Podcast Page Sponsor Ad
Display ad placement on specific high-traffic podcast pages and episode pages
Monthly Rate: $50 - $5000
Exist Ad Preview
Modern Wisdom - #965 - Rick Beato - AI Bands, Spotify, TikTok & The Death Of Songwriting
Episode Date: July 10, 2025Rick Beato is a multi-instrumentalist musician, YouTuber, and a music producer. Music and the industry around it have changed dramatically over the past few decades. With the rise of AI, the dominan...ce of streaming platforms like Spotify, and the fading relevance of traditional Popstars, the old model of making and producing music is on its last breath. So what comes next? And who or what will shape the future of music? Expect to learn why Live Nation has become a lot of peoples enemies, what most people don’t understand about the process of making a pop song now, the trends musically that are dominating at the moment and why country is controlling the charts, the impact of TikTok on music generation, the rise of AI artists, bands and the rippling effects it will have on creatives in the music industry, what the future of music monetisation is going to look like, why Popstars are becoming obsolete, and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of LMNT’s most popular Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Timestamps: (00:00) Imagine If You Were The Guy Who Killed Beyoncé (02:21) What Goes Into Making A Pop Song? (10:24) Producer Driven Song vs Artist Written Song (23:41) What Do Pop Stars Bring To The Table Today? (29:52) What Trends Are Dominating Currently? (38:52) Is Music Too Easy To Make Now? (49:24) The Impact Of TikTok On Music & Formula For Making A Hit Song (1:05:01) Why Is Country Music So Popular Now? (1:14:07) Will AI Artists Takeover The Music Industry? (1:22:33) The Ethics Of AI In Music (1:36:05) What is The Current Take Of The Music Financial Industry? (1:41:44) The Good, Bad, & Ugly Of Spotify (1:47:15) The Future Of Music Monetization Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I just saw this video of Beyonce the other night.
She was up in the car and the cars started going.
Dude, could you imagine if you were the guy that killed Beyonce?
Oh, you can, you, she was stood on top of a car.
Beyonce dies in Eddie Guerrero style catastrophe.
I was thinking, I was wondering like, what in the world is she thinking?
Well, she's up there.
She's got to be scared.
I mean, she was up really high.
Is she harnessed in?
I think that she was.
Got to have sort of backup.
Yeah.
I mean, do you imagine the fucking insurance policy on Beyonce?
It has to be.
Oh yeah.
It would bankrupt, it would bankrupt a country.
That was crazy to see that, to imagine some type of a problem like that.
You know that that's not going to happen again though.
Uh, Ronnie Radke, one of his, it was his drummer who got second degree burns
from flames that came somewhere
and he just fired everybody.
Everybody's fired except for the band.
Everybody's fired.
No one's allowed to do this again.
Run it back, pull it, get somebody new.
You know, when you're dealing with that kind of stuff,
any type of pyro,
when I was at the Metallica show,
I was 30 feet from the stage, any type of pyro. When I was at the Metallica show,
I was 30 feet from the stage,
but at the same level.
I asked Kirk, I said,
how do you know that,
what happens if you're somewhere you're not supposed to be?
They're in our ears saying, okay, pyro's coming.
Get the fuck away.
No, get to a mic.
Because all the mics are in safe areas.
Yes.
Right, okay.
So, but it's hot from when you're 30 feet away.
And I said, how hot is it on stage?
He's like, oh man, it's insanely hot on stage.
Like, fun.
These things are going, the flames are going up.
You've seen the Ramstein build where they have that big set of exhausts that come up the top.
Yeah, that's the those kind of setups are, it's gonna be a nightmare to do that really to
the liability with that and to make sure that that's right every night where nobody gets
nobody gets blown up. But it used to be having accidents, it was not an uncommon thing in the past.
Anytime you're doing something that there's bound to be some issue.
What do most people not understand about the process of making a pop song now?
I think everybody's got this allure of music.
It really is pop music is moving into pop culture.
It's crossing over. People are seeing behind the scenes,
Instagram stories, relationships, tabloids, journalism,
whether it's from TikTok or
citizen journalists or YouTube channels doing reactions.
But I think that the process of getting to the stage of
this song is now live seems to have changed quite a lot.
So what is it that people don't necessarily get about what that process looks like now?
So I just made this video where I was talking about the people that are behind
the scenes that help write the songs and in many cases write the songs.
And people have the impression that because somebody sings a song that they are the writer on it.
Or if they have co-writers that the co-writers are a minor part of this, right?
But in reality, most pop songwriters, not all, but most, have very little to do with their songs. Other than choosing them,
they might come in and say, okay, I have an idea for a story of a song. They'll describe it, and
then these professional songwriters will help them realize that idea. Or the people might have
the song completely done and they come in. Hard to generalize, but does Taylor Swift write all of her lyrics?
He probably writes most of her lyrics, I would think.
But typically, it used to be that when you,
in the 1980s, rock bands, there were very few people
that were songwriters that worked with artists.
Desmond Child was one. He worked with Bon Jovi, worked with Kiss, and he would co-write.
He was a specialist that would write with rock bands, but it was very rare. Rock bands wrote their own songs.
And a lot of pop artists wrote their own songs, but Madonna always had co-writers.
This has been a thing since the 1950s.
People have had songwriters, they've had co-writers.
The thing now about pop music is that you have to be
your own promotion department basically to be really successful.
So you have to be an expert in social media. And I see people that, um, um, one of the people is Tate McCray is a huge pop star
and she started on YouTube.
She knows how to make her own videos for, and she'll make 20, 30
TikToks for a song, for a single.
You can't beat that for advertising.
People that have that advantage,
they can just put up their phone and they can lip sync,
they do a dance, they can cut the stuff
themselves on their phone and upload it.
You're a big pop star,
if you can do that, that's tremendous advantage.
This is how songs become hits because if you don't have
a viral moment with a song that's
you know the days of the record labels creating your career are pretty much
over. Yes they can help but it's very difficult if you don't have
something that's on TikTok blowing up to have a successful
single.
Before we continue, if you haven't been feeling as sharp or energized as you'd like, getting
your blood work done is the best place to start, which is why I partnered with Function
because they run lab tests twice a year that monitor over 100 biomarkers.
They've got a team of expert physicians that take the data, put it in a simple dashboard
and give you actionable insights and recommendations to improve your health and lifespan. They track everything from your heart health to
your hormone levels, your thyroid function and nutrient deficiencies. They even screen for 50
types of cancer at stage one, which is five times more data than you get from an annual physical.
Getting your blood work drawn and analyzed like this would usually cost thousands, but with function
it is only $500.
And right now the first thousand people can get an additional $100 off, meaning
it's only 400 bucks to get the exact same blood panel that I use.
Just go to the link in the description below or head to functionhealth.com
slash modern wisdom.
That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom.
Is there a problem with so many songwriters contributing to the end product?
Is there an issue with that? I get the sense that maybe some people when the veil gets
revealed and they understand how the sausage is made go, hang on, 15 people wrote this Coldplay
song? It's vocals and the guitar and programmed drums. What were the 50? There's Chris Martin,
then there's the other one.
I think there's two more.
Who the fuck, who are these 11 people in the room with them?
Well, I always wonder that too.
Like who are these people?
Coldplay, the first, to me the first two Coldplay records
are great records, really.
The second record to me is an absolutely brilliant record.
As people get older,
I've made videos about this that once people hit 30 or so artists,
they begin to lose the spark, if you will.
The Beatles broke up the year that Lennon and Ringo turned 30.
Otherwise, Paul McCartney was 28 when they broke up,
George Harrison was 27.
These guys were young guys.
They did 12 albums over the course of eight years.
Some of the most important songs ever written
and they weren't even 30.
They literally broke up.
Lennon turned 30 on November 9th, 1970.
They were already broken up by then.
How much do you think that's due to the fact
that they were 30? And how much of do you think that's due to the fact that they were 30?
And how much of that do you think is due to the fact that they released
12 albums in the space of eight years?
Because it seems to me that the pace of release,
I know you've talked about this, is now slower.
Yeah.
That people are producing an album every 18 months,
something like that, maybe if you're cranking, right?
And then tour on it once, twice, come back, run it again.
Well, that would extend that,
you're talking about 20-year career
off the back of the same pacing.
So how much of it do you think is, I don't know,
some sort of wall that creatives hit at 30,
and how much of it is I've just exhausted my juice?
I think both those things.
So one of the things,
if you think about writing songs is like working out, right?
So the Beatles in 1965, they released the record Rubber Soul on August 6th, 1965. Then on December
3rd, they released, or they released Help, I'm sorry, and then they released Rubber Soul on December 3rd, and they released Revolver on August 5th.
So in 364 days, they released three 14 song albums.
So they wrote, recorded and released,
and they toured three records in one calendar year.
That's insane.
But, and they had so many hit songs in it,
but that's like working out, you know?
The more you work out, whereas nowadays,
if you go, most bands now, they do a record,
they go on tour for 18 months,
they tour for two years, whatever,
then you're out of shape writing.
Because when you're on the road,
most people don't like to write on the road.
So what do you have to do?
You come back, you put down a bunch of ideas,
and those aren't very good,
that's the starting to get back in shape again.
It takes a couple of weeks to.
How did the Beatles do it?
The Beatles were just,
they, well, first of all,
they were so famous that they couldn't do anything else.
They were stuck in hotel rooms a lot, I guess.
They had incredible competition between
Lennon McCartney and George Harrison to write
better and better songs.
Plus, they were competitive with bands like the Beach Boys as well.
But Beatles are kind of a unique.
Yeah.
It's like, I don't know, talking about Usain Bolt's ability to run fast or something. So just explain, how would you identify or categorize the difference between
a producer-driven song and an artist-driven song?
Is there such a thing or is it just meritocracy
and whatever sounds best at the end of the day is what matters?
Producer-driven songs are songs like,
would be something like Since You've Been Gone by Kelly Clarkson.
That was Max Martin and Dr. Luke wrote this song.
They wrote the song, they wrote the lyrics,
they recorded everything, she came in and sang it,
and that's a producer-driven song.
Literally written by the two guys that
produced it including the lyrics. So most music nowadays or a lot of music is
producer-driven. Whereas people come up with a track whether it's country music,
whether it's pop music, even rock music, There's some bed track first.
Now, to be fair, historically,
almost every songwriter writes the music first.
They sing a melody and then they write lyrics to the melody.
Elton John being the exception.
Bernie Toppin was Elton's lyricist.
They co-wrote the stuff.
Bernie would finish the lyrics, give them to Elton.
Elton would sit at the piano,
improvise the song, sing it,
record it on a half inch or on a dat,
and then they would cut the song.
He would basically improvise it to the lyrics he had.
I mean, this is very rare.
I think in the Beatles catalog,
from what I know, there was one song across
the universe where John Lennon had the lyrics first.
So it's like the juice world of the pop era.
Yeah.
So this is when I went to Nashville to do some songwriting, I told you I had a one number
one song, the only country song I ever wrote.
But then I went to Nashville and if you have a number one song, they put you in with all
the A-list songwriters. So I went there and I,
in for probably three months in 2014,
and I wrote with all the top songwriters in Nashville.
So the first session I went in and it was always three people
and I was like, why is it three people?
Well, that's the way that we do it here.
And I was like, why?
Well, because we want to involve, you know, at the time
as many publishing companies as possible, different publishing companies. So I was signed
to Sony ATV. There's a guy from there, a writer from Warner Chapel, maybe two writers from
Warner Chapel. And you get in a room. I was a track guy. So I came in with my laptop and
I would have five tracks that I programmed drums, I played guitar, I played banjo,
I played whatever on and I had a full track.
What do you think of this? That's interesting.
What else you got? Play the next song.
Oh, I like that. I think I might have a chorus line.
Everybody opens their laptops.
What do you think of this? Then they're looking through,
typing through. I get this line from someone else and then they would have to
be included in on the songwriting too, whatever.
So that was in Nashville.
But at that time period,
that's when Track Guys started.
The Track Guys are basically the producers that would come in
and that would be a producer-driven song.
And almost everything you hear on country radio now is producer driven.
I don't think people, and I certainly didn't,
I don't think people understand just how much of a music factory Nashville is.
It is a, it is the Chinese sweatshop of music production.
People go in and write, you know, they write five songs a week.
It's amazing. It's really amazing.
I have a friend who produces
at least five songs every single week.
Yeah.
I went into back then in 2014.
I have a lot of friends in Nashville.
I know all the friends at publishing companies,
at record labels, everything.
I know a lot of session players and
When I first started going to Nashville back, you know 10 years ago
I sat in on some songwriting demo sessions. They don't do them as much anymore. And what they do is they have these
Session players about five or six of them
They'd have an engineer that was also the producer and they would produce demos and they'd have a song, they'd had songwriters come in and do three songs.
So songwriters would come in or two or three songwriters would come in, they'd stand in
the control room, they'd hand out sheets with the tracks or the guy that was running the
session, they'd listen to it once and they would write down their parts and then they
cut it. These guys would just cut their parts and then they cut it.
These guys would just cut it there and that was it.
Yeah.
I've heard that these session musicians are like the Navy SEALs.
Oh my God, they're amazing.
One, yeah, got it.
And then that's it.
One take, two takes and then they fuck.
They're in the next room.
It's so, they play so well.
So I did a video where I have a good friend, Tom Bukovac.
He's one of the top guys,
like the top guitar session guy in Nashville.
So I was going up there and I said,
hey, Tom, I wanna do a video where I wanna get,
get a few of your players and we'll sit in a room
and we'll just talk and everything.
He's like, why don't we do a song?
Why don't you just produce a track
and I'll get my guys to come in and play on it?
He's like, okay, So he had this guy,
Daniel Tashian, who's a great songwriter
and had produced Kacey Musgraves.
He's had many hits with Kacey Musgraves and other people.
So Daniel sent me a couple songs and we decided on the song. So I go up there and
I knew a couple of the guys in the band. He introduced me to everyone. So I'm making the video.
We're going around talking to each individual person. Chris McHugh is the drummer and
anyhow. So they go, they get their sounds. I go in the control room, the engineer has everything dialed in and they play it down and they play
their parts perfectly.
They did a couple takes, but it was perfect.
Singing the vocals at the same time too.
Harmonies, two microphones in the same room, Daniel and this Cecilia Castleman was the
singer and they were singing the harmonies in the same room.
And that was the video.
Basically a live recording.
It was essentially a live recording.
It was.
Studio quality kit.
Yeah, so Tom Bukowac, he's like,
I think that he overdubbed the solo.
Then he's like,
what do you think about me doubling it at an octave down?
I was like, yeah, it sounds great.
Like there's no producing to be, you know.
Yep. And then he plays it great. Like there's no producing to be, you know,
and then he plays it perfectly and that's it.
They literally, oh, the guitar player, Todd Lombardo,
he said, my fingernail touched the string
on one of the chords.
Can we just punch that one note?
And I mean, it was ridiculous.
That's the level of resolution.
Yes, my fingernail accidentally touched a string.
Okay.
So we've got this big engine going on.
Nashville is kind of maybe patient zero for it,
but it's happening all over the place.
Is there, should people feel differently about Sabrina Carpenter's new song,
knowing that maybe she just changed a couple of words in it, but it's, you know,
it's all about, oh, it's meaningful.
Who is it about?
Like what's going on in her life?
That this is something to do with it.
And I think you can read into the lyrics,
the deeper sentiment when the song has been written
by the artist that's performing it.
I think that that adds allure and canon.
As the kids say, there's law attached to this, but there isn't.
We think that if Sabrina, the people are wondering who she's dating and what her dating life
is like, and if we do this song and she can come in and, oh, why don't we make it seem
a little bit more open-ended and vague in this regard?
I wouldn't quite say that.
There's two things.
You get your songwriting credit and then you do it. Is this gaslighting the audience into thinking that their favorite
artist is more of a creative than they are or is this just kind of the way that music
is evolving now? Should people be bothered?
I think it's the audience is the one that thinks that the artist has more to do with
it. That's the problem. It's not like the artist is going out there saying, oh, I wrote this song. And, you know, it's like the Nashville, when Nashville songs were written,
most of the artists do not write their own songs in Nashville, or many times they don't, right? So,
but they don't go on and get interviewed about the songs that they wrote.
They, they, you don't see those kinds of things. It'd be like there's a
famous song, one of the most famous songs of all time, Wichita Lineman.
Glenn Campbell did this song in 1968. It's one of my favorite songs. And this
guy Jimmy Webb wrote the song. And I interviewed Jimmy. He's in his 70s now.
And Bob Dylan said one of the greatest songs I've written. I mean, a lot of people think this is
the greatest song I've written, Which Tall Lineman.
Well, Glenn Campbell sang it.
Nobody interviewed Glenn Campbell about,
how did you write? Tell me about Which Tall Lineman.
It's like, well, I asked Jimmy about it.
He's the one that wrote it.
They're not going to ask him, what do the lyrics mean?
What were you thinking when you said this in the second verse?
So that's the same kind of thing with the Sabrina Carpenter thing.
Do you think that the audience is that aware?
Do you think that they know this?
Because I get the sense that they really don't.
I think that the entire story arc from the music video to the shoot,
to the single artwork on Spotify,
to the cut downs that go onto social media,
I think it very much is playing into this arc that this is
a genuine outgrowth of something that the artist is feeling or going through.
I suppose maybe somebody else can write a song that you then
perform and own that is resonating with what it is that you're doing.
That can be the case.
Yes.
But the level of prefabrication does seem to make it feel a bit more kind of perverted.
I think when people see the videos of these songs, like this, the Sabrina Carpenter song,
when people saw the video, they connect it with her writing it because of the way that she
performs it in the video.
Whereas if you take a song like Hurt, that's a Trent Reznor song that Johnny Cash did,
and Trent said that that song is owned by Johnny.
His now.
It's his now, right? So that's...
Traveling should be about the journey, not the chaos of packing, which is why I am such a huge fan of Nomadic. This
backpack has genuinely made the process of traveling so much more enjoyable.
They've got compartments for everything. Your laptop, your shoes, your sunglasses,
so well organized that even your toothbrush will feel important. It's the
Marie Kondo of luggage. Everything's got its place and if you're on the fence
their products will last you literally a lifetime with a lifetime guarantee. So
this is the final backpack that you'll ever need to buy. Plus you can return or exchange any
product within 30 days for any reason. So you can buy your new bag, try it for a month. And if you
do not like it, they will give you your money back. Plus they ship internationally. Right now,
you can get a 20% discount and see everything I use and recommend by going to the link in the
description below or heading to nomadic.com slash modern wisdom. That's nomadic.com slash
Modern wisdom. Can you tell people that that Johnny Cash story? I'm sure you've got a nice version of it
It's just I saw a really lovely cut down of
Someone explaining kind of where he was out with his life and what happened and I thought it was just such a beautiful story
so that song Rick Rubin produced,
and the song Hurt, right?
So Rick, I mean, it was right at the end of his life.
And Rick had, he told me the story when I interviewed him,
he said that he had put this song as the first song on this CD that he gave Johnny.
Multiple CDs would be the first song and Johnny CD that he gave Johnny. Multiple CDs would be the first song
and Johnny never said anything about it.
He keep listening to it.
And then, so Rick said,
how come you never say anything about that song?
He goes, oh, I don't know.
It's just kind of has a couple of weird chords
and everything.
And Rick's like, let me just do a version
where I think you can really,
I think this song would be amazing.
So Rick had
somebody come in and play guitars and do a rough demo and then Johnny heard it
and sang over it and he's like, oh yeah this is this is amazing. But when he
first heard it, because it has a couple dissonant chords in it on Trent's version,
the Nine Inch Nails version, and he didn't hear it at first.
He was like, I don't know, that song's kind of strange. And it was really interesting to
hear about the backstory of these things. And he was, you know, there'd be days where he
couldn't sing because he was very ill when he did that.
When he was singing, singing the vocals on that.
And, and so Rick had to be available whenever Johnny was.
Feeling good enough.
Yeah.
But amazing.
What, what is it then that a modern pop star
brings to the table?
Like primarily what is their value add now?
Depends on who it is. To me, somebody like Billie Eilish, her and her brother,
that's a rarity really where they create all the music on their own.
Phineas plays a lot of the, you know, they, they co-write all the songs and
they're a self-contained band unit, whatever you want to call them.
Uh, and it's hard to think of other, of other artists that are pop artists that,
um, that can function like that without outside songwriters.
So if you're not Billie Eilish, if you're not Billie Eilish.
What are you bringing to the table?
Well, it's gotten to the point where you need to be famous in order to be a big pop star.
You need to be famous prior to being a big pop star.
So think of all the Disney people from Demi Lovato,
Hilary Duff, who's Selena Gomez.
Jake Paul.
Yeah.
Right there.
And Sabrina Carpenter.
So Jake Paul, that's funny.
These Disney stars that were already famous,
and then you put them together with songwriters.
Addison, what's her name?
Addison Rae is a TikTok, TikTok-er,
which is same, she's famous already.
She got 80 million followers on TikTok.
I'm waiting for Charli D'Amelio.
I don't know if she can sing or not, but she would, you know.
Someone must be eyeing her up to get singing.
Charli D'Amelio to me is kind of like a pop star too.
These people that can dance. This is interesting to me.
Athleticism has been part of pop music forever.
James Brown, people that could really dance.
Michael Jackson, Prince.
Then modern pop stars like Tate McCray,
her mom is a dance teacher, she's a professional dancer.
I mean, I saw Benson Boone do a backflip off a stage a couple of weeks ago.
Yeah, these people are athletes.
And you have to be,
dancing is a massive part of pop music.
There are routines you have to be from Lady Gaga to Beyonce to whoever.
MGK now?
Yes, there you go.
And I really respect the athleticism of these people.
Right, but we're still not at no point here
if we said the tonality, the ability to understand form
and musical function and a deep knowledge
of where this comes from,
and control of the voice, the vibrato.
As of yet, I haven't heard you talk about anything to do with
songwriting capacity, creativity, vocal know-how.
Well, there's plenty of people that are-
Ed Sheeran.
Ed Sheeran is a real songwriter.
He can write his own songs and he's a pro.
Not only can he write his own songs, but Ed can go out and play them with an acoustic guitar.
And a fucking loop pedal, yeah, exactly.
Amazing.
So there are people that can do that, that are great songwriters, that are really talented, that can perform, put on a show themselves.
Chris Martin can go out just with a piano without
even the rest of Coldplay can
go out there and entertain the audience.
Or the 11 other people.
Yeah.
I just had it in my head that I wonder why we haven't seen,
or maybe we have and we just don't know about it.
I wonder why we haven't seen prefabricated DJs yet.
It's coming.
You think?
Probably.
I just get the sense you have somewhat,
Charlie D'Amelio, let's assume that,
let's say that she was a dude and he couldn't sing.
You're like, we've got the platform.
This motherfucker just cannot hit a note.
Make him a DJ. Make him a DJ.
Where's Skrillex?
Sonny Mo must be around.
Get him in.
Get him to, where's Fred again?
Speak to Fred.
Fred will do us a try.
Oh, whatever, right?
Get that in.
Okay.
Put him up there and then you've got the platform and you have somebody that is creating tracks
in that way.
Well, for, in Charlie's case, it's not cost effective.
She's already doing okay.
She doesn't need to be a, she doesn't need to be a musician at this point, unless
they've, unless they discontinued Tik Tok or something.
That nearly happened.
Yeah.
What are the trends?
Music.
It's interesting.
Just, just to make a point of that.
My son Dylan is, and all his friends are on Tik Tok.
The one day they, they they stopped TikTok for one day,
all of his friends went back to Instagram,
and they don't use TikTok anymore.
You're kidding from that one day?
No, from that one day.
Now, it's not that nobody's on TikTok,
but he noticed that all of his friends stopped using TikTok.
That's.
I mean, it was literally down,
I didn't even think it was down 24 hours.
It was like eight hours or something. Yeah. Well, I mean, it was literally down, I didn't think it was down 24 hours. It was like eight hours or something.
Yeah. Well, I mean,
it keeps getting extended,
that band keeps getting extended,
just like another extension,
second or third extension.
Yeah.
I have to say, I think in the interests of national security,
the collective aggregate IQ of the entire West,
and my social media presence, given that I kind of suck on TikTok, collective aggregate IQ of the entire West and
my social media presence given that I suck on TikTok.
I'm very pro TikTok being taken down
because I'm fucking allergic to
that platform and everyone hates me on there.
We explained at least part of the process of what's going on,
which is pretty interesting. When I watch your videos,
which everyone should go and check out,
it kind of feels to me like seeing a translator who understands a language
that you enjoy, but actually have no idea what's going on. Right? I can't break a
song into its constituent parts. I can't tell you what's, oh, there goes a full
step down here. This is, oh, that's interesting. That's sort of a discord.
You'll notice that there's some swing in the beat or whatever.
I'm like, nice, good vibe.
That's my muggle level interpretation.
What are the trends musically that are dominating right now?
People can have this sense that they understand where the scenes are at.
But what are you seeing?
What are the dominant aural themes that are going on?
I don't know if there is a dominant genre or dominant trend right now.
Everybody is algorithmically siloed at this point.
I don't see that there's very few shared experiences
that people have as far as with music nowadays.
She might have got with radio.
Yes. Once radio stopped being something that was,
stopped being dominant,
then people just didn't have any shared narratives.
Go back to up until 2000 or so.
We'll go back to Nirvana,
because Nirvana was a change,
a band that really changed radio form,
has changed everything.
So Nirvana comes out,
glam metal, hair metal,
whatever people wanna call it was huge in the 80s.
All of a sudden MTV comes out,
and I remember it,
1991, first time I saw the video for Smell's 18 Spirit.
What is that? I didn't understand what he was saying.
But I knew it was something game-changing.
It spawned an alternative music.
It literally overnight changed music, killed pretty much all the hair bands,
except for Guns N' Roses and maybe a couple others.
But that was still part of the music business where you make a record,
put out a single three months before the record comes out.
You go to radio with the record labels, radio promotion team.
They go out to their regions that they are in charge of.
Somebody comes to the South, they go to Atlanta,
they go to 99X, whatever,
they try and get their program director,
here's a new single from this band,
we're trying to get on the radio,
and then you start getting traction,
then if it's doing well, you hire independent promoters.
There was a whole system of things that happened,
and there were budgets to do these things.
Okay.
So you're going to get it.
You know, we have a budget to hire indies to go and promote the record.
And if we can get it on K-Rock, it's going to put it over the top.
So we're going to pay extra money to get the person.
This person can get it on K-Rock.
It's just, you know, that's the old music business basically run like the mob.
I was going to say, it sounds very sort of nepotistic.
Yeah, it's, uh, you know, to have a hit single back in the day, you know, it's
going to cost $500,000 or so of promotion money to get it, where to pay the people
what they need to get paid.
Usually it's the independent people.
They put people when they made pay all illegal,
they put people in the middle of
these things to these independent promoters.
Record labels wouldn't directly be paying the radio stations.
They pay the independent promoter that would
interface and get the songs played.
But as far as dominant trends nowadays, I don't
know how it will ever return from that.
Everything is controlled algorithmically by massive platforms.
Spotify, YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Feeser.
Does that suggest that we're going to see more entrenched subcultures?
If people get siloed off into algorithmic echo chambers,
you'd think that people would listen to more of the same kind of music.
But it feels like more of a homogenization
than an individuation when it comes to subcultures. So how do you square that
circle? Do you understand what I mean? Does that make sense?
If you think about how Spotify works, you put in a band, Bad Omens.
If you like this, then you're gonna like Sleep Token. You going to like, you go through the list of bands, whatever they are.
We could look it up right now.
We could pick any band and then you're going to
see other bands that are similar cross-referenced underneath.
That's how these platforms work, period.
They make your playlist for you once they know what you'd like.
You get your daily playlist on Spotify if you use that.
You get your recommended videos on YouTube.
And most of the people are okay with it. They like the recommendations.
YouTube cut the cord with subscribers getting every video.
YouTube will send you a video if it is something that they think you'll be interested in.
Just like YouTube, people that are more ad tolerant get more ads.
Yeah.
It's like feeding the hardest guy at the table, the spiciest meal.
Yeah.
I think your channel is one of the most, I would say, consistent that when I finish one of your videos,
it takes me to another from your channel.
I think it's very bingeable. I think people sequence
watch a lot of the stuff on your channel.
Huge advantages that you get more plays,
slight disadvantages that I think you have to cap a little bit of
the watch time because if you start getting up toward 20,
30 minutes, people actually don't end up finishing,
which means that they don't get delivered your next video,
they're distracted by something on the fucking sidebar.
Yeah.
So it's an interesting balance.
But yeah, I just wonder, I wonder whether we've seen the death of subcultures.
I mean, you know, growing up for me, you would have seen sort of goths, emo kids, you would
have had kids that were in a hard style.
I mean, I'm from the northeast of the UK, I can tell it was very working class.
Wasn't anything very refined.
There wasn't a classical music subculture up there,
a jazz subculture.
But I wonder whether the homogenization,
the fact that everybody is operating to appease the algorithm,
whether it flattens some of
the more experimental and interesting spikes.
Because everything's so fast-paced,
it doesn't allow any scene to ossify into,
oh, these are established rules.
These are the sorts of things that you can expect.
This is what this scene means.
Because very quickly it's in and out,
what's the next thing we've got to chase where the algo's going?
What's the trend? What's happening on TikTok?
Well, it kind of goes back to my video I made
that was in two parts.
Music is too easy to make and too easy to consume, right?
So you can put down a song
and you and I could write a song right now
and record it and we could put it out
five minutes from now.
record it and we could put it out five minutes from now. And the idea of a scene developing now,
there just things are too immediate.
People are too connected.
And because of that, it makes everything more homogenized.
Yeah.
We'll get back to talking in just a minute.
But first some things are built for summer.
Sunburns, hot girl walks, your ex posting their Eurorod trip, and now, lemonade and salt.
Huh?
Element just dropped their brand new lemonade salt flavor, and it's everything that you
want on a hot day.
Tart, salty, and stupidly refreshing.
It's like a grown-up lemonade stand in a stick, with actual function behind the flavor.
Because let's be real, if you're sweating through workouts, sauna sessions or just walking to your car in
July then you are losing more than just water.
Elment replaces the electrolytes that your body actually needs. Sodium,
potassium and magnesium with no sugar, no junk and no nonsense. I've been drinking
it every single day for years and in the Texas heat this lemonade flavor in a
cold glass of water is unbelievably good. Best of all they've got a no questions asked refund policy with an unlimited duration,
so you can buy it and try it for as long as you want.
And if you don't like it for any reason, they'll give you your money back.
And you don't even need to return the box.
That's how confident they are that you'll love it.
Plus, they offer free shipping in the US.
Right now, you can get a free sample pack of elements most popular flavors with your
first purchase by going to the link in the description below or heading to drink
LMNT comm slash modern wisdom that's drink LMNT comm slash modern wisdom
What's the issue with music being too easy to make?
The
If
One of the things let's say guitar amplifiers, okay?
And people that watch my channel, they see I've got 50 guitar amps before,
however many I have in the background.
Well, most people nowadays don't use guitar amps.
They use these, whatever, Helix or AxeFX or Kemper.
These are digital modeling amplifiers. whatever, Helix or AxeFX or Kemper,
these are digital modeling amplifiers, if you will,
but they're digital. And everybody's using the same algorithms
because the amplifiers are modeled, right?
So they have the same sounds.
Yes, you can program them, you can change this,
you can move them to the mic placement.
It's all digital though, right?
It's not someone saying,
what would it sound like if I move the mic,
you know, 50 feet away this way or tried this or,
oh, I knocked the mic out, you know,
out from in front of your amp.
Oh, well, that sounded amazing.
Where's the mic?
It's laying on the ground right there.
Well, that's an incredible sound that you would never get.
You'd never think to put the mic on the floor to do that.
If everybody's using the same palette to paint on the canvas,
then you're going to have these records that sound similar.
You and I talked about this last night a little bit about
that there's not as many professionals like
professional producers and mixing engineers for example that are working
in rock music pop music country music yes that but in rock music because
there's not the financial incentive that there was for example if you were a huge rock producer in the 1990s, 1980s, you'd have three points on a record,
three percentage points, and you had a million selling record, you'd make, you know, $10 retail,
you'd make $300,000 per million, the producer would make. Against their points, you get an advance,
$3,000 a track, typically, 10 song record, you get a $30,000
advance, once you pay that back, you start getting your money, right?
So multi-platinum records, you make millions of dollars as a producer.
Well now there's no money for producers like that anymore.
Well they've been competed away with advanced digital workstations.
That's right. So, and now there's been a whole generation of people
that are making records without producers and engineers
that may have different ideas than the people in the band
that learned everything they know
about recording from YouTube videos.
Well, that's your fault.
Well, let's see.
That is your fault.
That is your fault. It's, you know, it's, when I go back and listen to records from the, that were still being mixed by pro mixers back in the 90s and the early 2000s, and they just have a, when you have something that's really mixed well,
I was listening to a Chevelle record from maybe 2003,
Wonder What's Next, I think that was the name of it.
And it's mixed by a guy, Andy Wallace, amazing mixer and it sounds massive, so punchy.
I was like, why don't records sound like that now?
Well, it's because this guy is one of
the best mixers of all time, mixing engineers.
His records sounded incredibly good.
Brendan O'Brien that did all the Stone Temple Pilots records, all the Pearl Jam records,
he mixed Super Unknown by Soundgarden.
Brendan's mixes are amazing.
They're punchy.
They're fat.
They're, they're, they have dynamics.
And now when I hear everything, it's like I hear drum samples, I hear guitars that are recorded
digitally with the same amp simulators,
and there can tend to be
a sameness with the music
because everybody's using the same type of gear,
and they're recording it on the same workstations.
Like everybody's using all the same stuff.
So it's hard for it not to get this homogenous sound.
And the difference is the people who are the singers, because that's the ones that, that's
the one thing.
And then if you use auto tune on your voice.
Does this mean that the importance of the front man or woman is going to continue to get bigger given that
the singer is the highest point of differentiation
that bands and artists have now?
Yeah. I think that's always been the case though.
I know, but you would slash,
you've got some very talented,
although I suppose, especially when it comes to,
look at Sleep Token and look at the drummer,
right? You know, I'm aware that they're not molesting their tracks in quite the
same sort of a way, it's a very self-contained unit,
but there is still the opportunity now, I suppose,
for very talented, uh, back, further, further back in stage, uh,
contributors to, to really shine through.
But yeah, it seems to me that if what you're saying is correct,
music sounds are becoming more homogenized,
everybody's using the same presets and
fucking decapitators and whatever the hell else it is.
You didn't think I knew that, did you? Shock.
I get it.
If that's the case,
then where are the remaining points of differentiation?
I wonder whether this is going back to what we said at the very beginning.
Well, what about your marketing presence?
What about your social media game?
What about your rollout from an advertising perspective?
That's what it is. That's how you differentiate yourself is through that.
Not through the actual art, but through the promotion.
Does somebody in the band have a big social media platform?
Are they big on Instagram and they're bringing people to the shows?
Because that happens.
That does happen.
There's a band from Australia, Carnivool.
I love Carnivool.
Carnivool's amazing.
So the bass player, John, they have a new record coming out.
He sent me the new single, which it just dropped the other day.
It didn't play when I tried, I tried to play it and it wouldn't play on my Spotify.
You know why?
Why?
Because he's in Australia.
So his Aussie time, they said-
It was the 26th that was supposed to come out, Chris.
And it didn't-
What day were you?
Mine was the 26th, but it was, but they're a day ahead.
Yeah.
So I've had this before because I'm still on British, uh, British
Tik Tok, British Spotify.
Yeah.
I get access even in Austin.
I'll get access to songs at 6 PM because it was six hours behind.
Now the fact that it's a full day that that's something else.
My entire theory is going out the window.
But if you set your Spotify to Australia time, you'll get access
to songs 18 hours ahead of him.
Well, he sent me, he sent me a link and I wrote him back,
I'm like, John, that doesn't play.
Fucking thing doesn't work.
I imagine he felt good about that.
Okay, so I did a breakdown of a song, Goliath,
that's on, what record is on?
Came out in 2007, but the-
Carnival record?
Yeah.
And Forrester Savils was the producer of it.
And the sounds are phenomenal on it.
The drum sounds, this one tune is in a really weird,
like 27-4 time signature.
And Forrester sent me the tracks for it.
And you can hear the bass in the drum tracks,
because they're playing it at the same time.
And the drum sounds are phenomenal.
Then you hear the guitar sounds.
They have the room zone, they're done through amps.
I mean, it's impeccably recorded and mixed.
John, the bass player, his bass sound is
just unbelievably great.
Distortioned, it's the most aggressive bass sound.
And it's most aggressive bass sound and it's and this is this is kind
of before people started using all this kind of all the same gear and it was
done in a professional studio with a professional producer and you know the
band is obviously very involved in what they do. These guys are pros. But it's mixed so well.
I'm really curious to hear what the new record sounds like.
When you can finally get access to it.
My, I guess,
total layperson contention here is,
if it's the case that the sound is becoming more homogenized,
if everybody's using the same presets,
if everybody is becoming more reliant on DAWs to basically not enable but like buttress, like to replace the production process, surely that opens the door to anybody that has even a modicum of ability to properly make music.
ability to properly make music. So for every zig, there's another zag.
So if everybody is using the same sounds,
the same presets, the same 808s,
the same drum, whatever, decapitate bullshit.
If everybody's using that, well,
all that you need to do as an artist is actually
learn your craft and it's total blue ocean strategy.
So I understand people might be worried about
the vanilla ice cream,
live-laugh loving of music production,
that it's very prefabricated.
But that would just open up the door for more inventive artists,
just even remotely original artists,
somebody that was built in the 90s, so to speak,
but born in the 2000s, to be able to take over.
So surely we're just going to see this swing
back in the other direction, do you not think?
I hope so. It still comes down to do you have a tick-tockable moment?
It just does, Chris. You can have the greatest record in the world,
the most different sounding record, revolutionary new trend in music.
If people don't say, can you feel my heart?
Then it doesn't, it doesn't.
Okay, let's talk about this.
So why does my 12 year old know that song
that came out in 2013?
Before she was born.
Before she, the year she was born.
Yeah, she was born.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, that song, it was a good song,
but it kind of languished at least in terms of
that bring me these biggest songs for a long time.
I mean, okay.
What, how do you come to think about
the impact of TikTok on music generation?
Because I think a lot of the time,
normal people like me think about,
we consider it in one direction,
which is songs that blow up on TikTok.
But it's bidirectional,
which is the reverse happening.
The opportunity to blow up on TikTok causes musicians to create music
with the express purpose of being TikTok blow-up-able.
You know what I mean?
So what does that sound like?
What is happening to the form and the structure
and the sort of way that music is actually created
in order to be, how'd you make a song tick-tockable?
Okay, so I've thought a lot about this and I believe that there's a formula for having a
successful song. Here we go.
That is figureoutable. This is my word. There's a lot of data out there that's available.
I have different apps. There's an app called Chart Metrics
that will show you, give you metrics of artists,
Instagram, TikTok, YouTube.
It'll show you when something blew up.
I'll give you an example.
So there's artist Imogen Heap and my daughter, Laila,
I drive her to school every day.
She's like, can you play this song called Headlock by Imogen Heap?
How do you know that song?
So I play it.
It came out in 2005.
I was going to say Imogen Heap is 20 years old.
Yeah.
So that came out in 2005.
So she said, yeah, I heard it on YouTube shorts and I want to hear what the
whole song sounds like, right? And so I play her the song. She's like, Ooh, on, uh, YouTube shorts and I want to hear what the whole song sounds like.
Right.
And so, so I play her the song.
She's like, Ooh, that's really good.
I said, you know, there's another song on here.
There was a bigger song called hide and seek.
Yeah.
It was huge.
Huge.
So I start playing and she's like, yeah, I've never heard this.
All of a sudden two minutes and 47 seconds in there's this spot that is the
Tik Tok spot and she starts singing along.
She goes, Oh, I know this song.
It's the bridge of the song where
the singing where it gets into the faster singing part.
She knew that. Then I go back and I open up this chart,
matter, I started looking at it.
It's like, okay, so this song had a spike six months ago.
People started playing on TikTok.
I started looking at it and then she started getting
way more followers on Instagram.
Then I went back and I said,
Laila, how did you hear this?
She goes, well, I heard it on a few different places.
She sent me the three different places.
Two of them were anime videos,
but they use different parts of the song, Chris.
They weren't the same TikTok,
but they had a similar payoff.
They were from some anime and then one influencer that same TikTok, but they had the same, a similar payoff.
And they were, they were, they were from some anime
and then one influencer that had 3 million followers
had shared it as well, but it was in multiple places
and it was hashtag, Headlock.
And so I started studying these things to see,
and it had blown up multiple times over six months.
It kept getting bigger and bigger and
bigger until she became aware of it.
What is the constituent parts of a song that has that virality?
What is it that makes that?
I'm trying to figure that out right now.
I'm not sure yet.
I'm not sure what makes people want to use things.
And can you imagine how many resources are being spent trying to get, trying to reverse engineer what that is?
I mean, I'm sure that lots of record labels and producers will have got some sense of it.
Maybe someone's got the formula.
You know, maybe there's some person behind the scenes that's doing all the rest of it.
You remember what was that?
The dude that was skateboarding down the street drinking ocean spray.
Ocean spray, doing the dreams by Fleetwood Mac.
Okay, so this is-
Creed, fucking Creed, dude.
Yeah.
I guess that was partly like
Texas Rangers winning the World Series and that being a part of it.
Yeah, where's this coming from?
So I, when I first started on YouTube,
I used to have things, not only content ID,
but blocked where they'd take down videos.
And one of the videos I had taken down
was a Fleetwood Mac song.
It was a song, Go Your Own Way,
but it was written by Lindsey Buckingham,
whereas Dreams was written by Stevie Nicks.
And I argued, I made a lot of videos about blocking.
Why are, why are these big labels blocking stuff on YouTube of songs that
are 40 years old that I'm making videos of?
It's just like free publicity.
Why block it?
Just take the content ID money and make you're making money on it.
Why do you want to take down a video that has a million views, two million views?
Like, what's the point of it? It's just free promotion for them.
So finally, when that TikTok video that you're talking about with the guy with the ocean spray,
you know, listening to the song, that song went to number one.
And all of a sudden, the labels are like, wait a minute, this is promotion. Wait, wait, we can actually.
You know, and then they stopped blocking it.
And all of a sudden all of my old videos
that were blocked got unblocked.
Oh, that's interesting.
Over the course of a few months after that.
There's not really an equivalent from my industry,
a little bit of a one.
If you have a particularly good quotable moment, there's a famous bit from Lex interviewing Huberman.
And Andrew says, can you read me the quote one more time?
And then people super cut that with either stuff that's real or stuff
that's like, uh, like taking the piss.
There was one, I did a thing called Finn versus the internet.
Finn Taylor is a, like a friendly roast comic from the UK and it's half a skit and
half a sort of real roast and anyway he brings his pretend steps on out
Jeffrey. Jeffrey is sat on a stool and he's saying that I use a lot of quotes on
the show and Jeffrey's giving me some of his favorite quotes back. He says, all a man needs is the same as his dog.
Food, water, shelter, put your nose in a stranger's ass.
That clip, that short clip has been used tens of thousands of times by the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu community. Because if you're in North-South where you're like this, like that,
you've got your nose in a stranger's ass.
And it's the equivalent of that.
It's the only sort of equivalent thing that if you
capture a small piece of something that it could,
that was not what this was intended for.
Right? It's just part of a skit that the guys wrote.
But yeah, I suppose the same thing goes with music.
I think the thing that everybody feels concerned about
is how contrived the process of creating anything is.
Like the whole reason for virality
is that this thing wasn't meant to go viral.
And then it does, right?
It's the fact that it feels naturalistic, that's cool.
The fact that the Fleetwood Mac song was not meant to be listened to
while skateboarding, drinking ocean spray cranberry juice, right?
That's what's cool.
It's the fact that Can You Feel My Heart has this sort of slow wave
and then it comes back up and you can do cool stuff on videos with it.
I've seen lots of people doing like trampolining videos
and shit to that song.
That wasn't why it was designed.
No, but as soon as you get to the stage,
if you see how the magic trick is done,
I think it kind of kills the allure of believing in it.
And the same thing goes for the TikTokification thing
that you're playing a super gaslight game
where you need to create a track that
works on TikTok but doesn't seem like it was made to do that. You want people to
believe that they created this meme themselves and yeah it's like a I don't
know 5d chess. I don't know if that people can really create things that
are gonna work. It's it's I've had a lot of viral videos and I
never know what's gonna go viral. I have no idea. I do know that it's, almost all
my viral videos are just me talking to camera. Almost all of them variably are
that. But other than that, I don't know what, I never, you know, I can't plan anything.
You never know how a video is going to do.
And it's...
To me, I just make it move on.
I wonder how many times, I don't know,
over the last 10 years, let's say,
I wonder how many times people have got into a studio,
finished the final master on a track.
I mean, like, guys, that is a fucking number one.
And the song's gone out and not even charted.
I wonder how well the guys in the music industry can pick them now.
I know people that have written many number one songs
and they've told me that they had no idea it was going to be a number one song. You included. Yeah.
But you even wrote it for a different genre. You didn't even write it for the genre and it was
like 10 years later. Yeah. Yeah. So you don't, you know,
whoever thinks something's going to be a number one song. Well, if no, if you're writing something
for Beyonce or Sabrina Carpenter or somebody that's a famous star and it's picked as the single, the chances of it going number one are being really successful
or exponentially higher.
That's less so to do with the artistic merit of the song though.
Yeah, that's interesting.
One of the hardest things being a producer or songwriter is to get your song picked to be a single.
Historically, that's always a thing is that
you write songs for a record,
you might be one of 15 different songwriters on a record.
Let's say there's three people per song,
but there's five different groups of people that write for a record and everything.
Then they go back and forth and back and
forth with the A&R department and the head of the label.
Well, maybe this is going to be the single.
Well, we sent it out to a radio guys.
They think this is the single and they think this is the single.
To actually have your song picked is just the first step in that. Then it has to be,
and then it's the public has its vote.
It's like one of my friends,
like I always say,
well, people tell me that they want me to make
these kind of videos and I make them and people don't watch them.
It's like, well, people tell me that they want me to make these kind of videos, then I make them and people don't watch them. And say, well, people ultimately vote with their attention because we're in the attention
economy.
And that to me is not predictable.
Yes, you can talk about something that's a trending topic and it can do well, but you
still don't have any control over what the public.
Is this why record labels like replicable formats when it comes to music?
That we kind of have an idea that this thing worked before the same way as you?
I use the example of you and Dr. Mike Isretel in terms of appearance quite different,
but in terms of content strategy actually quite similar. I like Dr. Mike Isretel in terms of appearance, quite different. But in terms of content strategy, actually quite similar.
I like Dr. Mike.
Yeah, but he's got a strange shaped head.
He described himself as a human callus to me.
He's like if a veruca took human form.
But very similar.
We're going to do some sort of,
I have a degree of expertise in pretty specific area.
I'm going to break stuff down.
Musically, there has to be,
and this is why I was so interested.
He has a far better sense of humor than I do.
He's really funny.
That's true, but he's also Jewish.
So there's positives and negatives
to the way that Mike puts himself across.
Very good with money, very bad at spending it.
The thing that I thought was interesting when it comes to the music industry is the,
we find a format that works and then, okay, how do we, how do we sort of crank this until
it becomes old?
And then we go again and we, where does the genesis of that come from?
Is that even predictable I thought a lot about this what happened when new metal
came about you know let's say it's early mid 90s corn Limp Bizkit Lincoln Park Korn, Biscuit, Linkin Park. God, I miss POD. And POD.
So, new metal was the dominant force in rock music.
Now called Divorced Dad Metal.
Is that what they call it now?
Divorced Dad Rock.
Okay, so, and then you had bands,
Creed was not really a new metal band.
They were more of a hard rock band.
Like Breaking Benjamin, stuff like that.
Breaking Benjamin would be a new metal band. They were more of a hard rock band. Like Breaking Benjamin, stuff like that. Breaking Benjamin would be a new metal band.
One of my really dear friends produced Breaking Benjamin.
But it was this dominant force in radio until it wasn't.
And why, what happened?
What, you know, was it the Nickelbackification of.
Fucking old roads lead back to Chad Krogeman.
Right.
Holy shit.
Is it, uh, is it that he had too many hits?
Like an Obregtoe good.
It's interesting.
So, so the, the engineer for Nickelback, Joey Moy, that worked with Chad on all those records
moved to Nashville and he is the, one of the biggest producers in Nashville.
And he is, he engineers, mixes, produces, and he's just had hit after hit after hit
after hit. And I don't
know why Chad Kroger didn't move to Nashville, but for some reason I think that I thought like,
maybe it's, I used to say that when blues left rock music,
when there's no blues riffs anymore,
if you think of like Audioslave or
as an extension of Raging in the Machine,
a lot of the bands,
the Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, the bands of
the 90s have a lot of blues elements in them,
but a lot of new metal does not.
Linkin Park does not have blues licks,
like Crawling or a lot of the songs
on the first Linkin Park record are not bass.
They don't have blues melodies,
they don't have blues licks.
And once rock music became disconnected from the blues,
it started losing its appeal to people.
And then people moved to listen to country music.
And now country music has been popified,
where you hear the same drum loops that you hear in pop music,
you hear on Morgan Wallen songs, and a lot of country songs that you hear that hit top
40 radio now.
I mean, it's amazing how much country is in top 40.
We need to talk about this.
What has happened with the ascendancy of country over the last five years? What's
going on?
I think it's that. I think that the production style has changed and it sounds like pop music.
And so I think that it just connects with more people because it doesn't sound like
country music anymore.
It doesn't sound like the country music of when I was going to Nashville and writing
songs.
In other news, this episode is brought to you by Momentous.
If your workouts feel flat, your recovery is slow or you've just been feeling off, it
might not be a training plan or diet, it might be something a bit more boring like your testosterone.
So if you're not performing in the gym or the bedroom the way that you want, or you
just want to naturally improve your testosterone, Tonkat Ali is a fantastic research back place
to start.
And when this is stacked with zinc, it can make a huge improvement in testosterone production,
strength, recovery and energy, which is why I'm such a huge fan of Momentus' Zinc.
It supports testosterone, boosts vitality and helps keep everything running
like it should. And if you're still unsure, Momentus offers a 30 day
money back guarantee so you can buy it and try it for 29 days.
If you don't love it, they'll give you your money back.
Plus they ship internationally.
Right now you can get 35% off your first subscription and that 30 day
money back guarantee by going to the link in the description below or heading to livemomentous.com slash modern wisdom and using the code modern wisdom at checkout.
That's L I V E M O M E N T O U S.
E N T E U E.
L I V E M O M E N T O U S dot com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom at checkout.
US.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom, a check out. So the reason, at least for me,
the day I can tell you the day that I decided to move to America,
and it was partly because of country music,
which just sounds like the most
psy-opt way for an English person to decide to move to America.
So it's 4th of July on Broadway in Nashville,
and I was doing a road trip with a friend and we'd started off in Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, did Nashville, did Gatlinburg.
You have to.
We went to Lake Norman, we didn't do Dollywood, went to Lake Norman and then finished up in
Norfolk, Virginia and then I flew to Canada.
You know, rented a soft top Camaro, me and my friend, we were training every different day, staying in random places.
And, uh, it was 4th of July.
We got up and we ran the Nashville 5K, um, which was fun.
Had a little nap back at the hotel and then went out to Broadway.
So 4th of July, let's fucking go.
This is going to be cool.
So I go down on a Broadway and I see Whiskey Row.
I'm like, that looks, that place looks cool.
It's nice.
I walk in and it's one of these classic,
super talented, pay by the hour Nashville bands.
Dude's got a truck cap on and no one's looking at the band.
What the fuck is going on?
Everybody's at the bar and this is three in the afternoon,
peak Broadway time, sun's beating down,
windows are open, money.
And everybody's at the bar.
It's like, what the fuck is going on?
Why is this band's all the crush?
I've never heard this song before, but it was cool.
It was kind of like it sounded a bit emo, I guess,
but it was definitely country twangy.
I was like, what the fuck?
Anyway, this dude is partway through the bridge of this song.
And he grabs a shot, puts the shot in the air.
Everybody in the room, like they were part of a cult, lifts a shot up as well.
It's like, what the fuck is going on?
Like it was, I was, is there an email that went out that I wasn't a part of or something?
It was a song Tequila by Dan and Shay.
And there's a bit where it does a, it goes like a and Shay. And there's a bit where it goes like a full step up.
Well, there's a little change as it goes into the final verse,
or the final chorus, sorry.
And when I taste Tequila,
everybody knocked the shot back, the room explodes.
I was like, I am fucking moving to this country.
Consider me sold.
And then I got to, it turns out that-
He's friends with those guys, right?
He's a fan of the show.
So I got to go and see them and got to catch up and got to see this ridiculous bus set up.
He's got, oh yeah, the way that we put the bus together,
it's the same way that Taylor Swift's got hers.
Because if you put the bed at the back of the bus,
you can actually have more width and it's over the back wheel,
which means this is fucking insane.
But I mean, it's superstars, right?
Super, super production.
I saw in that moment,
I was like, this sounds so familiar to me as
somebody that hasn't listened to that much country.
And that summer, the summer of 2019,
Luke Holmes' massive album,
Hardy with like Red Necker,
you know, we had this bro trip playlist
and I think about all of that music and I remember listening to it at the time and
coming back to the UK and I had
maybe three years before I finally moved to America after that,
two and a half years.
All right. Listening to this music,
this seems like a really, really good scene.
So it kind of does make sense to me that we've got to the stage now where someone who was open to alternative music, but not into country, found
fuck-boy country, if that's what you want to call it.
Easy access country, I suppose. Pop country.
I could see that country music was moving that way. When I got involved in the scene and in the teens,
it was during the Bro Country era.
The Bro Country era lasted for a few years.
But the era of the track guys,
there were people moving to Nashville starting in 2015, 2016, and then Nashville just blew up.
And then the music started to change in style.
I started noticing my friends that used to listen to rock,
changed over and started listening to country.
I think part of it is that there were guitars in country and there was
no rock on the radio that they connected with,
because they didn't necessarily connect with
the metal bands that were going on in the mid teens.
I don't think people know just how much going on in the mid teens.
I don't think people know just how much
the country music industry is built on the back of
former scene kids and metal guitarists.
I think all of Jelly Roll's band X,
suicide something or Amity,
you know what I mean? Everyone was part of
some very black wearing
death metal band in the 2000s and then grew up to do this.
But yeah, Jelly Roll, massive pivot.
Post Malone, massive pivot.
Beyonce, massive pivot.
I guess Taylor Swift pivoted away.
But you-
She moved to New York and changed her music.
Her thing was that she was dominating the charts and then she
started she's like okay how do I broaden my appeal to to start hitting you know
pop radio because it was a different thing back when she did and there and
whenever it was 2012 when she started working with Max Martin and other
outside songwriters like that Max Martin and Shellback, and then she started having massive worldwide hits.
So I look at this stuff, Chris,
and I think it's just tough for musicians.
and I think it's just tougher for musicians to,
there's just, it's so hard to connect with the audience, even in the era when it's so easy to connect with people.
It's so hard to get any type of a,
of momentum going, right, with a song, or with any type of artist.
To get to that 100 million plays,
you're talking about the,
Bring Me the Horizon song that's.
500 million now.
Seven, what's that?
How much is it?
500 million?
720 million plays.
It's insane, right?
To get over 100 million plays on a song,
100 million plays is,
I was talking about this this morning actually,
it is about $300,000, I think,
or something like that.
No, $3 million.
Oh, geez. I just, no, $300,000.
I think a billion play song
is about $3 to $5 million, depending.
Do you imagine if Mia, you had a billion play video?
It'd be like Baby Shark.
Yeah, that's what you should do next.
I was gonna make this video series,
is this song better or worse than Baby Shark?
That's a pretty good barometer.
Is this song better or worse than what does the fox say?
Okay, we need to talk about AI artists.
Yeah, AI artists.
What's going on?
What's going on?
AI bands, AI everything, what's happening?
I think that one of the AI companies is testing whether people will accept AI music.
I mean, Spotify has AI music that they're already pushing in playlists that are, that
get millions of views.
A lot of it is kind of light jazz or atmospheric music and things like that.
But now they have this thing I just made a video on about this band, the Velvet Sundown.
That's a purported to be a fake band that has AI looking pictures and AI sounding songs.
I always have said in my videos every time, I've made many videos on AI.
I got, I testified at a Senate hearing in 2023, went to Washington.
I was one of 19 people.
It was a closed door session.
They did nine closed door hearings.
I was in the seventh one.
The first one they had, Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, all these people
were all the top people at these big.
About music.
About, no, this is about AI.
Right, okay.
I was gonna say, I don't think I care about Elon's music toast.
They invited me in with all the people,
SAG-AFTRA, Spotify people,
people for all these that worked at all,
basically all different interest groups, right?
And then me, because I had made a lot of big videos on AI music.
And one of my things that I said is that I didn't believe when they asked,
asked me questions, the senators asked me questions.
I don't think that anything that's completely fully generative AI
should be able to be copyrighted.
So that takes away the financial incentive for companies to go and put AI music out there
to make money on it.
If Spotify can put out fake artists and people stream it and they're perfectly okay with
it and then not pay artists that are getting streamed as well because they're, and then that,
then that just increases the incentive for them to
fill their playlist with fake artists.
Right.
But now what's happened is that there's this artist
that may or may not be fake.
So Elvis sundown that has a verified symbol on
Spotify and they have a second record, even though
there's no record of these people kind of looks like a, even though there's no record of these people, kind of looks like a fake bio.
There's no record of these people.
Uh, and they have another record coming out in two weeks, a second record.
And no one's coming forward saying it's us.
Now, if this was a marketing ploy, this is actually a very smart thing, but people are saying in the comments and
the video I just made yesterday, well, these are all bots that are on here. It's got over
600,000 followers now on Spotify in a week. Went from zero to 600,000. It's crazy.
Is this song any good? Well, there's a whole record there. And it's, I don't think it sounds good to
me. It doesn't. People are voting what there is though, did you not say earlier on that
it's a meritocracy here? Yeah, and I think that people will embrace, like I said early
on when you started seeing all these fake Drake
videos and and fake Beatles videos and all this stuff that they were on YouTube
but with with the voices of the you know young Paul McCartney or young John Lennon
whatever and I said eventually there's gonna be the Beatles and the Beatles AI
and Prince and Prince AI and Michael Jackson and Michael Jackson AI.
There'll be songs that are trained on their music, on the multi tracks that are controlled by whoever owns the publishing.
They license this stuff out and there will be people that say, you know what?
I like Michael Jackson AI better than Michael Jackson.
That's going to happen.
That will happen.
There are going to be people that like AI music and they're perfectly fine with it.
Should there be protections in place for artists to avoid AI bands, AI
artists coming in and taking plays?
Do you think that Spotify should ban AI music?
Should they ban it? Well there's so many workarounds with this.
I mean you can create your song via a completely AI prompted written song and then just recut
it and then it's you doing it.
It doesn't have all the artifacts,
you have all the independent tracks and everything.
Then who sues you, the Suno or UDO or whoever owns the thing.
Hey, that's our music.
Wait, no, it's not.
I prompted it myself and then I covered it.
It's like the, it's like the Spider-Man meme.
I don't even know what, you know, this, this, I don't know what's going to be done with it.
I don't know how they can.
Um, I, I think this is a great take.
I think that's a really interesting one.
Cause if you're a real person, but 80% of the process is AI enabled, where does the line get drawn?
You know, you can lock me in a room with some parchment and a quill and say,
write 60,000 words, no source material, or I can prompt chat GPT to do it all for me.
Somewhere in the middle is where most people are.
And some people are basically zero pumps.
Some people are essentially a quill.
But then they've got source material, Ryan Holiday's got reams and reams of flashcards
from all of these books that he's reading.
I've become very obsessed with the idea of plagiarism versus inspiration because very
few ideas come from real first principles.
You're telling me that this was not inspired by anything?
Well, when I look at the saxophone that you're holding,
you're holding it the right way up.
You're blowing into the bit at the top and not through the bit at the bottom.
So you've been inspired by all of the people that came
before you that taught you how to play a fucking saxophone.
Right.
Right? You're playing this thing in time.
You're using the kick and the snare in a very typical form,
because there's only so many ways. So everybody is inspired or educated by what came before them, thing in time, you're using the kick and the snare in a very typical sort of form, because
there's only so many ways. So everybody is inspired or educated by what came before them.
And that goes all the way to, well, I read this book or I watched this movie or I listened
to this song and I like that. And that made me think about this thing. So there's a wonderful
line from William James that says originality is just undetected plagiarism. And what we are
seeing now is the veil being lifted on detectable plagiarism, right? Which is not only is this
a direct copy of something else, but it's a direct copy of something else masquerading
as something original because it's been reconstituted by an AI. Um, I'm going to piss every musician off by saying this.
If AIs are able to create better music than you as an artist can, I think it's a
very difficult argument to make to say that they should be held back given that this is supposed
to be a meritocracy because all of the graphic designers for whom Mid Journey
just came and decapitated, people were up in arms about it and tried to make a big
issue around it, but it happened.
Podcasts, there is a website where you can put any topic in and Yeah. And it will create a pretty listenable podcast that explains.
Notebook LM.
Notebook LM is really good if you like learning, if you like learning stuff.
They have the ums, they have all the.
Oh, it's interesting with the way that we, yeah, you're so right, Rick, you know?
And if Notebook LM gets to the stage where it is able to produce a better podcast than
the one that I can, then I either need to up my game to be able to compete, or I'm going
to be defeated by the fucking robots.
Here's my theory, and I'd love to get your take on this.
The reason that I think that musicians feel particularly aggrieved when it comes to AI
coming and replacing plays, taking ear real estate from the audience,
is that the barrier to entry in order to be able to
create music is so high.
Anybody can do a podcast.
They can be very bad,
but anybody can do a podcast.
Right.
Anybody can draw anything,
can be really bad,
but anybody can draw anything.
If you put a saxophone in my hands,
I cannot make a sound come out of it.
Right.
Right. So the level of investment,
the moat that has typically
protected musicians for a very long time,
not just from being able to play the instrument,
but from understanding musical form,
from being able to master, produce, mix,
understanding how all of this stuff is supposed to be constructed.
When you level the playing field for something that people have invested a ton of time into,
they quite rightly are going to feel aggrieved because they say,
this is unfair.
Look at how much time I spent getting myself to the stage to be able to do this.
And you've just taken a shortcut.
I am not allowed to feel as aggrieved because an AI is able to replicate chatting shit on a podcast, right?
Because I know that the moat, the barrier to entry, the required skill set in terms of training was lower
than somebody who is aficionado at playing the keyboard or playing the drums or doing something like that.
And I think that this is the reason that musicians have a particular bee in their bonnet around the AI thing. But I struggle to see where
the delineation is between the graphic artists and the podcasters and the musicians.
If we're not going to stop Notebook LM or Mid Journey,
I think it's difficult to say Spotify should ban AI music for the same reason,
because wow, it took me ages to learn to play the drums.
why it took me ages to learn to play the drums.
When I talked about this, about the being good prompter, I mean there is an art to writing a prompt. I use AI programs all the time and sometimes I'll say, okay, here's my title for my video.
And to me, the best title generator is Gemini because they have all YouTube's data in it.
It's Google.
So I'll be like, okay, here's the title for my video.
Gemini, I want you to create 10 variations of this title for a Rick Beato YouTube.
It knows me. I've trained the whole thing to of this title for a Rick Beato YouTube.
Oh, it knows me.
I've trained the whole thing to do this for my, it knows my, my video titles and things like that.
And, and, and then it'll spit it out.
It's like, make it more clickable, make it this, make it that.
And, um, and a lot of times it'd be like, I like the first part of this one.
I like the second part of that one.
And I'll do that.
And, um, or sometimes it'll be like, you know, I need something for a, for a
thumbnail, a background where I have a cut out of me or I'm trying to do something.
But I, um, uh, you know, I want something that's that I couldn't create, but I
can imagine what it is, you put it in there, it'll create it.
No, do another variation. I'll do another variation. No, make it more this. put it in there, it'll create it. No, do another variation.
No, do another variation.
No, make it more this.
Can you make the, you know, so it's,
so I use it constantly and you have to just keep refining
it, refining it, refining it, like you refine a song.
It doesn't replace the decades that it takes
to become great at an instrument, but there
is, you could argue, I'm not arguing this, one could argue that being prompting is the
same kind of skill as learning how to play an instrument.
And I'm not saying that it is.
You're being very diplomatic today. But, but, well, because I actually do use AI programs and, and there, you know, we talked
about this yesterday about the, how there are things that to me that these AI programs
can do really well in music, like to me that these AI programs can do really well in music like to me mastering and I don't mean to upset any mastering engineers or anything but to
me that seems like a great use of of a of AI is to learn how to master songs
right I think mixing I think yes mixing there's taste there's all these things
involved but I sure love to be able to say hey could you mix it this mixing there's taste there's all these things involved, but I sure love to be able to say hey
Could you mix it? There's a guy Serban Gania? That's the mix is every big pop song and and then you have
You know you have your rock mixers Chris Lord LG Tom Lord LG
Brandon O'Brien Andy Wallace all these these famous rock mixers that
You know oh could you mix it in the style of this guy or mix it in
the style of this guy and instantly have your thing or in
15 seconds have a completely different take
of your song mixed by a different mixer.
That would be interesting.
That to me seems like a great use of AI as
opposed to AI creating the song from scratch.
To go back on what I said, I think it's a difficult argument to make that music is some
particular protected class.
All that being said, I do not like the idea of listening to music that's being created
by an AI because to me, and this is another reason why the prefabrication of music generally by songwriters also
removes a lot of the magic and the allure because I like the story.
I like to read into what the songwriter meant by
these lyrics and what's the emotion that's trying to be put across here.
If it's a philosophical zombie,
the idea of that, it operates like a human,
but behind the scenes, there's nothing going on.
If it's the musical equivalent of that, like upfront it sounds good and behind the scenes
there's nothing going on. But then you think, okay, is there anything particularly more special
about music that was created by an AI and produced by an AI than something that was made by a team
of 15 songwriters and then produced by an artist that had nothing to do with it. You know, again, right. And this is like an ethical.
That's a, that's a great point. That's a great point. It's one of my friends says,
well, you know, when you have 15 songwriters, it's basically like AI anyways, to your point.
And, and, you know, then you give it to the, to the person that had nothing to do with it,
that sings it. It's like, well, you know, well, at least there were real people playing it.
Well, are there really real people playing it?
There's like one guy that played the keyboard parts
and put all the drum loops together.
Drums are fucking sequenced.
Yeah, exactly.
But then when you thought, okay, well, electronic music,
dance music, there's no, very rarely,
apart from maybe if you've got some custom vocals done.
Sonny Moore made fucking scary monsters and nice sprites
on like a 2010 MacBook Pro on planes.
It was never anything, right?
I guess he would have recorded his vocals
at some point to put that in.
But okay, where do we draw this line?
And I think it very much is an ethical question
of what is it,
do we need to have to identify AI artists?
I think that would probably be quite a nice thing to do.
I think if there was a particular tick,
and this has been talked about on
other social media platforms too,
the dead internet theory that because AI is able to produce such a higher volume,
eventually almost all of the content on the internet is going to be produced by
AIs and the same thing may occur for music.
But for me, I would feel conned.
I would have felt catfished by a song.
If I went on and I'm reading into,
what does he really mean?
The rain fell like blood.
What did, oh, that's so steep.
It's like,, like what did, oh, that's so steep. And it's like, I dunno, like it was influenced by some fucking Marilyn Manson
song from whatever, 2005.
Um, that would suck.
And I, I feel like there's two ways that AI is going to make a change.
One is it's going to compete.
And the other is that it's going to enable
existing artists to be more effective and it's a case of whether or not the, for you,
your channel may be replaced by Rick Beato AI, but yeah, which would be great because
you could retire. But also it's enabling you to stay ahead. So it's a case of are people
going to use the tools in order to keep the competitive
advantage over to them and how much is the competition going to come through?
There's a program called 11 Labs that I use and when I trained it on my voice, it's weird because I inputted dialogue from,
I have a mic that's about,
it's out of camera range.
It's probably four feet in front of me.
That's about this high or so.
It's a little bit low.
Shotgun mic?
It's a stereo mic, stereo condenser mic.
That's what I typically record my YouTube videos with.
So it's a, there's a little bit of room ambience in it,
but it's pretty dry because I'm in a recording studio.
So, and then I had, I trained some of it using a SM7,
like we're using right now,
which is a very different sound.
It's got much more bass, it's closer,
it's more in your face.
But most of my videos are not like that, but I used it when I was training it.
So when I try to use that,
sometimes I wanna punch in on a video,
but I don't have access to this.
And so I try and use 11 Labs,
but it's like, it's sending me results back
with the close mic,
and the things done with the distance, right?
So I talked to 11 Labs, and they're going to do two different voice profiles for me, one
with a close mic and one with a distant mic.
So let me give you this from fucking 11 Labs.
This is crazy.
So Archer on 11 Labs, you know that?
It was the go-to British AI voice.
Yeah, yeah.
Right? Archer, you remember that?
Yeah.
They updated it recently.
Okay.
I'm just going to get you to have a little listen.
Just see if you notice anything about the particular voice that 11Lab's go-to standard
Archer British male AI voice is.
Shillajit is a powerful tar-like resin found high in the Himalayan mountains, formed over
centuries from ancient, decomposed plant matter.
It's loaded with over 80 trace minerals, fulvic acid, and essential nutrients your body needs
to function.
So how does it work?
You hear that?
Work.
Work.
That's you.
That's me. That's Mid Work. Work. That's you.
That's me.
That's, that's middle spirit.
That's been trained on my voice.
And that's now, so if anybody has an issue with my take around AI coming and taking people's
jobs.
Right.
So that's now, that was an ad for Shillaget, which is like a mineral testosterone thing.
I have no take on Shillaget.
I'm not associated with whatever that Shillajit company is,
but it's using my voice.
Do I own the likeness to my voice?
That's a great question.
When I trained it on my voice,
I provided the sound samples.
It takes about three weeks or so.
Then once it was done, it says, okay, it's ready.
Then you sign into 11 Labs, then they have you read a paragraph I provided the sound samples, it takes about three weeks or so. And then once it was done and says, okay, it's ready.
Then you sign into 11 labs. Then they have you read a paragraph because they have to do the voice
print and make sure it's you.
So you're not stealing someone else's voice, which is cool.
It's very smart verification.
Yeah.
Verification.
And they have 15 seconds to do it.
So you have to read this thing and it's like, yeah, okay.
It's you recognize that you're, you know, it's,'s cool. But I still haven't gotten it to where it,
it doesn't sound natural.
Mine doesn't sound natural because maybe I have a
odd way of speaking.
I use different registers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I have used 11 Labs as an experiment
where I'll go to some B roll and I'll put 11 Labs as an experiment where I'll go to some B-roll and I'll put 11 Labs
line in there, see if no one, if anyone notices, no one ever notices.
I've done it a few times.
I don't use a lot of B-roll, but sometimes I'll sneak things in there.
I was like, I wonder if anyone notices.
That's cool.
But I want to get it to where it is, where it works so that if I don't have access to a microphone or something and I
have an idea and I want to hear what it sounds like, sometimes I'll, I never use scripts,
I always improvise what I do, but sometimes I'll improvise it and I'll have it transcribed
and then I'll feed it in there and I'll listen to it.
I was using 11 Labs this morning actually.
I had some ideas that I wrote down and I wanted to listen to them back.
But I put them in a different voice.
You didn't use fucking Archer, did you?
I'm not reading your ideas back.
I was going to say you better enjoy using
11 Labs before this huge lawsuit comes down.
I called my assistant, Tom.
I said, Hey, can you, and he was like, what do you want me to do?
I said, I want you to open up 11 Labs and take this and put it in there so I can listen to it.
Why do you want to listen to it?
I said, because I wrote this down and I want to remember it, but I want to remember it by listening to it.
Okay, fine.
So, so I did that.
How do you come to think about
the earnings and financials arc of the music industry over the years?
I've heard all manner of,
you need to be as much a business person as
an artist now in order to be able to make it in the world of music,
that live is flourishing, that live is dead, that albums are pointless,
that waterfall releasing is the only way to make money.
What's the current state of financials in the music industry?
Well, live music is definitely a place that if you want to make a lot of money and you
have a successful live, I mean, there's not the money in, just say rock music, there's
not money in, there's not as much money in streaming as there is in live music if you're
a huge band, you know, Metallica is not out there living off their streaming.
Well, they maybe they are, but their streams, because they have songs that are getting streamed
that were, that came out.
With the fucking lifestyle that Metallica's probably got.
Right.
Yeah.
So, it's...
Live is incredibly important.
Can you, um...
Can you make a living as a, um...
From record sales? I mean, it used to be a thing where
if you had a hit record
that sold three, four million copies, physical copies,
the record labels, it would eventually get to the point where they had to pay you for the record sales.
But very few artists made money from actually selling records.
They'd make money from publishing. They'd make money from radio airplay, things like that.
They make money from radio, airplay, things like that. But one of the only reliable places to make a living in music is playing live.
And that goes for any level, whether you're playing at your local pub,
whether you're playing at the Enormo Dome here,
wherever it is, I don't know what Austin, what did?
Moody Sunder.
Okay.
That's why people go out on these long tours.
That's why ticket prices are incredibly high.
If you can sell tickets, that's where it is.
Because it's funding the rest of the operation.
Yeah. Right. And it wasn't's funding the rest of the operation. Yeah. Right.
And it wasn't, that wasn't always the case.
Pop music still, there's still money in
streaming for huge pop songs.
There's plenty of
plaintiff artists, Post Malone,
you look on his thing or The Weeknd.
They have multiple songs, they
have over two billion streams, you know, Coldplay.
Anybody that's in the top, any of the top 25 artists on Spotify, those people are making
a fortune from streaming. As you get further down, it's less and less.
And then it's just, you know, kind of always been like this.
I think sometimes it's over-exaggerated how much money people used to make from,
from radio and from record sales and things like that.
Everybody loves the idea of a golden era.
Yeah.
That they weren't a part of.
Right.
idea of a golden era. Yeah. That they weren't a part of. Right. I will say this though as a producer,
one of the things that when I started producing and things were um went to streaming eventually is that people didn't have the physical CD to see the producer's name on the back, whoever it is, whether it's me or whoever it is,
or see the songwriters or see who played on it.
So those things are not available.
If I want to know who played on a song,
I have to go to a separate website.
I have to go to allmusic.com.
Is it not in credits?
Credits on Spotify, they'll have the songwriter,
and they'll have, but they don't have the
people that played on the record.
Okay.
So you have to either go to Wikipedia.
Would you?
Those things should be connected.
Do you think it would be a good idea for Spotify to just integrate that?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And they're so bad about, if you look at Sabrina Carpenter's newest song, when you go to Man Child, for example,
Amy Allen and Jack Antonoff both have hundreds of credits.
But Amy Allen only has a little triangle that...
Oh, you can click on it. You click on it and it shows you all the list of her songs from the most streamed down.
Jack Antonoff doesn't have that. But if you go to a different song of Sabrina
Carpenter's, please, please, please.
That was on the last record that they were both involved with.
Then you then they both have arrows on it.
You can click Jack Antonoff to see all his stuff.
Why is that?
It's just that they haven't gotten around to updating it.
I mean, it's stupid, right?
You'd think that, Hey, if you were him, Hey, why don't you update my thing there?
And, and whose job is it to put it on there?
And then of course you go to the streaming thing on Spotify.
It takes you to a different, on my phone, a Safari browser, and then you
can't get back to Spotify.
You have to close that.
And if you want to look someone else up on it, it's just ridiculous.
All that information should be contained in there.
What, what's the good, the bad, the ugly of Spotify and its impact on the music industry?
I like Spotify because I like it's easy to make playlists on it. And Apple, I have both. I pay for both every month.
I've always paid for Apple. If you have an iPhone, you know, I have tons of music that I paid for
that are part of the Apple ecosystem and I pay the monthly fee and but I use Spotify predominantly.
I just, it's just easier to use and that's the thing. You know, it's the, It's kind of like, why did certain, why did Facebook outlast MySpace?
Eventually, people upload so much stuff to Instagram or Facebook or whatever
that they don't want to try a new social media platform.
Right. You're saying that Spotify,
the ease of making playlists on Spotify has given everybody stunk cost fallacy.
Yeah.
Unless I can port all of my very complex
and my algorithmic preference,
oh, so you're telling me I need to go back to 2014
and listen to all of the stuff I was doing there
and it needs to see the arc that I went through and yeah.
Chris, I have hundreds of playlists on Spotify,
private playlists that I refer back to.
Hundreds, do I really wanna go and start them all over again
on another platform?
Even though Spotify pisses me off a lot,
no, I don't wanna do that.
I don't know of any artists,
I know of lots of podcasters, me included,
thank you, Daniel Ek.
They treat me very well.
I'm super happy with what they've done.
But it's very rare that I speak to a musician and they say, yeah, Spotify.
Thanks.
Really good.
People get mad at me when I do my, every four months I do a Spotify top 10 countdown video.
And I do that so that people know and people get mad in the comments.
They're like, I don't believe that these are the top songs.
What do you mean?
I'm just reading them off the thing.
Easily verifiable.
Yeah.
I'm not part of a Psy-op to make you believe that Sabrina Carpenter is higher
up than she actually is.
Right.
It's like, I have nothing to gain from, you know, this is what's on the charts.
Well, it's all, I don't believe it because it's, uh, these are all bots in this thing.
It's like, yeah, where's your evidence that it's all bots on there?
Is it possible for something to change with regards to Spotify?
It does seem like,
I don't know what coming to a head even means.
Musicians need Spotify.
If you've got even medium-sized bands
doing hundreds of thousands of plays monthly.
What are you going to do?
Are you going to protest Spotify?
You're not not putting your music on Spotify.
You're going to keep putting your music on Spotify.
So what does it mean to try and apply pressure to the guys at Spotify HQ
in order to make some sort of a change?
But we have a little bit of a unsolvable equation here,
which is that the artists,
many of the artists I speak to have a problem with it.
And what is their problem?
That they don't feel like they're getting compensated
fairly?
Yeah, the compensation is insufficient.
The removal of staff that happened, I think,
about 18 months ago,
two years ago or so, resulted in much more algorithmic curation of playlists
rather than human curation of playlists.
That largely seems to be a complaint by artists who aren't getting algorithmically curated into playlists very much,
because I'm sure that all the people that are at the top of the new music Wednesday or whatever
are like, yeah, I love it. But still, I do think that it allows the system to be gamed
in a manner that's a little bit less fair. I think, rightly, artists have a very big
concern around what's happening with AI. I don't know whether this is true.
I got sent some information that suggests record labels get paid out at a higher rate per stream
than independent artists do, that there's some sort of preferential pricing,
which means that if you can bypass the record labels and go straight to the AI artist,
there's also an even more large concern,
which is, well, if Spotify is able to reverse engineer
its own AI artists, then kind of like if OnlyFans
developed a VR girlfriend company,
that you would end up completely bypassing
all of the poor OnlyFans models that were no longer needed
because you have both distribution and creation
contained within the same platform.
So I think the last two around the AI bands and this reverse integration back up the stack,
those are future concerns. Compensation and playlists are the two things that I hear the most.
But I don't know what artists can do. They need Spotify.
They do need it. It's kind of like people that complain to me,
oh, I'm being shadow banned on YouTube or I'm doing this and that.
Your content sucks, dude.
The algorithm hates me. The algorithm is the audience. There's nothing that hates, it's agnostic.
You've fallen off for a little bit and you just need to be a bit more creative.
Yeah, I feel it.
I wonder what that is.
What do you think the future of music monetization looks like?
What will artists do when it comes to keeping the liquidity wheels greased?
It's hard to say.
I saw a...
I forget who was talking about this, about using blockchain to verify that something is a real artist as opposed to AI, right?
And that would be a great use of that technology. And as far as the
future of monetization, hard to say because because I'm, even though I'm
involved in the music business, at least in the, with what I do, I don't, a lot of
the people that I interview are really famous people that made their money in
the old music business.
Like Heritage.
Yeah. So it's none of them are missing any meals as they say. So it's, I don't hear about the
struggle. I know I have friends that are that are that I have on the channel, younger musicians
and but they're all out touring. For the most part, everybody that I interview are people that are pro musicians
that are, you know, my friend Tosin that plays in animals as leaders.
He's been on my channel many times, Tim Henson from Polyphia.
And, you know, I know all the guys.
Yeah.
Zed.
I mean, all these people that are friends of mine,
they've been on my channel,
they're all professional musicians
and they've all got their own recipe
of all the different income streams,
whether it's some people are,
they have money from Spotify, they have a YouTube channel,
they have a pedal that's their thing or pedal company, or they've
got their amp model that, that is, uh, made by neural DSP or whatever it is.
They've got their whole recipe of especially Yamaha leather strap or whatever it is,
whatever it is that, that, uh, that, or they're doing, you know, some people do
these lessons group lessons before shows.
They do VIP meet and greets.
I mean, there's so many different places that you can.
That's a really good point.
I think what musicians, and I understand why,
especially given the CPMs that we can generate on YouTube,
especially on podcasting with a two,
three hour long episode, the RPMs can get really get up there, especially if podcasting with a two, three hour long episode.
The RPMs can get really get up there, especially if you hold on to people.
I understand why I put so much blood, sweat and tears into making this record.
I put it out and you got to pay 10 bucks a month and listen to it infinity times.
And I got paid a rounding error on my sandwich for today.
Um, that feels unfair.
And I think it feels unfair largely due to anchoring bias that in the past, that
CD would have cost 10.99 or 7.99 or something and fuck like that.
Like I missed that.
I imagine if I got the streams I did, a million plays a month,
but they were all single sales at 399,
that would be amazing and you don't.
But then on the flip side of that, you think, okay,
well, you can do early access,
Patreon, behind the scenes, subscriber-only content.
You can get easier access to merch.
I've got a friend who,
the way that they do merch at shows in
order to speed it up is these QR code things that you buy in advance and then
you collect it like getting Uber Eats collection. Which is a great idea.
Yep. You have the listing on your Spotify page for your upcoming events that will
geotarget the people that are listening. Dude, that wouldn't have happened.
You'd have had to have had an outdoor billboard campaign that would have been
organized in each different city that you were going to or fly posting and
putting it in the newsletter or putting it on paying for fucking radio spots.
Okay.
So we've got that.
We've got much, much can be sold through a much shelf on Spotify.
We don't have that yet.
Podcasts don't have that yet.
They're, wow, I can't sell my merch on Spotify.
You can sell courses same way that you do the the same way that Gabe from I Prevail does.
You can use your live experience, capture that,
use that as the front end of your funnel,
then teach people to do the thing that you do to get
the life that you have in order to, you know.
So it's kind of just a changing of the times.
But I really do, I feel it because fundamentally what we want is creative songs that make us
feel something and are a good vibe.
And the less that bands are incentivized or artists are incentivized to do that thing,
ultimately the live experience will be worse because the songs aren't gonna be as good.
The listening experience is gonna be worse
because it's gonna be more homogenous
and there's gonna be less care and attention put into it.
Like everything is sort of born out of the song.
And is it Spotify's job to incentivize
the culture of music creation in that way?
Probably not. I think it's difficult argument to make that
it's their job to do it,
but it is their position in
the market to enable that at least.
I think that this little Gordian knot
is where people get caught up.
When I open Spotify,
if there's a band that's in town in Atlanta,
I say, oh my God, they're playing.
I mean, that's amazing.
You've shown the interest and you go to the Sardis.
I would never have known because there are
no magazines or anything that I'd look at to see.
Fred again is coming to Austin.
I didn't even see that. Yeah. So it's, it's, uh, uh, there's so many artists that I, when I look at Spotify,
that I'll click on a song and I was like, oh my God, they're coming, they're
beer next week.
And I think that, that there are so many opportunities for people to, I mean, you have to be creative though,
to make, to take all these different income streams
and combine them to make a living.
But my friend Tosin, Tosin Abbasi,
Tosin has a guitar company,
he has plugins that he makes,
or he's got so many different things that he's a part of. He's
a real entrepreneur and the people that do well nowadays that are people that don't just
write songs and go out and tour with their band. They have to figure out
what their recipe is for making a living and it takes a lot of work to do that.
That's the drag of it.
It takes a lot of work that is-
That used to be done by other people.
And is orthogonal to the main thing, right?
A lot of musicians, and this is kind of creating the world
that music's going to move into,
which is a lot of musicians get into music
to be purst musicians and
then to play songs that they care about and have people respond and all the rest of that stuff.
But increasingly, if you need to be a businessman and the success of your
operation is based on how good you are at business, well, that's going to select for
business people, not for musicians. And that's not fantastic given that we're all here to listen to
good music.
And yeah, I...
Chris, when people complain to me, and I mean to interrupt,
but when people complain to me, younger musicians about stuff, I'm like,
hey, I'm 63 and I figured out how to do this stuff.
I mean, come on. It's like...
I think the...
We're not splitting the atom here.
The glass half full approach to this is the only way to go about it.
Because, okay dude, you're not happy with the state of the music industry, stop.
Right.
Stop making your music.
Yeah.
That's cool. There's other stuff that you can do.
Why don't you go be a music teacher?
Why don't want to do that? It's like, all right, then figure it out.
Figure it the fuck out.
Right.
You do not get to whine about the changing of an ecosystem that is happening to everything.
You know, the horses being upset were quite rightly so at the fact that they were about to be killed
and supplanted by the automobile in, you know, the 20s.
There was an entire industry of muck shovelers in New York, New York City,
to get rid of all of the muck that came out of the horses. In the space of five years, all of the muck shovelers in New York, New York City, to get rid of all of the muck that came out of the horses.
In the space of five years, all of the muck shovelers were gone.
Okay, that's some.
But here's another thing.
You are, as far as I can see it from a musician standpoint, you are more protected than almost
any other industry because of live.
Because AI cannot come and replicate live.
Yet.
It's not what, what would that mean?
What would it mean to replicate a live experience?
I was just talking about, let's say, robots going out and playing the AI songs.
Okay.
Of course, I'm joking with this.
Yes.
So this is, of course, this will be somewhere in the future, it'll be robots that can really
shred on the guitar.
I think people will go and see it as a spectacle.
Yeah. But it's not going to have, and again,
okay, so you have this walled off garden.
In order for me in the podcasting world to do that,
I need to completely revamp.
It is not the same skill set for me to go out on stage and do
a two-hour TEDx talk with fingering jokes,
which I am doing actually.
So come and see me in Chicago, Boston,
Denver, New York, Salt Lake City.
And where's the fucking final one that I've gotten about Austin, uh, this winter.
Come and see that. Everywhere else is sold out.
In order for me to do that, I don't just get to do the thing.
I don't just get to replicate things that I say on a podcast.
Like it's a whole new fucking, yeah, it's a whole new moat for me to get over
in order to be able to do that.
But even for me, I'm thinking I should probably apply quite a lot of effort to becoming really good at doing live,
because if Notebook LL fucking human centipedes me out of the front of this industry,
I'm going to have to have a new moat that can't be replicated.
The people that it's going to replicate,
the people like you and I that have so much content out there with our image and our voice.
Right.
I mean, that's the, this is like the easiest, easiest thing to do.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're right.
I mean, 2000 videos for you, whatever.
It's two, two and a half thousand on my channel.
Yeah.
I look, I really think that the live element
is something that will be protective,
but you're fighting against an ever more insular culture,
especially among young people.
So yeah, going out to see Benson Boone
or whatever sounds great, but Netflix is on.
I'm sure that someone will record it and put it on YouTube,
and I can just watch it through whatever.
I've heard it on Spotify a bit.
Do I really need to go out?
Times are changing, man.
For all that I can tell musicians that I think
the times are going to change and they need to keep up with it.
I really hope it doesn't damage the creation of music because that would make me really sad.
Been a huge part of my life and it would suck.
It would suck to not have the kind of emotional depth that people access through good songwriting be taken away by, yeah.
We're in an interesting time right now.
Just the fact that these AI artists,
I mean, to me, they're testing the waters.
And then we don't know who's doing it.
If it's Spotify's AI artists, is it Suno, is it Udio?
Whose artist is this?
Is this in conjunction?
Is it one of these AI music companies with Spotify
and they're testing it out to see if people will bite on it?
I think it's fascinating actually.
Well, there's definitely gonna be,
the main fear that people have is it's an open loop.
It's like, okay, what's gonna happen?
And we don't know.
You know, if we come into land and,
okay, there's AI playlist with AI artists in there,
but it's actually walled off or it's this,
but the concern people have is,
what if the top 10 is, you know, five of them are AI?
What if that makes it twice as hard
to get to the stage that I need to?
And actually, to create even more fear,
if you assume that the reason that live works
is because people have privately listened to the track,
but that real estate in people's ears is being taken up increasingly by AI,
that does make getting to the critical mass to become a successful live artist more difficult.
Because the song, the record is the genesis of the interest and the popularity that you then
sell merch and do your courses and do all the rest of it.
Well, I'm sure that there will be platforms that will arise that are, you know, non-AI,
just human only.
Human only, yeah.
Which is pretty funny to think of, right, that you have to do that.
But there's a business model for that out there right now, ready to be had at some point.
Yeah.
I don't use Spotify anymore.
They have AI artists.
I don't, you know, it's like buying, I only buy organic, you know,
organic music.
Funny.
Rick Beato, ladies and gentlemen, Rick, you're awesome, man.
Your channel fucking crushes.
I appreciate it.
Same, same.
But thank you for inviting me.
Until next time, man, let's, uh, let's keep a weather eye on whether or not we're going to be replaced by robots anytime soon.
Hopefully not.
When I first started doing personal growth, I really wanted to read the best
books, the most impactful ones, the most entertaining ones, the ones that were
the easiest to read and the most dense and interesting, but there wasn't a list of them.
So I scoured and scoured and scoured and then gave up and just started reading on my own.
And then I made a list of 100 of the best books that I've ever found.
And you can get that for free right now.
So if you want to spend more time around great books that aren't going to completely kill
your memory and your attention, just trying to get through a single page, go to chriswillx.com slash books to get my list completely free
of 100 books you should read before you die.
That's chriswillx.com slash books.