Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Behind the Music: The Journey to Happiness for a Music Icon with Moby & Lindsay Hicks

Episode Date: July 4, 2023

Welcome to The Radcast! We've got an incredible lineup today with Moby, the multi-talented musician, author, and producer, along with our fantastic actress, co-host and producer, Lindsay Hicks!Join Li...ndsay, Moby, and Ryan as they discuss the importance of setting goals and prioritize creativity over commercial success. Discover how Moby's life experiences, including his upbringing and philosophy studies, have influenced his unique personality and skyrocketed his musical success. Uncover the harsh reality that many stars face - money and success don't guarantee happiness. Sometimes, it takes a profound self-discovery to find true contentment. It's a fascinating exploration into the mind of one of today's most captivating artists. So, get ready to learn from the best and find tips that you can apply to reach your own version of success!Key notes from the episode:Moby and Lindsay share their upbringing and their journey to success and how Moby got his nickname which he still uses today. (00:16)Moby's life experiences, including his upbringing and philosophy studies, have shaped his unique personality and musical success. (04:02)Lindsay and Moby have collaborated to create an informative and engaging conversational podcast focusing on topics related to mental health, animal rights, environmentalism and more. (07:18)Moby started out as a classical musician, but his musical career flourished when he discovered punk rock and electronic music, leading to the immense success of his album "Play", despite which he still struggled to find fulfillment. (11:22)Moby and Lindsay have seen many stars realize that money and success do not guarantee happiness, and that it can often take a personal journey of self-discovery to find true satisfaction. (16:26)Lindsay, Moby and Ryan discuss the importance of having goals and how creativity should be prioritized over commercial success on their journey of understanding. (19:40)Moby highlights the paradoxical nature of life and art and encourages people to prioritize beauty and integrity over commercial success or compromise when it comes to music. (25:00)The Moby Pod is an informative and engaging podcast featuring conversations with various guests about topics ranging from music composition to sustainability and even writing a song in an episode. (32:02)Moby discusses the potential sacredness of intentional conversations in a podcast format, remarking on his experience as a guest and how meaningful they can be. (37:25)Lindsay and Moby discuss the power of their podcast to deepen relationships. (43:28)This episode is packed with information, wisdom, and passion and we know you will get a ton of value from this.If you want to learn more about Moby, follow him on Instagram @Moby and his podcast https://www.human-content.com/moby-pod-blogIf you want to learn more about Lindsay Hicks, follow her on Instagram @linzhicks and @humancontentpodsLearn more by visiting our website at www.theradcast.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/c/RadicalHomeofTheRadcastIf you enjoyed this episode of The Radcast, Like, Share, and leave us a review! If you enjoyed this episode and want to learn more, join Ryan’s newsletter https://ryanalford.com/newsletter/ to get Ferrari level advice daily for FREE.  Learn how to build a 7 figure business from your personal brand by signing up for a FREE introduction to personal branding https://ryanalford.com/personalbranding.  Learn more by visiting our website at www.ryanisright.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel  www.youtube.com/@RightAboutNowwithRyanAlford. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to The Radcast, a top 25 worldwide business podcast. If it's radical, we cover it. Here's your host, Ryan Alford. Hey guys, what's up? Welcome to the latest edition of The Radcast. They say, if it's radical, we cover it. And this is, let me just say, if you'd have told me, 20-year-old me, while I was sitting in college at Clemson, listening to dance music and listening
Starting point is 00:00:33 to electronic music and playing this album, probably till I wore it out, that I'd be talking to Moby one day, I wouldn't have believed you. But I am blessed to have Moby on along with Lindsay Hicks, his co-host, a producer. Moby doesn't need any introduction, but we'll do it. Author, producer, writer, badass musician, and one of my favorite artists of all times. It's great to have you guys on the show. It's wonderful to be here. Thank you. Hi. Lindsay, pleasure to have you.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Been enjoying digesting your show, MobyPod, which we'll talk about. We don't want to start too far down the path, but Moby, I know you need no introduction, but our audience, your career's fanned a lot, but let's go straight at setting the table for everyone on your career and your life and what's brought you here today. And we'll do the same with you, Lindsay. Okay, great. So I'm very comfortable being completely self-involved in describing my life and my career, if you want me to do that. Let's start there, man. I know you could talk, we could probably talk for two hours about that it's you've had such longevity and success there'd be a lot but let's let's talk about all the i don't know the foundational things that led to your music career to just breaking all the rules and making actually
Starting point is 00:01:56 electronic dance music some of the hottest best-selling music of the late 90s early 2000s like you're a game changer it started It started, and as an old person, my stories tend to go way back. I was born in Harlem in 1965, and I grew up for the first few years of my life in a basement apartment in Harlem, and my parents were academics. Then when I was three, my dad died, So my mom and I moved back to Connecticut, where she grew up. And I then for the next about 16 years, lived in Darien, Connecticut, which I assume you and a lot of your listeners are familiar with, because it is just about the waspiest, preppiest, most affluent place on the planet. And what made my upbringing there so strange
Starting point is 00:02:47 was my mom and I were on food stamps. We were on welfare. We bought our clothes at Goodwill and Salvation Army. But I went to school with the children of millionaires and billionaires. My first girlfriend in Darien, her dad owned a fleet of oil tankers. And my second serious girlfriend in Darien, her grandfather was Bill Hewlett, who started Hewlett Packard. So the contrast of living in a house with secondhand furniture, having to go to the grocery store and buy things with food stamps, wearing secondhand clothes. And then to put it in perspective, one of the first trips I ever took was with my then girlfriend in the mid 80s to Lake Tahoe to visit the Hewlett compound. So the Hewlett compound had a private railroad connecting the different houses of the Hewlett kids. So compare and contrast that to buying groceries with food stamps.
Starting point is 00:03:48 So it was a very confusing upbringing. And you mentioned my weird name. So I'm related to Herman Melville. And when I was born, my parents thought it would be funny to give me the nickname Moby. And lo and behold, 57 years later, I still have my infant joke nickname. Yeah, but was there ever a cooler name once you got to become an artist? The people who chose their name, like Sting, like that's a cool name. I love my name, the literary aspects of it, the fact that I didn't have to invent it for myself, but my parents had a sense of humor and gave it to me. But so regarding music,
Starting point is 00:04:20 when I was growing up, music to me represented refuge it represented excitement because as i mentioned we were very poor the home i grew up in there was a lot of chaos there was violence there was drug addiction and music to me was a way of feeling excited and safe at the same time and i never thought i'd have a career as a musician. I thought I'd be an academic and I'd teach philosophy at some community college and make music that no one would ever listen to. So every single aspect of my career has been both accidental and completely surprising. Yes, but I'm thankful that you didn't end up the professor.
Starting point is 00:05:05 You know, you could pass for one, I think. You've always had the look of the smartest guy in the room, Professor Moby. When I went to college, I studied philosophy because I both loved philosophy, but also I learned early on the moment you say you were a philosophy major, people immediately assume you're way smarter than you actually are. Maybe. But Moby, where does that side come from? Because even your music has always had, I don't know, every time I turn your music on now, maybe not as much as a 20-year-old kid that's hanging out listening to play. But it's always had that thoughtful i don't know i feel like i'm in deep thought when i listen to a lot of your music and
Starting point is 00:05:50 so when where did that come from and you just are we talking nature or nurture that's a it's a i self-involvedly think it's a really interesting question not just as applies to me but as applies to everyone like And sorry, I'll try not to sound like too much of a grad student, but who are we and how did we end up this way? How much of it is socioeconomic? How much of it is cultural? How much of it is hereditary or epigenetic? And when I try and deconstruct myself, I think it's that sort of the intersection, and maybe this is very self-evident, but the intersection of nature and nurture and how they inform each other. in Madagascar and I was six foot five and really good at sports, we would, if we were talking right now, we'd be having a very different conversation as opposed to a nerdy little guy who played guitar in his bedroom when he was growing up. Yes. But equally good on the piano, I presume, at least
Starting point is 00:06:59 with the melodies and the sounds, but we'll come back to it. Lindsay, I do want to turn to you. I know you co-host MobyPod with Moby, producer. Let's give our audience a little bit of your background before we come a little more further down the line. Yeah, as it relates to how I got here and working on this podcast with Moby, I many years ago wrote a web series that got bought by a TV network, which eventually got me a TV development job working
Starting point is 00:07:33 at a production company. And then I worked at a couple of different production companies, amazing ones. I worked for Wanda Sykes for a while. I worked for the company that that runs that owns and operates the improv. So I was doing TV development for the comedy side of that. And it was really fun. But then the pandemic happened. And Moby and I have been friends for years. And we were talking one day and I was saying like, okay, I'm furloughed from this job, I can wait until they hire me back. But I don't know, I want to do something where I feel like what I'm doing matters. Like it helps someone with their mental health, or it helps animals or it helps the environment or brings awareness to climate crisis, or just general things that I care about something
Starting point is 00:08:19 that I feel like moves the needle a little bit. And we had this conversation about it. And a few weeks later, Moby called me back and said, hey, I was thinking, and what if we work together and try to figure out what we can do in the content world to find something that could potentially make a difference? And he had this kind of fledgling production company where he shot a couple of things and done a couple of things, but wanted to do more with the production company.
Starting point is 00:08:50 And so I came and was working with Moby for Little Walnut. And we've made, I came on and finished, helped finish Moby doc. And we recently in January released Punk Rock Vegan Movie that he had shot some of, and then we put it all together and released it and premiered it at Slamdance in Park City last January. And then we were talking about a podcast and trying to figure out what it was. And eventually we just wanted to make it something that felt specific to Moby and what he cares about because he has this amazing platform that consists of so many people that care about all the things that we care about, but also that care about his music and music in general. So we decided that a podcast would be an amazing place to talk to people that know about
Starting point is 00:09:32 things or that care about things that could help someone or people that could help people enter into possibly a more plant-based lifestyle or care about animal rights or things like that. So that was how MobyPod got started. So we produce it all in house and it's been a really, podcasting is so fun. It's so open. It's so free. You can do whatever you want and it has this kind of like direct reach to an audience. And we have this email set up where people can contact us directly and say what they love and what they want more of. And it's been, it's just been really wonderful. Yeah. Well, let me say this. I've really enjoyed it. I listened to three or four episodes before you have a very soothing voice, Lindsay. It's
Starting point is 00:10:14 therapeutic. It's very light, but it's like nice. I listened to a lot of podcasts. I have to a lot of people with guests and things like that. And then Moby's like exactly what I expected. Like he's, I know he likes to say, oh, I'm not the smart guy or whatever, but just so thoughtful. It's exactly what I expect. And, but it's very, the variation in the episodes remind me a little bit of Moby's music. There's so many things going on variations. Like if you really listen to some of the tracks, I've really enjoyed it. So I think the audience, check that out on all the podcast networks, the MobyPod, P-O-D, easy to remember. Moby, got to transition back. You've been in the music business for a long time. You've seen it all, I'm sure. Talk to me, give me the reel of it, of what it was like going through the heyday of play and some of that, I don't want to say unexpected, but I think for
Starting point is 00:11:07 other people it was unexpected, maybe it was expected for you, the success of that and what the industry has been like to this evolution from records to CDs to now everything's streaming. I'd love just your broad-based perspective on the music business. I started out, weirdly enough, perspective on the music business? I started out, weirdly enough, playing classical music, which might seem very surprising, but when I was really young, I was playing piano and guitar and studying music theory. And then when I was around 13, I heard The Clash and The Sex Pistols, and I tried to unlearn everything I had learned about classical music. And I started playing in a punk rock band. And I got so involved in the world of New York-based punk rock in the early 80s. Seeing bands like Minor Threat and Black Flag and the Dead Kennedys.
Starting point is 00:11:56 It was so exciting. And honestly, I just thought this was the be-all and end-all. Our first seven-inch record, the first record that my band, the Vatican Commandos put out, we sold 200 copies. And I was like, we're the biggest rock stars in the world. We sold 200 copies of a record that we made.
Starting point is 00:12:15 That means there are potentially 200 people out there who know who we are. I was ready to retire at that point. But I kept working on music. I kept DJing. I was hanging out in night that point. But I kept working on music. I kept DJing. I was hanging out in nightclubs. And I got really involved in the world of electronic music. So then in the late 80s, I started releasing my own electronic music with the assumption that, okay, no one's ever going to listen to it.
Starting point is 00:12:37 But who knows? Maybe I'll play a show and 30 people will show up. show and 30 people will show up through the 90s i kept having very weird unexpected success and one of the things again that i never but by definition was unexpected so i never expected it but also what had made the world of punk rock and early electronic music so interesting is that they were sui generis, meaning they were not reliant on corporations. We were making the records ourselves. We were printing the flyers. We were making the T-shirts. We were booking our tours.
Starting point is 00:13:19 So it was all very DIY, do-it-yourself. Organic is what I'd see. Yeah, completely. And then I found myself being on the receiving end of mass media attention and signed to a major label, which didn't work out
Starting point is 00:13:36 by the end of the 90s. And I'll try and keep this relatively brief, but by the end of the 90s, I had lost my record deal. I'd been dropped because I'd made a record that people didn't like very much. And I was really in a dark place. I was battling drug addiction and alcoholism. My mom had cancer, then she died of cancer. I was going broke. I was battling panic attacks. I'd lost my record deal. panic attacks i'd lost my record deal and that's when i made the album play which i thought was going to be my last record because it was a weird record that i made in my bedroom at the time and it went on as you mentioned to sell 12 million copies and be this huge cultural phenomena where suddenly i'll put it in perspective the first show on the tour for the album play was in the basement of a record store and between 20 and 25 people showed up.
Starting point is 00:14:31 The last show was at Wembley Stadium in the UK and it sold out so quickly we had to book a second show at Wembley Arena. We're talking about tens of thousands of people as opposed to that first show with 25 people and so here's where hopefully the story becomes a little more psychological is as i mentioned growing up i'd never expected to have any success but i always assumed that when i had success it it would fix everything. As I think a lot of people make that assumption. I just thought, oh, if ever I have fame and money and a good career, I'll be the happiest person in the world. And not surprisingly, that was not the case. And then I started wondering, what am I doing wrong?
Starting point is 00:15:23 Like, I'm making money. I'm buying apartments and houses. I'm flying around the world I'm standing on stage in front of hundreds of thousands of people why was I so anxious and depressed and that became a huge challenge for years trying to figure out and I think a lot of people who are probably listening a lot of people have had that experience of you're given the keys to the kingdom with the assumption that you will be the happiest person in the world. And then lo and behold, you're not. And then the question is, what do you do next? And I guess one option for me would have been like get hair plugs and start trying to go to St. Bart's for new years.
Starting point is 00:16:06 But the other option was to figure out what actually works. Meaning if, and sorry, I'm rambling on. No, you're not. It's good. You're a lot of very relatable to how people think about the journey and
Starting point is 00:16:21 like the destiny. You think the destination is going to be all this. It's great. Keep going. And it's not. And also i would say it's not just me which was an interesting realization like on one hand there is the idea that fame and wealth fix everything but then on the other hand there's evidence and i would say if fame and wealth fixed everything donald trump would be the happiest person in the world. Kanye would be running through a field singing happy songs.
Starting point is 00:16:50 Avicii would still be alive. Kurt Cobain would still be alive. Amy Winehouse would still be alive. Chris Cornell from Soundgarden would still be alive. And so clearly there's a disconnect where we all think that fame and wealth will fix everything. But in the real world, there's no evidence that's actually the case. And it was a really interesting challenge to not just experience that academically, but personally. I bet. Because anyone listening to this, if they could be told, including myself, thinking through like the superstardom level that you were at in 2001, around that time frame, to go, he's anxious and not happy.
Starting point is 00:17:45 You wouldn't believe it. You wouldn't believe it at the pinnacle of, I'm sure there's been other pinnacles now, but to not, and they say, people say the journey's everything. Once you get there, you know, you're not, but you got to figure out what makes you happy ultimately. And say, money doesn't make you happy. Success doesn't make you happy. It sure helps, but it doesn't help with maybe the core isn't where it needs to be. Yeah. That's exactly what I slowly had to realize. And it was a lesson that was hard learned because I didn't want to learn that lesson. I had to be dragged kicking and screaming to that realization. Houses, having apartments, having fancy friends, going to crazy red, like exclusive parties and red carpet events. I thought this was going to make me happy. And the more I did it, the less happy I was. And as I mentioned, for a while, I was thinking, what am I doing wrong? And then I realized, you know what, maybe I'm doing it wrong.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Maybe someone else would be jumping up and down with happiness given the same circumstances that i had but i had to figure that out and i had to really bottom out as an alcoholic as a drug addict as a human and then figure out the next step of okay that didn't work i could keep pursuing it but that seems like the Einstein quote or like the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results. I was like, there are a lot of people, especially here in Los Angeles, who keep doing it, even though it's not working. And I've had to ask myself, okay, this doesn't work anymore. What does? And it's a really fascinating, at least for me, and challenging question
Starting point is 00:19:26 that I had to ask myself. Lindsay, I bet you've been in and around this. You've been around Moe. You've been around a lot of stars, I'm sure. You're probably familiar with this, like seeing this exact thing play out with friends and colleagues. Yeah, it's a little bit of a kind of
Starting point is 00:19:42 wherever you go, there you are type of situation. It's you. Nothing external is going to actually fix any problem that starts internally. about Moby's journey and help reframe my perspective of, okay, having goals is necessary, but it's not all about getting there. There's so many more important things that will ideally happen along the way. And something else I've learned, especially from Moby, is that where you think you'll end up is probably the farthest from where you'll actually end up, especially if you are following the journey and going with what feels best and most right in the moment and trying to keep your morals in check and make sure that you're doing the best, not only for yourself,
Starting point is 00:20:40 but the world around you, your path is going to get curvier than. Yeah. So that's something that I've definitely learned from watching him. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Moby, did you find ultimately that what brought you success wasn't necessarily what you wanted to do? Like if you can do play times four, you've had other success, but like that level of success, I'm hearing maybe the music itself, maybe what came had other success, but like that level of success, I'm hearing maybe the music itself, maybe what came with that success just ultimately didn't make you happy, or is it
Starting point is 00:21:12 broader and deeper than that? When I was growing up, as mentioned, I never expected anyone to pay attention to me or the music I was making. So I could focus on music purely for the purity of music. There was no commerce involved because by definition there was no commerce involved. But then once I started being on the receiving end of attention and making money from music and feeling like my emotional needs were being met by the attention and the validation to my great, but understandable shame. I found myself thinking of music as a way to keep the juggernaut going, which I think a lot,
Starting point is 00:21:55 I'm sure you've talked to other musicians who if they're willing to admit it, we'll say that like when you have success, you start looking at your next record, not by the criteria of how beautiful is it how interesting is it how emotionally resonant or powerful is it you start thinking like oh will it get played on the radio will it sound good when i'm standing on stage in front of a hundred thousand people will it get good reviews will it sell and that's where i went wrong. That was my sort of Faustian approach of I had a period where I was willing to compromise my creativity for commercial gain for and ultimately for emotional validation.
Starting point is 00:22:38 And it didn't work. And luckily, the turning point for me was a very simple moment. And I don't know if this is going to make sense to anybody, but it makes a lot of sense to me is I met David Lynch for the first time. This was around 2007, 2008. And I was in a very dark place. I was actually like suicidal. I was bottoming out as an alcoholic in a really dark place. Twin Peaks, David Lynch, Mulholland Drive, David Lynch. Twin Peaks, David Lynch, Mulholland Drive, David Lynch. Yeah, Twin Peaks, David Lynch, Mulholland Drive. For anyone listening. Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Yeah. And so I met David Lynch for the first time, and I was in awe because I was such a huge David Lynch fan. And David is really complicated and simple in equal measures. Like, obviously, the work that he does is incredibly complicated, but sometimes he speaks like a child. And he said something that was like, it felt like the light of, it was just this wonderful moment where he said,
Starting point is 00:23:39 creativity is beautiful. And I know that might sound like something that a four-year-old would say. But when he said it, all of a sudden, it was like the Rosetta Stone. It was like the moment when I understood there's nothing wrong with commerce. There's nothing wrong with the world. There's nothing wrong with financial success. But for me, it can't be the focus. financial success. But for me, it can't be the focus. The focus, what got me into this originally was that love of creativity, the spiritual aspects of creativity. And if it creates wealth,
Starting point is 00:24:13 great, that's fine. But in that simple moment with David Lynch, I just realized, oh, my focus has to be on the creativity. It has to have integrity. It has to be honest and not compromised to accommodate a world of commerce that is inherently compromised. So that was the big turning point there. So I really thank David Lynch for knocking me off the path I was on and setting me on a better path. I've been in the ad agency business for 22 years. So nothing brings me more joy than hearing creativity is beautiful because that's what the ad business is supposed to be. It used to be like that. I came up on, I worked on Madison Avenue for six years and it was beautiful then.
Starting point is 00:24:55 The ideas were, it's gotten a little trashy with digital and everything else in between, ironically. Yeah. Regarding advertisements, for example, remember because there's it's very easy and quick to say oh the world of commerce is cheap and tawdry and terrible but it isn't it has a potential to be transcendent like i think of this moment i had i was in germany in the mid 90s and i was watching tv and a volkswagen ad came on that used the nick drake song pink moon and i found myself like many people crying while watching this commercial because it was so
Starting point is 00:25:34 beautiful and nick drake sold more records granted he was dead but he's his estate sold more records on the back of this beautiful vol commercial than he had for the 40 years or 35 years before that. So commerce can be so powerful and effective. But for me, I had to realize I couldn't prioritize commerce. I couldn't accommodate commerce. I couldn't compromise for commerce. I had to focus on the beauty and the integrity of creativity and let, and if commerce ensued, that would be great, but I couldn't be the,
Starting point is 00:26:11 it couldn't be the focus. So I've got some irony for you. Play was created in your closet with no commercial pressure in sight. And lo and behold, that the beauty of that creation became what it was isn't there a lot of irony there that it's like proving your point that without maybe that weight you created some of your most beautiful work yeah i would say that as i've gotten older and maybe again this is a glib reductive thing to say but if i had to describe especially the human condition it's an ironic paradox that's the only thing that makes sense is and it's almost like the universe not to anthropomorphize it but the universe is aware of this and keeps trying to remind us, guess what? Everything's a paradox. Life is a paradox. We're so attached to life, the only guarantee we have is that at some
Starting point is 00:27:13 point we'll die. That's a paradox. And if that central paradox is the bedrock of all existence, of all human existence, clearly everything that follows from that is also going to be paradoxical yeah so clearly free of chasing commercial success give us and people listening the difference between the music business play era and today like is it is yeah it's also tricky is it badly because like i talk to people and there's this jaded Is it sneaky? Is it seems? Is it bad? Because I talk to people and there's this jaded perspective, I think, with a lot of it, with the royalties and everything like that. I'm going to qualify it a little bit by saying I don't fully trust my perspective because I'm a closed guy. I'm 57. And it's unfortunately too easy for me to glorify the world of music 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 years ago. I will say there's some objective support for the idea that things used to be better.
Starting point is 00:28:15 If you look at the top 10 songs and albums from 1969, it was Let It Be. It's the Beatles. It's the Rolling Stones Stones it's Creedence Clearwater Revival it's Marvin Gaye it's transcendent music that spoke to people as opposed to now the world of pop music is I'll say this politely 99% of it's garbage it's the criteria then was how can you change the world through music the criteria now tends to be how can we get kids to do a TikTok dance to it? So I will say the quality of the music and there are people making remarkable music out there. But a lot of the pop music, considering Let It Be was a top 10 song compared to the top 10 songs now, it's really hard to make the case that the quality of the music has benefited from the current state of the music business. But to your
Starting point is 00:29:14 question about the music business itself, for the longest time, to state the obvious, it sold plastic from wax cylinders in the early 20th century to vinyl to seven inches to cassettes to eight tracks to lps to cds to mini discs like it was the business of shipping and selling plastic and that obviously changed in the early 2000s with limew, with Napster. And then here's what's so interesting, I think, is in the early 2000s into about 2008, people thought, oh, the record business is done. The music business is finished. It's wrapped up.
Starting point is 00:29:58 Like it's entered the realm of like broadcast news and free jazz, poetry slams, things that are just going to be greatly diminished. But then, like a weird phoenix, the music business came back and is now generating more money than it ever has without having to make plastic. And I just find that so interesting
Starting point is 00:30:24 that as an industry, and I wonder if there's analogous lessons that other industries can learn. Other industries struggle. Look at the music business, which was more abundant in about 2008 and now is more successful than it's ever been. Yeah. I think a lot of that's social media and other platforms of growth and awareness and all that. When they stopped fighting the downloads and awareness and all that when they stopped fighting the downloads and the streaming i think they embraced it it came around it doesn't mean the quality improved but i think the money that can generate the awareness that it's able to generate yeah and the idea that what and i was just talking about this with a friend of mine who runs a big song fund and the one of the things that makes music
Starting point is 00:31:07 so remarkably unique it's one of the only art forms that lives everywhere in a person's life for example if i watch a movie you don't watch a movie in the shower you don't watch a movie when you're driving to work you don't watch a movie at a funeral unless you're a sociopath so the fact that music lives at festivals but it also lives in churches it's it helps people sleep and it wakes them up they listen while they're making breakfast and while they're having sex and while they're dancing and while they're getting tattoos and getting their hair cut and it's so interesting that music, it's the only creative art form that lives everywhere in a person's life. And I think that's one thing
Starting point is 00:31:53 that the music business has woken up to is realizing like, oh, we don't need to sell people plastic. We just need to make music available for wherever people want to listen to it. Yes, that's definitely true. Sorry, I know I'm rambling on like a crazy it. Yes, that's definitely. Sorry, I know I'm rambling on like a crazy person. No, it's good. Talking with Moby and Lindsay Hicks,
Starting point is 00:32:10 co-host of the Moby Pod, which we're going to get to in just a second. You did mention everywhere and you did mention movies. And I would be remiss to not bring up the Bourne franchise and the song with that. Talk briefly about the impact of that or how that came about. It's so recognizable and like people may not even know about play, but know that song with that. Talk briefly about the impact of that or how that came about. It's so recognizable. And like, people may not even know about Play, but know that song because that franchise was just the mega hit. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:32 You know, again, the bedrock context of all this is that I never expected anything. I never expected to make music that people paid attention to. So everything that's happened has been surprising. But tosey's earlier point this the this idea of irony or paradox is so the song extreme ways that's in all the movies when it was released it failed it was the first single from the album 18, which was the follow-up to play.
Starting point is 00:33:08 And it was everybody in the world was paying attention to me. And the record labels were spending tons of money. To put it in perspective, the video for Extreme Waves cost just shy of a million dollars. And it got played once for good reason. It's bad. and it got played once for good reason it's bad so we spent a million dollars on a video shot at andrews air force base in the mojave desert and no one watched it understandably because it's just not very good and i thought oh no radio's not playing it mtv's not playing it the record's not selling very well what in the world world? Like, it was a failure, a very public failure.
Starting point is 00:33:47 And then my friend Doug Lyman made the first Bourne movie. And with Frank Marshall and a few other people, Kathy Nelson, they came to me to license this song. But no one expected the movie to be successful. And it became hugely successful. And all of a sudden the song was like this well-known part of the first movie so here's where i think it gets a little funny they came to us to license it again for the second born movie not because they wanted it to be the soundtrack or the theme of the movie because they had run out of time to license anything else and they knew I'd say yes.
Starting point is 00:34:35 So it very accidentally became this well-known part of the Bourne franchise because when they were finishing the second movie, they ran out of time to license another song. I hope the price tag went up as the popularity increased. Not that much, surprisingly, because I'm always so flattered that anyone would listen to my music or want to license it. I think one of the reasons I've licensed a lot of music is because I don't charge that much for it. It's good to know. I have a lot to remember that with the brands we work with. I can hear Southside on a few commercial spots. Yeah, sure.
Starting point is 00:35:03 It's yours. So, Lindsay, talk to me about MobyPod. We talked briefly about it at the beginning. What are you guys hoping to do with the show? Where is it all going? I know it's broad-based, but talk to me about MobyPod, what you've done to date, and any of the future episodes. Something that's been really fun is that we came in not the plan was to not have a plan.
Starting point is 00:35:27 So we are just doing what feels right in the moment. The last episode we released, Moby and I decided to write a song on as the episode, the episode was just us writing a song from scratch. And I'm not really a musician. I did some pretty epic musical theater in college. But I'm not a musician. And it was really interesting to do that with Moby and get to kind of mine different forms of showing his knowledge, all of the things that he knows how to do. Because it's very rare that you can sit and get granular with Moby about how he makes a song and we had done it before for a different project and the whole time I was like god this is fun this is so cool I wish we had a place to put that and now we
Starting point is 00:36:16 do have a place to put it but we also we had we've had some amazing guests some Our next episode is with a psychiatrist named Kirsten Thompson, who is an amazing human being who her first day working in finance was on September 11, 2001. She then became a surgeon and now is this amazing psychiatrist. And we also had Dan Buettner on the show who wrote the book, The Blue Zones, which if you don't know about it, it's so fascinating. It's about longevity. He figured out these spots in the world where more people were living to and beyond 100. And we had Ed Begley on. He'll be the next one after Kirsten Thompson that we release to talk about his sustainability efforts and his vegan diet and all of the amazing things he's done in the world of renewable energy. So it's this awesome place where we can just do whatever we want.
Starting point is 00:37:10 We can get as serious as we want. We can also get as silly as we want. And it's nice to have that space to do that. That's the wonderful thing about podcasts, especially when you have built-in interest bringing Moby's name to it but then like I said like I went into it going okay it's Moby so I'm gonna listen and Moby's come on the show and Lindsay's come to show I want to know who these are but then listen I'm like I found myself went down the I went down the rabbit hole I was like so you guys gotta keep at it Moby what how
Starting point is 00:37:40 are you feeling about where it's gone and where you're headed? It hopefully is a continuation of what we were talking about, which is that moment in 2008 when I had to get sober. I realized I was on a wrong path. I was pursuing – I was really involved in some very shallow pursuits. And the question was, what's next? in some very shallow pursuits. And the question was, what's next? And I read an interview with the Dalai Lama. And it annoyed me so much, which is funny, because I've met the Dalai Lama, he's a delightful person. And, but this interview, what annoyed me, and I might be the only person in history who's ever said they were annoyed by the Dalai Lama. I think so. I love it. But it annoyed me so much because he was talking about the importance of service.
Starting point is 00:38:32 And at this point, this was 2007, 2008, I was like, no, I don't want to be of service. I want to be selfish. I want the world to glorify me and make me the happiest person who's ever been. the world to glorify me and make me the happiest person who's ever been. But then as time passed, also when I started getting sober, I realized, oh, this is that paradox that we're talking about. The more people pursue selfishness, the less happy they are. The more people pursue philanthropy, more people pursue philanthropy, altruism, service, the happier they are. And so I found myself focusing more on trying to be of service. I opened a restaurant here in Los Angeles called Little Pine that got shut down during the pandemic, but we gave the money to charity. It was basically being run. It was a for-profit, but the profits went to charity.
Starting point is 00:39:24 charity it was basically being run it was a for-profit but the profits went to charity and i try to keep doing this is to do things for the right reasons and it just it creates a bedrock of integrity that i find so much more satisfying and rewarding than trying to disingenuously pretend that i'm like doing the right thing while not doing the right thing. And so regarding the podcast, on one hand, the impetus for starting it was the idea that, and maybe I'm really stating the obvious, you probably know this better than anyone, is controlling your platform in this environment is so important and essential if you care about communicating with people because as we know the algorithms on the other platforms change all the time like one minute twitter is suppressing people's content
Starting point is 00:40:22 then it's allowing all sorts of crazy people to say whatever they want. One minute Instagram has a certain algorithm, then it doesn't. TikTok has an algorithm, then it doesn't. They are constantly changing. And the idea of having platforms that can bypass these other platforms becomes so essential, especially if you want to create meaningful content. And the wonderful thing, and again, I know you know this better than anyone, with a podcast is if people listen, that's great. But even if they don't, you're having remarkable conversations with people you care about. And you're having these wonderful conversations where people listen to each other because ryan i don't know what it's like when your friends get together but i have
Starting point is 00:41:10 some really smart friends when we meet up we're idiots we meet up and we eat vegan pizza and we tell stupid jokes like it doesn't matter they might have iqs of 165 and work at mass's jet propulsion laboratory when we're social, we're idiots. And there's something wonderful about a podcast where you listen, you ask, we think about what we're going to talk about and you really listen. And like Dan Buettner, who starred the Blue Zones,
Starting point is 00:41:35 when we had him on, I've known Dan forever. I learned so much about him and I saw a side of him that I'd never seen before because we weren't just joking around eating vegan pizza. No, it does. People ask me all the time, why did you start the podcast? I started it because I wanted to have conversations and I thought it would be good for business. It's been great for business, but more than that, I've gotten to have conversations in the beginning. I didn't get to choose, but then suddenly now it's like I get to talk to Moby and Lindsay Hicks and listen. And like my phone's turned off and I'm got my headphones on and I'm like listening and absorbing
Starting point is 00:42:13 and like having this real dialogue. And in our lives now with so many distractions, there's so little of that. I crave this now. Can I do it two to four times a week, but I love it. And because it doesn't force me, but it allots time to do that. And now with the ability of our show being popular, getting to have the depth of conversations with childhood idols and musicians and everything else, it's a wonderful experience. Yeah. And I think it's interesting because on one hand, podcasts are, they live in, I'm stating the obvious in the most basic way, but they live in the same world of content as other media. But I, given my limited experience with Lindsay hosting this, hosting MobyPod, I actually, and I'm going to sound like such a hippie and I'm sorry, but there's something potentially sacred about it. Like when you're speaking, we're listening.
Starting point is 00:43:05 Like we don't interrupt each other. It's this really wonderful moment where you get to sit down and have a very, really intentional, remarkable conversation. So I wasn't expecting that when we started MobyPod, but I've been really satisfied. And I presumptuously think Lindsay has as well with how meaningful it can potentially be. Yeah, we've had friends. Yeah, friends I've known for years, and I'm suddenly learning things about them that never would have come up in regular conversation. It's deepened relationships and people I'm meeting for the first time, I feel like we walk away, friends, good friends at the end of it. So it's a great, it's a great medium. And even for just me and Moby, when it's just he and I, we can be as silly or go down rabbit holes of conversation that we probably never would have gone that in depth had we not been in this space for this reason. And to get to talk about things we really care about,
Starting point is 00:44:07 for this reason and to get to talk about things we really care about like like animal rights like helping people be healthier and more like moby has this incredible knowledge of the human body and diets and he's this is now a place where he can put that information so it's really been a fascinating endeavor and i'm very excited to get to do more of them. That's awesome. I own a plant-based wellness company called vacay. That's the hat I'm wearing can relate to that. Oh, nice. Oh, nice. That's awesome. Yes. So Moby, what's the future of the music? Are we going to have another round? Are we, are you going to unintentionally because you're not chasing fame? Are we going to, are we going to have a resurgence?
Starting point is 00:44:43 Is there any desire for that to happen? I know you're not chasing fame? Are we going to have a resurgence? Is there any desire for that to happen? I know you're not chasing it, but you'd probably be okay with it, wouldn't you? I'd be okay with it. I make tons of music, but I don't tour and I don't really do much promotion. So I make music
Starting point is 00:45:01 and then once I've made it, I don't pay attention to what happens because there's one recurring – there's a variable here which is both unavoidable but very scary to me, possible to bypass the ego. I don't think it's possible as a human to have a life without ego. But I know that in my past, I've lived a very ego-driven life, and it was bad. I suffered. The people around me suffered. My relationship suffered. My family suffered.
Starting point is 00:45:40 My health suffered. The more selfish and ego-driven I was it makes me think of did you grow up watching bugs bunny oh yeah you remember and i feel like this is a cartoon that sort of describes our current zeitgeist there's one where daffy duck they meet a genie, and Daffy Duck gets turned into a tiny little duck. Sorry, this is spoiler alert at the end of the cartoon. And Bugs opens a clamshell, and there's a pearl, and tiny little Daffy Duck runs in to grab the pearl, and he's just yelling, mine, mine, mine. That, to me, is the sort of the feral, selfish ego that I know is within me, I have to avoid it. And I don't trust it. So to that point of if someone said, hey, do you want to go on tour and play for
Starting point is 00:46:34 millions of people and be celebrated and go to red carpet events? My honest answer would be, yeah, there's a part of me that would love that. But don't trust it and i don't i want to make a concerted effort to not be on the receiving end of that attention i like the health and sustainability of living a normal life of going to the grocery store going hiking of talking to you guys of playing with dogs and cleaning my kitchen like Like I don't have a housekeeper. I clean my house because it's this humble meditation that I really love. So I just think I've also just done something quite interesting is I've just had a very ego driven soliloquy about how I don't trust ego. So thank you for accommodating another paradox there but do you have tiktok because you
Starting point is 00:47:28 wouldn't have to leave your house if we just blow are we on tiktok like i'm on all the social media i'm not really on i posted to tiktok a few times but i'll be honest i don't think demographically it's for me i'm gonna sound like such an person, but every time I've tried to open TikTok, I'm like, why are these people yelling at me? Everyone's so loud. So I think I need like TikTok for old people where they like, it's just people who like wear cardigans
Starting point is 00:47:57 and watch old episodes of 30 Rock and it's quiet and calm because I find TikTok just be way too noisy. You don't have to watch it. You just need to create for it. I can see you blowing up on TikTok and the music discovery part of it, but I won't push you.
Starting point is 00:48:09 That's just my industry, but I can see it. That's Bagel the dog. Bagel has some pretty strong opinions. I heard about Bagel on the podcast. She's a very big deal over here. I love it. We're going to keep up with all things. The show, you personally, Lindsay, and obviously Moby.
Starting point is 00:48:33 I'm sure they can find you easily, but give us some locations where everybody can keep up with everything that's happening. Yeah, Moby on all the platforms. I left Twitter when Elon lost his mind. He and I, we were old friends, and I i just i don't know what's going on yeah but something happened and that the elon who everyone knows now is not the elon i've known for a long time and i like when he started posting insane conspiracy theories to his trillion followers i was like i don't want to be a part of this. So I left Twitter. But the other platforms certainly are not ethically much better, but they seem a little more neutral. If Mark Zuckerberg starts posting insane conspiracy theories about Paul Pelosi, I probably would
Starting point is 00:49:17 leave that Instagram and Facebook as well. But for now, those are like safe spaces for me. Lindsay, what about you? Yeah, Lobie is very good about posting about the podcast. So every time we come out, he makes a big post because he has a lot of followers and I don't. But I'm at Linz Hicks. If you want to watch what I do, I post mostly about Bagel. So it's very valuable information going on over there.
Starting point is 00:49:40 Hey, the dog and animal content gets some of the highest engagement sometimes. You never know. They have their own channels and everything else now. I know. Their personalities live through their hosts. But guys, it's been a joy. It's been a pleasure hearing more about the podcast and both of you and Moby. It was truly, I don't, someone like yourself comes on, people say these things, but I'm telling you, it was on like repeat play, then the soundtrack, and then all the stuff.
Starting point is 00:50:08 A true fan and someone that respects your artistry and for someone that grew up that probably had no business enjoying everything that you did. Like some of the influences I had are so like left field, but I think you just totally flipped the expectation of electronic and dance music and how beautiful it could be, but how interesting it could be. And it's been great really getting to know you better. Oh, thank you very much. That makes me like, I'm thrilled to hear you say that. And it was, yeah, I'll speak on behalf of Lindsay and I, sorry, Lindsay, I assume you agree with this. It was really wonderful talking to you. Like this was great. Thank you so much. Awesome. Hey guys, you know where to find us, Theradcast.com. Search for Moby. You'll find all the highlight clips from today.
Starting point is 00:50:47 You'll find links to their show and links to everything else. I'm at Ryan Alford on all the platforms. Blowing up on TikTok, even if Moby doesn't want to. We'll see you next time on The Radcast. To listen or watch full episodes, visit us on the web at theradcast.com or follow us on social media at our Instagram account, the.rad.cast or at Ryan Alford.
Starting point is 00:51:12 Stay radical.

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