My response to Rick Beato.

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Get your ticket for my upcoming tour with Charles Berthoud and Ola Englund here ▶ bit.ly/3WBqCLE
    Check out the original and interesting video by Rick Beato here and subscribe to his channel: • The Real Reason Why Mu...

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @Bernthguitar
    @Bernthguitar  14 дней назад +89

    Get your ticket for my upcoming tour with Charles Berthoud and Ola Englund here ▶

  • @cosmicg4z3yt21
    @cosmicg4z3yt21 14 дней назад +1

    Every like this comment gets one like i play 1 note on my saxophone

  • @ericgiova1663
    @ericgiova1663 14 дней назад +828

    I think Rick Beato's point was about mainstream music. That which is distributed by the major labels, and receives the most media attention, thanks to marketing teams. These "artists" are treated like consumer products. Pop music is getting poorer, that's a fact, but the music galaxy around it is getting richer.

  • @josephperrigo7008
    @josephperrigo7008 День назад +19

    Rick B ain’t wrong my friends

  • @kingbai69
    @kingbai69 14 дней назад +564

    This is a prime example of how to have a real discussion that includes disagreement. It's positive, well thought out and articulated such that it's very clear where you stand but shows that you are listening to the other side of the argument and respectfully hearing the points being made. It's totally okay to agree with some and disagree with others while furthering the discussion. I seriously wish more conversations about divisive topics played out exactly like this. Great response Bernth! Like you, I too enjoy Rick's content and have my own set of experiences that can live in both worlds.

  • @pobsdad
    @pobsdad 14 дней назад +6

    It may be easier to make BAD music, but it's also easier to make GOOD music and get it out there. A perfect example would be REN, an independent artist with no label behind him, who released his album, Sick Boi, with nothing but RUclips, Twitch, X, etc for advertising it. Hell, he wasn't even in the country when it was released, he was in Canada having treatment for Lymes disease. No radio play, no interviews on major tv networks, AND he released the same day as Rick Astley dropped his album, and who was on constantly pushing it every time we turned on the radio or tv. So what happened? Ren made number 1 in the uk charts! He Rick Rolled Rick Astley! It CAN be done now. 20 years ago? No way.

  • @ShiceSquad
    @ShiceSquad 14 дней назад +128

    When Rick Beato said it, what I understood was "The Real Reason Why

  • @FleshgodApocalypse
    @FleshgodApocalypse 14 дней назад +490

    "Cannibal Corpse listening party" is basically how we like to spend our Saturdays.

  • @Beau2874-kf4rz
    @Beau2874-kf4rz 14 дней назад +35

    Wow. You gave a fair response without being a condescending egotist? Fantano should take note.

  • @chuckmarmo6244
    @chuckmarmo6244 14 дней назад +53

    Two things can be true and your views vs Rick’s are certainly not mutually exclusive. Rick has very clearly been speaking about the ills of mass-market music, while you are discussing independent artists. This type of scenario has already been described in a famous quote: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” The music that is being heavily promoted via mass-market media is unquestionably getting worse in most cases. But yes, talented artists can independently produce incredible music and make it readily available to everyone. There’s another famous quote I feel is appropriate: "If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" Without a label and their publicity/distribution power, a very limited number of dedicated enthusiasts CAN find your music, but WILL they?? Meanwhile the regurgitated AI, quantitized, autotuned songs that all use the same samples, presets, and 4 chords are flooding the airwaves, being featured in commercials, boosted by paid influencers, getting exposure at corporate music festivals, etc. Rick’s point is about the widely available and therefore mass-socially shareable music being degraded into a cheaply produced homogenized commodity. The quality and diversity of a 1974 or 1984 Billboard top-20 vs a 2024 Spotify or iTunes top-20 is striking, and not in a positive way.

  • @rictutero9033
    @rictutero9033 14 дней назад +149

    I have been writing metal music since 1996.. but because of Rick's points, I ended up just focusing on my IT-related day job & my music kinda took the backseat for decades. THIS video is a wake up call for me. This is TRULY a good time to be an musician since everyone has a fair shot at the market. - and at a GLOBAL scale, at that. Thank you for inspiring music & words, Bernth. There may be hope for a lot of us old-school independent musicians, yet.

  • @tonyjones1560
    @tonyjones1560 14 дней назад +446

    Reading album linear notes was definitely a thing for me. What brands of gear did the band use? What studios? Who was the producer? Studio musicians? Guest performers?

  • @ahind1234
    @ahind1234 14 дней назад +41

    I still remember when I got my first walkman and first scorpions cassette after saving for over a year. The novelty of taking the music wherever you wanted and having headphones to immerse yourself in was a big win.

  • @rebeccaschade3987
    @rebeccaschade3987 14 дней назад +5

    And here's I'm sitting thinking "What?! You had digital camera when you were a teenager? Not film? Ouch. I'm getting old."

  • @FrancoM7747
    @FrancoM7747 14 дней назад +95

    Album cover art is what I miss.

  • @Jack.Waters
    @Jack.Waters 14 дней назад +194

    This is so true. I created 2 singles. Instrumental with 1 guitar. 1 recorded on iPad the other on iPhone. Cost $9.99 each to get streamed to 250+ services. They actually got play on Spotify, YT, and Apple Music. Will I make money? NO and that wasn’t the point.

  • @tbsq1114
    @tbsq1114 14 дней назад +20

    There's absolutely no way I've would have discovered my favorite bands/albums if I didn't have internet.

  • @modelcitizen1977
    @modelcitizen1977 14 дней назад +112

    Pretty soon the labels will collude with tickeaster. "Want to play live nation venues? You'll need to be signed to one of Warner Media Group subsidiaries. And they're taking a 95% cut.

  • @monkeyking617
    @monkeyking617 14 дней назад +9

    I am "old school", I was raised in the 80s and 90s, and I can assure you all that listening to music was a very, very different experience. I learned about what music was out there almost exclusively through MTV and whatever friends had discovered. I also started learning to play guitar and bass, and in Portugal where I grew up, guitar players were as ubiquitous as soccer players, so needless to say I was immersed in an environment where music was treasured and was a common topic for discussion. I can't hold it against anybody for the environment they grew up in, but in so many ways the "next generation" simply can't see how diluted their musical experience is, compared to having to buy music one album at a time. Its entirely true that music used to be not only important and valued but also DELIBERATE, if you wanted portable music you had a walkman or discman and you had to choose in advance what you were going to listen to. Its not only about music but about art and entertainment, the fact that you have endless choices now days means you can listen to something for 30 seconds and just move on to the next thing like it doesn't matter, there are thousands of fantastic artist out there, but you don't value any single one of them, if you look up "cool dragon art" you have an infinite supply of it, so each artist is just a drop in the bucket. Its the same with the dating pool, in fact, you don't value the person you're dating because if they have some minor flaw that annoys you then just keep looking, instead of being satisfied. And that's it, the more you have the less you are satisfied, the less you value any one thing. But it can't be helped. The internet is an ocean you can never fully explore, and it is past the point of no return.

  • @simonwilkins6939
    @simonwilkins6939 14 дней назад +5

    Pretty much 100% in agreement with you here - I'm 64 and I've been paid to play off & on for over 50 years now, and I'm more than a little fed up with many of my contemporaries who say that music was better then / is worse now - I think that maybe there is an argument to be made that audiences aren't as good as they used to be...