the furniture as well. You've done like I said,
the documentary, I guess you would say, with Paul McCartney, and you've done a podcast yourself,
broken record podcast, and you've done conversation too. So what have you learned from that process
about the art of conversation? and also maybe what advice would
you give to this to me about what to do with conversation? Like what is interesting to
you about conversation? One of the things that I like is to not feel like there's any
stakes or that it's actually almost that it's not happening like the fact that when I came in you were setting up cameras
Made it less good from from I knew that that would impact the conversation in a negative way the best version of it would be
if we didn't see the cameras and
If we were and we didn't see any technology is and we were just sitting at this table having a conversation, maybe even if we were miked beforehand,
would be okay if it was necessary. But then we were just sitting here having a conversation, no people in the room, nothing, and feeling like we're just having a conversation.
I feel like it would get closer to, um, closer to the relaxed feeling, same thing we do in studios, like, you know, you've
heard of red light fever, you know, when an artist get nervous when, like, they play
a song great and then the tape starts rolling and they can't play it. And it's, we're all,
we're all to some degree like that. We went newer with Paul McCartney, I mean, you're, were you cognizant of cameras?
We had the room black. Everybody who was working there was dressed in black. Everything
was invisible. We were lit in a way where even though there were probably 20 people, between
12 and 20 people working in the room, within three minutes of starting the conversation,
Paul and I were alone in the room.
So that was the feeling.
On occasion, you'd hear a noise and it would be weird.
People, we also had nobody was allowed to wear shoes
because we were trying to create this intimate space.
And I know from in the recording studio,
when we're recording, if even one person
is there that's just watching and not working, you know, like does it like there's usually,
I'm usually there and an engineer is there technically making it happen. If anyone else is
in the room, it's different because then it goes from this moment where the person's doing a performance to the sense or where the person is feeling something internally and
we're capturing it to the other version is they're performing for someone.
It's so interesting. So like to push back in the alternatives here. So one
about the third person, not to make people self conscious. But I find that I'm so torn on that. Because sometimes when that
person like, so Evan is in the room here, he's been in the room
before he's a huge fan of yours, by the way. So he'll he'll
nod. Yeah, you'll get excited.
And you can see that nodding.
And for some reason for me, he's like, yeah, you get excited together.
That third person can be really special.
So having an audience when it's a friend or somebody that has that love in them.
It depends on the performer.
It depends on the performer.
Yeah, some people really thrive in front of an audience.
And you're saying you like that simple intimacy of everything
that's in the face.
Well, I like the reality of it, not being it.
I want it to be as far from a performance as possible.
Got it.
And if someone, I'll tell you a story that just happened. And it was viewed as kind of a,
it seemed uncool in the moment to the person that it happened to. It wasn't at all.
We're recording Nutrily Pepper's album, which is coming out, I think, any day now. Like,
I don't know what today's date is, but within the next, it may be by the time this airs, it will be out.
what today's date is, but within the next, it may be by the time this airs, it will be out. And the band was playing in studio and it was ripping because they played, they're incredible.
And one of the members walked through the control room after a particularly great performance.
And the engineer said, wow, that's all that was really great. And the
person who heard this said, please don't say that and walked away. It's like it was not,
it just changed this feeling of where in this place where we're doing this thing. And
there's, there is no outside world. You know, we're doing this for us. We're going as deep as we can for us. And as soon as there's
an acknowledgement to someone else, in a way, it breaks the concentration of being inside of it.
That's so well told. And it's something about saying, wow, that's always great.
It shows the reminds you that there's an outside world, but I feel like there's a way
to enter the inside world as an audience.
So you just have to do that.
So it matters what you say.
It matters how you look.
It matters.
So there's these generic compliments,
not generic, but they they sound in the way an outside world would interact as opposed
to in that creative thing where you're dancing around the fire together or something.
There was actually, I can tell you there's another interesting one that happened to me. And
I didn't know this until I saw the film of it, which was a strange one.
We were recording with the avid brothers and the song was called No Hard Feelings and
it was this recording of No Hard Feelings. When my body won't hold me anymore, I did finally let's meet free. Such a great voice. So beautiful. When my hands be steady, when I lay down my fears, my hopes and my doubts, the rings
on my fingers and the keys to my house will know hard feelings. So bright, so hopeful, so lighthearted. Love in the songs they sing in the church and know how hard feelings are. Much good for anyone
Get me afraid of cold
With so much to have at home Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm He sounds good in studio. Yes, every bit. I'm good. Holding love I've known in my life
And no hard feelings
Your nose behind the grind
Hush to find one Aren't you afraid of one?
You can't be afraid of cold
With someone's driving home
I'm not only learning why
It matters for me and you
To save me too
The life that is all we have There's a building and building and building. I have no enemies.
I have no enemies.
I have no enemies.
I have no enemy.
Wow.
He's got the power of Jeff Buckley with more, like, so much more flavor to the voice.
He's got so many different places.
It's cool when it's like, a copilot just mostly him.
You could do like, Hallelujah.
The Jeff Buckley way where I can tell.
It's incredible.
That's an incredible song.
Is this a new record?
Rose.
I don't know, four, five years ago, something like that.
But what happened with this, that happened.
And I mean, they're great and it's always good.
But that performance in that moment was felt like the sky open.
Oh, it was unbelievable.
But this was a single take.
This was a single.
This was a wow.
That was just like that was incredible.
Yeah, that was perfect.
So that's perfect.
Yeah.
When it ended, I said, great.
What do you want to do next?
And they said, we just need a few minutes.
They walked out.
And that's all I know.
It's like, okay, I'm laying down,
waiting till they ready to start again.
And in the film, there was a film made of the sessions
of this, they went out and they're like,
what was that?
Like, like, didn't he get what just happened?
Like, like, because it was so heavy. And it was just as heavy for me. And in the
spirit of we're here to make the most great stuff we can, we're not going to like open champagne.
Like, that's not, it's like, great. What do you want to do next? It's like, let's, let's not
great what do you want to do next? It's like let's let's not revel in this. Yeah. Let's but they took it as like this guy just like doesn't even understand what we're doing.
That's funny.
Until I saw the film. That's funny.
Well, that was the reaction. Yeah, but I think your response is the right risk to take, right? Because it's the celebration at the end of a, you want to keep like a, people celebrate too early.
Yes, great. And now let's use that momentum. We're in the zone. Yeah. What's next? Yeah. Yeah.
But you yourself in conversation. So you said that you want to create this, would you use the word intimacy?
Like is it to create or just a most real?
Like there's no cameras, there's no mics.
I would say a place where you're comfortable to be naked.
You know, a place where you can be your most vulnerable without questioning it.
You want to really be able to let your guard down. And to, you know,
if you want to start crying when you're singing, whatever it is, whatever it is. And it's hard
to get to that place. And again, just the idea of someone, you know, I'm like, hey, that was good.
That could take you right out of that going in, you know, going in.
And so we're interested in to think about how to achieve that and still have mics
Yeah, that
It's hard. It's harder. It's harder. Some of it is space some of it is raw conversational skill
like
There's something about certain
Well, some of that is also just like, you have that, I'm sure you
are there's a there's a legend to recruitment. And there's like my not friend Joe
Rogan, there's a legend to him. And when you show up into Joe Rogan's studio, the
legend creates an aura. And he, I think subconsciously or consciously uses it. So like this is somehow it's nervous, nervous,
nervous, and then you realize, oh, he's just, he's just human or something. I don't, there's
a relief. And then yeah, you could be, you could be yourself at that. So that's that nervous,
there's nervousness, nervousness, and it's like, oh, it's not that this legend is just a human. And it's just, it's normal.
So I don't know how that's done.
But it's so interesting to think about how that's because I forget recording.
I just enjoy it when it's real.
Like this microphone gives us an excuse to connect on a human level and forget.
And nobody's listening.
It doesn't matter.
I don't say I felt maybe in the last 15 minutes, I was less aware of anybody else being
in the room or in the equipment here.
Yeah.
But it took that long.
That's so interesting.
I didn't have that at all.
All I had, I mean, the wind calmed down outside, but there was a wind before.
And there's something about the wind.
Now, you can think of it from an audio
engineering perspective, like, I wonder if the wind creates sound or whatever that you hear.
But I was thinking like, none of this matters. Like, the wind is like nature will be here before us
after us. And all of this will be dead and forgotten. That's what the windows are minding me of. It's almost like laughing at the fact that we
would even consider itself important enough to put on clothes.
And talk.
You love it? You love talking? You love the podcast and just that
I expected what did you dive into that? Like what?
It was not in it was a strange occurrence.
My friend Malcolm said he wanted to start doing a podcast about music
and ask if I would do it with him.
Like, I like Malcolm.
And I thought it would be more like his podcast,
which is not an interview podcast.
I thought it was going to be telling stories
in the music world using audio stories.
And then it just started being interviews.
Not again, it wasn't intentional,
just started that way and ended up being that.
But I love it and I love both
because I get to talk to people that I don't know,
but also when I get to talk to people that I know
and ask them about things that we would never talk about ever.
You know, I don't know the origin stories of any of the people, any of my friends.
So to get to hear their perspective,
another like relating to the chili peppers, their albums coming out now,
I interviewed all four members of the band individually,
John,
I interviewed John and Midway through Anthony came in
and then I interviewed Flea separately
and I interviewed Chad separately.
And it was fascinating.
I know them for 30 years
and I learned a tremendous amount
because we don't ask people about themselves
when you're just, you know, workmates.
They're friends.
I do this sometimes.
I'll just set up my microphones and I'll record a thing for private consumption with friends
or loved ones.
That's fascinating.
Good idea.
Because you get to ask, yeah, those are ridiculous questions.
First of all, about life, about the future, about the past, about little fears and the things
you miss.
Yeah, there's something people just reveal. first loves, all those kinds of things.
Your view on love, your view on, and those are things that don't come up in regular conversations.
So it's so nice that's something about. See, that's the pushback. There's something about this microphone,
or maybe it's just the deliberate nature sitting down. Let's just talk. There is something about this microphone or maybe it's just the deliberate nature sitting down. Let's just talk
There is something about the microphone that
For me thinks just same with the suit. I'm gonna take this moment seriously. I
long for God that anyone is listening
I'm gonna try to
to really listen to another human first of all and
to also ask the questions that like a
really interesting, like I feel like when I talk to normal people out on the street, I'm
not allowed to ask anything. I'm allowed to ask only the more sort of generic things.
I think you can ask anything. I'm starting to think that. I that you're allowed to ask anything.
I think you're allowed to basically do anything, especially in Texas.
I think it's okay to ask people and I think people like it when you ask them.
People like to be seen and like to show who they are.
As the wind blows again, do you have advice for young people?
You're have a fascinating life journey.
Is there advice you can give to people in high school and college
about how to have a
life like yours in whatever pursuit in terms of
success is such a silly word, but just find success or maybe
happiness in career or just in life in general.
Yeah, I would, the only advice I would have would be to not listen to anyone and to do
what you love and to make things that you love, whatever it is, make your favorite things.
Be the audio, be the audience,
make the thing for you, the audience.
And it doesn't really matter what anyone else thinks
and if you have to get a job to support yourself
so that you can make your art, that's fine.
You can't make art for someone else.
You can't make art with someone else. You can't make art with
someone else in mind. I don't believe. I don't believe it can be good. So what does success
feel like? Are you grateful? Are you proud of the work you've done in the past? Or is there
some engine of constant dissatisfaction, like self-criticism of I could have done better. No, I'm pleased with the work that we did.
Excited to keep working. It's fun.
It's I don't know what else I would do with myself because it I like the,
I like making things fun.
I feel like it's my reason to be on the planet.
So I just keep doing it.
Whatever ideas are actually coming from elsewhere and are using your mind as a temporary vehicle,
that's their purpose to be on this planet.
Your purpose is to procreate and not die and eat regularly enough such that the brain
is alive.
It's a biological purpose.
Yeah, and anything I can do to keep the channel open to allow what wants to come through to come through,
I'm a willing channel.
It's so interesting,
because I'm extremely self-critical.
So you don't have that self-criticism harsh,
like this could have been better, this...
If it could have been better, I would keep working on it.
It's like, if it could be better,
it's not done. It's the one that's done. It's done.
It's done. Well, it's the best it can be. I've done everything I can to make it the best
it can be. And that's, I can't do more than that. So there's nothing to be critical of.
I did my very, if you always very, if you always give all of yourself
and do your best, which you're capable of doing,
you're not, I'm not suggesting that you're capable
of doing more than you can do.
But whatever it is that you can do,
if you've given all of yourself to it,
you've done your best, where is it,
where could they be regret?
Yeah, I mean, there could be, you relicin' to an album,
you relicin' to, or anything you've created,
and think, oh, there's so many interesting ideas missed.
It's fine though, but that was that moment.
It's like, everything is like a, it's almost like a diary entry.
Everything we make is a reflection of a moment in time,
a window in time.
Could be a day, it could be a day, it could
be a year, it could be a, you know, it could be whatever window you decide that it is.
But if you give it all of yourself and you know, if you're not interested in working it
on it anymore, it's done. Now, you may decide it's not good enough to share with people,
and that's fine. But if it's good enough to share with people, and that's fine.
But if it's good enough, share with people is no regret looking back.
That's funny, because think of it as a diary entry.
It's hard to look back at a diary entry and say, you know, I did it wrong.
I did it wrong.
It's impossible.
Yeah.
And even if it's read by a hundred people, a thousand people, a million people, is just a diary entry.
Doesn't matter.
Speaking of doesn't matter, this life is finite.
All of us, even recruitment will be forgotten one day.
Do you think about your mortality tomorrow?
Yes.
Do you think about the finiteness of this thing? Do you think
about mortality about your mortality? Does it make any sense to you? Do you think
about death? Are you afraid of death? I don't think about it. I don't think about
very much. Are you afraid? I don't think I'm afraid. I mean, I don't want to die.
But I know that that's in the cards and when it happens, it happens.
Your nature of not wanting to die is kind of like, you don't want to go to a shady restaurant.
You'd like to go to a nicer one.
So it's just a preference thing.
Well, I want to keep living because I want to do what I like to do.
So whatever, whatever.
Now, who knows? Whatever comes next. Maybe even better. Maybe we're, you know what I like to do. So whatever, now who knows, whatever comes next,
maybe even better, maybe where, you know, I don't know.
I can't, I can't, I haven't experienced it yet.
So who knows?
What do you think happens after we die?
I believe we go on in some capacity.
I don't know what that means, but in the same way that everything
recycles, you know, everything comes around. I don't know why we would be different.
In some way. In some way. I don't know what that way is, and I don't know that it's in the same
being, you know, or in the same grouping of information, whatever that is. But the thing that
makes us us, that information I imagine goes on.
Yes, it does seem like our world here at least on earth as a memory. And just like history,
it kind of rhymes, it brings back creations of the past and riffs on them, improvises on top of them.
And that in that way humanity propagates.
I mean, you see it with garbage.
You see the like mountains of garbage.
It's like it doesn't really go anywhere,
even when it breaks up.
It disintegrates, but it's never really gone.
Same.
Is there anything in this world you're afraid of?
A lot of things, but not death.
I mean, I don't know, I don't know. What do you question? Death is more of a question mark. Again, I'm not in any, to be answered.
Yeah, I'm not in any hurry for that to happen. But it will happen. And when it does, we get to
experience what that is. Well, the, okay, then the big question mark, what's the meaning of this whole thing?
It's the meaning of life.
Recrubin.
Pretty my name on it makes it harder to answer.
It's just a diary entry, like we said.
It's true. It's true.
And you will get a different answer tomorrow.
Let's see what's the meaning of life today.
Late and later today.
It could be, so for people who don't know
We were maybe thinking maybe meeting in Austin have some barbecue and now we're in the middle of nowhere And West in beautiful West Texas and
We this is basically a glorified delivery of barbecue
To of my favorite barbecue. Maybe you maybe one of your top favorite barbecue's to one of my favorite
humans.
So we'll get to eat some barbecue today.
Maybe that's the meaning.
Do you have something bigger than barbecue?
Barbecue's pretty big.
It's pretty good.
Now, is your love for barbecue come from by the way?
Do you?
Well, I was I was for 20-something years.
And once I found my way back into meeting, eating meat,
I think barbecue is my favorite of, uh, of any of the things that I didn't eat for so long.
I have to ask you, I almost forgot.
So there's an SNL skit with Will Ferrell that he wrote about Don't
Fear the Reaper where Bruce Dickinson is the producer. I always think about you when I
see that skit. I don't know why people should definitely watch it and he demands more cowbell
into the mix. And the whole band is how I imagine people interact with you.
The whole band is really impressed.
Like, we get to work with the great Bruce Dickinson.
And then it's played by Christopher Walken
and he says, like, fellas, fellas,
I put on my pants one leg at a time,
just like the rest of you.
But once my pants are on, I make gold records.
And I just, and then the whole skit continues and he wants to add more and more cowbell.
And Will Ferrell said he wrote that skit because he always heard the song, don't fear the
reaper and there's a distant cowbell.
It's very light in the mix.
And he's like, I wonder what the story of that cowbell is.
Like, if we just look at that one one layer who's that guy that was in there
So is that basically exactly how your life is is
Boosting some from the cowbell. I don't know if you've seen that skit
I don't think it's like that. It's not okay. All right. I'm just gonna pretend then right this is a huge honor that you said with me. I mean
What can I say about how incredible the human you are you truly are out of this world and thank you so much for talking today
I'm great fan. I'm so
Happy that you agreed to do this with me
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Rick Rubin to support this podcast do this with me. and hope to see you next time.