OGBama
Big Clit Energy
The @2GooD Productions bedroom producers here are all ILL compared to 99% of the terminally online who inhabit YT.
Im one of the 99% thats "terminally online" and inhabits youtube, because I havent watched TV in over 20 years
I was terminally online before being terminally online was coolYou seem cool, though, too bad you ain't in the U.S.
165,000 views in 3 hours and 4.29 million followers.
Somebody is listening to him
I agree on what you're saying @Fade but to me this guy sounds off to me and I can't put my finger on it. What he say in this video sounds good but at the same time he's bashing the music of today... So in his mind it seems like no music of today is good and let's go back to the good ole times and because of his musical background he's right. Im going to do my research on him.I can't believe the reactions to a very simple opinion video from Rick Beato. WTF. I've said this numerous times - the internet is like this: you can have your own opinion, just as long as everyone else agrees with you. It's beyond ridiculous at this point. But he's right in the fact that the music today is so much worse than what it was and because of streaming platforms (like @Iron Keys mentioned), it devalues it, which is what Rich was saying. You can't replace the feeling of buying a vinyl/cassette/cd and listening to it while looking at the artwork and reading the lyrics or thank yous.
As far as making beats/music today, people don't need to be taught how to make music. Instead, all they have to do is what the previous generations did. I know it's wild idea, but how about reading the fucking manual and doing trial and error? That's all it is. I'm tired of everyone waiting for someone to hold their hand and show them exactly how to do something. Just do it. Everyone is a fucking victim nowadays and if anyone today can't figure out how to make beats then they shouldn't be making beats to begin with. There's tons of tutorials right here on ILL and on other sites, plus Youtube. No excuses.
As @2GooD Productions can relate - learning how to scratch and beat juggle was straight up practice and trial and error. I watched DMC videos because I was trying to figure out what those DJs were doing but it wasn't a tutorial, if anything it was inspiration. But I still had to actually get on the turntables and figure it out myself because I didn't know anyone else that DJ'd. Same with beat making. I worked and took whatever overtime I could get, saved my money, and bought a drum machine and sampler then I just figured it out. I didn't have the luxury of someone showing me how to do it step by step while coddling me and jerking me off at the same time.
Let's say you want to learn how to make beats and you choose FL Studio as your DAW. What's the first thing everyone does? They go on YouTube and look up tutorials. I'll bet most people don't even check the manual, (let alone actually know how to spell "manual"), and they follow the tutorial. So essentially all they're learning is how to use an app. That's it. They're not necessarily literate in how the recording process actually works. Everyone wants a quick fix and wants to learn everything right away like it's some secret formula that they have to know immediately. No one wants to actually LEARN anything.
The first book I bought about recording taught me all the basics I needed to know, like what equipment was needed and the proper signal chain, what typical outboard gear was needed, etc. And I read it front to back numerous times. Yeah it's an old book but at least it taught me the basics of how recording actually works. And that's one of the main things missing with today's so called "beat makers" and "producers".
He often speaks in a language that kids just dont understand, it took me a quite a while to comprehend some of his words myself. I had to learn some actual theory.He's a famous record producer/ engineer of course people subscribe to him going to click on his new upload... Like you wrote he has 4.29 million subs he better get something. Who's listening to him that young???? Are up and coming hiphop young artist listening to him right now?? Hell nawww.. Probably nobody but people in his genre or the people that respects his past works. You and I wouldn't know nothing about this guy if @Fade didn't post his video. If you believe in him like that... you should buy one of his courses and you can teach the youth with it
Ive been following Rick for yearsHe's a famous record producer/ engineer of course people subscribe to him going to click on his new upload... Like you wrote he has 4.29 million subs he better get something. Who's listening to him that young???? Are up and coming hiphop young artist listening to him right now?? Hell nawww.. Probably nobody but people in his genre or the people that respects his past works. You and I wouldn't know nothing about this guy if @Fade didn't post his video. If you believe in him like that... you should buy one of his courses and you can teach the youth with it
I'm looking at this from a production standpoint, and I agree 100% with what this guy is saying. I've been saying for years about how the technology has made music worse, and he's got some great points in here.
the saga continues...
Doing all the above daily.Just make it dope. Practice. Continue to learn.
Me and @Fade call that the loosey goosey.If everything is loose; nothing is loose.
To keep pulling on this thread — part of it is also the collapse of "traditional careers." If you take the corporate route, most folks have about 10 years until they become too expensive and need to fight to hold on to their jobs before what they do gets automated and shipped overseas, or just becomes obsolete in general. If you go the blue collar trade school route, it's a grind that a lot of people just don't want to do given all of the options that tech offers to make some money while sitting in AC. But the rate of which new skills/re-skilling is needed is suggesting to be challenging for humans to keep up. But in a globalized world, that just means the company can hire someone else cheaper and who cares.KRS 1, but like I said kids know it all already.
We are all social animals, I got into hip hop through a friend, it was a shared interest between me and my friend for many many years, we took that shit far too fucking seriously, but if I didnt, I'd never be here now.
The labels are responsible for what gets released, they serve the food, we just eat it. If we refused to eat what they were serving then they might be forced to improve their menu.
The overabundance of bedroom producers like us has diluted the quality of the music that is out there, combined with our rapidly diminishing attention spans, and the music becoming purely a route to getting paid so you can avoid getting a proper career. The real world doesn't work like that, 5 mins of fame will rarely provide for a lifetime of expenses. People chase fame and fortune which is fleeting, like our attention spans, instead of concentrating on building a long successful career with pension plans and creating a legacy to pass down to our children.
There are many reasons why the quality in all forms of entertainment is lacking, can't really scapegoat any one particular thing.
I noticed in one of the comments someone mentioned that we live in a society where a drunk girl is now famous because she said "hawk tua".