The Problem with Rick Beato

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PLEASE NOTE: at 6:07, I meant to say "subjectivity", not objectivity
Video by K Nkanza
Instagram: @springsilvergram
Twitter: @springsilverya

Пікірлер: 4 400

  • @zinc_magnesium
    @zinc_magnesium2 жыл бұрын

    A lot of people don’t know this, but Rick Beato invented music.

  • @krmitt5

    @krmitt5

    2 жыл бұрын

    I chuckled. Rick "I played a short stint in Fleetwood Mac" Beeeato, when Stevie was so coked out that her new nose was still healing and the Lindsay Buckingham needed a stunt dick to take the heat off of him.

  • @mantra3000

    @mantra3000

    Жыл бұрын

    And video games

  • @craigsaxonmusic9372

    @craigsaxonmusic9372

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @krmitt5

    @krmitt5

    Жыл бұрын

    @@craigsaxonmusic9372 you like that Craig. The internet is full of free entertainment. Happy to help.

  • @craigsaxonmusic9372

    @craigsaxonmusic9372

    Жыл бұрын

    @@krmitt5 hi there!…..just so we’re clear, I enjoyed the comment, presumably a bit sarcastic in nature very much……I enjoyed this YT vid in its totality and hope that if Beato views it he’d have a sense of humor as well as be enlightened…..like many folks out there….apparently several million….I’ve found enjoyment in many Beato vids, however it seems to me….I mean, this is merely my perception, that he’s bought into his own hype a bit…..There is value to be found, that’s undeniable in many of his takes on music and musicians, however overall I get overwhelmed by his ….I dunno….arrogance?…ego?……and as a matter of constructive criticism, I personally feel his forte is not as a teacher….especially when compared to so many fine and focused teachers of all things music on the Internet…for free many times! It’s refreshing to see and hear someone being constructively critical of this YT *God*….with specific examples of his foibles…. And btw, like any earnest 71 year old music fan/musician, I definitely/sincerely would appreciate any recommendations of good contemporary music I should check out… Best of everything/ Craig

  • @modern-day_warrior
    @modern-day_warrior8 ай бұрын

    GTA has introduced so many people to artists they would have never heard our wise and thats just GTA.

  • @rubiax61

    @rubiax61

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly. And motion pictures did the same when RB was young... Movies like "Once upon a Time in the West" or "Jesus Christ Superstar" were of huge influence at the time...

  • @senomous7798

    @senomous7798

    28 күн бұрын

    very true. i wouldve never heard ot black flag or other punk rock bands if not for playing as trevor in gta 5

  • @zeljkoplavsic784

    @zeljkoplavsic784

    24 күн бұрын

    What is GTA ?

  • @ld4067

    @ld4067

    22 күн бұрын

    GTA, Donkey Kong Country, Tony Hawk (anyone else rip the music from the PS1 cd back in the day?), the list goes on...nice Lain av

  • @SuziQ.

    @SuziQ.

    9 күн бұрын

    @@zeljkoplavsic784, Grand Theft Auto.

  • @pbasswil
    @pbasswil4 ай бұрын

    95% of us are like Beato, at least _some_ of the time: We like to justify our own tastes, sometimes by condemning what we _don't_ like. Not many of us are secure enough to simply like what we like, and do what we do, without passing judgment on the rest of the world.

  • @Gorilla.Guitar

    @Gorilla.Guitar

    3 күн бұрын

    well put & spot-on IMO. Beato (& his thought processes) are about as offensive, difficult or controversial as a dish of vanilla ice cream. with each new beato -bashing i observe, i realize the negativity directed at him is born out of frustrations & difficulties that have nothing to do with his views & opinions on probably anything

  • @pbasswil

    @pbasswil

    3 күн бұрын

    @@Gorilla.Guitar Just to point out, I was saying _Beato_ generally justifies his own tastes (with elaborate analysis), is fairly judgmental - and that we're most of us a bit like him. Since he's kind of disdainful of what he doesn't care for, YT Commenters who _like_ what he disdains get defensive, and the less gracious ones snap back at him. I've done it myself.

  • @Gorilla.Guitar

    @Gorilla.Guitar

    3 күн бұрын

    @@pbasswil see, i'm waay more pessimistic & over-thinking than that. even if the obvious reality is on the surface for all to see, im looking for a shovel. my answers are always waaay below the surface. I'm always believing things are never simple & that humanity is deviate & complicated to the max.. to be fair, i often consider the possibility that it is I that posess all these traits & i work my ass off to bring the rest of humanity down to my level in hopes of feeling better about meself, lol... the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle. I've got no special sympathics towards beato & dont wanna appear as his guard dogg . To me he seems a convenient yet no more remarkable a target for bashing than you or I. I've noticed commonality amongst those who work to expose his "naughtiness" and i'm largely convinced I know what its about. being the pessimist, i've come to expect such behavior.

  • @Gorilla.Guitar

    @Gorilla.Guitar

    3 күн бұрын

    @@pbasswil we all have & its largely the point i'm trying to make. this analysis basically describes the human race. Ive never met anybody that doesnt have these tendencies from time to time & for some of us, all the time.

  • @brigidwell
    @brigidwell4 ай бұрын

    I love a lot of Rick videos and can relate to his desire to return to the glory days of rock, and we all get a little grumpy when we see the world we grew up in fading away. I was told to listen to KEXP when I wanted to hear new rock bands, and can say the current generation still makes incredible guitar based music, rooted in the old values while still taking it to new places.

  • @lesterama6110

    @lesterama6110

    4 ай бұрын

    Audiotree is another great source

  • @krollpeter

    @krollpeter

    4 ай бұрын

    It does not have to be guitar-based at all. KEXP is one of the best stations in the world. They play all kinds of music, from pop, jazz, blues, prog, punk whatever, even the occasional classic piece. And it is exactly that elaborate and knowledgeable mix which separates them from all the usual radio junk.

  • @aquatichighs

    @aquatichighs

    3 ай бұрын

    I’m still waiting for one of those “there’s still good music you just have to search for it” to give me an example.

  • @lesterama6110

    @lesterama6110

    3 ай бұрын

    @@aquatichighs but depends on What you listen too. I mostly like extreme metal, but outside of that, there's Yves Tumor, Salami Rose Joe Louis, Nova Twins, Fleshwater, Just Mustard and Eartheater. All of them released albums the Last two years.

  • @jeffblanks529

    @jeffblanks529

    3 ай бұрын

    I mostly hear basically a bunch of the same old "indie" (i.e., "like 1964, but ironically") stuff I've been hearing most of my life. (OK, maybe crossed with punk, too.)

  • @AutPen38
    @AutPen388 ай бұрын

    A lot of Beato's hot takes can be dismissed as 'Old man shakes fist at cloud', but if his main point is that there's a crisis in the music industry, he's right. He might not be adept at explaining the causes (it's all basically due to the progress of technology), but at least he gets people thinking and talking about music, which I guess is a good thing.

  • @jamescotner2459

    @jamescotner2459

    7 ай бұрын

    Rick is not old.

  • @yahnferral9163

    @yahnferral9163

    7 ай бұрын

    The industry structured itself around mind control. That’s the real problem.

  • @ThatcherUlrich

    @ThatcherUlrich

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@jamescotner2459you can be an old man shaking fist at cloud at any age

  • @clouds-rb9xt

    @clouds-rb9xt

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jamescotner2459He's 61. Maybe not elderly but still fairly old

  • @Jeff_____

    @Jeff_____

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jamescotner2459 that's good to know. He's 61, I'm 50. I guess I'm still a youngster.

  • @kagenotatsumaki
    @kagenotatsumaki10 ай бұрын

    "I was playing games with my kids and they asked me if I liked the music, but I didn't even notice the music, I just cared about winning! And that's when I realized, these video games are so addictive and the kids don't care about music." Soooooo, the kids like the music, but Rick didn't even notice the music, but the kids did, and thus this proves kids don't care about music? I am so confused...

  • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    10 ай бұрын

    Music in video games is not the type of music he's talking about.

  • @smidlem1117

    @smidlem1117

    10 ай бұрын

    @@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 what makes it less valid lmao. the mario kart sax solo is more tonally colourful than any iron maiden song i can think of off the top of my head. what you're doing is just insulting an entire medium because you don't have the imagination to call it 'real music'

  • @quantize

    @quantize

    10 ай бұрын

    @@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 yes its often shittier

  • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    9 ай бұрын

    @@smidlem1117 You presume a lot without knowning anything about me. I know music in video games, and "music in video games is not the type of music he's talking about." That statement says absolutely nothing about my opinion concerning video game music. I was a music composition major in the early 90s if you need a reference point.

  • @KeithKong973

    @KeithKong973

    9 ай бұрын

    He didn't say his kids asked him about the music he said his friend did.

  • @steveclark9934
    @steveclark993418 күн бұрын

    When I started to care about music around age 11 my level of love and caring for music has not wavered higher or lower in many decades😊

  • @clarencethomas01
    @clarencethomas015 ай бұрын

    The biggest difference BY FAR in my opinion is less of a focus on listening to full albums, or even learning artists names for that matter. I know this is anecdotal, but I worked with multiple people who were millennials (as am I) and couldn't even tell me a single artist they liked.The reasoning was all they listened to was Spotify EDM playlists while they played Rocket League. I still have plenty of friends and acquaintances who love music of all kinds and know tons of albums, but these are all musicians. The appreciation for music doesn't seem to be there for the general public as much as it used to, like if you look back music used to be everything to most of the youth, probably cause there was so much incredible music coming out in the 60s and 70s. I've even been told that being into music is considered cringy now by people from Gen Z. Video games definitely have replaced a lot of interest that used to be put into music, whether you want to admit it or not. It just is what it is, not shitting on the younger generation cause there's still fantastic music out there, as well as video game music (Celeste B-sides is one of my favorite soundtracks ever) and also a lot of the bands you mentioned are very artistic and fresh, like BCNR, Squid, FIDLAR, MGMT, Black Midi, Thee Oh Sees, Nolan Potter Nightmare Band, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard (specifically polygondwanaland one of the best albums of the decade), just to name a few. It just feels like music has become a lot more niche, but I still love finding new masterpiece albums. sorry i got a little carried away.. i'm very passionate about music

  • @blackcatcommenter

    @blackcatcommenter

    4 ай бұрын

    Based comment

  • @dmatt1116

    @dmatt1116

    4 ай бұрын

    It's a sign of the times. I don't know if it's an under or even an over appreciation of music for that matter. Generations use whatever platform is available to them at the time they're living. Gen Z for example have the ease of using the internet where Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, etc. are the thing. So they are exposed to a plethora of different music, performers, and genres making it hard sometimes to focus on one or two bands. Some of these platforms were available when I was in my teens and early 20's, but never as streamline or as easy to use as they are today. We had the local DJ on the radio and relied on learning new groups, performers, and songs, etc. based on what they felt like playing. Also, when I look back, I had to update my vinyl collection when cassette tapes became a thing to only have to do it again when CDs came out. It's all relevant. But to say any particular generation lacks appreciation for music is an understatement. I think Rick means well, but it reminds me of things like our elders would say to us, "I had to walk to school uphill both ways in the snow..." That's the stance I think Rick means by his statements. He's a good guy and a fine musician. Take the good with the bad from anyone or anything. That's what makes it all so interesting in life, music, and love.

  • @jordanhouze1609

    @jordanhouze1609

    4 ай бұрын

    nah man as a music instructor I completely agree with this take you spitting right here bro

  • @bruh......2005

    @bruh......2005

    4 ай бұрын

    Never heard anyone of this generation sayin "being into music is cringy"

  • @clarencethomas01

    @clarencethomas01

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bruh......2005 they were two tools/bros, and one hot chick. I think they're just haters and jealous more than anything lol 😂 oh and they were saying it about other musicians, they had never heard me play

  • @ReedsRedactions
    @ReedsRedactions10 ай бұрын

    I have an 11 year old son that listens to music all the time and a 97 year old grandfather that couldn't care less about music. Generational gaps mean nothing.

  • @kimmux

    @kimmux

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm a gen X but had to sit through the bullshit of all the complaints about Millenials. Now that Millenials are older it's all bitching about Gen-Z. Everyone is trying to be so profound they don't realize they are just repeating the same cycle. It's like older generations want to blame younger generations for not having the same experience as them, but also will blame them if they make the same mistakes they did.

  • @ReedsRedactions

    @ReedsRedactions

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kimmux Very true. In the words of Elton John ... It's the circle of life!

  • @zimonslot

    @zimonslot

    10 ай бұрын

    but wtf do you still care about when your 97??

  • @ReedsRedactions

    @ReedsRedactions

    10 ай бұрын

    @@zimonslot I hope I'd still enjoy music at that age, but my grandfather never really showed an interest in music. Even when he was young.

  • @ReedsRedactions

    @ReedsRedactions

    10 ай бұрын

    @@critiqueeverything3297 I think part of that has some truth to it, but I also think that the newer generations have such an abundance of music to listen to that the industry has become much more spread out. I personally grew up in the 80's and 90's, but most of the music I listen to is from the 40's, 50's and 60's (Jazz). At some point most people will grow out of their rebellious stage and just listen to whatever they want. But maybe that's just me.

  • @homeaccount5943
    @homeaccount59437 ай бұрын

    The thing is, Rick Beato's correct, most of the time. The man knows what he's talking about. He understands music. He doesn't always understand generations, but he does most of the time.

  • @siberianhusky5874

    @siberianhusky5874

    4 ай бұрын

    And he was right here. The guy who did this video is the one who is wrong. And I say this even though I'm not a fan of Beato.

  • @AudioReplica2023

    @AudioReplica2023

    4 ай бұрын

    @@siberianhusky5874 He totally missed beato’s point on that video. Went waay over his head

  • @siberianhusky5874

    @siberianhusky5874

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AudioReplica2023 After listening to this guy, going way over his head does not seem to be much of a challenge.

  • @pedrova8058

    @pedrova8058

    4 ай бұрын

    oh no , the Beato's brigade !!!

  • @poison7512

    @poison7512

    4 ай бұрын

    He knows music theory but outside of that his music takes are 🤡🤡🤡

  • @EarnestWilliamsGeofferic
    @EarnestWilliamsGeofferic6 ай бұрын

    There's not a problem with Rick Beato. There's a problem with the lack of musicality in music, and young people either not knowing the difference or not caring.

  • @jonjuan2020

    @jonjuan2020

    4 ай бұрын

    If you think there's no good music around at the moment, then you're not paying attention. The internet has changed the game, so a lot of the genuinely talented artists are on the periphery & nowhere near the mainstream like they were back in the day. Young Gun Silver Fox, Lianne La Havas, Snarky Puppy, Thundercat, Louis Cole, Kamasi Washington to name but a few. And i'm Gen X in my early 50's, so a different generation.

  • @carlpanzram7081

    @carlpanzram7081

    4 ай бұрын

    If all music you know comes from the radio, it might appear that all music is lacking originality. You are looking at a single point of great and ever expanding painting with a microscope, concluding that it consists of only one color, because that is all your small field of view lense is allowing you to see. I could name you 10 genres you have never heard of. Innovative and extremely interesting genres, spearheaded by young bands and individuals. Just in the last 10 years the development within music has been CRAZY fast and wild. You wouldn't even understand what is happening, because you are probably stuck in the cultural environment of 30+ years ago.

  • @jakepierce1153

    @jakepierce1153

    Ай бұрын

    I agree but the thing is it’s not a valid point because if you bring that up you’ll labeled as an oldhead but it’s genuinely true

  • @chinmeysway

    @chinmeysway

    15 күн бұрын

    think on it more. what is musicality? like music that’s extra musical? sounds like you’re critiquing things like everyone you come across something, it’s avant garde noise / minimalism lol. like you want more notes per 5 seconds or what do you think it should be? i’m old too ps lol and theres always stuff you like that new if you try harder. there’s tons of older trash too.

  • @neonfroot

    @neonfroot

    2 күн бұрын

    ​@@jakepierce1153 they said the same back in the 1960s and esrlier

  • @boblupton583
    @boblupton5834 ай бұрын

    being an old geezer I totally missed this. i agree with you. very good. i had a sense of this, but until I saw your video. oh and by the way lots of geezers don't care about music too. on the other hand. I can only wish him continued success, thanks for making this

  • @patrickstjean7646
    @patrickstjean76469 ай бұрын

    I think you hit the nail on the head when you talked about Rick obssession with the concept of the "ROCK STAR". I'm Gen X, a kid in the 80s', teen in the 90's. I cannot put into words the ethos that surrounded these bands. It was such a huge part of our identity and community. But, before the internet, everything was like that. Movies, movie stars, toy fads, game fads tv shows. There was more excitement and momentum around everything, because promotion and distrubution was so much more expensive and restricted. Companies and producers had to pool their resources behind fewer projects, because there was only so much space on cable or radio. Pop culture was a more collective experience back then, and I wish my kids could have experienced more things that way. I think memes are the only thing that come close today, and that's why every generation loves memes

  • @Saffron-sugar

    @Saffron-sugar

    9 ай бұрын

    As a Gen X kid, I was told so many times by late silent generation folks or early Boomers, that we didn’t know what music was. Rock ‘n’ roll had been destroyed and we all had “plink, plink“ keyboard, music. I think it’s just something one generation hands down to the other 🤣

  • @patrickstjean7646

    @patrickstjean7646

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Saffron-sugar there's a lot of truth to that.

  • @herculesbrofister265

    @herculesbrofister265

    9 ай бұрын

    I think he's catering a lot to his boomer fanbase, too. Spews for views

  • @choobachooba3140

    @choobachooba3140

    9 ай бұрын

    pretty much. Memes and TikToks are only creative thing young kids do, top10 on spotify is 30-year olds that plugged into formula. They are not even sell-outs because they were never amazing. I remember watching Steve Vai in Crossroads when I was 14-15. I just saw an alien that night. Who can you watch today? Everybody is learning music behind a PC nowadays. Steve Vai learned from Zappa. We are fucked.

  • @jeremyreichwein9105

    @jeremyreichwein9105

    9 ай бұрын

    Not sure I agree with the "every generation loves memes" but the rest is well said. Imagine what this generation will be saying to the next

  • @ibassnote
    @ibassnote10 ай бұрын

    I think you make many good points here. Some Rick might even agree with. To try to distill this down: people have changed and music has changed, enormously! The world has changed enormously. I’m about Ricks age and I can understand everything he says. He is very insightful from the perspective of someone coming up in the 80’s and 90’s and he is trying to understand this next generations music. Good in him, most people his age are completely checked out. He is right about the quality of music suffering at the top. Much of what we hear, by the time we get to it, is corporate garbage. But a rock guy with jazz chops is just not a thing anymore. He’s right, there’s nothing like the music of the nineties, nor should there be. I think he is most interesting when he shows us what is great about his era, not what’s bad about now. We older guys love our era, as it should be, but nothing is the same as it was and never will be. Kids get together now and show things they’ve found on the web, their knowledge of things SEEN is encyclopedic or wikipedic. It’s just a completely different way to exist. We used to be value going to places, now it is what you have seen, not where you’ve been. But it’s just what it is. Rick is a good guy, trying to help, to inform, to relate. I bet his demographic is 40+ men. He’s not really getting in genZ’s business. He’s letting old Police fans marvel at a 70-something year old Sting. It’s good for something.

  • @maurotorres1802
    @maurotorres18023 ай бұрын

    I think his channel is great, he talks about music, he does great analysis of bands and their albums, I don't see anything wrong with the guy having an opinion on his channel. If anyone who doesn't agree with him can simply not join his channel.

  • @obscured.by.clouds.
    @obscured.by.clouds.25 күн бұрын

    Rick Beato is a goddamn saint and of the last of his generation who does this because he’s too passionate to not do it. He’s in his 60s and he still possesses the joy and wonder everyone loses way before they’re his age. he’s one of the best interviewers I’ve ever watched, he’s humble, down to earth, and just a solid good dude. It’s there’s a problem, Rick ain’t it.

  • @mychannel2054

    @mychannel2054

    17 күн бұрын

    Okay now let's not over do it! He is good at what he does but "Saint"??? Dude please....You are obviously one of his cult flowers...LOL!🤣🤣🤣

  • @chinmeysway

    @chinmeysway

    15 күн бұрын

    this video is argument against your beato groupthink maybe try again? that idea you share w beatoff is just so goofy and inaccurate sorry

  • @boopsnoot2807

    @boopsnoot2807

    12 күн бұрын

    Dude stop meat riding and try to look at things form an objective point of view and not a subjective point of view. You’re too focused on why Rick has to be right and why this guy has to be wrong that you’re missing the forest for a single tree and instead are just going down with the ship. Beato does have good points, but like you, he was also too subjective and was too reactionary. Culture has changed and shifted but a love of music has not. The difference is how we consume it and how we learn about it. Sure there are people now who don’t care about music, but there were also people who didn’t care in the 1800s too. Same as the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and the 00s. Instead of focusing on yelling at the clouds, let’s focus on just celebrating that music is still relevant, people still listen to it, and a love of music is something that is never going away.

  • @obscured.by.clouds.

    @obscured.by.clouds.

    12 күн бұрын

    @@boopsnoot2807 Going down with the ship? Meat riding? I think you read way more into that than any point that was intended. And referencing people not caring through any previous era is not relevant to today, because they also didn’t have AI creating music and removing the human element from it entirely.

  • @mediumvillain

    @mediumvillain

    3 сағат бұрын

    I mean, he's fine, I watch his stuff sometimes, but he can be wrong about things sometimes lmao

  • @McDiezel-iu9sv
    @McDiezel-iu9sv10 ай бұрын

    To be fair. Rick has many times talked about the rediscovery of old music through games and other sources on the internet. Many old songs have gone up the charts again 30, 40 or more years after it was first released. Alot because of youtube. My son likes alot of music that I liked some 30-40 years ago and it’s not because of me. It’s through youtube and games. That’s a good thing and Rick have been saying this time and time again.

  • @santibanks

    @santibanks

    9 ай бұрын

    which proves the point in this video: Rick is just rambling incoherent arguments because you are now pointing out that he is just contradicting himself on this topic.

  • @steamline432

    @steamline432

    9 ай бұрын

    ah yes the internet and video games are only good they redirect people to the music of Rick's time.

  • @AnthonyMonaghan

    @AnthonyMonaghan

    9 ай бұрын

    @@santibanks Exactly!

  • @darcyperkins7041

    @darcyperkins7041

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@santibanksNot really.

  • @hansmemling2311

    @hansmemling2311

    2 ай бұрын

    @steamline432 Exactly because that was the only real music. According to Rick.

  • @Guitarbeast37
    @Guitarbeast378 ай бұрын

    What's also good about Rick is while he exchanges his ideas and opinions, he doesn't insult those opinions which oppose him.

  • @PhrygianPhrog

    @PhrygianPhrog

    8 ай бұрын

    Unlike Adam Neely, who is a meany.

  • @pancakemaster8567

    @pancakemaster8567

    4 ай бұрын

    Unlike the author of this (embarrassing) video

  • @krollpeter

    @krollpeter

    4 ай бұрын

    @@pancakemaster8567 I tend to agree with your assessment.

  • @idiotburns

    @idiotburns

    4 ай бұрын

    unlike this maker

  • @brooklynboy1000

    @brooklynboy1000

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes he does. Total asshole

  • @maxx7733
    @maxx773316 күн бұрын

    Such a bruh moment. I picked up the guitar and learned it only to be able to play the theme for the last of us

  • @geoffcbr929
    @geoffcbr9292 ай бұрын

    Rick is a Legend,The amount i have learnt from this guy is amazing!I can't big him up enough!👊

  • @markkilley2683
    @markkilley26832 жыл бұрын

    As an old fart, I haven't enough knowledge to know if Gen Z doesn't care about music. All I know is the whole industry has changed.

  • @dirtygirl2468

    @dirtygirl2468

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe not but you should have enough common sense to know that the millions of people born between 95 and 2015 didn’t just magically stop liking music because internet. It’s ridiculous like all sweeping generalisations are.

  • @Benefacez

    @Benefacez

    Жыл бұрын

    Video games these days oftentimes have more intricate musical scores than block buster movies.

  • @ed.z.

    @ed.z.

    Жыл бұрын

    Do kids even have nightclubs and dance clubs and dance parties.

  • @markkilley2683

    @markkilley2683

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dirtygirl2468 There isn't much common sense these days. Most people don't play music, because of, they either don't want to pay for it, or because of self-righteous whinging neighbors, who believe people shouldn't be seen, and not heard.

  • @supertuscans9512

    @supertuscans9512

    Жыл бұрын

    No it’s just that most of the music they like, is utter shite!

  • @xxczerxx
    @xxczerxx Жыл бұрын

    History repeats itself. It's bizarre to think but gen-Z will soon be doing the "back in my day" schtick as well. Call it the elitism of age...

  • @bw2937

    @bw2937

    Жыл бұрын

    I already hear that from people my age lol (I'm 18). Claiming music was better in the early 2010s lol and how 2008-2014 was the best era of music.

  • @9002RPMS

    @9002RPMS

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bw2937 that was honestly one of the worst periods of popular music lmfaooo rn is sm better

  • @fenrirwolf7238

    @fenrirwolf7238

    Жыл бұрын

    @@9002RPMSuhmmm, no? There’re actually some quite nice albums that came out between 2008 and 2014. But ok, maybe for your favourite genres it wasn’t that great, whatever 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @michaelward1341

    @michaelward1341

    Жыл бұрын

    It's so hard! I'm 49. Back in the 80's I got so sick to death of Boomers droning on about how new music sucked, and how everything was better in the 60s. I promised, I'd never do that when I was older, but I have to fight the urge to say "New music sucks", and "Back in my day..." all the time.

  • @ed.z.

    @ed.z.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@michaelward1341 the Grammy Awards are coming in February. It’s always fascinating to experience the ratio between good music and the vapid shite that just happens to be “popular”. I’m looking for something that moves me, period.

  • @Jeckobandit
    @Jeckobandit6 ай бұрын

    Rick is absolutely right. The more you love music, the more you understand his point

  • @hadrienhartgers3498

    @hadrienhartgers3498

    5 ай бұрын

    Nope. You're just biased by age.

  • @aliceborealis

    @aliceborealis

    5 ай бұрын

    He sounds like a lot of my tired old boomer friends, just wishing for the good old days. I'm as old or older than RB, but he's he's full of it on this point.

  • @bruh......2005

    @bruh......2005

    4 ай бұрын

    Nah it's just a stereotypical oldhead take. I don't dislike him, but I'm tired of this "new music sucks now" saying when they don't actually make the effort to dig for some gold

  • @thabookwyrm

    @thabookwyrm

    4 ай бұрын

    I care more about music than just about anything else. Rick Beato is full of it, lmao If the guy spent half as much time looking for good new music as he did ripping on top 40 garbage, he'd never run out of amazing shit to listen to.

  • @ChickenJoe-tq6xd

    @ChickenJoe-tq6xd

    4 ай бұрын

    @@hadrienhartgers3498than what am I? I’m Gen z and completely agree with everything Rick says, just because you feel offended by it doesn’t mean he’s wrong, he’s saying the truth out loud and a lot of zoomers can’t handle it

  • @lanatrzczka
    @lanatrzczka4 ай бұрын

    I think you did bring up one really good point. I'm in my late 40s now and I really only know the older way of finding new music. I don't have a clue how to find all those bands you mentioned other than searching them directly because I heard you mention them in this video. New bands are simply "off my radar" unless I get a direct reference.

  • @garyarnold3141
    @garyarnold3141 Жыл бұрын

    I have a few criticisms of Beato too. His phenomenal understanding of music kind of outweighs that for me. I've learnt a lot from him.

  • @hanswurst9120

    @hanswurst9120

    Жыл бұрын

    Nah, go ahead. There can be no "oh yeah? then do it better than me!" kind of argument coming from authority. And no matter if he wants to or not, Beato has a huge audience and therefore authority. His opinion and statements influence his audience. And if he says nonsense - even if it is only sometimes -, it needs to be pointed out.

  • @Kevinschart

    @Kevinschart

    Жыл бұрын

    eh....i haven't actually learned much from him.. he has inspired me to practice more.

  • @asamiyashin444

    @asamiyashin444

    11 ай бұрын

    There are many people teaching music theory on KZread who have the same level of knowledge, if not higher, and they are healthier to watch. I mean, you can learn the same things from other people. He didn't invented them.

  • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    @dr.emilschaffhausen4683

    10 ай бұрын

    But are they interviewing the same caliber of musicians?

  • @BIZARBIES

    @BIZARBIES

    10 ай бұрын

    I disagreed with Beato a couple years ago when he was doing a live stream. He banned me. Lol I still watch his interviews though, but his rants are wack and I can't go for that, no can do.

  • @davidjunto1008
    @davidjunto10089 ай бұрын

    Ricks videos are an articulation of his experience and knowledge as a professional musican/producer. Its his point-of-view, and I have never seen him claim his observations are some infallible facts about the world, just that he sees things have changed greatly and is theorizing on why, how, and what it means for the future. His thoughts often evolve, which is a good indicator hes allowing new info to guide him more than just relying on confirmation bias. Mostly, it seems Mr. Beato mourns heavily the loss of Music as a dominate cultural force. Advancing technologies has given the power of making and distributing music to the commoner, which is both good and bad, but mostly radically shifted and unstoppable; so there's going to be a period of untethered flux before things settle into a more uniting experience again. Who knows how long that may take? Rick seems to want to preserve and communicate some aspect of music that is being lost in the shuffle. I appreciate hearing the musings of someone much older than I who sincerely loves music in both its existence and creation.

  • @skiphoffenflaven8004

    @skiphoffenflaven8004

    9 ай бұрын

    Excellent and wise take.

  • @BillKurn

    @BillKurn

    9 ай бұрын

    There are some things I like about Beato, and some things I don't. But I think that what he means is that digital media has sucked away the attention of younger people that used to be dedicated to learning instruments and music. That's what he means by "they don't care about music". Maybe true, maybe not.

  • @skiphoffenflaven8004

    @skiphoffenflaven8004

    9 ай бұрын

    @@BillKurn I think that is correct. But also the “commitment” to music, whether it be a genre, a band, an entire album. Once the album “died” and youth began only buying a single song by a group, there has been a loss of a commitment to the art. I liken it to readers today only picking out quotes/memes from a literary work without ever reading the whole work, let alone reading several books by a single author/collaborative author pair. The construct upon which most of us Gen Xers, especially, built our memories upon were more solid, less fleeting, compared with a digital download or stream of one song at a time by lots of disparate artists/genres. Which is fine, that is like radio. But most people I know that have only a “need for background noise” are those that typically do not buy complete works and instead skim the radio or create an mp3 list or YT list of individual songs.

  • @RONCASE152

    @RONCASE152

    9 ай бұрын

    Well said!!!!!

  • @dojyaaan9632

    @dojyaaan9632

    8 ай бұрын

    @@skiphoffenflaven8004 this is kinda just wrong (heavily anecdotal). albums are still a big thing, theyre just online now. people still "stan" artists and love them and have commitments to them

  • @user-zp8us9bq8g
    @user-zp8us9bq8g4 ай бұрын

    lol just realised this is the Spring Silver guy. Love your tunes, love the video!

  • @stevenboldt6489
    @stevenboldt64894 ай бұрын

    I'm 66 years old and used to play in bands. I haven't gigged since 2000. For a number of reasons, band gigs dried up starting around the mid to late 80's. Rick was a band guy who transitioned very well into other things and I like his videos. Naturally bands still exist but it's nothing like it was in the 60's, 70's and part of the 80's.

  • @siberianhusky5874

    @siberianhusky5874

    4 ай бұрын

    In other words, Beato is right.

  • @jeff7764

    @jeff7764

    3 ай бұрын

    The same dumb comment, not once but twice 🤦🏻

  • @iceWaterProductions1
    @iceWaterProductions18 ай бұрын

    It’s not stupid to think as Rick explains how kids bought records and they meant more to them than some kid who can’t even make it through the first verse of a song before skipping to the next one.

  • @martinwillinick6419

    @martinwillinick6419

    3 ай бұрын

    Correct this guy this video is an idiot

  • @hansmemling2311

    @hansmemling2311

    2 ай бұрын

    Yet I knew teenagers who couldn’t wait to come home after school to put on Spotify, headphones on and drop in their bed for some intensive listening to their favorite rappers. Listening note for note and word for word.

  • @phil6899
    @phil68998 ай бұрын

    Rick clearly isn't speaking in absolutes, he is formulating a hypothesis to the disparity of passionate musicians in mainstream society versus the decades of his youth. Clearly if he isn't a regular gamer, he's gonna be more distracted away from the music to embrace the learning curve and mechanics of modern games to engage with his family members in a meaningful way. Imagine trying to ride a bike, you block out other stimuli in order to fulfil the task at hand. Rick is a musical god and is an incredibly inspiring and remarkable teacher with a humble and likeable personality. He praises all his musical guests and gives credit to modern music all too often and sometimes just goes with a video title that is a bit more visceral representation of his thoughts to get attention.

  • @havable

    @havable

    4 ай бұрын

    I watched the vid when it came out and it felt like absolutes to me. Its why I started watching him a lot less. There is too much stuff on the internet to waste my time with trash talk about a generation the guy clearly has no clue about.

  • @rabarebra

    @rabarebra

    4 ай бұрын

    @@havable this is the problem with young people, cannot tolerate anything. Wonder where the world will go. Youngsters think everything will come easy to them. After the internet and social media boom there haven't been so many depressed young people ever. And not talking about over weight... lets see if you tolerate these facts. 😂

  • @CharltonCharles

    @CharltonCharles

    4 ай бұрын

    @@rabarebraSeems you got a bit rattled snowflake.

  • @hansmemling2311

    @hansmemling2311

    2 ай бұрын

    @rabarebra Bro I’m a classical musician and composer of 13 years and rock/hiphop for 15. I grew up with those genres before the internet and I can still see Rick Is full of bs. He doesn’t get it, the new way of things. Rather than accepting this and wanting to learn more, he does what every older generation does to the newer generations: keeping a distance and judging it all with a holier than thou attitude. Big mistake. Rick at some point was part of the youngster culture whose music sounded like noise to their parents.

  • @betoperdido
    @betoperdidoАй бұрын

    this was a very well argumented video-essay, and what i like the most is that it opens an intergenerational conversation between old school and new school rockers. cheers from a mexican millenial rocker.

  • @nightowlrecordingstudio6437
    @nightowlrecordingstudio64373 ай бұрын

    Rick Beato is right, Cheers Rick!!!

  • @cajonaconaquetebotou
    @cajonaconaquetebotou8 ай бұрын

    Como persona de la generación de Beato pienso que hoy se escucha más música que nunca, se tiene acceso a más variedad que nunca (no depende de que una discográfica lo publique para poder escucharlo, bendita sea internet) y el aprendizaje y educación musical es más accesible que nunca. No sé si esto e una ventaja o un inconveniente, pero envidio a los jóvenes de hoy. Ojalá hubiera todo esto en cuando era niño y adolescente. As a person of Beato's generation, I think that today we listen to more music than ever, we have access to more variety than ever (it does not depend on a record company publishing it to be able to listen to it, blessed be the internet) and musical learning and education is more accessible than ever. I don't know if this is an advantage or a disadvantage, but I envy today's young people. I wish I had all this when I was a kid and teenager.

  • @Instramark
    @Instramark8 ай бұрын

    I am 68. Pro guitar player. Good vid. Problem is lack of venue. I caught the tail end of the Vietnam era music scene which was everywhere and was glorious even though Vietnam was horrific. If you played in cover bands and had no ear training you would be hurting to learn songs because of lack of instructional base. Beato is right about that. You could and did develop your style in all that venue. Plus, you learned how to work audiences and club owners. Yes, the present offers great access to instruction and I love studying all kinds of theory not really all that available back in the day but........where do you now play live? What gig is there worth doing and how do you string them together to make a living? I used to play 7 days a week for hire whenever I wanted to, anywhere, any town. Not now....In your house in front of the camera red light is the gig? Musical yin and yang. Knowledge now, but no gig except the virtual gig. Not much dimension there, imo. So? Beato for general knowledge, but do your own thing because there is no real music profession, not that there ever really was like other jobs but now, no venue, no promotional industry, albeit mobbed up, leaves you entirely on your own, which...has its own unique opportunities. You can go from zero to hero on the net but it used to be a steady gig complete with the musicians lifestyle.........not now nomatter how good you are or better yet, how truly bad you are. Too bad though, the stories I can tell from being a 70's touring rocker just can't be relived today. Not just about sex and drugs but mostly about avoiding "the man" and the band of brothers and unspoken language music and how it transcends. This experience is a soul blessing that never leaves you. Computer games? I wouldn't know but if you have a real pin ball machine, can I come over?

  • @benl5341

    @benl5341

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah man I think you hit the nail on the head. I’m 25 and just started getting gigs after covid. I don’t know the world you lived in. I’m from New Zealand so there’s not a huge population. But god, there just is such a lack of places to play with ears to listen to grow your ideas. A gig is a great litmus test of whether or not you’re going down the right path I feel. You get a sense of who you are in front of an audience and that BUILDS YOU. but when I only get that once in a blue moon it’s so hard to keep momentum building, to keep your band motivated, to keep fresh things happening. I don’t know what to do really, I just take every gig that is thrown at me and hope to god that someone there will hear the music and feel what is being created and that leads to more opportunities. It’s all you can do

  • @hotrodjones74

    @hotrodjones74

    7 ай бұрын

    There aren't enough people going to live local rock shows. The internet might be a part of the problem with it. Now we can listen to anything for basically free for hours on end with a smartphone and internet connection. I have around 75 GB of mp3 files, which is around 3 days of music. All of this is much more than your old record collection back in the day. Back in your day going to a local rock show was a great way to discover new music outside the classic hits. Keep on rocking Pinball wizard 🎸🤘

  • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    7 ай бұрын

    Let's face it; most Gen Z people are socially inept. It's just a fact.

  • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    7 ай бұрын

    @@benl5341I feel bad for you man. You should find a city where there is a vibrant club/music scene. They are few and far between these days, but there are still a few.

  • @chriscampbell9191

    @chriscampbell9191

    7 ай бұрын

    Understood. In my large suburb of 100K people there are zero live venues. In 1980 there were probably about 15. And back then the city had one third the people. No places to play = no scene and no opportunity to develop the live music work ethic or to get known.

  • @_Information_
    @_Information_7 күн бұрын

    I still have video game melodies stuck in my head from over 30 years ago.

  • @pabrodi
    @pabrodi6 күн бұрын

    As someone who lived Beato's experience and "stopped linking music" after online gaming became a thing, I agree with him. Back in the day, there were fewer ways to socialize, and one of them was through music. Music could define what you wore, who you talked with, and your other hobbies. Everyone knew at least a handful of kids who had their own band or music group. Not liking music means not having that obsessive relationship with it, akin to what it was back in the day, as music was pushed to become a secondary medium-a supporting art form for other art. Even in pop music nowadays, the spectacle is more important than the music.

  • @mediumvillain

    @mediumvillain

    3 сағат бұрын

    I dont, and this is a good example of why it's wrong: it's a broad generalization purely based on a personal anecdote. So here's mine: I never at any point "stopped liking music" when I was playing a lot of video games, I listened to music while playing games, I listened to video game music while not playing video games, and got a lot of music from video games that included various contemporary artists.

  • @bakedbeings
    @bakedbeings9 ай бұрын

    Rick has his issues with wild generalisms and era-blaming, but I got the impression on that first line that he meant that games are so enthralling and require so much attention that they have so many fun things on hand that they aren't as likely to pick up and learn an instrument.

  • @craigusselman546

    @craigusselman546

    8 ай бұрын

    Rick is very open to hearing new music the thing is that with most modern pop there isnt much to hear,and you can see his sadness when there is nothing for him to champion.

  • @AutPen38

    @AutPen38

    8 ай бұрын

    Rick's generation grew up listening to the radio. Sound and music was channeled into his ears. Modern humans use their eyes, hands, AND ears when playing games. This multi-sensory experience is clearly more fun than being restricted solely to aural stimuli, and naturally means music is of less importance than it used to be, but I don't really see the point in moaning about it. Until nuclear war wipes out the internet and all our TV screens explode and survivors go back to bashing rocks together for pleasure, people are obviously going to be attracted to the most compelling forms of entertainment that modern technology enables.

  • @margaretedwards1366

    @margaretedwards1366

    7 ай бұрын

    @AutPen38- You just inadvertently proved Beato's point.

  • @AutPen38

    @AutPen38

    7 ай бұрын

    @@margaretedwards1366 It wasn't inadvertent.

  • @oldunclemick

    @oldunclemick

    7 ай бұрын

    Rick's only open to music of the genres he likes. He's only interested in championing that kind of music.@@craigusselman546

  • @Mbitj1andonly
    @Mbitj1andonly7 ай бұрын

    Interesting take. I watched that video and I thought he was making the point that the generation he grew up in was really into music mostly because that was the distraction of the day and Gen Z, on the other hand, might be less into music because there are other, more significant distractions surrounding them. If you look at the amount of money, time and attention that was thrown into the rock 'n roll and pop music industry in the 70's, 80's and 90's, it was HUGE and was rivalled only by the the Hollywood production machine. But since the age of the internet and the fact that it's pretty hard to make money in music anymore (at least not on the same scale) the focus is now on videogames. In fact, gaming is the top earning entertainment industry by a pretty massive margin. I don't know that Rick was criticizing Gen Z so much as he might've just been making a valid observation...which often sounds like complaining when it comes out of "old peoples" mouths and hits "young peoples" ears. Of course Gen Z isn't as into music as Gen X because media and money are no longer backing it like they used to. That said, musical performance by live bands has never been better because they can't rely on album sales to keep them going.

  • @havable

    @havable

    4 ай бұрын

    And yet, despite all that, my boomer mom still has no interest in music.

  • @Mbitj1andonly

    @Mbitj1andonly

    4 ай бұрын

    @@havable LoL... Well there's exceptions to every rule. You'd think growing up with the Beatles, the Stone's and Pink Floyd it'd be hard not to be into music 🤷‍♂️...

  • @PallahDaOracle

    @PallahDaOracle

    4 ай бұрын

    You are correct and there's far more on the idiot margin that only like pop/rap.

  • @hansmemling2311

    @hansmemling2311

    2 ай бұрын

    You are completely correct. Entertainment has been fragmenting more and more. However the cult like following that music can create still exists. Which is why successful bands still make it work financially. They somehow cut trough the noise or distractions and offer their audience a magical cultish experience. I believe this will become even more and more important over time.

  • @Persun_McPersonson

    @Persun_McPersonson

    Ай бұрын

    @@hansmemling2311 Except for videogames, which are multiple forms of entertainment wrapped together, including music.

  • @BenTOGM
    @BenTOGM4 ай бұрын

    A few good points here, for the most part well made. But by far my favourite part of this video is that long list of great bands you included. Particularly the 5-second clip of Mannequin Pussy, who I'd never heard of before. Those 2 chords were enough to send me on a hunt for the Audiotree Session and a nice journey into their back catalogue. Thanks for that :)

  • @aaronparys1750
    @aaronparys17503 ай бұрын

    Thnx your spot on .. I like watching him but he does live in a bubble when it comes to "NEW" music .. Soooo many new and amazing Artists out there .. and with the Internet it is way easier to find .. and yes you have to look around ( Bandcamp, RPM Challenge, University Radio stations, International Radio, etc ) .. not just spotify .. You're Correct in what you're saying!!

  • @RockfordRoe
    @RockfordRoe9 ай бұрын

    - "Our coming of age thing was buying records" It also was my thing being born in 2002. I wouldn't have known about it if it weren't from both my parents and the Internet. - "You could only buy a certain amount of records" I could only buy a certain amount as well since the prices went up by $15 on average - "And you would listen to these records all the way through" I do that too because the ritual is very therapeutic for my ADHD and I tend to pay attention more to the music when I play it on my turntable - "It was different music than what your parents grew up with, this was our music" It still applies. I don't recall my parents listening to industrial hip hop, indie rock, shoegaze, etc. Granted, my parents were into The Beatles as well.

  • @AutPen38

    @AutPen38

    8 ай бұрын

    But like Rick Beato, you are just you and you have a bias to your own experience. You are not like MOST young people. When I grew up in the '80s, the radio was switched on at 7.30 in the morning, and music was everywhere. One of the most popular TV shows was Top of the Pops. Today's kids spend far more time playing video games, or watching KZread or Netflix, or listening to podcasts, or chatting on social media than my generation spent listening to music. A lot of youngsters' experience of music is 30-second clips on TikTok. They don't listen to whole albums in the right order. The world has changed. You, I, and Rick Beato might not like the way that the consumption of music has changed, and we might not like that music's importance has been degraded by the rise of newer technologies, but it's just reality.

  • @RockfordRoe

    @RockfordRoe

    8 ай бұрын

    @@AutPen38 Dude, the point I was trying to make is that we still have access to older technology. The reason why it's not as common in my demographic is because it's not the only way to do so, and it's seen as old.

  • @muchanadziko6378

    @muchanadziko6378

    6 ай бұрын

    What you wrote above applies to young people who would watch Rick Beato Not to young people from 2002 in general. People born around 2000 had no need to ever buy records. By the time of 2015 most music was listened to on streaming. And that is exactly Beato’s point.

  • @25756881

    @25756881

    5 ай бұрын

    I was born in 1986. When I left primary school I asked Eric Clapton's Reptile as a gift. According to Rick I shouldn't exist.

  • @25756881

    @25756881

    5 ай бұрын

    @@AutPen38 how do you know? I see kids with earphones everywhere. What are they listening to? Alex Jones?

  • @balthasardenner5216
    @balthasardenner5216 Жыл бұрын

    Rick might be wrong about Gen Zs relationship with music, but you seem to be attributing a much greater attitude of criticism to the video than there actually was. He was just looking at differences in the generations without making value judgements.

  • @23ofSeptember

    @23ofSeptember

    Жыл бұрын

    Rick in general is right about the generational changes and how the internet has changed music and also how the internet and gaming have become more addictive. He doesn't need to be 100% correct. I feel that the younger generation is too picky and feels the need to throw criticism because thats what it wants to do.

  • @TF_Tony

    @TF_Tony

    Жыл бұрын

    "Without making value judgements." "How computers ruined rock music." Sure there, bud.

  • @balthasardenner5216

    @balthasardenner5216

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TF_Tony Quote ke where he says something bad about Gen Z, or even says that's it's wrong for rock music to go out of style. I'll wait.

  • @involuntaryathlete5874

    @involuntaryathlete5874

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. Rick is Great.

  • @JanBadertscher

    @JanBadertscher

    Жыл бұрын

    i feel the same.

  • @wasabiginger6993
    @wasabiginger69934 ай бұрын

    Very well done, thank you. As a boomer I am aware how my musical preferences have changed over the decades … and how I am very biased towards the what I listened to in the 50’s, 60’s & early 70’s as “the best ever”. While I have appreciated many of Beato’s interviews … I can’t stand his ‘expert’ rants that you are referring to. You are absolutely correct. And I admit that as a boomer I have no interest in exploring what younger generations are playing. It’s like … I have been there, done that … and just want to hear JJ Cale or The Allman Brothers or Joni Mitchell or Pat Metheny or some jazz or Hawaiian (not Jawaiian tho). It has to do with how one’s life slowly changes over the decades that one usually never notices … or just does not want to admit it. So think this is where Beato is … because aging is a bitch and one likes to stay relevant … when in reality … it’s ALWAYS the younger generation’s time to explore & shine, like it or not.

  • @jayfrank1913
    @jayfrank19134 ай бұрын

    I'm 60 years old and I was in Olympia and Seattle when one of my favorite local bands became "rock stars" and were over-hyped into despair and suicide within a few short years. I'm sure you can guess which band I'm talking about. Fame is the worst drug of all, even when you don't seek it, and it can destroy art and artists. Seeing you play Psycho Killer earned my subscription!

  • @ArnoldLokman

    @ArnoldLokman

    4 ай бұрын

    Damn, Kurt could be 57 this year.

  • @allancerf9038

    @allancerf9038

    3 ай бұрын

    If you're from that era and those places (me too, give or take 20 miles) curious, do you know the notorious "Tom Bonehead" of Bumwater, I mean Tumwater, WA?

  • @MurphysLaw996
    @MurphysLaw9968 ай бұрын

    Big rock stars like we had in the 60s, 70s, 80s and the 90s were possible only because the handful of record companies that could distribute records internationally were acting as gatekeepers. In the 80s I’ve seen bands getting rejected by record companies not because they were not good enough but because it would cannibalize the sales of one of the bands they already have in their portfolio. By doing that the bands that were signed had more space to grow to become huge. Nowadays anyone can produce a song in their bedroom and post it on social media. There’s no gatekeepers, once an artist can raise over the noise level of the pile of crap that is put online every day, they can build their audience that most of the time will be relatively small. Some of them eventually get signed but record companies no longer invest large sums of money to promote their artists, they expect their artists to already have a significant following on social media. They no longer invest to promote their artists because since there’s no gate keeping they can’t prevent another similar artist to become the flavour of the month and eclipse their expensive marketing campaign. The music industry has changed, nowadays we see more artists that have relatively small audience scattered internationally as opposed to big international stars with huge audience all over the world.

  • @stinghouseproductions8502

    @stinghouseproductions8502

    8 ай бұрын

    Social Media though will always keep music blander than it was, sadly. You now have to be attractive and have a salesman like personality/charisma. Being a salesman and being an artist are two different personality types. It's why, as open as the internet has made things, we have no great works of art from Gen-Z.

  • @joethompson9124

    @joethompson9124

    8 ай бұрын

    @MurphysLaw996 Exactly, well said.

  • @joethompson9124

    @joethompson9124

    8 ай бұрын

    @@stinghouseproductions8502 You're clueless and out of touch. Music is getting weirder and better than ever.

  • @stinghouseproductions8502

    @stinghouseproductions8502

    8 ай бұрын

    @@joethompson9124 yet you cite no music for me to listen to in order to prove your point. You just insult.

  • @joethompson9124

    @joethompson9124

    8 ай бұрын

    @@stinghouseproductions8502 Correct. I don't know what you're into. Why should I hold your hand? It's out there if you actually enjoy music and care to look.

  • @5WT000
    @5WT000 Жыл бұрын

    Rick has already forgotten more about music than most KZreadrs will ever learn.

  • @simonjames1604

    @simonjames1604

    Жыл бұрын

    he hasnt forgotten to be a boring old fart complaining about the kids today! its a dull take and he is a predictable bore for doing it, he is turning into grandpa simpson.

  • @synthoelectro

    @synthoelectro

    Жыл бұрын

    he's not hunting down the indie scene, the unknowns. I've tried a few times to shake his tree. The amount of pull he has on his channel would help to excel unknown artists, who just can't get a fanbase. He needs to see it. I saw it years ago when I formed We are the New Underground, with its label WEATNU Records. Do you know how difficult it is these days to find a fanbase? Nearly impossible. If he took his blinders off his eyes for one moment and looked around him, he would find unknown, non-mainstream music, I gave up the mainstream back in 2000 2003 / because it was getting so bad. If he were to start showcasing the underground music, people would love it.

  • @stevensingleton5179

    @stevensingleton5179

    Жыл бұрын

    When god said, "Let there be Music!" Rick Beato said, "Say Please."

  • @mattbasford6299

    @mattbasford6299

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Almark maybe because a lot of indy music stinks and he doesn't want to promote them. He doesn't owe them anything.

  • @Kevinschart

    @Kevinschart

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you know that "music theory" was created when Rick Beato turned his Sophomore mid terms?

  • @Nebulung
    @Nebulung4 ай бұрын

    It's akin to arguing movie scores are pointless or overlooked.

  • @DrMurdercock
    @DrMurdercock6 ай бұрын

    Video game music is more popular now than it has EVER been

  • @ErickMcNerney
    @ErickMcNerney8 ай бұрын

    I love video game music. I also love Mahler, Sibelius, Debussy and others. I think what Rick is experiencing is the sense of being overwhelmed. When you're not experienced with games, it's more difficult to take it all in. When you get used to it, then you start to notice more details, because you're not focused on playing well.

  • @phil6899

    @phil6899

    8 ай бұрын

    Bingo. You can't focus on anything else when you're trying to ride a skateboard for the first time. An elephant could literally shit at your feet and you'd hardly notice because you're unable to focus on secondary stimuli.

  • @darcyperkins7041

    @darcyperkins7041

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@phil6899You think he just learned about video games last week?

  • @phil6899

    @phil6899

    8 ай бұрын

    @@darcyperkins7041 He has said he isn't a seasoned gamer in his videos. I used to have a video game addiction and some games today still have a learning curve that distracts me from aspects of the audio-visual lustre.

  • @orestezanardo4468

    @orestezanardo4468

    8 ай бұрын

    So when they explicitly ask you to turn your smartphone off at classical music concerts they are basically wrong? They just need to get better at something?

  • @ErickMcNerney

    @ErickMcNerney

    8 ай бұрын

    @@orestezanardo4468 No. When you're sitting for the expressed purpose of listening to an orchestra play classical music, then that is what you need to focus on. Just like with a movie, the purpose of the music is different in games. For the most part, classical music stands by itself and doesn't need visuals or anything else to enhance it. Film and video games have visuals as a main component, but they are not necessarily the central focus. So the music is listened to in that context. For the most part, the music enhances everything and adds to the experience. That being said, a lot of music in games can stand up just fine by itself. Really enjoying the Skyward Sword soundtrack right now. kzread.info/dash/bejne/qXiW29yclqWrpZM.html

  • @MinPhase
    @MinPhase9 ай бұрын

    As a late Millennial, I do know and hang out with mostly GenZ people and as much as Rick's reasoning is flawed, his observations about lack of interests aren't too off in my experience. I rarely come across younger people these days who are into music.. like really into it. That number has always been small, but it's getting smaller I feel. In fact, this one time I was meeting a group of mostly new people, where one guy picked up that I played music and started talking about music. He asked everyone what they are listening to these days, and one guy just froze. Wasn't able to come up with answer. Then this other person says "you must be a podcast kinda person then". And he said yes, while many others echoed that sentiment. I think my heart broke a little that day.

  • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah I think this guy just took Rick's video personally because **he's** not disinterested in music. Most Gen Z kids don't really care that much about music the way prior generations absolutely worshiped it.

  • @bastetowl3258

    @bastetowl3258

    7 ай бұрын

    podcasts would just be called radio talk shows back then. some ppl just aren't really into music, and that's always been a thing. you haven't met every gen z person out there

  • @Sep45

    @Sep45

    7 ай бұрын

    That’s been my exact experience too. Sure there’s a few kids now that are Really in to music and say ridiculous things like music has never been better because they lack any real perspective but mostly it’s a lot of musical indifference I find.

  • @GrandHighGamer

    @GrandHighGamer

    7 ай бұрын

    There'll always be one guy. Honestly as a young-un I was that guy. My musical knowledge mostly extended to whatever was popular on the radio, and to this day I don't know who sings half the pop songs and could name maybe one Ed Sheeran song (shape of you?). I'm probably as musically knowledgable now as I've ever been, but I'd have definitely given crap answers in the early 2000s since my current interests tended to change often and I'm not a person that tends to have favourite-anythings.

  • @subbbass

    @subbbass

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bastetowl3258 it has not been always like that. In the 80ies (when i was a teenager) the release of a new album was an event and you would talk for weeks about it. a teenager would define him/herself about the music he/she listened to. Maybe not everyone but a big majority.

  • @Ep1sodeVideoArt
    @Ep1sodeVideoArt4 ай бұрын

    My goal in life right now is making sure no Gen Z person has to make a video like this about me. Solid work here, and delivered gently.

  • @AJ-ch2cg
    @AJ-ch2cg6 ай бұрын

    Lots of running with assumptions in this one. Obviously he's not saying "no Zoomer is into music," but there's a lot of truth to the overall landscape in terms of fluff vs substance, especially in the mainstream. And as someone who's immensely frustrated with Boomers' effect on the world in general, I don't find his takes condescending or "pointing the finger" at the younger generation at all. A lot of this just makes sense. We don't fund the arts anymore, we don't incentivize music monetarily like we used to, the record and streaming companies suck the life out of musicianship and musical innovation-it's no wonder the quality of music, as a whole, is kind of objectively suffering right now. Look at production budgets these days compared to what they used to be. They're basically non-existent. By going full-fledged denialist is to discount the value of music education, production, songwriting, and healthy competition in a given "music scene." The fans aren't the ones making the decisions as to who becomes popular; the corporations, their algorithms, and money are. That's not to say there aren't individual exceptions of great new/young musicians, but the "meta" trend is undeniable.

  • @tysnothere
    @tysnothere Жыл бұрын

    I've heard Rick say this and did get a little confused because I grew up playing a lot of video games and I think it went hand in hand in growing my obsession to music. I'm 19 btw

  • @eelamite

    @eelamite

    Жыл бұрын

    IKR. like especially the irony is that one of the most captivating parts of growing up on nintendo games not just the mk series, is the music that drew us as children.. im 19 as well

  • @Kevinschart

    @Kevinschart

    Жыл бұрын

    final fantasy has a couple soundtracks that I like to play for back ground music. rick is becoming a menace.

  • @DedsecEric

    @DedsecEric

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Kevinschart hahahahaha becoming a menace 🤣 He was wrong, clearly wrong... but, it wasn't a big deal. He was just obviously wrong. That's not very menacing hahaha

  • @dtb2229

    @dtb2229

    10 ай бұрын

    Right on! I was obsessed with the songs from my Super Nintendo/N64 games and it subliminally got me really into music. I got Tony Hawk's Pro Skater and it opened my world up to a bunch of bands I've never heard of, and I've been a music nerd ever since.

  • @lukasketner

    @lukasketner

    9 ай бұрын

    Even for us olds. I remember how much I loved some of the old NES music, TMNT, Ninja Gaiden 2, and even more elaborate stuff at our local arcade. You saw a lot of Nintendo rock cover bands popping up mid-2000s as a result, like Minibosses, The Advantage, etc. Video games were very musically inspiring from the first beep boop.

  • @johngiraldi1150
    @johngiraldi115010 ай бұрын

    In my day (boomer here) I had to walk to guitar lessons in the snow and take my lessons with frozen fingers and hear my guitar teacher tell me how I had it easier than he did because he couldn't afford to buy records (vinyl for those wondering what I'm talking about) when he was learning. I could complain that today's guitarists (musicians) can do everything from the comfort of their own bedroom but then I would be just like Rick in some respect. It's the same story because every generation stands on the shoulders of artists that came before them and exploits contemporary technology to leap ahead of those older artists. "Generational-ism", is a type of bias or prejudice against a group of people, based on when they were born and how that generation lived their lives or achieved their success. It seems to creep into conversations about how unfair it is that younger generations didn't suffer as much while learning their craft. Sorry boomers and X-ers, what makes younger generations life easier today also makes your life easier so you can live long enough to complain about even younger generations.

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    Nah, not really. It's not about working hard for the gear. I'm sure quite a few hours are spent today in front of KZread, practicing until your teenage fingers bleed, and begging for money on Patreon to buy that piece of gear you long for. However, what's missing today is the live interaction, meeting with fellow human beings three times a week. It produces better results than just one person trying to manipulate a sample in milliseconds to get it to "groove."

  • @misterkite99

    @misterkite99

    9 ай бұрын

    @@slydawwg yeah, shit music did not exist in the time of our grandfathers, I'm sure hahahaha

  • @Nick_CF

    @Nick_CF

    9 ай бұрын

    But do you have perfect pitch 😊

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    @@misterkite99 It certainly did but it rarely made it´s way up the charts.

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Nick_CF You can learn perfect pitch.

  • @nickepp4078
    @nickepp407811 күн бұрын

    I get what Rick is saying!!! When I was in school…… the cool kids wore band tshirts! Nirvana, helmet, primus, maiden, helmet…. Melvins, minor threat, rancid, pennywise, bad religion…….etc! Now, and I am a school teacher, see kids wearing gaming tshirts! ????? Right! My generation……. Wanted to start a band………. Now, kids want to eat Doritos, drink Monster and play video games! I can assure you…….. music consumption is way different! When have you listened to a full album fully…… all the way through……. 10 times! Or listen to music/ play music for 3-4 hours a day?????

  • @scummymulisha
    @scummymulisha4 ай бұрын

    Rick is right the barrier to entry is very low. Its not just music but movies and culture in general. In today's world it seems as if everything is just a remake with an agenda. It seems like the 90's were the last generation and even the youth are trying to relive it as some sort of nostalgia that they didn't experience

  • @Edward-MTBKR
    @Edward-MTBKR Жыл бұрын

    I'm 10 years older than Rick, and my parents always used to tell me my music sucked. It's just an endless generation thing, don't take it seriously. Modern music is always for the young, by the young, and if it were the same as what Beato likes, then it would be extremely boring and stale.

  • @rudygracia5573

    @rudygracia5573

    Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate/own/perform music that's WAY before my time.I prefer music that requires/involves technical prowess(some),and has beautiful melodies.Simple is ok too,but performing"fancy"stuff has served me well.Especially when playing for people who know/appreciate"Good".The younger generation pretty much doesn't.(In my experience).

  • @sandsmarc

    @sandsmarc

    Жыл бұрын

    Because quality and effort and complexity and sophistication are boring and stale, while the putrid pitch-corrected looped garbage on your nasty little tik-tok is exciting and new.

  • @bw2937

    @bw2937

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rudygracia5573 But simple melodies are so hard to actually write. What it looks like on paper isn't an indication of how hard it was to make. And the production complexity has taken the place of harmonic complexity nowadays.

  • @caixiuying8901

    @caixiuying8901

    10 ай бұрын

    appreciate your comment Edward, good man

  • @projam7534

    @projam7534

    9 ай бұрын

    17 yrs old here and I personally don’t like modern music, I love listening and discovering old music and my favourite band is the Rolling Stones.

  • @Caperhere
    @Caperhere9 ай бұрын

    He has a very good point. When we grew up, the only real entertainment we had was music. It was our common denominator. We lived to buy a record, anticipate buying it, getting it, opening it, reading the liner notes, and listening to the music, until we could recite the lyrics on every record we owned. That was our focus. Music was what we listened to as a community, music was basically what we were. That brings people together, and doesn’t require the short attention span video games develop in kids.

  • @steamline432

    @steamline432

    9 ай бұрын

    You're right. You're so right. Kids nowadays don't have anything like that. They don't go out and buy things (videogames, for instance), go to eachother's house to enjoy time with a common activity together (playing videogames, for instance), talk about every last detail of things (video games, for instance), get excited for things (video game releases, for instance), aspire to create things (video games, for instance). Kids these days really don't have anything (video games, for instance) that could unite them like music did, or anything (video games, for instance) to inspire them like music did to the young 'uns of the sixties, seventies, and eighties. No wonder kids don't talk to each other about media nowadays. It's also a shame that video games these days require such short attention spans and no real dedication. Kids these days are playing short, shallow games that take barely any time at all to complete, like the Breath of the Wild games (only about 50 hours long), the Dark Souls games (only about forty hours long), Skyrim (which can be beat in a mere 30 hours!) Minecraft (which can't be beat at all but rather allows the player to play for as long as their short short attention span permits.) RDR2 (around 20 hours of play time), and hordes of other games that barely take 20 hours to complete! Absolutely nothing compared to a 40 minute LP. There's also the price to be considered. It used to be that you had to save up money from grandma on Christmas and your birthdays to buy LPs, but kids these days can just buy video games will-nilly like. A mere sixty dollars? You've got to be kidding to me! Maybe if video games were more expensive, kids woudlsafdnfkdlvndslkfjdls hdhslkfjhds I think you get my point by now

  • @chriscurry2496

    @chriscurry2496

    9 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@steamline432your comment was absolutely not sarcastic and neither am I when I saw how on point it was. It was so on point that the point it made had a point. You got it. You understood so well the point rick beato made, and you of gen z know how other gens are so expertly that you made a point about their points. I just really want to say how not absolutely sarcastic I’m being when I saw that gen z totally gets music in every way. The ability to not be addicted to the video games they play 20 hours a day in no way influences their dedication to music, and their willingness to pick up a great album and listen to it 10 hours a day. So good. So much misconception about gen z. So much not sarcasm.

  • @jamesfoo8999

    @jamesfoo8999

    6 ай бұрын

    Both very good points 👍 Everything is quantity over quality these days. So many things to do and be involved in on a digital level that most things are just short lived and this makes them less passionate. Finish a game and move on to the next, not savouring it and replaying it many times because there are few like it. Listen to a dozen songs on KZread and because it's so quick and easy there's no passion over choosing it, owning it, placing it within our already large collection. There are many pros to the modern world, like you can listen to just about anything ever on KZread. But that pros comes with a hefty price in my opinion, and I feel it myself. That's the lack of effort needed loses a lot of potential involvement and passion for it.

  • @Caperhere

    @Caperhere

    6 ай бұрын

    @@steamline432 Sigh. Did She Mention My Name, Black Day in July, etc., by Gordon Lightfoot. I Saw It on Tv, by John Fogarty,. I was going to list some songs here that make you engage with life, but it’s not worth the effort. Sadly, I fear you’re missing so much. Garbage in, garbage out.

  • @Caperhere

    @Caperhere

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jamesfoo8999 Yes, the passion is missing. I have my parent’s records from the 60’s, my records for the 70’s on, all of my cassettes, both bought and mixed, all my CDS. There is a lifetime in there. A song can mean so much, a story told on a bed of beauty which surpasses mere speech. Such shared expression. Such depth. The power to be recalled 50 years after all the people around you at any given time, shared that song, and are contained within it. The Story of a Life.

  • @Cougar139tweak
    @Cougar139tweak6 ай бұрын

    GTA!!!! That was great to hear music from the 80s and country music!!! It turned people that would have never otherwise heard.

  • @ldhorricks
    @ldhorricks25 күн бұрын

    I enjoy Rick Beato's sharing of his musical knowledge and chops...I also feel he can get stuck in certain bias loops. I play music myself...and I enjoy learning the guitar parts of songs from musicians/groups I have never heard of...some of those you brought to my attention in your video. I'm 63, I listen to a lot of music...a lot of different music...and I play a lot of different music. I really enjoy listening to new music played by today's young musicians and recognising the clear influences from music that came before them. In my experience there are a lot of new musicians out there that display no shortage of respect, acknowledgment and appreciation to those that came before them...and you can hear it in the music they play...That's how creative legacy works.

  • @jamiecampbell1981
    @jamiecampbell19819 ай бұрын

    He is right Gen Z has less to offer music than any other since WW2

  • @cringeceo4626

    @cringeceo4626

    Ай бұрын

    are you even listening to music from gen z?

  • @brett22bt
    @brett22bt10 ай бұрын

    The problem with music today is a direct result of the over-corporatization of the industry. There are plenty of great young bands out there that will never have the same opportunities as previous generations. Corporate songwriters have monopolized the market, making it extremely difficult for emerging artists to break through. But hey, that's what happens when capitalism goes unchecked. This is one of many sectors where corporate giants have crushed small businesses and workers.

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    Actually, it was quite the opposite. Technology and streaming had a detrimental impact on the small yet professional studios, producers, and bands comprising individual musicians playing together. Consequently, we ended up with a highly streamlined roster of major artists, and a new generation of DIY musicians emerged, operating from their basements. These DIY artists are forced to handle every aspect of their music production. As a result, the basement musician is responsible for recording, mixing, mastering, writing, and producing their own music. We all know what happens when someone has to juggle too many tasks-it often leads to an overall subpar outcome.

  • @dimitrisdimitriadis4913

    @dimitrisdimitriadis4913

    9 ай бұрын

    "It's exactly the opposite!" (Proceeds to agree with the original statement)

  • @jimreplicant

    @jimreplicant

    9 ай бұрын

    Blaming capitalism🤣

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@dimitrisdimitriadis4913 The first post blamed capitalism, but my post indicated that technology has significantly transformed the playing field. It could be argued that advancements in technology are a result of capitalism, and I will grant that point.

  • @brett22bt

    @brett22bt

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jimreplicant No, I'm blaming governments. I said, "that's what happens when capitalism goes unchecked". I'm a firm advocate for a market-based economy, but it must be properly regulated to prevent price-gouging monopolies and exploitation.

  • @matttorrence2900
    @matttorrence29004 ай бұрын

    I dunno... I am a music teacher and I ask kids "What do you listen to?" and it's always "I don't really listen to music." And they're all interested in video games, but not rock bands. And they don't know the names of bands or albums or songs. And yes, the internet obviously gives you access to the sum total of human knowledge... and guess what? People are dumber than ever, with no memory.

  • @fgauer1
    @fgauer14 ай бұрын

    Everything changes. Everything. I enjoy watching Rick's videos and others, like Daryl Hall's sessions with well known musicians, to get a dose of warm nostalgia. But it just kind of ends there for me. There is nothing wrong or bad with Gen X, Y, Z or whatever navigating a new landscape with respect to anything, including music. It's the way it is, and it's the way it will always be. I wish them the same prospects for heartfelt enjoyment and connection as I do for any other generation. The 60's, 70's, 80's, 90's are gone. They will leave a great legacy indeed. But times are different now. The potential for true enjoyment, whether through, art, games, sports, connection, whatever, is still there like it's always been and I feel we should sincerely wish that the new generations navigate towards their own happiness through it.

  • @thedeadxtras9927
    @thedeadxtras99278 ай бұрын

    A very good shout mate, it’s just one man’s opinion. I’ve learnt a lot of studio production techniques from him and his channel but do t always think everything he says is gospel, it’s just his view, I’ll always make my own opinions. I’m a musician, songwriter, producer who spends most of my free time songwriting, recording, performing live. I’ve never really been a gamer but have played and enjoyed playing various games sometimes, I’ve always noticed the music in the games as it sets the mood of the game etc. In the early 1990’s the Bass guitar player in my band has a Commodore 64 while I had a ZX Spectrum 48k, there was a game on the Commodore 64 called ‘Another World’ this game, the characters and the speech of the characters inspired us to write a song years ago that we still play now called Another World’ the lyrics of the song in parts are from what the characters say in the game. Manic Miner on the spectrum had really catchy but annoying 8bit sounding music that still to this day goes round in my head! So it obviously did it’s job and stayed in my brain if 30+ years later it just starts up in my head.

  • @NeilCrouse99
    @NeilCrouse9911 ай бұрын

    For me, born in 1965, music of the late seventies and 80's/90's was the last era in which music was a much bigger part of people's lives. I believe, and this is JMO... that it's due almost exclusively from the influence of the internet. All of a sudden, the song on the radio that made you lose yourself for a little while was no longer as much of a release it once was. Now there's more ways than anyone could imagine to connect people and release tension. Back in the day it was music that connected people. likeminded music lovers would meet at concerts and bar dances more then than is needed nowadays to meet people.

  • @adambane1719

    @adambane1719

    10 ай бұрын

    Boomer vs Zoomers

  • @chain12bb

    @chain12bb

    10 ай бұрын

    No, that literally still happens. You grew out of it.

  • @StraightPunkEdge93

    @StraightPunkEdge93

    10 ай бұрын

    Literally met my best friends at a show grandma lol. People still do things dude.

  • @tombjornebark

    @tombjornebark

    9 ай бұрын

    @@chain12bb You might have a point there, however the Billboard does not indicate that.

  • @chain12bb

    @chain12bb

    9 ай бұрын

    @@tombjornebark so because you personally dont like the music, you think thats the case for everyone? And that people can’t Connect through it?

  • @MOTLrBlaze
    @MOTLrBlaze4 ай бұрын

    Ive never related more with the first minute of a video in my life, amsterdam and swervedriver crazyyyyyy!

  • @vince8081
    @vince8081 Жыл бұрын

    He don"t say genZ utilize internet, he say GenZ GREW UP with internet, and that's a world of difference.

  • @dennisspaanstra5652

    @dennisspaanstra5652

    Жыл бұрын

    i agree. the problem with this guy(sorry that i don't know who he is, but people seem to know him) talking about Rick Beato, is that he is not such a good listener. Rick compliments gen Z several times about all kinds of stuff they can do better. Like gaming better than him, and playing/copying all kinds of music we the older generation probably weren't able to play that well, because we didn't had 'the YT tutorial'. So that is what Gen Z is really good in. Even 'virtuosic' We(the old guys) had the advantage of the repetition. Because we had to try so many times with the LP. or cassette tape winding back. That gave us other advantages. But this guy seems really angry and does also the ugly-face-video-stop-motion-trick with Beato. That is not an act of of great intellectual capabilities. That is just showing that you can't handle your emotions with well-chosen words.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz9 ай бұрын

    I was born in 1997 and I remember frequently going down to stores to listen to music, I remember going in HMV and putting on the big earphones to listen to tracks. The HMV in my town closed down after the global recession. Not people playing video games, I will also say that I barely bought anything because it is very expensive and listened to music much more after I could access it for free, on things like youtube.

  • @layoung.
    @layoung.9 күн бұрын

    My son loves video game music. Huge industry. He seeks out that music. My son loves music so much he is always encouraging to turn the mic on and go live.

  • @bilboswagginz2808
    @bilboswagginz28082 ай бұрын

    Was that a DJ Shadow album cover? 6:57

  • @ed.z.
    @ed.z. Жыл бұрын

    Rick shows are phenomenal and his interviews are music magic!!!

  • @glennwisse6271
    @glennwisse627110 ай бұрын

    I agree with Beato. It IS much different. Is that bad? Meh, I don’t care. I’ll stick with music and I’ll continue to happily ignore video games and play guitar all by myself if I must. I love it. Peace.

  • @DE-GEN-ART
    @DE-GEN-ART4 ай бұрын

    strong "frightening the maidens" energy at that psycho killer set on the patio, you ookay bruh? lol

  • @alfonsstekebrugge8049
    @alfonsstekebrugge804922 күн бұрын

    This is a good video in the sense that it offers a deconstruction, assessment and retort of some of the points Beato makes, but I guess I (1984 born) am in a prime position to sort of connect the tissues here, because yes there is a bit of a problem with Gen Z and how they approach music from the vantage point of what came before. However, I have watched this clip on Beato's channel a short while ago about how artists are both bigger and smaller than ever that essentially makes the same point I would make. The next step to the argument made there is as follows: the big filter got thinner, so the canon died. What do I mean? Well, when I was young we wouldn't go to record stores. We would read forums, newsgroups and online magazines to see which acts were worth it and based on that download a song or two and then if it was good download or buy the record. This is akin to what Beato portrays as being this group of friends coming together. This is also akin to what happens now: people actively searching for new music through various means. Thing is: you will arrive at vastly different conclusions when the search gets more individualized. There are people I know whose taste is extremely close to mine, yet they listen to vastly different stuff than I do. Moreover I am absolutely fine appreciating the balls-to-the-wall production of girl groups in the K-Pop scene with hooks that absolutely murder you while appreciating some experimental piano fiddling over a completely wrecked distorted breakbeat as a Japanese girl whispers horrible sentences in your ear. Twenty years ago I would have no avenue to ever even find that sort of stuff, now it's simple. Beato has a tendency to look at the charts, see what is apparently popular, and take that to mean that this is what people actually listen to. It isn't. People listen to wildly different things. People also listen to way more and more varied music than they ever did on an individual level. Gaming massively helps with this. Play some Grand Strategy and you will get soaring orchestral pieces, play FIFA and you get middle-of-the-road genres but the songs are generally a bit left field, play older games and you will get chiptune, play Minecraft and you get minimalist piano stuff. I mean the variety is absolutely wild. Meanwhile Beato thinks 'old music kills new music'. No it isn't. I mean yeah sure young people sometimes find themselves interested in old music and why wouldn't they? There's a very long list of bangers there. However, there is an absolute horde of old people interested in old music because they never learned the tricks of the trade in the modern marketplace. They don't know what is out there, don't know how to look for it, lack the curiosity to actually go for it and more importantly: they tend to lack an upbringing that automatically instills this appreciation for variety that Gen Z tends to have BECAUSE of video games. So yeah, there is a skill check to music nowadays in that you need to learn how to search for the music you want. So what is the problem with Gen Z then, they seem to be able to pass this skill check usually, right? Yes, but the problem I see is that Gen Z doesn't seem to talk about music as much as generations before did, which is a point Beato made that I think is absolutely valid. Listening to a song 10 times doesn't move the needle as much as 10 people doing it. I understand how this came to be though, I mean the internet is an absolute shithouse nowadays. There are idiots and trolls everywhere and basically people flock to reddit, but reddit is nowhere near as vibrant a place as forums were in the late 90s/early 00s. Set up safe well-moderated communities and talk. Share that music if you think it's good. If you are Gen Z you might think I'm talking crap, but look around you and you will know what I mean. People tend to just consume. This wasn't the case two decades ago, it sure wasn't the case four decades ago. Engage more with the meta. This would combat the individualistic bent of music consumption and allow the best of the crop to rise to stardom and enter the canon of music history.

  • @Nordischsound
    @Nordischsound8 ай бұрын

    My passion for video game music is what led me to become a composer myself. I have a deep appreciation for music in all its forms, from 30's swing and electronic genres like dance, trance, and house, to rock, orchestral compositions, 8-bit and 16-bit tunes, salsa, and samba. And you know what's amazing? You can find elements of all these styles within video game music. From epic themes like those in Zelda, to whimsical melodies like in Mario, or even the rock-infused soundtracks of Mega Man-X, the salsa beats of Tropico, the techno rhythms of Extreme-G, and the metal vibes of F-Zero X. You can even discover the nostalgic sounds of 30s swing and gypsy guitar in games like Mafia (PC Game from 2002). The list could go on endlessly.

  • @snickpickle

    @snickpickle

    8 ай бұрын

    Actually, my older son got me into video game music. While I can't operate those controllers with 375 buttons to save my life (I'm fine with a joystick and a fire button!), my son is quite adept at both video games, *and* with the great music of today's composers -- which is *wonderful* stuff! Halo 2 was my introduction into some of the greatest music being composed right now -- for video games! Who knew! (Full disclosure: I'm in my early 60s as of this writing.)

  • @jamesmcmackin8773

    @jamesmcmackin8773

    5 ай бұрын

    Deus Ex is an exceptional example of many different styles being tastefully incorporated into a set of now-iconic musical motifs that creep their way into our memory of each setting and major event in the game.

  • @mraaronhd

    @mraaronhd

    5 ай бұрын

    I got into video games before I ever got into music, and their soundtracks certainly made a huge impression on me. The Mario Bros. theme song is forever etched in my mind, as is Zelda’s over world theme. I also remember being a huge fan of Streets of Rage 2’s early 90’s inspired soundtrack by Yuzo Koshiro. As a matter of fact, I remember a friend of mine and I actually pretending to play the SOR super mix song in my bedroom by listening to the song via sound options on my genesis. And the amount of great RPG soundtracks that I adore like Pokémon’s and Final Fantasy VII’s- they just made a huge impact on me.

  • @badnick6659

    @badnick6659

    4 ай бұрын

    You lost me at trance. 😮

  • @DawsonJBailey

    @DawsonJBailey

    28 күн бұрын

    @@snickpicklehell yeah dude halo has some of the best music in gaming. It’s better than most stuff you hear in movies. Also a lot of it was made using vintage synths!

  • @billbolton
    @billbolton8 ай бұрын

    That thing about being a super technical player in your own bedroom isn't something Rick is complaining about, what his point seems to be is he'd love these players to get together and hone their skills in bands, get more live music out there. He seems to suggest there is an aspect of their playing and development that is missing, and I'm sure that's fair comment for some. Unfortunately music isn't as valued as it once was and there are lots of other ways to spend your time. I've never stopped playing a video game because the soundtrack wasn't good enough as that is incidental to the gaming experience.

  • @BeachHouse83

    @BeachHouse83

    7 ай бұрын

    When you say “music isn’t as valued as it once was” what is that based off of?

  • @billbolton

    @billbolton

    7 ай бұрын

    @@BeachHouse83 statistics around the value of music sales, a lot of anecdotal evidence re the fewer number of people who regularly play an instrument

  • @PhillipGregoryMusic

    @PhillipGregoryMusic

    19 күн бұрын

    exactly, i said this the other day. you never see these instagram guitarists doing actual gigs. they arent capable of putting on a show longer than the 30 second clip that they are used to.

  • @Mark_Bayer
    @Mark_Bayer3 күн бұрын

    You’re doing gods work

  • @tommeyer6033
    @tommeyer60334 ай бұрын

    Great video🔥, excellent points😼, and I love Rick 😂 and I’m older than he is. heh.

  • @Dooweyful
    @Dooweyful2 жыл бұрын

    i remenber you, you are the youtuber that did the essay video on the beatles, great, i like you, i will stay subscribe, keep up

  • @churchofsighandthology
    @churchofsighandthology Жыл бұрын

    It's easy to underestimate how good Rick Beato actually is. I made that mistake myself once. I'd say he's very in tune to modern music, but also not hiding his own preferences. He's not afraid of bringing in other voices on subjects. He analyses all music from the same criteria - dynamics, harmonic structure and performance. I'd say he's one of the fairest voices on the subject of what actually makes music and musicians great, while fighting an incredible battle against the twisted interpretation of copyright law that plagues the KZread-era, and teaching people about music in a very unique and thorough way. Not every KZreadr has written a 700 page book of instructions about their subject. He's doing us all a great service by showcasing music from a modern historical perspective and actually going into detail about why and how it works, I don't see many other people doing that for popular music. Adam Neely does his part for jazz but he often has a more high brow or scientific approach and wouldn't go into breaking down a Blink 182 song. The reason that nobody else did this video is because it is unnecessary. Nobody believes Rick Beato thinks he's always right or the one and only voice on music, he's just talking from his perspective. Like you're talking from yours. But he's doing an awesome job.

  • @jnny7182

    @jnny7182

    Жыл бұрын

    Very well said

  • @Luke-ew6uo

    @Luke-ew6uo

    Жыл бұрын

    I like the video. I learned stuff and was entertained.

  • @agustindetlefsen6944

    @agustindetlefsen6944

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly, seems this guy took Rick’s opinion close to the heart and felt the need to push out what he thinks about it. Besides, his video doesn’t apply arguments against Rick’s ‘problem’, but criticizes small parts of separate videos which derive from different contexts, making them unconnected and partially irrelevant to each other.

  • @andrewchilton7186
    @andrewchilton71863 ай бұрын

    Excuse my ignorance but what is the song at 14:00 - I must hear more!

  • @user-bf6gz8ej4o

    @user-bf6gz8ej4o

    9 күн бұрын

    Raped by Elephants - Torsofuck

  • @andrewveale9481
    @andrewveale9481Ай бұрын

    You mentioned a lot of bands, I'd love a playlist!

  • @lordofallspoons4190
    @lordofallspoons4190 Жыл бұрын

    The thing that he also may have forgot is everyone’s a lot more alienated so finding band mates your age is incredibly difficult.

  • @vinnyc365

    @vinnyc365

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah right? If there was only some device where you can communicate with literally millions of people with similar interests.

  • @davisworth5114

    @davisworth5114

    10 ай бұрын

    It's being married to your phone and video games that makes it so.

  • @dio_hoestar_4204

    @dio_hoestar_4204

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@davisworth5114As if old people weren't addicted as well. Old farts are constantly glued to facebook. To the point where sometimes, I the 21 year old, am the only one not on my phone. It's frustrating wanting to talk and they just mindlessly scroll through facebook. It's not even a good social media

  • @j_freed

    @j_freed

    10 ай бұрын

    Well, the hip young kids will have to make it trendy & cool to meet IRL.

  • @dr.nigsopmcchortlefag9544

    @dr.nigsopmcchortlefag9544

    10 ай бұрын

    lol that youth in the seventies weren't alienated you just aint that unique

  • @nobodynoone2500
    @nobodynoone25008 ай бұрын

    They said the same shit about his generation and Television, the previous 2 generations radio, and before that, the proliferation of newspapers.

  • @kevinoconnor1396
    @kevinoconnor13964 ай бұрын

    'perhaps I'm wrong' .... yep ... I agree with you!

  • @michaellabarre6388
    @michaellabarre63886 ай бұрын

    What is that initial picture of Thom Yorke taken from? lol

  • @lundsweden
    @lundsweden Жыл бұрын

    I'm not that much younger than Rick, but I'm trying not to close my mind and have strong opinions. In other words as we get older, it becomes harder to keep our minds open. Maybe being comfortable with not knowing about everthing and an attitude of exploration leads to a richer experience of not just music, but of life generally!

  • @ed.z.

    @ed.z.

    Жыл бұрын

    OK. But, these days just stating an obvious fact gets people so offended. That’s very different than it was decades ago. For a few years in the late 60s and early 70s radio DJs played anything they liked regardless of label, category, genre’, or description. So, we were exposed to a wide variety of music. And school had music programs that encouraged music appreciation and expanding our experience, expectations, through exploration. I hope young people are discovering and sharing the universe of offerings. OK?

  • @lundsweden

    @lundsweden

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ed.z. Maybe it depends on where you live. Here in Australia, radio stations have been pretty much the same for 40+ years. Even when we had things like MTV (here it was a TV show, not a 24/7 channel) it had a very narrow selection of music, mostly pop. Music is now more easily accessed if we want to put in the effort.

  • @Heitzsche

    @Heitzsche

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ed.z. Uhh what being offended has to do with this?

  • @hagars35

    @hagars35

    Жыл бұрын

    It just feels like autotune has taken the talent out of a lot of music

  • @lundsweden

    @lundsweden

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hagars35 Yeah, but in the 80s people complained about synths, sequencing and vocoders!

  • @comedycompilations7748
    @comedycompilations77488 ай бұрын

    As a 20 you old kid who loves music, I have to say that Rick is half right. Some of his takes on video games are very accurate, the addictive nature of these games causes us to lose touch with reality to a certain extent. Nobody is innocent of this, even me. I personally gave up video games because I felt that I was missing out on life. Moderation in anything is the key. Furthermore I think part of his argument is that while spotify and other apps give us the ability to listen to anything, it doesnt hold quite the same value compared to previous generations, who had to buy there records and were much more limited. While this view is most certainly subjective I understand where hes coming from. While he does seem to have little hope for the new generations, I do think it's important that we don't abandon them. That feeling of abandonment by our elders is what drives the divide. We always need to be accepting and understanding of the times. As bob dylan put it, "The Times they are a changin". I think we forget that.

  • @xRickAstleyx

    @xRickAstleyx

    4 ай бұрын

    tfw you thik your own personal failings are reflective of everyone and not just yourself

  • @G-regTaylor

    @G-regTaylor

    4 ай бұрын

    As a 20 year old, you should not be wasting your time watching Rick beato.

  • @alexfons3667

    @alexfons3667

    4 ай бұрын

    well, the same way in which you say "hey, this happened to me, so it must be true!" I and a lot of people say "this has never happened to me, so it isn't true". It's not about videogames, that's the problem with Rick's hypothesis. It's about the capacity of attention of each person. I can't understand how someone can not have the ability to concentrate on multiple things at once and for some unexplicable reason believe there's a problem with those things they can't concentrate at, instead of y'know....thinking they are the ones with the attention problem? Tldr: If you lose touch with reality "because of videogames" it's not a videogames thing, it's a you thing.

  • @comedycompilations7748

    @comedycompilations7748

    4 ай бұрын

    @alexfons3667 I like how you took an entire paragraph to basically say that the problem is a personal problem. Like no shit... it's a personal problem that is widespread in society. They've literally run tests and determined this to be the case, that media is shifting attention spans. I've noticed that people with a problem will do anything to rationalize it. Gatekeepers is an interesting job, the people that always get mad are usually the ones the gate was meant to keep out. Strange...

  • @PallahDaOracle

    @PallahDaOracle

    4 ай бұрын

    Exactly! This smug bastard is being incredibly disingenuous with his takes.

  • @ohhansel
    @ohhansel4 ай бұрын

    Rick is pretty much spot on. Most of the music made today will not be listened to by future generations. While so much of the music made during Rick's generation is still the mainstay for good music.

  • @rabarebra

    @rabarebra

    4 ай бұрын

    True.

  • @AlystrZelland

    @AlystrZelland

    4 ай бұрын

    But we don't listen to /most/ of the music from Rick's generation either-just a narrow slice of the really good stuff. That's how it'll be with this generation, as it has been.

  • @ohhansel

    @ohhansel

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AlystrZelland we'll see about that. In the meantime, enjoy your Taylor Swift.

  • @msisles6278

    @msisles6278

    4 ай бұрын

    Spot on. We are still listening to Beatles and Stones music from fifty years ago.

  • @zinAab79

    @zinAab79

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AlystrZelland Not really, the thing is that Rick's generation music had the potential to trascend forever. It may be a narrow slice, but still a bigger one, with tons of recognizable artists. If we speak about the music of the last ten years is fun seeing how those viral hits aged very fast, and other ones feel cringe worthy, because a lot of those songs turned viral just for meme reasons. When I listen to ABBA in radio it feels like a timeless classic, it never will get old. But you don't listen Gangnam style or Despacito anymore, is music with a very short lifespan, you won't see those songs featured in films in the next 20 years. Media had the potential to make music trascendental, but now everything is disposable. Is so strange how before everyone knew and could recognize The beatles or Michael jackson, teens and boomers knew them, being popular back then meant being part of the world culture and music history. Now you see the spotify top 10 and is strange how very few of those artist have any cultural relevance outside the bubble of their fans. Media has changed since internet, how music is consumed changed too, radio now is just a legacy media, tv is dead, tiktok reigns, now everything is a niche, some are massive and other very small.

  • @rEdf196
    @rEdf1964 ай бұрын

    As an 80's teenager/ 20somethig I remember many articles on the argument of video games eclipsing music dating back to 1981.

  • @Peasant_in_a_tree
    @Peasant_in_a_tree9 ай бұрын

    Ricks right. Today's society in general is watered down.

  • @hicsunt5043
    @hicsunt50439 ай бұрын

    1. Music is in trouble, artist's can't make money selling recorded music anymore and have to tour and sell swag to make a living. 2. Music is in great shape, we have 500,000 songs at the tips of our fingers on streaming services, on devices we can carry everywhere. Which is true? Both? For learning musicians, I'm jealous of all the resources available now. Free lessons for literally any song on any instrument. It's fantastic. As a kid , I struggled to learn guitar and vocal, you either had a good teacher for in person lessons, or you floundered.

  • @brutallyremastered4255

    @brutallyremastered4255

    9 ай бұрын

    I couldn't even tune the damn thing: still upsets me.

  • @ronj9448

    @ronj9448

    8 ай бұрын

    Musicians throughout history have been broke. Only from the 1930s to 1990s were they able to make money and obscene amounts. But even then certainly not all but maybe the top 20 artists. The top 100 were comfortable and it seems it went down quickly from there.

  • @stevenboldt6489
    @stevenboldt64894 ай бұрын

    The difference is simply lack of band gigs theses days. My last one was in 2000 but gigs generally dried up around 86'. I see people on their cell phones in clubs now and I'm very happy not to be gigging anymore.

  • @jeff7764

    @jeff7764

    3 ай бұрын

    What a silly comment. There’s 15 great clubs within 3-5 mile radius that host an array of bands near my house in Philadelphia.

  • @johndelconte9915

    @johndelconte9915

    20 күн бұрын

    @@jeff7764lucky you that you live in Philadelphia. There’s very few in ocean county NJ. Other than the typical strip joint, there’s only one within 25 miles of me. I think strip joints use pre recorded music. Too bad they don’t go with live music.

  • @kebmel8668
    @kebmel86683 ай бұрын

    I'm a boomer, I love the music in games. Medal Of Honor, the first 3 especially, so much so that I bought the soundtracks and listen to them. I agree with you about Rick. I watch and enjoy his stuff, and thanks for the heads up, I didn't consider what you're saying, but now you have enlightened me, thanks.

  • @yellowjackboots2624
    @yellowjackboots26249 ай бұрын

    Condescending laughter is the best way to get your point across

  • @nichth6744
    @nichth67449 ай бұрын

    Whilst Rick dwells mostly on the musicians of earlier decades, these are the ones that have stood the test of time. It's really too early to say which of the current generation of bands will leave a lasting legacy, but I am sure that the best of them will be as revered as our current heroes, and someone like Rick will be making videos about them in 30 years time.

  • @turtnet3378

    @turtnet3378

    9 ай бұрын

    I don’t want to know the answer to that

  • @Terrible_Peril

    @Terrible_Peril

    9 ай бұрын

    I think part of the issue is that access to platforms used to be very minimal. Rick seams to bemoan the fact that anyone can make, share, gain notoriety and continue their personal creative output WITHOUT the big companies, the expensive gear, the private jets. I'm sorry but those days are OVER it seems, and I am not sad.

  • @tw19771

    @tw19771

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Terrible_Peril Rick is wrong and so is the video uploader. I'm sure Gen Z does appreciate music, the issue is that Gen Z is a victim of its own culture's musical bias. when the TV dishes you contemporary Pop and Hip Hop music, in some areas Country. Thats what social media is gonna dish out to you for reccomendations. There is no musical discovery. A lot of kids these days don't binge the local FM radio for rock. And if they did most of the time it wouldn't do them any good. My local rock station has been spinning the same set of songs and bands for the past 40 years. Also, theres no big time label focusing on pushing rock. The biggest labels even close to that is focusing on Heavy Metal. And Van Halen is sonically different from something like say Opeth or even say something like Sadus. I'm sure there is outliers, to all this. I'm sure there is some Gen Zer named Dexter thats discovered his dad's Black Sabbath and Led Zepplin vinyl collections and digs it. But it's the exception to the norm. If Gen Z wants things to change and bring rock back, pick up where the 80's bands were cut off and continue from there. They are gonna have to get their hands dirty, and start making music scenes in their cities and town like rock had in LA and San Diego back in the 80's. And push back against the label's modern pop barrage they are subjected to. Thats it. It changes when Gen Z does something about it.

  • @blib3786

    @blib3786

    9 ай бұрын

    @@tw19771 I'm sorry but as a Gen Z'er what you said is the complete and total opposite of the truth, most people my age that I know, even people outside my social circle, all listen to many different styles of music from across many decades. Classic rock, country, folk, indie pop, ambient electronic, you name it, my generation listens to it all, even the kids who mostly just stick to mainstream rap and pop will occasionally venture outside those confines. And ironically enough, it is largely social media platforms like Tiktok that have lead to this; I can name countless songs spanning across all kinds of different genres and decades that have become massively popular amongst people my age due to Tiktok. In complete contrast to what you claim, I would say--based on my personal experience--that Gen Z on average has far more diverse taste in music compared to any preceding generation.

  • @tw19771

    @tw19771

    9 ай бұрын

    @@blib3786 Do you? Because the last time I heard anybody listening to something like say Judas Priest besides myself was some old man I ran into on the street in Cali, who was blasting their Defenders Of The Faith record. I suppose you would have too, considering you would have had no choice not to as you walked by. I never said some Gen Zers don't have a wide taste and music, you lot seem to. As long as its not rock n' roll. And "country, folk, indie pop, ambient electronic, you name it" is not rock n' roll. You did mention classic rock, ...Okay but I don't hear you guys rocking out to something like Deep Purple. Although like I said in my first post, I'm sure theres a few of you who do. The closest thing to Rock n Roll ya'll seem to get and the heaviest you lot seem to get into. Is Lizzo Tiesto is not Rock, Daft Punk is not rock n' roll and so on. And heres the thing, we'd have actually new and popular mainstream rock acts rocking arenas. If the major labels thought there is a market to push that, but they don't. You know why they don't? They don't see the market for it. Ya'll aren't saying "Hey we wanna hear this." to them. Your generation aren't picking up guitars and sitting behind drumkits and writing rock songs. You guys aren't going out gigging, you aren't making Rock N' Roll music scenes. UMG and Spotify doesn't care that you listen to Bob Marley followed up by Rhianna. Or whatever trendy 80's pop song thats "cool" to listen to these days like Blue Monday, they are gonna give you Bob Marley and Rhianna. It's not rock, and they will give you what they know you want. This isn't even about your music taste, because nobody should really care whats on your Spotify's release radar. It's about your culture and your generation, and what music ya'll listen to the majority of. And saying you listen to everything just doesn't cut it. Practice what you preach, if you wanna hear Rock n' Roll, start some rock bands and start some music scenes. You even have a group already flying that torch its called Greta Van Fleet, those cats got the memo, too bad the rest of you guys didn't.

  • @jasonl1942
    @jasonl1942Ай бұрын

    Love ricks videos.

  • @ineedjesus7
    @ineedjesus710 күн бұрын

    so happy about the swervedriver mention

  • @kenfrederick6223
    @kenfrederick622310 ай бұрын

    Well everybody has their opinions and Rick is no exception. I think he's shown a lot of enthusiasm about rock music and keeping it alive.

  • @bradley3123

    @bradley3123

    9 ай бұрын

    i don’t think this video discredits ricks passion for music, i think this video is aware that his heart is in the right place regardless of his flimsy points about gen z

  • @nicholaschavira1743

    @nicholaschavira1743

    9 ай бұрын

    He shows a lot of enthusiasm about pop music. If he was a real rock advocate he’d be giving praise to the 100’s of rad bands of today that just aren’t popular in the grand scheme and using his platform to boost them. This video makes a good point. If the bands aren’t “popular” then they aren’t relevant to him.

  • @anniedarkhorse6791

    @anniedarkhorse6791

    9 ай бұрын

    @@nicholaschavira1743 He does, you knob. You obviously don't watch his videos. He often discusses obscure artists.

  • @anniedarkhorse6791

    @anniedarkhorse6791

    9 ай бұрын

    @@bradley3123 Apparently you didn't read the title. This video was made by a no-talent loser to get clicks by using the name of an established you-tuber.

  • @nicholaschavira1743

    @nicholaschavira1743

    9 ай бұрын

    @@anniedarkhorse6791 I do.. idk if you know what obscure means. And they aren’t even “obscure” he still talks about bands that are already relevant and popular. Do you live under a rock? That these bands are obscure to you… 👀

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