Viral Music Phenom Jacob Collier: This “Life-Changing” Moment Unlocked New Creative Powers

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
  • 🔔Subscribe for more like this: / @guy_raz
    ☝Watch next: • Jewel: When I Was Poor...
    Jacob Collier has been called the “Mozart of Gen Z” by the New York Times. As a teen, his one-man-band performances went viral and led to a cold email from (and friendship with) music legend Quincy Jones - one of many topics he discusses in this episode.
    Get Jacob’s album Djesse Vol. 4 here: shop.jacobcollier.com/
    Listen to this episode on the go:
    🟣Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
    🟢Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/6W3s...
    (0:00:00) Intro
    (0:01:22) Jacob’s early life, learning to sing and play instruments
    (0:14:45) What makes a good singer?
    (0:19:45) His experience in school
    (0:23:45) Going viral on RUclips
    (0:30:00) Can anyone be creative?
    (0:34:45) Optimism
    (0:42:00) Record labels “didn’t know what to do with me”
    (0:47:36) What does the future hold for Jacob?
    (0:53:45) Djesse Vol 4 and collaborating remotely with big-name artists
    (0:57:30) Human choirs
    Mentioned in this episode:
    • Jacob’s rendition of Pure Imagination - • Pure Imagination - Jac... and
    • Directing an audience choir Jacob Collier - The Audience Choir (Live at O2 Academy Brixton, London)
    • TED Talk -www.ted.com/talks/jacob_colli...
    • Tiny Desk Concert (2019) - • Jacob Collier: NPR Mus...
    Connect with Jacob:
    • 💻Website: www.jacobcollier.com/
    • 📺RUclips: / @jacobcollier
    • 📸Instagram: / jacobcollier
    • 🎵TikTok: / jacobcollier
    Connect with us:
    •💻Website: TheGreatCreators.com
    •📸Instagram: / thegreatcreatorspodcast and / guy.raz
    • 🎵TikTok: / guyraz
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 33

  • @user-ps1lv8yv9t
    @user-ps1lv8yv9t 4 месяца назад +21

    “I revere my audiences..,they’re part of the band” 🙏🏻spreading so much joy to the world, thank you Jacob!

  • @JusticeConstantine
    @JusticeConstantine 4 месяца назад +14

    Thank you Guy for asking Jacob about how the absence of his father affected him and asking him with very good tack. Though all in all it is really none of my business about his personal life, it really spoke to me. Great interview.

  • @lynnzij1231
    @lynnzij1231 4 месяца назад +10

    Gem of an interview! So happy this just showed up as a suggestion. Jacob is an enlightnened being here to spread the love. Infinite gratitude ❤

  • @SeanFenlon
    @SeanFenlon 2 месяца назад +2

    The intersection of Guy Raz -- the greatest interviewer of builders and creators in our generation -- interviewing Jacob Collier -- the greatest musician of our generation IMHO -- is... in a word... transcendent 😎

  • @jrbergsten
    @jrbergsten 4 месяца назад +6

    “AI built to exaggerate current forms.” Smartest line I’ve heard in a month.

  • @user-ps1lv8yv9t
    @user-ps1lv8yv9t 4 месяца назад +8

    Just listening to this for the second time 😅the wisdom, authenticity and humility in this amazing human being is just beautiful 🙏🏻thank you so much for sharing it 😊

  • @sonofhamp
    @sonofhamp 4 месяца назад +9

    Listening to him is always a treat :)

  • @EannaButler
    @EannaButler 4 месяца назад +7

    Jacob is such a joy. Such a brilliant communicator, on top of being a brilliant musician.
    Exceptional talk! So well researched Guy Raz, you knew the detail and formulated good questions around that information. Easy sub, for me...

  • @chrisfireymusic
    @chrisfireymusic 4 месяца назад +9

    Incredible interview! I could listen to Jacob speak for days, I learn so much.

  • @tatasuzanne4316
    @tatasuzanne4316 4 месяца назад +9

    Amazing Interview, Jacob is such an interesting person and Guy is such a Good interviewer, letting the guest all the time to express, and asking very interesting questions. I highly recommend Guy’s podcasts !

  • @JohnTurri
    @JohnTurri 4 месяца назад +9

    Such a great interview. I’ve listened to countless Jacob interviews and I haven’t come across anyone who tapped into his thoughts on his own optimism and if it’s easy for him to feel that way; thank you for opening up that conversation.

  • @friederikechylek4744
    @friederikechylek4744 Месяц назад

    What an amazing interview. I was deeply touched by Jacob's admiration of great Renaissance composers like William Byrd and Thomas Tallis!

  • @Rosalei-or3rc
    @Rosalei-or3rc Месяц назад +1

    Absolute clarity and Truth in everything Jacob expresses. Such a pleasure to listen to. Thank you for facilitating such an inspiring conversation ❤🙏🙏🙏

  • @user-ps1lv8yv9t
    @user-ps1lv8yv9t 4 месяца назад +5

    Grandfather’s cutlery 🤣🤣

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад +2

    2:12 2nd language: avid listener, avid player, avid singer
    2:26 found music to be a very very valuable and rich companion to all stages of life right from the very beginnings to the present moment
    2:37 lucky to have had access to the breadth of music but also the curiosity of music like: how does this work; why do I FEEL like this when I hear this chord or this sound; how is the energy controlled; what are the human beings trying to say?

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад +2

    Excellent articulations of healthy, integrated, honest and possibility-laden thought processes.

  • @tofo8700
    @tofo8700 Месяц назад

    Excellent interview! Thanks for sharing

  • @sophiafakevirus-ro8cc
    @sophiafakevirus-ro8cc 2 месяца назад +1

    Glastonbury, "just a bunch of plebs"

  • @Cubase-sb8nn
    @Cubase-sb8nn 4 месяца назад +1

    Great conversation.

  • @jhoffa131
    @jhoffa131 3 месяца назад +2

    6 grammys buddy,....6 grammys

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад

    3:30
    I picked it up as I went along.
    I was very interested in how to be a bass player or a drummer or how to play piano. …there was no qualifications that I had other than my DEEP INTEREST…and I had
    1. a microphone (SM58)
    2. A computer
    3. Software to layer up
    4. these different sounds
    5. to imitate and replicate
    6. the things I was hearing in the world around me
    7. vocals
    8. harmonies
    9. the way they can layer up
    10. eventually more instruments
    11. lucky to have that music space/room.

  • @tristankline6676
    @tristankline6676 4 месяца назад +1

    Great interview

  • @dougitoonsdesigns
    @dougitoonsdesigns 4 месяца назад +3

    Cool, but he has 6 Grammys including one with Säje

  • @artofunk
    @artofunk 4 месяца назад

    @16:30… Dave Weckl ( back in the day)…
    p.s We Love Dave Weckl!!

  • @artofunk
    @artofunk 4 месяца назад

    I’ve added JC to my Mt Rushmore ❤️👍🏽

  • @anikdasdigital
    @anikdasdigital 4 месяца назад

    your videos are amazing. i really like it. i am a new subscriber to your channel. can i talk with you Raz?

  • @haaskakuolleiden2030
    @haaskakuolleiden2030 4 месяца назад +2

    47:00 "Jacob have to surprise us, and if he doesn't surprise us he's doing it wrong !"
    Maybe if they expect Jacob to surprise them with his music, him not surprising them would be the surprising thing ! Hence creating another kind of "surprise paradox" !

  • @bycarolinakobayashi
    @bycarolinakobayashi 4 месяца назад

    38:57

  • @tabor503
    @tabor503 4 месяца назад

    T-pain was the one who put me on Jacob.

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад

    11:48
    My attitude to creativity in general was: I will
    1. use the things I have around me, whatever they are,
    2. to make things I care about.
    The family piano - (like one of my dearest companions)
    Guitar at age 13
    Bass age 14
    Sauce pans
    Spoons
    It wasn’t so much a bunch of instruments. I didn’t have a huge AMOUNT to create with but I had a MASSIVE APPETITE for creativity.
    The one thing I ALWAYS had was my voice. I would use my voice to re-create sounds of instruments I didn’t have: trumpets, trombone, flutes, clarinets.
    Casio keyboard
    Or any keyboard
    contains
    100 rhythms
    200 sounds
    Bossa Nova, Reggae, Polka, Rock and Roll
    Tubular Bells
    Appalachian Mountain Dulcimer
    Casio to Logic
    Tons more sounds.
    Orchestral. Drum sounds.
    Enjoyed the process of learning, first hand, by touching these materials like “What does this stuff mean? What can it do?” and joining the dots between things I heard on CDs
    I re-created my own version of that for fun. That ended up being a very valuable way of learning those early ropes.

  • @geoffwales8646
    @geoffwales8646 4 месяца назад

    TLDR: "By the time I was 4 I grew bored with the violin".

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад +2

    6:54 I definitely wasn’t a theater kid. I didn’t parade myself about or exaggerate my behavior for others.
    I think I exaggerated inwards, perhaps: I would feel a lot of things vividly and I would seek ways of explaining them.
    I wanted to craft stuff I cared about.
    Being a craftsman
    appealed to me more than
    being a showman.

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 4 месяца назад

    9:20 singing lessons
    Cathedrial singing
    Tender fragile moving boys’ voice.
    Thomas Tallis
    William Bird