There are a bunch of comments on how quickly I figure out the songs. This is from ear training to develop my relative pitch. I literally have an ear training course that I developed 2 years that will teach you how to do this as easily as I do. The link for Beato Ear Training is in the description. Thanks!
Rick, you do have a hell of an ear, but this stuff is kindergarten. I do not have near the ear you do and I could do it almost as fast. What I cannot do is pull off that Allan Holdsworth lick! (or play drums, or play piano.........LOL!)
The fact that 23 isn’t divisible by anything (aka a prime number) softly implies that none of the strings are coupled (as opposed to a 12 string guitar, for example). If you were to tune the strings fourths apart (standard interval between bass strings) you’d end up with strings tuned both above and below the range of a full piano. I’ll take 2.
He's a (wealthy and well recognized) producer/audio engineer so it makes sense. Tools of the trade and all that. I'm sure his gear has paid for itself many times over.
@@DylanODonnell I hear you, but someone took the time to create something and put themselves out there. It may not be for you, but hopefully it brings joy to someone.
@@cg41 oh I totally agree. I love a lot of 3 chord songs. I’d just honestly like to hear ricks obviously held back exegesis. I know the production is “big” but we know that’s a euphemism.
You hit it exactly. It's sort of power pop,more than anything. The goal I think is pretty much exactly what you suggest, which is to get picked up for a movie or a TV show. It's pretty lame, actually.
Rick is like the sniffer dog of music. He hears music 3,000 times more intensely than everyone else, immediately dissecting every single note and every instrument. He then plays along first time after selecting the appropriate guitar. A very rare talent.
@CRAB-20 I have yet to see him analyze any real complex songs. The closest he came was the song by Segio Mendes and that wasn't really complicated. He was amazed that the chord progressions stayed tge same but would shift up half steps and whole steps, as if he never heard of that before Bur these were very common songwriting techniques in 20th century composition, especially in pop rock adult contemporary and metal.
@CRAB-20 Just one thing when you are listening to clean music where notes and chords are strummed and held for a second it is really easy to say, after years playing musical instruments, oh that's an E minor, or a B flat sus 2, I would love to see him listen one time to the first measure of Yngwie Malmsteen's Trilogy Opus Suite, Then sit down with a peace of music paper and write out what he heard note for note. Or do an analysis live of Dream Theater's Dance of Eternity pointing out all the time signature changes, and key changes. Or analyze BabyMetal Rondo of Nightmare with the Mischief of the Metal Gods intro, pointing out the key changes time signature changes, tempo changes, chords and modalities, inversions and modulations and do that live.
Anyone can learn it, my friend. When I was 15 I watched my guitar teacher do the same thing and my mind was blown. He assured me I'd be able to do the same one day. Here I am, 16 years later, with the ability to exactly what Rick is doing here. It's all about your ear. You have to learn to really "listen". That's the key.
Seems like the pop punk/emo sound of the early 2000s is making a comeback. There were 3-4 songs on here that fit that mold (with some modern production tweaks).
0:27 10 - Amnesia by MOD SUN 2:31 9 - SOS (feat. Travis Barker) by Sueco 4:47 8 - Invincible (feat. Lindsey Stirling) by Escape The Fate 8:06 7 - Breathe Again by Pop Evil 10:49 6 - Adrenaline by Zero 9:36 13:02 5 - Anarchy by Lilith Czar 14:46 4 - Love Race (feat. Kellin Quinn) by Machine Gun Kelly 16:48 3 - Boilermaker by Royal Blood 18:54 2 - All The Good Ones by Weezer 20:13 1 - Hollywood Sucks// by KennyHoopla, Travis Barker
@@danieldaniels7571 I wouldn't say dead. The good bands are there just not featured much cus they are not generic and basic like these songs. Rock does not die you just harder to find.
What I love about Rick is he is very secure with himself. He doesn’t feel the need to constantly rip other producers, or musicians . He’s very quick to differentiate between his taste and a good job.
I really do like how positive he is. Mumble rap might make me wanna rip my ears off my head but I should just chill and take a breath. The best thing about fads is they never last. Well, all the face tattoos sure will 😏
The Royal Blood song is the only one that stands out for me not just because it’s Swing time but the openness, arrangement, voice and the song itself is better in my opinion. Although he’s a Bassist/Singer he gets a huge sound without resorting to cliches!
Mike Kerr is like a hook factory. He's pulling from a seemingly endless reservoir of catchy licks. Those guys are head and shoulders above the rest, and who can resist that nasty bass groove?
It's funny, a lot of people take this seriously. Billy Corgan says his original yellow guitar sounded the way it did partially because of the color. I don't know about that but to each their own
If you stick with guitar for any longer than a year you'd be able to pick it up like that. Super easy riff! (Not putting it down) a lot of the best riffs are super easy
Love Rick's diplomacy when something isn't his cup of tea; always finds something to like. So many people seem quick to dismiss or trash things they don't immediately like.
@@KaninTuzi actually yes, because Hip-Hop always used to sample instrumentals from other music and then rap over it (or at least they did it A LOT in the beginning). Bad example! XD But I do agree with you that some of these songs have more in common with pop or rap than they do with a typical rock song. And it ain't elitist to point that out!
@@Adrian-zd4cs during the same period (early 2000s) we also had indie bands that were inspired by the avant garde and sound of the 80s. Thankfully there's always some evolution even if it's not in the pop charts
Pop Punk is in a sad place right now. Well the actual stuff people seem to be listening to anyways. unfortunate because there is heaps of decent pop punk around right now, it's just not charting.
Yes! I'm sitting here like, grunge lasted maybe 15 years, alt rock about the same with some overlap. Pop punk has been dominating going on 30 years. Borrowing from outside influences here and there from band to band. But mostly it's the same slush that's been around forever. No wonder all the zoomers I know who are into rock mostly only listen to stuff that was made 30+ years ago.
This. Why hire Travis Barker to play something that sounds like the drums were just programmed samples? His style and personality are nowhere to be found on that Sveco track.
@@Diatonic5th Yeah I think Travis just enjoys playing music regardless and most bands that have an inkling of substance already have a drummer so they aren't going to be asking Travis to feature.
Mr Beato knows more music than all those 10 bands together..His kindness and patience is remarkable and always admire how he approach every song as a fan-listener. I dont have that patience!!
It's passion, not patience. Sometimes even a young child can offer insight that changes your perspective significantly. It's best to keep an open mind if possible. It sure as hell ain't possible for me, LOL.
@@alext2566 Good point. Using your own self as a benchmark to improve and using other insights and good ideas (irrespective of who it comes from because your improvement is a function of the ideas you incorporate) give you the fodder to improve. The first person to then be thankful to is yourself - for taking the steps to raise your own bar. ^-^
Just love the way you deconstruct songs and are able to comment not only on chord progressions but vocals (yes, I hate autotune as well), different instruments and overall production. Rick, I recommend your channel to everyone who is interested in learning music. Thank you.
Cool. 7 formulaic pop punk songs by Blink 182, one by Lilith someone, one interesting one from Royal Blood that has a Josh Homme sound and one where Weezer is doing Weezer.
Travis Barker is the worst "rock" producer ever. The fact that has such a footprint on the current alternative charts is something I find depressing. There is so much more interesting music out there that is being blocked by this crap.
Love Royal Blood new album is great especially the song Oblivion. Where would rock be now without duos such as these guys, the White Stripes & the Black Keys.
Actually, you want to create something that he will INSTANTLY want to play along to! The best songs are the ones that have you reaching for your guitar or running to the piano... So many people think complexity equals brilliance when, in fact, the greatest rock songs are relatively simple.
I appreciate when Rick starts smiling at the artistic choices made by the musicians, sound editors, etc. He really just turns into a big kid around new music, and it's so much fun to see ^_^
..yup. I look for some direction from the young 'uns, but I can't see the salvation of rock happening anytime soon. That's ok, I have decades of music to draw from..
Yeah I also get that feeling. I'm asking myself where that comes from. Maybe because of the many four-chord loops in regular major keys instead of mixolydian and blues scales.
The Royal Blood song is killer, the Weezer and Lilith Czar songs are pretty good, and the rest I'd be fine if I never heard again. Rick is always awesome, though.
It was about the only track I would have personally classed as rock on the whole playlist.. but then I am aware that i am getting old and do not understand the tik tok generation.
@@davidgomersall7185 bring the horizons recent album “POST HUMAN: SURVIVAL HORROR” is worth checking out (Ludens and 1x1 are my favorites). All Time Low’s “Wake Up, Sunshine” is a good new pop punk album If you’re into heavier stuff, check out The Blade by SION (a duo made up of Jared dines and Howard from Kill Switch Engage)
You know the old joke: The quality of Weezer's music is inversely proportional to Rivers Cuomo's self esteem. So if you want to hear better Weezer tunes, you have to try to make Rivers feel sad.
well the critics made rivers really sad after Pinkerton, and thus the green album was born, and thus the mediocrity of weezer began. they have had solid albums since of course, but nothing like the first two obviously.
@@steadyrhythms9571 i have a theory that having matt sharp in the band helped form the sound. His falsetto and bass licks are a big part of those first two Edit: THIS IS WRONG. MATT SHARP DID NOTHING AND MY THEORY IS GARBAGE.
@@trackermusicforever matt usually always played root notes and kept it pretty straight. rivers also taught him the falsettos, those were entirely his idea. matt sharp leaving didn’t make weezer suck for a couple years, it was just rivers consciously trying to make poppier and more accessible music. correlation doesn’t equal causation
Imagine being in a band writing, riffing, jamming, rewriting, recording, recording, rewriting... Rick Beato listening along for 15 seconds: okay, hang on, yup, got it. Plays along straight away.
I'd be thrilled. It'd be like a polite and helpful chef Ramsay critiquing a dish you prepared and offering insight. The man is a music analysis machine/encyclopedia, you can't realistically expect to compete with that on a technical level, nor is it necessary to write good music.
You're acting like the bands actually do any of that stuff. What they really do is play a little demo for the music producers. Two months later, the band members come into the studio to record their parts. Two months later, the songs are done. If they actually tour for the album, the band has to learn how to play the songs live, because they had very little input into how the songs actually turned out.
@@John-tr5hn I'd imagine if you got to the point where Rick is producing your music you would have enough disposable cash to pay for a little extra time with him. Maybe I'm wrong though. Don't tell me if I am. Please don't ruin my fantasy
@@alext2566 I'm not a musician, but if I were, I'd try to write the best music possible. The better the music, the less you need a good producer. It's like would you rather be pretty or have a good makeup artist?
@@John-tr5hn I A different perspective is always helpful. Sometimes all it takes is a little noodling around then 💡 Hey that sounds pretty good. That's how the riff for Kashmir was written.
These type of vocals suck, they sound like autotuned heroin addicts. aka Billie Eilish "Bad Guy" - Can't stand that horrible voice, got more than 1 million dislikes so there is some hope for humanity.
These are all pop songs with Rock elements. Every instrument have gone through lot of digitalisation. Sound doesn't reveal the player, but it reveals mixers and sound engineers fingerprint. Real rock music in my opinion it's more analogue. There should be feel of the studio in the sound, with cigarette smoke and whisky breath on the air.
You all are forgetting genres evolve over time and borrow elements from new stuff that comes along. Okay some stuff might not be exactly like nirvana or ACDC, but that doesn't mean it is not rock. Pop nowadays sounds nothing like this, maybe it did back in the days but not now.
What surprises me in the current Rock This list is how a large amount of the songs actually sounds like metal. The massive production we are used to hearing in the metal genre is now very present in modern rock, alongside rap (and even trap) influences. It makes the list very intersting to listen to, with various genres and codes coming together
There's been some really good metal over the past decade or two that's completely inaccessible to a lot of people because instead of singing you get vocalizations/growling/screaming, kinda out of nowhere. I know plenty of those songs have huge audiences but they don't do well in the mainstream. if the REST of the ideas metal has are migrating over to a more conventional singing style, we're in for something huge. This reminds me a bit of how in the late 2000s/early 2010s North American pop music was suddenly like "HEY THIS EDM SHIT'S GREAT" and meanwhile all the EDM they're sampling/covering/etc came out in like 1996. Not trying to be a snob saying I liked it then first - genuinely just confused at how it was so overlooked and what the heck suddenly made it "cool".
@@evilspoons Yeah intersting parallel with EDM in mainstream pop. All it takes is some popular artists to bring new influences to mainstream genres, like the Black Eyed Peas did with EDM in the early 2010s. As for metal sounding music and scream singing, it's quiet intersting and even funny to see musical codes usually pushed away by the mainstream public getting their way in mildly popular genres. Aggressive sounds are more accepted when diluted it would seem haha
Yeah I listen to modern rock and none of them except the Weezer one is something I would usually listen too. Rockin’ Vibes, Retro Pop or Southern Comfort are much better than Rock This. I have my own playlist called 21st century classic rock with non metal modern rock and new stuff by the classic artists (McCartney, The Who, etc...). My point is there’s a lot of great non metal modern rock artists. Rick just missed Greta Van Fleet (#11 on the list). Great rock bands now are GVF (I understand the hate but I like them), The Struts, Inhaler (Bono’s son fronts the band), Black Pumas, Michael Kiwanuka, The Black Keys, Young Gun Silver Fox, Kings of Leon, Hearty Har (Fogerty’s kids) and of course the soon to be rock and roll hall of famers Foo Fighters. I know it’s kinda weird but Miley Cyrus is in a rock phase - some of it isn’t bad. Those are just some artists I like that aren’t metal.
@@erlandaspetkevicius7701 I was speaking production-wise mostly. The few songs I'm talking about are indeed not composed as metal songs, but the productions are built as such
I could listen to Rick talk about music for hours. I always learn something new when I watch his videos! I love how he approaches these songs with an open mind and finds things to appreciate.
@@reidedlund7132 compression is just to reduce the dynamic range so the loud parts are quieter and then the whole thing is turned up to make the whole mixer louder on average
@@reidedlund7132 Over compressed sounds are usually super transient parodies of the original sound. Transience is the initial part of a sound, so like the second you play a guitar string or hit a drum. If a sound has lots of compression the transience will become extremely over accentuated so every sound has a HUGE hit and sounds super plucky, so it can be really startling and hit WAY too hard, especially if a song has a dramatic shift in volume.
It does prove Rick's production abilities but even if I had those I couldn't work as a producer because most of what you would be asked to produce would bore me to death. Id last a week then quit!
LOL! Rick does not want to alienate ANYONE, so he finds whatever redeeming quality in this music he can find (hence "Huge sounding production"). I bet his inner eye is rolling to the back of his brain when he hears this crap. Rick is a professional indeed.
🚨 *Okay hear me out. I love this series so much. I know a lot of musicians and writers follow Rick so it’d be sooo awesome if he did an episode just like this but with him listening to song submissions from his subscribers. We’ve all learned so much from him so hopefully he’d be proud to hear our music reflecting his tips haha.*
I imagine a band playing and their guitar player passes out. The band asks if there are any guitarists in the audience that can play their set. Up comes Rick, and says “I can, give me 5 mins to listen to your Spotify playlist”. Show resumes.
That would be the coolest video to actually do it. Find a new band that shows up on the Spotify rock list and have them show up to his studio. The video shows him listen to 5 songs and then they play. After you hear the real guitarist and compare them.
Rick Beato is the most KIND human alive (super gifted and knowledgeable). 8 of 10 were really bad songs (Weezer is a very skilled band, cool new stuff), and Rick made lemonade out of urine. Mad respect for Beato...
I can't think of a single moment in popular music history where being unoriginal was embraced like this. I bet some of their hardest fans couldn't tell if they switched singers. The definition of "interchangeable".
Song: in drop Jb. one string is a goatee from a goat. The others are all taken from the bowels of hell. Rick: let me just go and grab my guitar that’s set like that.
Me listening to Boilermaker for the first time: "Love this, but it really sounds like a Queens of the Stone Age track." Me looking at the liner notes for the record: "Oh, producer: Josh Homme. There you go."
Agree the production goes with a new trend of Homme style although this is really him lol. I’ve thought the track though sounds like jack white and ledzep with the groove and vox especially
Almost half these songs on the list sound like Blink 182. A few others sound like nu-metal. Is modern pop-rock still stuck in the late 90's/early 2000's?
...just subscribed over the weekend and can't stop watching. I stopped playing guitar some 30 years ago, but Rick made me pick it up again. If you see this, Rick, you are a small 'g' - god! Keep doin' what you're doin', man!
yes they are - sound more real (cause it is) instead of overproduced/squeeze/compressed/elongated/fuzzed - whatever they do in the studio - to make it sound it like everything else.
It's because a lot of these modern rock bands are WAY overproduced. So Rick adding an actual real sounding electric guitar over top makes it sound more... authentic? real? good? One of those lol.
AGREE!!! Rick: "Sounds like he's bouncing off the E string," then one second later nails it.....If these bands only had half the WOW factor Rick has......
It's not just guitar that rick can talk about either. He can also talk about drums, bass And keyboards And the production And the effects that they use. That's what separates him from everyone else
Since watching this channel I've started hearing so much more in the background on tracks. I'm not an audiophile or someone who knows a lot of music theory, but damn I love Rick.
I really appreciate Rick going through all these songs like this so I can expand my musical horizons without having to sort through too much chaff. I'm not really feeling most of these songs, but Boilermaker is definitely a solid tune.
He's extremely adept at picking up "structure", but he is also very good at predicting or anticipating what the artist will do next. Or he gets very close. There's no limit in music to what can happen next, but everything you hear sticks with you and has some influence in how you hear and interpret "new stuff."
Weezer ain't the only band to get lazy/lose inspiration after making it big. Just the way it is sometimes. Guess it's hard to write deep meaningful songs from an Ivory tower.
@@alext2566 Yeah some people lose the touch what made them famous. For example it's ultra cringe when a person gets popular for songs about being poor, lve broken etc and then they go big and next thing you know they still do the same thing so their songs can't contrast well with their reality. You can't sing that you are broke even tho you live in a million dollar apartment or villa etc. Or bitching about your life while someone out there is actually starving and strugling. It just doesn't adds up. Those are most common themes while singing about success is pointless and even more toxic. It's like you are rubbing it all into others people faces "look at me bla bla bla". People should seriously start singing more about nature or specific more common sense themes instead of just love, love broke, and being poor or having a bad day. Done to death already.
@@DJGodaryD86 Or write more using more introspective, observational, or esoteric themes. Chris Cornell and Tom Waits are two of my favorites for this. They both stayed relatable despite success, because the music they wrote wasn't entirely dependent on external factors.
@@DJGodaryD86 So that's one thing Nickelback did right, I'm thinking of We All Wanna Be Big Rockstars, writing about what they have but from the perspective of a non-rockstar.
Amnesia, Adrenaline, Anarchy....anyone else see a trend here? I wonder if in the Spotify world you almost can't make the top 10 without the "alphabetical advantage".
I love these videos, but I make it an ABSOLUTE point, if I don't know the artist and I like the song, to just go listen to the whole thing on the artist's page (or whatever medium it's available). Lilith Czar blew me away. I need to seek out more music. Thanks Rick, you're an absolute gem for giving you perspective and exposing people to all kinds of music.
Does Travis Barker just show up at everyone’s recording session and refuse to leave until someone lets him lay down a drum track edit: that 7 string is gorgeous!! I’ve never seen a guitar quite like it, what is that thing?
For me this whole series is about watching Rick figuring out chords in a matter of seconds. It onestly doesn't matter what genre the songs are in - I love it.
Here for the Lilith Czar "Anarchy" Supremacy. I absolutely love her, she was former known as Juliet Simms and was once apart of a band called Atomatic Lovelleter. Her debut album as Lilith dropped just this past April with Anarchy. Another highlights on the album are King, Lola and a cover of Edge of Seventeen.
First time of hearing for me. Hers was the most original and worthy of all the tracks Rick played. I'm 69 and it's good to here someone who sounds fresh with a new twist.
@@jimandlizhudson2501 I am so glad to hear you say that, honestly, she is really worth the listen, her voice is very charismatic and the range of emotions and stories in her songs are also very captivating, each album or ep of her career truly feels like a body of work and not just a collection of fresh made songs. I bet you would love one of her old records with her old band, if you want, just search up Automatic Lovelleter Let It Ride, insane record, probably my favorite of her's.
I was a teenager in the 80s, I felt already that it was a subpar decade compared to the 70s. Then the 90s brought radiohead, placebo, muse and the likes, I thought it was pretty awful. Then we got Drake and Taylor Swift. I just ignore them and spend my free time to discovering incredible artists on yt, most of them are much older than me and thanks to the magic of yt I can enjoy their discography.
@@Prognosis__ Well, the late 60's and 70's was pretty amazing as so many musical styles were born, the 80's were pretty good, then Grunge hit and made Rock music Rock again, and it has steadily gone to crap since then IMO.
@@Prognosis__ Ah, the 90s were great, granted, but the 60s. and 70s were simply legendary. A couple could afford to move out ONCE from Mom and Dads at 17/18, have a crap minimum wage paying job, afford rent in something bigger than a closet, and could catch our favorite bands live in good seats up front for less than $20 while keeping the ticket stub after! I know, I know....whatever Gen-X, whatever.
When Rick is nailing a riff and expecting a chord progression or drums to kick in and it doesn't but when it does the surprise look on his face is EPIC! Man I'm so glad I subscribed to this channel thanks to my Big Brother!
There are a bunch of comments on how quickly I figure out the songs. This is from ear training to develop my relative pitch. I literally have an ear training course that I developed 2 years that will teach you how to do this as easily as I do. The link for Beato Ear Training is in the description. Thanks!
It's also because all these songs basically have the same chords progressions :)
Yo Rick, super big fan, you literally inspired me to start my channel, keep rocking my dude!
@@orsozapata hahah
Rick, you do have a hell of an ear, but this stuff is kindergarten. I do not have near the ear you do and I could do it almost as fast. What I cannot do is pull off that Allan Holdsworth lick! (or play drums, or play piano.........LOL!)
Anyone who's been playing guitar as long has you have should be able to do this.
Rick Beato be like 'oh they play a 23 string ukulele bass, lets go get my 23 string ukulele bass'
😂 he's 💎
The fact that 23 isn’t divisible by anything (aka a prime number) softly implies that none of the strings are coupled (as opposed to a 12 string guitar, for example). If you were to tune the strings fourths apart (standard interval between bass strings) you’d end up with strings tuned both above and below the range of a full piano.
I’ll take 2.
best comment ever
Yeah it’s definitely tuned down step and a half but I can still play it on this guitar lol
He's a (wealthy and well recognized) producer/audio engineer so it makes sense. Tools of the trade and all that. I'm sure his gear has paid for itself many times over.
There’s nothing but a love of music here. No judgement, just a simple “that’s cool” and instant strumming like he wrote it 10 years ago.
I love listening to Rick talk about music. Gives me a want to go get to playing myself.
I wouldn’t mind a bit of “judgement” on some of em ;)
@@daviddavis1322 I gave up on my dream decades ago, but find myself wanting to pick it up again
@@DylanODonnell I hear you, but someone took the time to create something and put themselves out there. It may not be for you, but hopefully it brings joy to someone.
@@cg41 oh I totally agree. I love a lot of 3 chord songs. I’d just honestly like to hear ricks obviously held back exegesis. I know the production is “big” but we know that’s a euphemism.
Why do most these songs sound like they would be on the ending credits to a Spider-Man movie
or American Pie
@@heavenorhell2024 Then they'd be the montage scene in the film's 2nd act.
cos they're quite generic sounding, unfortunately.
EXACTLY
You hit it exactly. It's sort of power pop,more than anything. The goal I think is pretty much exactly what you suggest, which is to get picked up for a movie or a TV show. It's pretty lame, actually.
Rick is like the sniffer dog of music. He hears music 3,000 times more intensely than everyone else, immediately dissecting every single note and every instrument. He then plays along first time after selecting the appropriate guitar. A very rare talent.
You guys are aware he spends 15 hours editing these videos, they aren't live and spontaneous.
@@gerardcote8391 🙄 Watch the videos he does with his son. Even he can do it, almost better...
@CRAB-20 I have yet to see him analyze any real complex songs.
The closest he came was the song by Segio Mendes and that wasn't really complicated.
He was amazed that the chord progressions stayed tge same but would shift up half steps and whole steps, as if he never heard of that before
Bur these were very common songwriting techniques in 20th century composition, especially in pop rock adult contemporary and metal.
@CRAB-20 Just one thing when you are listening to clean music where notes and chords are strummed and held for a second it is really easy to say, after years playing musical instruments, oh that's an E minor, or a B flat sus 2,
I would love to see him listen one time to the first measure of Yngwie Malmsteen's Trilogy Opus Suite, Then sit down with a peace of music paper and write out what he heard note for note. Or do an analysis live of Dream Theater's Dance of Eternity pointing out all the time signature changes, and key changes.
Or analyze BabyMetal Rondo of Nightmare with the Mischief of the Metal Gods intro, pointing out the key changes time signature changes, tempo changes, chords and modalities, inversions and modulations and do that live.
Anyone can learn it, my friend. When I was 15 I watched my guitar teacher do the same thing and my mind was blown. He assured me I'd be able to do the same one day.
Here I am, 16 years later, with the ability to exactly what Rick is doing here. It's all about your ear. You have to learn to really "listen". That's the key.
Seems like the pop punk/emo sound of the early 2000s is making a comeback. There were 3-4 songs on here that fit that mold (with some modern production tweaks).
If only that were true. Emo never dies.
maybe the first one, the rest doesnt sound like anything i heard on the 2000s
With "modern production" you mean horribly autotuned?
Also as an Italian, I'm waiting for Rick to review Maneskin... They really, really remind me of Rock-Pop and Pop-Punk bands from the "Noughties".
@@Baalicho Bro hollywood sucks is pure early Blink (that was actually in the 90's lol, but it got more popular in the 2000's)
0:27 10 - Amnesia by MOD SUN
2:31 9 - SOS (feat. Travis Barker) by Sueco
4:47 8 - Invincible (feat. Lindsey Stirling) by Escape The Fate
8:06 7 - Breathe Again by Pop Evil
10:49 6 - Adrenaline by Zero 9:36
13:02 5 - Anarchy by Lilith Czar
14:46 4 - Love Race (feat. Kellin Quinn) by Machine Gun Kelly
16:48 3 - Boilermaker by Royal Blood
18:54 2 - All The Good Ones by Weezer
20:13 1 - Hollywood Sucks// by KennyHoopla, Travis Barker
Breathe Again was a decent song.
Thx man
Most of the rock songs sound like pop songs just with heavier guitar.
Pop punk you mean?
That’s because rock is dead
@@danieldaniels7571 Probably true. Why I keep listening to old albums.
@@danieldaniels7571 I wouldn't say dead. The good bands are there just not featured much cus they are not generic and basic like these songs. Rock does not die you just harder to find.
I think thats a good think
sure Power Pop Punk but even metal songs that have great chord structures and melodic vocals sound good to me
So apparently pop punk is back, and everyone is using the same chord progressions.
I thought it was a bit I've heard it all before but better, The better Punk (Rock Pop) is coming out of the U.K at the moment .
@@brewsyyg Post punk is having a slight resurgence as well.
@@brewsyyg
Japan.
Nu metal as well it seems.
the same chord progressions never stopped being used
When Rick says a song "sounds great," he's not saying the song is great. He means it was mixed well.
And that is him not wanting to alienate anyone! As soon as that camera turned off, I bet he said 'That was tuff to get through with a straight face'
Correct
Or he could actually like the music. Having an open mind is a thing.
I’m exactly Rick’s age and play rock in a band. I’ll bet it was pretty tough for him to even listen to these highly produced sounds (Rock Songs?).
@@ooniak36 I think it is cool he does this, as I wouldn't have a clue what the top 10 'rock' songs of today sound like. Unfortunately, now I do! LOL
For me, this is more about watching Rick’s reaction than listening to what’s on the list.
8:14 looks awesome!
Yeah! I love it too.
Also, 8:20 will be great for gifs 😂
@@martiboucat Totally!
Not to mention how he ‘doesn’t’ react… restraint is definitely in tact. 😅👍
SO darn true! I laughed hard when I saw his reaction to the auto tune.
We need an "I listened to the Top 10 Eurovision songs", it would be ace!
And a what makes this song great for zitti e buoni
This would be too premium of content
What I love about Rick is he is very secure with himself. He doesn’t feel the need to constantly rip other producers, or musicians . He’s very quick to differentiate between his taste and a good job.
Agreed. He doesn't need to rip on people just because it isn't necessarily his type of music. He can recognize talent in songs.
@@emjfotografi he always find some merit where frankly there is hardly any.
I really do like how positive he is. Mumble rap might make me wanna rip my ears off my head but I should just chill and take a breath. The best thing about fads is they never last. Well, all the face tattoos sure will 😏
Yes
The Royal Blood song is the only one that stands out for me not just because it’s Swing time but the openness, arrangement, voice and the song itself is better in my opinion. Although he’s a Bassist/Singer he gets a huge sound without resorting to cliches!
Mike Kerr is like a hook factory. He's pulling from a seemingly endless reservoir of catchy licks. Those guys are head and shoulders above the rest, and who can resist that nasty bass groove?
Love Royal Blood. The rest of this list is awful
Great track, Josh Homme's influence is all over it. I believe he produced one of the other tracks from this LP.
Stands out as the only rock song in the list.
Actually kind of reminds me of Jack White's solo work.
I reckon Rick could tell the color of a guitar just by listening to it😀
Laughed way to hard on that 🤣
It's funny, a lot of people take this seriously. Billy Corgan says his original yellow guitar sounded the way it did partially because of the color. I don't know about that but to each their own
It's sure not that difficult. Chappers can do it!
Rick figuring out the "hollywood sucks" riff and instantly nailing it on the first try made me scream
It was too fast tho
I yelled out loud. Literally took him seconds
it's really not a complicated riff, and as Rick points out in another recent video, these riffs are recycled regularly
it's every blink-182 song tho?
If you stick with guitar for any longer than a year you'd be able to pick it up like that. Super easy riff! (Not putting it down) a lot of the best riffs are super easy
The most rock thing in this playlist is Rick's playing
Love Rick's diplomacy when something isn't his cup of tea; always finds something to like. So many people seem quick to dismiss or trash things they don't immediately like.
Pop/Rap song with a palm muted guitar riff exists.
Spotify: Ah yes, *Rock*
Found the elitist
@@sabre242 Come on, if I play a polka and then mumble rap over it - is it hip hop?
@@KaninTuzi actually yes, because Hip-Hop always used to sample instrumentals from other music and then rap over it (or at least they did it A LOT in the beginning).
Bad example! XD
But I do agree with you that some of these songs have more in common with pop or rap than they do with a typical rock song.
And it ain't elitist to point that out!
It’s true though. Garbage.
@@sabre242 what elite is the poster a part of, exactly? Some YT cabal that pulls the strings?
20 year cycle.. most of these songs sound like the mainstream/alternative rock of early 2000s
with the same drummer too
You're right , Olivia Rodrigo's Good 4 you also has a pop punk beat and is currently in the top 10 I think.
Well they are... Look at the bands or involvement... Like, I didn't know Pop Evil was still around... Haha
@@Adrian-zd4cs during the same period (early 2000s) we also had indie bands that were inspired by the avant garde and sound of the 80s. Thankfully there's always some evolution even if it's not in the pop charts
Is it really a cycle? First it was Coldplay and pop punk then it was just Coldplay and now it's just pop punk.
I hope there will be a "What makes this song great?" about Royal Blood.
If he does, I'd say Little Monster would be my pick.
YES 100% Rick we need the WMTSG for Royal Blood - they're a 2 piece making a killing off of huge riffs and great drums
Yes I'd love that! I haven't heard anything bad from them yet
I discover that band because of Rick, so that would be cool
@@muntificator "Figure It Out"!
I realize Travis Barker was playing on some of these songs but it’s amazing how many seem to just be rewritten Blink songs
Seriously. Had the same thought.
Pop Punk is in a sad place right now. Well the actual stuff people seem to be listening to anyways. unfortunate because there is heaps of decent pop punk around right now, it's just not charting.
Yes!
I'm sitting here like, grunge lasted maybe 15 years, alt rock about the same with some overlap. Pop punk has been dominating going on 30 years. Borrowing from outside influences here and there from band to band. But mostly it's the same slush that's been around forever.
No wonder all the zoomers I know who are into rock mostly only listen to stuff that was made 30+ years ago.
This. Why hire Travis Barker to play something that sounds like the drums were just programmed samples? His style and personality are nowhere to be found on that Sveco track.
@@Diatonic5th Yeah I think Travis just enjoys playing music regardless and most bands that have an inkling of substance already have a drummer so they aren't going to be asking Travis to feature.
The Royal Blood swings well. Great riff, and that drummer is tight
Tight af
Too tight. The guy plays soooo well
What’s your opinion on Shinedown? I think they have some pretty solid stuff.
Mr Beato knows more music than all those 10 bands together..His kindness and patience is remarkable and always admire how he approach every song as a fan-listener. I dont have that patience!!
It's passion, not patience. Sometimes even a young child can offer insight that changes your perspective significantly. It's best to keep an open mind if possible.
It sure as hell ain't possible for me, LOL.
@@alext2566 Good point. Using your own self as a benchmark to improve and using other insights and good ideas (irrespective of who it comes from because your improvement is a function of the ideas you incorporate) give you the fodder to improve. The first person to then be thankful to is yourself - for taking the steps to raise your own bar. ^-^
He is too kind.
weezer
I swear these videos are just practice exercises for Rick to see how quickly he can predict where every song is going.
And still it's the most entertaining and instructive thing I could find on RUclips!!
It's not hard
@@greencase ok
his facial and eyebrow expression when he nail the prediction.. LOL especially at 3:29-3:31.
Just love the way you deconstruct songs and are able to comment not only on chord progressions but vocals (yes, I hate autotune as well), different instruments and overall production. Rick, I recommend your channel to everyone who is interested in learning music. Thank you.
Cool. 7 formulaic pop punk songs by Blink 182, one by Lilith someone, one interesting one from Royal Blood that has a Josh Homme sound and one where Weezer is doing Weezer.
Does Weezer even have more than the one instrumental track for which they just keep tacking on new lyrics?
The Lilith someone song actually stood out most of all of these
Josh Homme produced that track, that’s why it, well, sounds like Josh Homme
@@darkphoenix2 agreed
@@Viper-dz2kw that explains it.
This playlist be like: Here's a artist you've never heard of before, playing with Travis Barker.
Travis Barker is the worst "rock" producer ever. The fact that has such a footprint on the current alternative charts is something I find depressing. There is so much more interesting music out there that is being blocked by this crap.
@@johnhamilton2588 travis barker is a drummer
@@louie8604 Yeah, I wish he had stayed just a drummer, LOL!
@@johnhamilton2588 ohhh i thought he played drums on all these songs, not produce them
@@louie8604 He's producer, co-writer, co-vocaliat, the whole deal. A HUGE ego trip
One of Ricks superpowers is to be able to listen to autotune 23 minutes straight without imploding.
Haha!!!
Yeah. I just can’t. I turned it off at 2:09.
Paramore could have used Rick as a producer. They had a lot of potential then just turned into another pop band.
@@BlONIC I do.
@@BlONIC I care more about his comment than yours.
For a 2 person band.. Royal Blood has soooo many layers to their production. Boilermaker is such a good song
The production on their latest album is INSANELY good.
Although, the drums switching sides in the middle of the album threw me for a loop.
Oblivion is the real beast on that album 💯💯🥵🥵
I think Josh Homme from Queens of the Stone Age produced it.
Produced by the one and only Josh Homme.
Love Royal Blood new album is great especially the song Oblivion. Where would rock be now without duos such as these guys, the White Stripes & the Black Keys.
Songwriting goals - to create something so brilliant and sophisticated that Rick can't instantly figure out how to play it!
That's a high high bar you put on yourself. Good luck!
I think he can pick out the chords of any jazz song in a few minutes no matter how difficult, but at least that wouldn't be instantly!
Dream Theatre
Actually, you want to create something that he will INSTANTLY want to play along to! The best songs are the ones that have you reaching for your guitar or running to the piano...
So many people think complexity equals brilliance when, in fact, the greatest rock songs are relatively simple.
@@tdsims1963 Entirely subjective, many of those so called "greatest rock songs" bore me to tears.
5:49 I haven't been that disappointed in a minute. The riff had me excited
Haha sameee 🙉
Christ, same!
The riff reminds me of “overrated” by three days grace
I agree
I appreciate when Rick starts smiling at the artistic choices made by the musicians, sound editors, etc. He really just turns into a big kid around new music, and it's so much fun to see ^_^
Well, It looks like the definition of "rock" has changed drastically.
I mean most of it here is soft rock or indie rock 🤷♀️
..yup. I look for some direction from the young 'uns, but I can't see the salvation of rock happening anytime soon. That's ok, I have decades of music to draw from..
@@icedragon9097 to me it sounds more like pop rock/pop punk rock
Rock has always been a pretty diverse genre. There’s nothing in this list that doesn’t sound similar to popular rock songs of the past.
Sound in rock changes every decade
So to sum it up: according to Spotify today's top rock music is actually pop music with distorted guitars. I don't know... I feel old.
Yeah I also get that feeling. I'm asking myself where that comes from. Maybe because of the many four-chord loops in regular major keys instead of mixolydian and blues scales.
yup exactly!
@@bernhardkrickl3567 yeah, both are stale, we need something fresh, when it comes to rock
I don't think it has to do with age at all. The music sucks
Sounds fine to me. Music changes, imagine a world where it didn't. That's not a world I'd wanna be part of.
Just when I think I have you figured out as a person, you pull out an Abasi Guitar. Legendary.
"I was just in Hollywood last week and Hollywood's pretty cool." Rick seems like a chill dude who appreciates the good in things haha
Love the series! I wish you'd check out like a more alternative or indie top 10 to get some more experimental bands like Squid or Black Midi in there.
Black Country, New Road as well!
The Mantis Opera!
I am so hyped for the new Black Midi album, the singles they released and the recent KEXP performance absolutely rip
love discovering new music I'll check them out
id love to see rick check out black midi or king gizzard
"This is really fast..." Three seconds later. "Okay got it" 👑 🎸
Royal Blood is really interesting to me. Great album. Great riffs.
Great live too!! I've seen them twice and again next month.
The Royal Blood song is killer, the Weezer and Lilith Czar songs are pretty good, and the rest I'd be fine if I never heard again. Rick is always awesome, though.
Out of all of them, the Royal Blood made me sit up and go, "Okay....".
Agreed
The Royal Blood track is killer. The riff, the shuffle, you can tell the boys have been hanging with Josh Homme.
It was about the only track I would have personally classed as rock on the whole playlist.. but then I am aware that i am getting old and do not understand the tik tok generation.
@@davidgomersall7185 trust me, I’m young and I agree with you. This playlist doesn’t reflect the actual bands pushing rock forward
@@EnderGaming50 Anyone you would recommend listening to in particular?
@@davidgomersall7185 bring the horizons recent album “POST HUMAN: SURVIVAL HORROR” is worth checking out (Ludens and 1x1 are my favorites). All Time Low’s “Wake Up, Sunshine” is a good new pop punk album
If you’re into heavier stuff, check out The Blade by SION (a duo made up of Jared dines and Howard from Kill Switch Engage)
@@EnderGaming50 thanks, will have a look
You know the old joke: The quality of Weezer's music is inversely proportional to Rivers Cuomo's self esteem. So if you want to hear better Weezer tunes, you have to try to make Rivers feel sad.
well the critics made rivers really sad after Pinkerton, and thus the green album was born, and thus the mediocrity of weezer began. they have had solid albums since of course, but nothing like the first two obviously.
@@steadyrhythms9571 i have a theory that having matt sharp in the band helped form the sound. His falsetto and bass licks are a big part of those first two
Edit: THIS IS WRONG. MATT SHARP DID NOTHING AND MY THEORY IS GARBAGE.
Somehow the White one they put out a few years ago is great. Not sure how it happened.
that and the one before that are great imo, not on the level of the first two but i found them very enjoyable
@@trackermusicforever matt usually always played root notes and kept it pretty straight. rivers also taught him the falsettos, those were entirely his idea. matt sharp leaving didn’t make weezer suck for a couple years, it was just rivers consciously trying to make poppier and more accessible music. correlation doesn’t equal causation
Imagine being in a band writing, riffing, jamming, rewriting, recording, recording, rewriting...
Rick Beato listening along for 15 seconds: okay, hang on, yup, got it.
Plays along straight away.
I'd be thrilled. It'd be like a polite and helpful chef Ramsay critiquing a dish you prepared and offering insight.
The man is a music analysis machine/encyclopedia, you can't realistically expect to compete with that on a technical level, nor is it necessary to write good music.
You're acting like the bands actually do any of that stuff. What they really do is play a little demo for the music producers. Two months later, the band members come into the studio to record their parts. Two months later, the songs are done. If they actually tour for the album, the band has to learn how to play the songs live, because they had very little input into how the songs actually turned out.
@@John-tr5hn I'd imagine if you got to the point where Rick is producing your music you would have enough disposable cash to pay for a little extra time with him. Maybe I'm wrong though. Don't tell me if I am.
Please don't ruin my fantasy
@@alext2566 I'm not a musician, but if I were, I'd try to write the best music possible. The better the music, the less you need a good producer. It's like would you rather be pretty or have a good makeup artist?
@@John-tr5hn I
A different perspective is always helpful. Sometimes all it takes is a little noodling around then 💡 Hey that sounds pretty good.
That's how the riff for Kashmir was written.
A handful of the songs are very similar in vocals and singing style. Sound like they came of the same production line
exactlyy
bc they came, a lot of them was produced by Travis Barker
These type of vocals suck, they sound like autotuned heroin addicts.
aka Billie Eilish "Bad Guy" - Can't stand that horrible voice, got more than 1 million dislikes so there is some hope for humanity.
They did.
🤷
@@gerardcote8391 I'm pretty sure it got many more likes, but I need to check.
So it is actually 3 times Travis Barker as artist/producer, two times John Feldman (Goldfinger) as producer and Weezer. So the 90s are coming back.
Explains why a lot of the music,while well produced enough, does sound similar.
I'm glad Rick listens to these songs so I don't have to.
Hahahhahahaha 😂
I second that. The singers voice makes my stomach hurt.
I agree on every song except for that Royal Blood song. Really enjoying that album now.
I mean, by watching this video you have listened to them
lmao! totally that first song was puke-worthy. Theres good soundgarden docs on youtube!
The good faith with which Rick approached these songs is outstanding.
These are all pop songs with Rock elements. Every instrument have gone through lot of digitalisation. Sound doesn't reveal the player, but it reveals mixers and sound engineers fingerprint. Real rock music in my opinion it's more analogue. There should be feel of the studio in the sound, with cigarette smoke and whisky breath on the air.
Exactly, this is pop with some overdrive.
Man how can you listen to Escape The Fate and Pop Evil songs and say they are pop? Check out top pop songs, and tell me again this is the same.
It's kindof a sign of the times. We are living in an era where overlords are obsessed with controlling the process and leaving their fingerprint.
You all are forgetting genres evolve over time and borrow elements from new stuff that comes along. Okay some stuff might not be exactly like nirvana or ACDC, but that doesn't mean it is not rock.
Pop nowadays sounds nothing like this, maybe it did back in the days but not now.
@@jdavidmoreiraify this is so not rock. I can be ok if you say that this is pop with rock influences but this should not be define as rock
I love that Rick still has a child like passion and enthusiasm for music, it's awesome.
What surprises me in the current Rock This list is how a large amount of the songs actually sounds like metal. The massive production we are used to hearing in the metal genre is now very present in modern rock, alongside rap (and even trap) influences.
It makes the list very intersting to listen to, with various genres and codes coming together
There's been some really good metal over the past decade or two that's completely inaccessible to a lot of people because instead of singing you get vocalizations/growling/screaming, kinda out of nowhere. I know plenty of those songs have huge audiences but they don't do well in the mainstream. if the REST of the ideas metal has are migrating over to a more conventional singing style, we're in for something huge.
This reminds me a bit of how in the late 2000s/early 2010s North American pop music was suddenly like "HEY THIS EDM SHIT'S GREAT" and meanwhile all the EDM they're sampling/covering/etc came out in like 1996. Not trying to be a snob saying I liked it then first - genuinely just confused at how it was so overlooked and what the heck suddenly made it "cool".
@@evilspoons Yeah intersting parallel with EDM in mainstream pop. All it takes is some popular artists to bring new influences to mainstream genres, like the Black Eyed Peas did with EDM in the early 2010s.
As for metal sounding music and scream singing, it's quiet intersting and even funny to see musical codes usually pushed away by the mainstream public getting their way in mildly popular genres. Aggressive sounds are more accepted when diluted it would seem haha
Yeah I listen to modern rock and none of them except the Weezer one is something I would usually listen too. Rockin’ Vibes, Retro Pop or Southern Comfort are much better than Rock This. I have my own playlist called 21st century classic rock with non metal modern rock and new stuff by the classic artists (McCartney, The Who, etc...). My point is there’s a lot of great non metal modern rock artists. Rick just missed Greta Van Fleet (#11 on the list). Great rock bands now are GVF (I understand the hate but I like them), The Struts, Inhaler (Bono’s son fronts the band), Black Pumas, Michael Kiwanuka, The Black Keys, Young Gun Silver Fox, Kings of Leon, Hearty Har (Fogerty’s kids) and of course the soon to be rock and roll hall of famers Foo Fighters. I know it’s kinda weird but Miley Cyrus is in a rock phase - some of it isn’t bad. Those are just some artists I like that aren’t metal.
Most of those songs don`t even sound remotely close to metal.
@@erlandaspetkevicius7701 I was speaking production-wise mostly. The few songs I'm talking about are indeed not composed as metal songs, but the productions are built as such
I could listen to Rick talk about music for hours. I always learn something new when I watch his videos! I love how he approaches these songs with an open mind and finds things to appreciate.
I'd love these songs if I were 12.
I wanted to say 11, but this is close enough...
I don't fucking care how old I am, I still like some of those and I'm going to put them in my playlist right now :D
Really? I was into Zeppelin AC/DC Rush (but mainly Zeppelin!) when I was 12. This stuff is just awful.
@@beachcomber4141 I got to 14 and the Sabbath hit!
@@sallyschildcare LOVE!!!! I think I was 14 also when I got infatuated with Ozzy and Sabbath. Great minds bro
You know the compression of modern music is high when the songs continuously startle Rick
Just out of curiosity, what exactly do you mean by this? Like what is compression and why would high compression startle someone?
@@reidedlund7132 compression is basically making the silent parts of a song louder so that the volume is more equally distributed
@@reidedlund7132 compression is just to reduce the dynamic range so the loud parts are quieter and then the whole thing is turned up to make the whole mixer louder on average
@@reidedlund7132 Over compressed sounds are usually super transient parodies of the original sound. Transience is the initial part of a sound, so like the second you play a guitar string or hit a drum. If a sound has lots of compression the transience will become extremely over accentuated so every sound has a HUGE hit and sounds super plucky, so it can be really startling and hit WAY too hard, especially if a song has a dramatic shift in volume.
This video proves why I could not become a producer. Rick, hat's off to you for being able to get through that with a smile on your face.
It does prove Rick's production abilities but even if I had those I couldn't work as a producer because most of what you would be asked to produce would bore me to death. Id last a week then quit!
You know you are a professional when you can separate talent and artistry from the job and just get it done.
LOL! Rick does not want to alienate ANYONE, so he finds whatever redeeming quality in this music he can find (hence "Huge sounding production"). I bet his inner eye is rolling to the back of his brain when he hears this crap. Rick is a professional indeed.
🚨 *Okay hear me out. I love this series so much. I know a lot of musicians and writers follow Rick so it’d be sooo awesome if he did an episode just like this but with him listening to song submissions from his subscribers. We’ve all learned so much from him so hopefully he’d be proud to hear our music reflecting his tips haha.*
Ditto
Listen to your fans @rick beato
Hire him...whatever the price it would be more than worth it!
@@johntebbetts7876 lol. It doesn’t work like that. He’s not some bouncy castle you rent from the used car dealership/party supply.
u can tell josh homme had a massive part in that royal blood tune
I imagine a band playing and their guitar player passes out. The band asks if there are any guitarists in the audience that can play their set. Up comes Rick, and says “I can, give me 5 mins to listen to your Spotify playlist”. Show resumes.
That would be the coolest video to actually do it. Find a new band that shows up on the Spotify rock list and have them show up to his studio. The video shows him listen to 5 songs and then they play. After you hear the real guitarist and compare them.
He wouldn't even need 5 minutes
He would also have the isolated tracks to at least 4 songs of theirs before even hearing them play.
Rick Beato is the most KIND human alive (super gifted and knowledgeable). 8 of 10 were really bad songs (Weezer is a very skilled band, cool new stuff), and Rick made lemonade out of urine. Mad respect for Beato...
Im gonna incorporate “made lemonade out of urine” into my vocab lol hope you dont mind
You don't need Spotify you just need Rick in your room jamming.
Fully agree, drop Poopify, just keep Rick.
I can't think of a single moment in popular music history where being unoriginal was embraced like this. I bet some of their hardest fans couldn't tell if they switched singers. The definition of "interchangeable".
Couldn't of said it better myself!!!
They should've saved that money they were spending on tattoos and invested it on a crash course in songwriting instead.
totally agree
Dam what a cool comment!
That's what I was thinking, but you said it MUCH better.
Song: in drop Jb. one string is a goatee from a goat. The others are all taken from the bowels of hell.
Rick: let me just go and grab my guitar that’s set like that.
@harpy it’s just a joke, chill, it’s all love ❤️
Me listening to Boilermaker for the first time: "Love this, but it really sounds like a Queens of the Stone Age track."
Me looking at the liner notes for the record: "Oh, producer: Josh Homme. There you go."
The video looks like an animated Them Crooked Vultures album as well 😂
Agree the production goes with a new trend of Homme style although this is really him lol. I’ve thought the track though sounds like jack white and ledzep with the groove and vox especially
@@JimboCruntz Yeah, it's a Liam Lynch video. He did the artwork for TCV too.
For many of these it’s like listening to Owl City over and over again
dont do that to owl city
Owl City is a great artist... Dont do him bad
These dudes all sound like they played in a church band and then discovered power chords and autotune.
@@howdytherepardner318 I like the drop tuning in invincible tho you don’t see that a lot in modern pop rock
Rick’s “What the Hell?” face at the start on “Breathe Again” was gold.
I laughed out loud when I realized Hollywood Sucks has the same chord progression as Blink 182's Dammit, just one step higher.
So So so many songs use that chord progression both before and after dammit
Dammit uses a I V vi IV progression. Thousands and thousands of songs use that progression
Almost half these songs on the list sound like Blink 182. A few others sound like nu-metal. Is modern pop-rock still stuck in the late 90's/early 2000's?
With M&M's as the start riff.
That Machine Gun Kelly track is really Relient K's "Be My Escape" with new paint. Smart on them giving Matt Thissen a writing credit.
I thought the exact same thing once I heard it!
@@mo3mack BRING BACK RELIENT K!
Damn, that's why I strangely liked MGK album, what's next Switchfoot music?
@@sacriste Meant to Live is still such an incredible track.
Dude I was just thinking this, Relient K is one of my favorite bands and that song is amazing. Glad to see credit is given where it is due
I love when Rick says "I think I got it" and then nails it.
My uni guitar professor told me to check out your videos and im really digging them! Cheers rick from Puerto Rico.
...just subscribed over the weekend and can't stop watching. I stopped playing guitar some 30 years ago, but Rick made me pick it up again. If you see this, Rick, you are a small 'g' - god! Keep doin' what you're doin', man!
"That's very fast... off the open E string, lets see if i can do that" *proceeds to play it flawlessly on the first try in 3 seconds*
hahah funny, I was having trouble just listening to it and like you say in 3 seconds he is playing it.....amazing:)
Rick: *listens to A Hard Day's Night*
"Oh I know what that opening chord is..."
13:42
Rick: Let’s see if it’s gonna get heavy
*gets heavy*
Rick: 😮
That Royal Blood album is off the chain.
Glad I found them by accident in 2014. That dude does wonders with his Bass guitar.
Yeah man Typhoons is great. All three of Royal Blood's albums are great, tbh.
They’ve gotten a little too techy and digital, I like their older stuff more. Good band tho
I'd suggest a doing a video like this for Top-10 Japan, it's always interesting, very little overlap with the global top 10
That would make for an interesting video series ☝🏽☝🏽☝🏽 @RickBeato, do the top 10 from each country around the world? Crossover into some fresh tunes!
As long as it has drums I guess we can call it rock now
Not even real drums these music have mate
Is it just me, or do all these songs become 100% more listenable when Rick plays along...
it's you
yes they are - sound more real (cause it is) instead of overproduced/squeeze/compressed/elongated/fuzzed - whatever they do in the studio - to make it sound it like everything else.
It's because a lot of these modern rock bands are WAY overproduced. So Rick adding an actual real sounding electric guitar over top makes it sound more... authentic? real? good? One of those lol.
AGREE!!! Rick: "Sounds like he's bouncing off the E string," then one second later nails it.....If these bands only had half the WOW factor Rick has......
No. I can’t listen to any of them. Nothing strikes me as new or interesting.
It's not just guitar that rick can talk about either. He can also talk about drums, bass And keyboards And the production And the effects that they use. That's what separates him from everyone else
Yeah, rick is the real deal fo sho
I would love a "What makes this song great"-episode about a Jinjer song, that wourld be very interesting ^^
Teacher teacher self proclaimed preacher
I want one for kiss
judgement and punishment would be sick
So many of these heavier songs start out pretty interesting and then just turn into some generic Skillet tune
You sir are extremely correct
The escape the fate especially had a strong opening sound, but turned into absolutely dogshit.
Since watching this channel I've started hearing so much more in the background on tracks. I'm not an audiophile or someone who knows a lot of music theory, but damn I love Rick.
THE FACT RICK COULD PERFORM A SHOW W MOST ANY BAND IN THE WORLD AFTER PRACTICING W FOR 10 MINS!! 🙌🏻💥🎶💪🏻💯👏🏻
Lilith Czar is AMAZING, she’s been known as Juliet Simms and dropped her new album as Lilith Czar “created from filth and dust” april 23rd
I like how the “can you please move your Prius” line made rick laugh twice 😂😂
I really appreciate Rick going through all these songs like this so I can expand my musical horizons without having to sort through too much chaff. I'm not really feeling most of these songs, but Boilermaker is definitely a solid tune.
He's extremely adept at picking up "structure", but he is also very good at predicting or anticipating what the artist will do next. Or he gets very close. There's no limit in music to what can happen next, but everything you hear sticks with you and has some influence in how you hear and interpret "new stuff."
Rick, I think this series is going to make you the modern musician's Casey Kasem.
Hearing Rick voice Shaggy in a new Scooby-Doo movie would be quite interesting.
“You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become Weezer”
Weezer ain't the only band to get lazy/lose inspiration after making it big.
Just the way it is sometimes.
Guess it's hard to write deep meaningful songs from an Ivory tower.
@@alext2566 Yeah some people lose the touch what made them famous. For example it's ultra cringe when a person gets popular for songs about being poor, lve broken etc and then they go big and next thing you know they still do the same thing so their songs can't contrast well with their reality. You can't sing that you are broke even tho you live in a million dollar apartment or villa etc. Or bitching about your life while someone out there is actually starving and strugling. It just doesn't adds up. Those are most common themes while singing about success is pointless and even more toxic. It's like you are rubbing it all into others people faces "look at me bla bla bla". People should seriously start singing more about nature or specific more common sense themes instead of just love, love broke, and being poor or having a bad day. Done to death already.
@@DJGodaryD86 Or write more using more introspective, observational, or esoteric themes. Chris Cornell and Tom Waits are two of my favorites for this.
They both stayed relatable despite success, because the music they wrote wasn't entirely dependent on external factors.
@@DJGodaryD86 So that's one thing Nickelback did right, I'm thinking of We All Wanna Be Big Rockstars, writing about what they have but from the perspective of a non-rockstar.
Nah Weezer put out 3 of their 5 best albums (white, ok human, ewbaite) in the last eight years
Amnesia, Adrenaline, Anarchy....anyone else see a trend here? I wonder if in the Spotify world you almost can't make the top 10 without the "alphabetical advantage".
...and up for our next song, Aardvark Blues,...
ZZ Top must hate Spotify :)
@@sharpvidtube There's always a few malicious ones that starts from the end, though 😁
I love these videos, but I make it an ABSOLUTE point, if I don't know the artist and I like the song, to just go listen to the whole thing on the artist's page (or whatever medium it's available). Lilith Czar blew me away. I need to seek out more music. Thanks Rick, you're an absolute gem for giving you perspective and exposing people to all kinds of music.
Rick knows the chords to a song before it's even written.
Well everyone uses the same ones.
This music is as basic as Mary Had A Little Lamb unfortunately.
Hahaha, I've noticed this.
@@j_freed ...... ... Hey that's what i was going to say. It's like you know me well.
Haha. Keep well
* song plays for 3 seconds *
Rick: Okay, I got this
Rick is a beast but lets be fair: not real heavy players here
Does Travis Barker just show up at everyone’s recording session and refuse to leave until someone lets him lay down a drum track
edit: that 7 string is gorgeous!! I’ve never seen a guitar quite like it, what is that thing?
It’s all made by the same people so it’s not hard
He's just doing the most trying to get some sort of Rock revival happening. I dig it.
first song sounded more like 1-2 minutes programming a basic midi drum plugin
That’s an Abasi 7 string!
@@Jayzigz oh I have nothing against him, just think it’s funny how he’s just sneaking his way into everything haha. Good for him
For me this whole series is about watching Rick figuring out chords in a matter of seconds.
It onestly doesn't matter what genre the songs are in - I love it.
I’m loving this series of top 10s. Watching Rick slay a song he just heard is always awe inspiring.
I can imagine the recording engineers on these tracks. "Let's speed this up a little. Rick Beato can still keep up with it."
Here for the Lilith Czar "Anarchy" Supremacy. I absolutely love her, she was former known as Juliet Simms and was once apart of a band called Atomatic Lovelleter. Her debut album as Lilith dropped just this past April with Anarchy. Another highlights on the album are King, Lola and a cover of Edge of Seventeen.
First time of hearing for me. Hers was the most original and worthy of all the tracks Rick played. I'm 69 and it's good to here someone who sounds fresh with a new twist.
@@jimandlizhudson2501 I am so glad to hear you say that, honestly, she is really worth the listen, her voice is very charismatic and the range of emotions and stories in her songs are also very captivating, each album or ep of her career truly feels like a body of work and not just a collection of fresh made songs. I bet you would love one of her old records with her old band, if you want, just search up Automatic Lovelleter Let It Ride, insane record, probably my favorite of her's.
God I am glad I was a teenager in the 90's
I was a teenager in the 80s, I felt already that it was a subpar decade compared to the 70s. Then the 90s brought radiohead, placebo, muse and the likes, I thought it was pretty awful. Then we got Drake and Taylor Swift.
I just ignore them and spend my free time to discovering incredible artists on yt, most of them are much older than me and thanks to the magic of yt I can enjoy their discography.
I’m open minded when I come to music and I listen to new bands everyday but the 90’s cannot be beaten
@@Prognosis__ Well, the late 60's and 70's was pretty amazing as so many musical styles were born, the 80's were pretty good, then Grunge hit and made Rock music Rock again, and it has steadily gone to crap since then IMO.
Lucky
@@Prognosis__ Ah, the 90s were great, granted, but the 60s. and 70s were simply legendary. A couple could afford to move out ONCE from Mom and Dads at 17/18, have a crap minimum wage paying job, afford rent in something bigger than a closet, and could catch our favorite bands live in good seats up front for less than $20 while keeping the ticket stub after! I know, I know....whatever Gen-X, whatever.
Me: Does violent shart after a night on the booze.
Rick: “That’s 16th notes in b diminished”
Lol
When Rick is nailing a riff and expecting a chord progression or drums to kick in and it doesn't but when it does the surprise look on his face is EPIC! Man I'm so glad I subscribed to this channel thanks to my Big Brother!