How TikTok Hijacked the Future of Music - Nik Nocturnal
CChris Williamson
MusicAdvertising/MarketingMental HealthInternet Technology
Transcript
00:00:00- How big of an impact do you think TikTok has played
00:00:02in shaping the way that modern metal music sounds now?
00:00:06- Ooh, it has a pretty big impact
00:00:09because all the young kids growing up right now on TikTok,
00:00:12and I remember, you know, even when I started YouTube,
00:00:15that was like a newer thing.
00:00:16People were discovering music through YouTube.
00:00:18I discovered a lot of like the big bands I listened to
00:00:20growing up through YouTube, and that was like unheard of.
00:00:22You know, it was like, no matter what,
00:00:24it was usually all on the radio or like, I don't know,
00:00:26your brother gave you like a cassette or like a CD.
00:00:29So that was already such a new thing.
00:00:31There was kids discovering music through the internet,
00:00:33and I mean, MySpace, YouTube,
00:00:35I mean, like Facebook to some capacity after that.
00:00:39So TikTok was kind of just that next generation
00:00:42of people scrolling and whatever they might be doing.
00:00:44Doom scrolling or just, you know,
00:00:46I don't know, trying to find cooking recipes,
00:00:48and then all of a sudden, you know,
00:00:49if they like music in any capacity, or even if they don't,
00:00:52you know, they hear a sound and they're like, this is cool.
00:00:56And a lot of the things with modern metal is,
00:00:59there's a lot of good clip moments
00:01:02usually with modern metal, particularly, you know,
00:01:05whether it's the breakdown or the other breakdown
00:01:08or the crazy vocal moment, or even on the guitar,
00:01:11so crazy guitar moment, maybe drum moment, right?
00:01:12There's a lot of musicianship and like unique attributes
00:01:16that kind of go into that skill
00:01:20and in terms of like metal as a genre.
00:01:22So like when you're able to just like kind of clip farm
00:01:24some things like that and be like, oh,
00:01:26like here's the best part and you instantly get a payoff
00:01:29versus most people you have to listen to the whole song
00:01:31or like, you know, in a minute and a half
00:01:32until the breakdown happens.
00:01:34So TikTok, I think really enforces that
00:01:37where people will be scrolling
00:01:38and they'll just hear like this crazy noise or breakdown
00:01:40or some dude screaming and doing goblin noises.
00:01:42And it'll be like, oh, I want more of this.
00:01:44You know, you instantly get hit with the punch line.
00:01:47It's like watching a horror movie
00:01:48and only getting hit with the jump scare.
00:01:50So it's, you instantly get kind of intrigued.
00:01:52And I think that has really helped push metal
00:01:55into a bigger kind of more just normalized audience.
00:01:58- Look at the state of "Can You Feel My Heart?"
00:02:00Look at the state of that "Bring Me" track,
00:02:03which if anybody listened to that album when it came out,
00:02:06it was good, it was a good song.
00:02:07It's one of my favorite songs on the album.
00:02:10It shouldn't be like 10 times better known
00:02:13than the next best known "Bring Me" track.
00:02:16And then just because the internet gets a hold of it
00:02:18and can do, if you make a track that is good
00:02:21to have videos laid over the top of.
00:02:23So that's my, that's what I'm thinking now.
00:02:26How many bands are thinking almost short form first?
00:02:30Like these are the three segments of this track
00:02:34that work for some reason.
00:02:35And then can we seed a meme early?
00:02:38I mean, both of us know that the industry
00:02:40are doing exactly this.
00:02:42Like they're seeding, who was that?
00:02:44Fuck, who was that band?
00:02:45Is it Geese or something?
00:02:47Is that the band?
00:02:48I swear it's called Geese.
00:02:51When it comes to writing tracks,
00:02:53I think it seems so.
00:02:55When it comes to writing tracks,
00:02:58bands have to be curating that sound to go,
00:03:01this is a bit that everybody's gonna clip to go on TikTok.
00:03:04Obviously not everybody, but some non-zero number
00:03:06that think, hey, we've got a chance
00:03:08of really blowing this up.
00:03:09Yeah, I think bands are really aware of it.
00:03:13And I think a lot of bands still nowadays are like,
00:03:15you know, let's just, let's write our bangers.
00:03:17You know what I mean?
00:03:17Like it's also weird
00:03:18'cause there's a different process of writing.
00:03:20Obviously it's not, hey, everyone let's hang in our garage
00:03:22and figure it out until mom tells us to come up for dinner.
00:03:24You know what I mean?
00:03:25Or whatever kicks us out of the house.
00:03:27You know, it's, everyone's on their laptops.
00:03:29Everyone's, you know, either with their one producer
00:03:32or with, you know, now AI exists too,
00:03:34which is his own fun thing.
00:03:36So it's like, the process is also really different.
00:03:39And capturing that very exciting live,
00:03:42like start to finish song moment with you and your band mates
00:03:47is not as common in general when songwriting.
00:03:50So now, because it's so segmented
00:03:53and a lot of people even are like,
00:03:54okay, well, let's start writing,
00:03:55let's start writing the song at the breakdown, you know,
00:03:57because that can,
00:03:58let's start writing it at the climactic moment.
00:04:01- We'll write how the movie ends
00:04:03and then we'll work back from there.
00:04:04- Yeah, so that's also things that have been happening.
00:04:07And with that, obviously bands are more, you know,
00:04:10attuned with like, hey, you know,
00:04:11we've been in a band for 10 years making heavy music.
00:04:14All right, well, we've seen other bands, you know,
00:04:16blow up by literally just having one moment
00:04:18that was crazier than the other moments
00:04:19or like one noise, you know,
00:04:21literally vocal gymnastic that they did it.
00:04:23- Look at like Knock Loose,
00:04:25what they've managed to do through short form as well,
00:04:27just by being kind of the best extreme sound
00:04:29that most people have ever heard.
00:04:30- Yeah, well, that's a thing with Knock Loose particularly
00:04:32is I think they don't care about any of that,
00:04:34but because their music is so intense and so well,
00:04:39momentum, like, I'm sorry, it's paced so well.
00:04:42They naturally work in that world.
00:04:45- Well, that's what it's supposed to be.
00:04:46Social media is supposed to be something that happens
00:04:50that wasn't meant to fugazi everybody into loving it
00:04:52on social media, being loved on social media
00:04:55because it's a window into something outside of it.
00:04:58- Exactly.
00:04:59- And the problem is if you try and make it for social media,
00:05:02you also have to mask over the fact
00:05:04that this isn't supposed to look like it was made
00:05:06for social media 'cause that then completely undermines it.
00:05:09- Yep, and then also a lot of time, unfortunately,
00:05:11the song just sucks, you know, like in the end,
00:05:13you get like a shitty song and that's the worst part
00:05:17because sure, you'll maybe get some hype
00:05:18and maybe you'll get like a lot of people going like,
00:05:20"What was that?"
00:05:21But then you won't get replayability.
00:05:22You won't get a timelessness of a song.
00:05:24And then it's, again, because that becomes more of the focus.
00:05:27The focus is let's create a moment of a song
00:05:31instead of let's make a good song.
00:05:33There's a lot more songs then,
00:05:34but then there's not a lot more long lasting songs
00:05:37and songs that actually people like put even
00:05:39in their playlist other than like,
00:05:41well, here's the meme, you know, here's the meme song.
00:05:43Oh, he did the thing, you know what I mean?
00:05:45- Jerry, can you give me the screen?
00:05:48'Cause I wanna pull up something that I think,
00:05:51like I started listening to metal when I was in college,
00:05:53right, so do you remember that job for a cowboy moment?
00:05:58You know exactly the moment that I'm gonna pull up, right?
00:06:00What was it called?
00:06:02Was it "In Tumor"?
00:06:03- It was "In Tumor" with the girl scream, right?
00:06:04- Yeah.
00:06:05- Yeah.
00:06:06(laughing)
00:06:07(upbeat music)
00:06:12Kids today will never know.
00:06:13- Yeah, well, dude, that's what's happening
00:06:15is there's a revival of this stuff.
00:06:17- Bring me?
00:06:18- Oh, dude, count your blessings.
00:06:20They're gonna be the forefront.
00:06:21- Listen to this, Jared, you'll have never heard this before.
00:06:23(upbeat music)
00:06:26(laughing)
00:06:29- Out with the--
00:06:30- So unnecessary.
00:06:31- Yeah.
00:06:32- And then they put a bass bin.
00:06:33- Yup.
00:06:34- Like a proper electronic bass bin on that drop.
00:06:36I remember we were listening to that in my friend's car.
00:06:38I must've been 17 driving through the mean streets
00:06:41of the Northeast of the UK and he had a proper subwoofer
00:06:46in the boot of his car, the fancy head unit upfront.
00:06:50And I remember that shook my fucking teeth
00:06:53when that thing dropped.
00:06:54It was like, holy shit.
00:06:56- Dude, the bass drops of that era of music
00:06:59were legendary, unmatched of just these big 808 nonsense.
00:07:03You know what I mean?
00:07:04A lot of those, they were just having fun, right?
00:07:06They were with their producer and the producer
00:07:07could hit the button that literally was a bass drop
00:07:09or a reverse snare and everyone just laughed.
00:07:11- Do the thing, do the thing.
00:07:12- Yeah, that was the equivalent.
00:07:13Do the thing, but it was a fun thing
00:07:15that they know no one would have cared outside of them.
00:07:19And then they, 'cause they're putting out extreme music.
00:07:21You know, for this time, putting out that extreme music
00:07:23like Deathcore for example, like Deathcore wasn't Deathcore.
00:07:27There's no such thing as the word Deathcore.
00:07:28Even metalcore was kind of like not necessarily a term.
00:07:31- You might've had post hardcore at that time.
00:07:33- Yeah.
00:07:34- Coming through like Fightstar would have kind of
00:07:36been post hardcore-y sound.
00:07:37- Yeah, and then there was even bands like
00:07:39that were kind of that weird in the middle
00:07:40where they had post hardcore elements
00:07:42and, but they were metal, like Under Oath was a cool one.
00:07:44'Cause they had emo-y moments.
00:07:47- Melodically taken back Sunday,
00:07:48meets the heavy aggressive stuff.
00:07:50- Right, so it was just a weird era where there wasn't genres.
00:07:53It was more of that freedom, I think of just like,
00:07:55here's music and people that loved the extreme extreme
00:07:58were a lot of times just like kids that were screwing around
00:08:01and, you know, in school and were like, that's fun, dude.
00:08:03Like, can you do that again?
00:08:04Let's do that again.
00:08:05And it's funny 'cause now with the resurgence
00:08:08and the movement again of like the 2000 traditional
00:08:10Deathcore coming back, especially with Bring Me Being,
00:08:12like let's do Count Your Blessings again,
00:08:14'cause why not, we can do that.
00:08:16It's those moments, there's so many of those moments
00:08:19in that music that naturally would be the TikTok moment.
00:08:23- I wonder, so you know, pretty much everything
00:08:26has sort of come back around again.
00:08:27What was that video of the dude drinking ocean spray
00:08:30cranberry juice going down the street
00:08:32and it completely blew up a track
00:08:34that was 40, 50 years old.
00:08:36ABBA has had a resurgence like that.
00:08:38You know, so many old tracks that have come back around again,
00:08:40old hip hop that's come back around again,
00:08:41old pop songs that have come back around again.
00:08:44I haven't seen the same thing happen with metal.
00:08:46I haven't seen people go back to kind of the golden era,
00:08:502004 to 2010, which would have kind of been very formative
00:08:54for our age and then gone, oh my God, dude,
00:08:58have you heard like from the first bullet
00:09:00for my Valentine EP?
00:09:02Have you heard, oh, have you heard like this
00:09:03devil, a T.U. track?
00:09:05- Everyone knows Tears Don't Fall.
00:09:06That's, that's, it doesn't matter how much death metal
00:09:08you listen to and how much you would, you know,
00:09:10say words to people that liked that music
00:09:12when you were a young kid in the 2000s, right?
00:09:14Like it's like, you know Tears Don't Fall
00:09:16and all those kinds of clowns.
00:09:17I think what has happened is a lot of that music
00:09:21is starting to research because during the 10s and the 20s,
00:09:24like there's been a lot of cool music, a lot of cool metal
00:09:26and modern metal, but there hasn't been as many hits.
00:09:31You know, like there's, in the 10s, there was, you know,
00:09:34a big one in the metalcore scene was like
00:09:35Doomsday Architects, that's a massive one.
00:09:37But the thing is, yeah, but with bands like that
00:09:41and when those moments happen,
00:09:43what happens with the music scene tends to be like,
00:09:46oh, something's working and so many bands do that.
00:09:50The amount of, yeah, I talked with Sam from Architects one time
00:09:52and he was just like, yeah, he was quite aware
00:09:54how many people ripped off that riff.
00:09:56It was just like, it is what it is.
00:09:58Even, funny enough, wasn't, the intention wasn't metal,
00:10:01but Mick Gordon doing the Doom soundtrack is 10,
00:10:05it's 10 years later now.
00:10:05Oh my God, that is still one of the biggest influences
00:10:09on modern metal.
00:10:10- Did they not get Mick Gordon in to do the mastering
00:10:13for Bring Me's album?
00:10:14- Yeah.
00:10:15- I'm pretty sure that Jordan got him in
00:10:16to either help with something,
00:10:17maybe it was one of the tracks or at least maybe-
00:10:19- It was on Posthuman.
00:10:20I think he did, I'm not sure exactly his like credits,
00:10:22but I think he worked maybe on one of the tracks.
00:10:26He might've been mastering it mixed into a capacity too,
00:10:28but it's like-
00:10:29- Well, that just stinks of Jordan.
00:10:30Like Jordan's very sort of orthogonal approach
00:10:33to looking at stuff.
00:10:33Like he comes into a band that's very established
00:10:35and goes, okay, I'm gonna add sort of more complexity,
00:10:38mastering, the sound's gonna become wider,
00:10:40everything's gonna become bigger, it's more electronic.
00:10:42But yeah, dude, I mean, fucking Architects
00:10:45is a great example of this.
00:10:46Somebody who's been around way longer than you think.
00:10:49- Yes.
00:10:50- Those motherfuckers are old.
00:10:51I love Sam, I love the boys,
00:10:54but like they're looking well for their age
00:10:58and for how much touring they've done.
00:11:00I think they're on album nine or 11 now.
00:11:02And each album, if you track it,
00:11:04each album has just been linearly bigger than the last one.
00:11:08The lines just kept going up steadily.
00:11:10How many bands that after nine albums
00:11:14or 11 albums or something, have that be their biggest one?
00:11:17That's the first number one album
00:11:19or the first time that they charted,
00:11:20the first time, whatever, after doing it for two decades.
00:11:22That's really rare.
00:11:23- It's very tricky for bands to be that consistent.
00:11:27Bring Me is one of them, Architects is one of them.
00:11:29Obviously the newer bands like Sleep Token, Bad Omens,
00:11:31The Spirit Boxes. - Reddish, Reddish, dude.
00:11:33- Dude, Loathe, I don't know if you listen to Loathe at all.
00:11:35- I do, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:11:36- That was a crazy one where that one dropped,
00:11:37I think it was 2020 or 2021, around COVID eras.
00:11:40And it was like, I remember dropping and people were like,
00:11:42"Oh, this is cool.
00:11:43I like Deftones, Meshoga and Loathe.
00:11:45They're spiced on it, that's cool."
00:11:47And it was like, I noticed six months a year later,
00:11:49I was like, "Okay, why is this band now big?
00:11:53It's like these numbers are going crazier."
00:11:54And they haven't done dropped anything else.
00:11:56You know, they've been touring on it,
00:11:57but as much as they could, but there wasn't much going on.
00:12:01And then you start to see,
00:12:02"Oh, like these songs had something very special to them."
00:12:05They had a bit more of that timeless effort
00:12:07where they kind of- - Yeah, people are like,
00:12:08"What's going on, is this metal, is it shoegaze?"
00:12:09- Yeah, yeah. - It's sort of this-
00:12:10- That was when also the genre fusion thing
00:12:13was like kind of more in its infancy.
00:12:15Not that, you know, bands weren't doing it even in the 2000s.
00:12:18I mean, nu metal as a whole is genre fluidity, right?
00:12:21Of like hip hop and mainstream stuff mixed with,
00:12:24you know, aggressive riffs and groove and stuff like that.
00:12:27But I think in terms of the modern sphere
00:12:30where you're able to, in the same capacity here,
00:12:32like almost a near, you know,
00:12:342000 traditional deathcore breakdown.
00:12:36But then here, of course, where it's like an R&B
00:12:38or like a Deftonesy shoegaze kind of thing,
00:12:41that was a newer concept in the 2020s.
00:12:43- But to do it in a way that doesn't feel too partitioned.
00:12:47- Yes. - 'Cause, you know,
00:12:48if you go back to, what would be a good example of this?
00:12:51Earlier Day to Remember. - Yep.
00:12:52- Earlier Day to Remember, very poppy vocals.
00:12:55Jeremy's working real hard on that.
00:12:57And I remember a plot to bomb the panhandle, right?
00:12:59Where they got fucking What's His Face,
00:13:01that porn star in the music video.
00:13:03- Don't remember. - It was pretty funny.
00:13:06They were playing around with the cleanest vocals possible
00:13:10and the heaviest breakdown that they could get
00:13:13using the same tone.
00:13:14And it was good, but it did feel quite fragmented.
00:13:17And I think if you look at even their music now,
00:13:19but also if you were to look at basically anything
00:13:22except for Caramel, it's very flowy.
00:13:26Architects has gone from, I mean,
00:13:28they actually with Doomsday inverted it, right?
00:13:30And they went from heavy verse to melodic chorus,
00:13:33which had almost never been heard of,
00:13:35to go heavy to light as opposed to light.
00:13:38And then the chorus and the breakdown is what's heavy.
00:13:40- Yeah.
00:13:41Yeah, that's something where like,
00:13:42I think bands have gotten better.
00:13:44'Cause in the '10s, there was the whole like rise core era
00:13:47where there was the electronic.
00:13:48- Chunk, chunk, chunk.
00:13:49Yeah, like Edna Shikari.
00:13:51- Yes, all of that.
00:13:52And a lot of those bands,
00:13:53I think we did it with a lot of fun intent.
00:13:55You know, they were like, well, we liked that death core part
00:13:57of the 2000s and metal core.
00:13:59We liked the five, seven, eight riffs and all of that.
00:14:01But then also like, oh, synths, yo, what is this?
00:14:03(laughing)
00:14:04Like what the fuck's a synth, dude?
00:14:06Like, you know, like electronic dance breaks.
00:14:07- What's the most rave sound that we can get
00:14:10from sort of the mid '90s?
00:14:11And I'm going to put it over the top.
00:14:12- Yeah, and I think a lot of people initially
00:14:14when they started like obviously Attack Attack
00:14:16being a big proponent of that.
00:14:17And like early, early asking Alexandria and those bands
00:14:19where it was like, oh, this is like so weird and out there.
00:14:22And I think when those bands start to adapt it initially,
00:14:25it is, it's obviously fragmented,
00:14:27but it's like, you can tell they are having fun with it.
00:14:29So they didn't necessarily care for it to be
00:14:32like this beautiful cohesive from start to finish work.
00:14:35It's just like, no, here we like breakdowns
00:14:37and then we liked electronics and we just shoved it,
00:14:40like whatever.
00:14:40And if it works.
00:14:41- This bits the electronics bit,
00:14:42this bits the breakdown bit, and you're going to listen.
00:14:44- And you're going to be forced to listen
00:14:46because you want to get to the ending,
00:14:47which is the other breakdown.
00:14:48So like, it's weird how they wrote stuff back then.
00:14:51And some of that song,
00:14:53some of those songs have like a lot of longevity.
00:14:54Some of them do not at all.
00:14:56And oh my God, you're like, damn that,
00:14:58it was definitely just part of the movement.
00:15:00But I think over time,
00:15:01bands start to just get better at blending.
00:15:03And like I said, I think Mick Gordon.
00:15:05- All sophisticated, mastering's better,
00:15:07the production's better.
00:15:08It's not just some dude who happens to be okay on Pro Tools
00:15:12or like that's like piecing this together.
00:15:14Oh no, no, no, we're getting the guy
00:15:15that made the fucking Doom soundtrack in to do this.
00:15:18And then as soon as that's done,
00:15:19everybody else can kind of, okay,
00:15:21what did Mick do to make that sound quite wide?
00:15:23What did he do to layer 75 cents on top of each other?
00:15:26- There's so many cents on guitars.
00:15:29I joke about it every time because it just is what it is,
00:15:32but it's more sound design now.
00:15:34Like the guitar- - So true.
00:15:36- Obviously in a lot of sub genres of metal,
00:15:38like extreme death metal or technical death metal
00:15:40and that kind of stuff, it's very like a riff first.
00:15:43Like you have one or two guitars and they sit there
00:15:46and they make sick ass riffs in audible tuning.
00:15:49Not in like drop omega lol tuning.
00:15:51Like it's still like drop C or E standard, you know.
00:15:55There's a band Silosis who I don't know if you know them
00:15:57with Josh Middleton. - No.
00:15:58- He's super sick.
00:16:00He is a riff master.
00:16:01They've been going since, oh my God, 2006?
00:16:06I'm gonna, people are gonna-
00:16:07- What the fuck happened?
00:16:08Big question. - Yeah.
00:16:09- We'll get back to talking in just one second,
00:16:11but first tell me if this sounds familiar.
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00:17:37What happened in 1988 to 1991
00:17:42to produce so many humans that in 2006 to 2010
00:17:47would create fucking insane music for the next two decades?
00:17:50What was in the water?
00:17:51But it's attack, attack.
00:17:53Everybody fucking splinters off in different directions
00:17:56and they all rule.
00:17:58Like Underoath still going fucking decades later.
00:18:01- Dude, they're killing it.
00:18:02They sound very good.
00:18:03They sound very good nowadays.
00:18:04And I think a lot with all of those legacy bands too,
00:18:07I'd consider Underoath in that capacity
00:18:08where they have such a good old catalog
00:18:10as well as their new stuff is sick
00:18:12where like they're able to embrace their old catalog.
00:18:15And I start to see a lot of those bands,
00:18:16especially new metal bands.
00:18:18Oh my God, like the Linkin Parks and the Korns.
00:18:20- Have you seen MGK is about to release a track
00:18:21with Limp Bizkit?
00:18:22- Yeah, that's fun, man.
00:18:24Like, you know what I mean?
00:18:25It's gonna be like-
00:18:26- They kind of fit.
00:18:26- Hot, you know, starfish fucking hot dog brother, hell yeah.
00:18:29Like whatever.
00:18:30You know, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
00:18:31I don't know how they're gonna combo,
00:18:32but like it'll make sense, you know?
00:18:34And that's something, when I see stuff like that,
00:18:36I think it's fun.
00:18:37Even if the song ends up being shit, I'm like, that's fun.
00:18:40- I'm glad that you did it. - Yeah, someone went for it.
00:18:43You know what I mean?
00:18:44Like that's cool.
00:18:45And unfortunately in the metal scene,
00:18:48you not only don't get rewarded for those efforts,
00:18:51you usually get shunned intensely.
00:18:54- Oh, for collaborating too much outside of the genre?
00:18:56- Yeah, if like you get shunned if it's not like-
00:18:58- Do a feature on your fucking next track or whatever?
00:19:00- Yeah, it's very tricky.
00:19:02There's very rare occasions where like,
00:19:04it's like, oh hell yeah, like this is sick.
00:19:06Like there was one,
00:19:07I think like Spirit Box did something with like Megan,
00:19:08Megan Thee Stallion and I was like, that's a big combo,
00:19:11you know, between those two.
00:19:12- And I imagine that the Venn diagram of the people
00:19:14that listened to Spirit Box and Megan Thee Stallion,
00:19:17just fucking two circles that have never intersected.
00:19:19- Dude, it's tricky 'cause nowadays I think
00:19:21kids are growing up with like, I don't know,
00:19:23maybe they're going up with their parents,
00:19:24like that they grew up in the 2000s in the nineties.
00:19:26So they listened to all the pop and radio stuff,
00:19:29but then also, I don't know, dad listened to Suicide Silence,
00:19:31you know, or mom listened to The Acacia Strain, you know?
00:19:34So it's like-
00:19:35- I used to run nightclubs in the UK
00:19:36and the venue that I was working at passed through hands
00:19:40a bunch while we were running the Saturday.
00:19:42We had this huge fuck off Saturday,
00:19:43the shout out to everyone
00:19:44that came to Voodoo Saturdays in Newcastle.
00:19:46And we were doing like 1800 kids a week
00:19:49in a venue that held a thousand.
00:19:51And we were, it was like,
00:19:52they were pouring out the back doors,
00:19:54the door staff were taking back handers
00:19:56so that people could cue jump
00:19:57because it was the hottest thing for half a decade.
00:20:00It was really cool, it was fun to run.
00:20:02It passed hands a second time after about three years,
00:20:06four years in, and it became a live music venue
00:20:08'cause it had a big stage,
00:20:09it had quite good sound production
00:20:11and they started putting bands on.
00:20:12I was like, oh, this is cool.
00:20:14Like maybe some bands will come through that I really like.
00:20:17Not many bands came through that I liked,
00:20:19but there was one time where I needed to clear out
00:20:23the remnants of the mosh pit after Every Time I Die
00:20:26and the same thing after Suicide Silence
00:20:29and the fucking guys came upstairs
00:20:31and the dude, I didn't realize, I can't remember who it is,
00:20:34one of the guys was recovering.
00:20:38I can't remember who it was, but he came upstairs
00:20:40and all of his bandmates, they're like,
00:20:42what's going on after this?
00:20:43And I'm like, hey, it's a club night
00:20:44and if you look outside, there's 500 people waiting,
00:20:48like just pouring out of this car park.
00:20:50And I'd go outside, like some, I had a big afro at the time,
00:20:53some huge fucking big head conductor
00:20:55trying to orchestrate this just chaos,
00:20:58this cacophony of bullshit.
00:20:59And they're like, oh, this sounds sick.
00:21:01And I remember that one of the guys,
00:21:02I think it was Suicide Silence, I hope I haven't got it wrong,
00:21:05I remember that one of the guys was sort of thinking like,
00:21:07this sounds really good, but like,
00:21:08I probably shouldn't be in a nightclub
00:21:10surrounded by 1500 British 19 year olds,
00:21:14given that I'm recovering.
00:21:16Anyway, it just, it caused this sort of crazy crossover
00:21:19between different worlds.
00:21:20But you are right, like people listen to,
00:21:22that you can have a dad, like my age,
00:21:26listening to something that the kid,
00:21:27the kids are like teaching him about sleep token
00:21:29and he's teaching them about Every Time I Die.
00:21:31That's what's happening now is,
00:21:33it's funny to see with like, you mentioned sleep token,
00:21:35like the battle with these very particular
00:21:36modern metal bands are like,
00:21:38they seem to be like going through all the generations,
00:21:41so like the younger kids are finding them on TikTok
00:21:43and then the parents, maybe it's also
00:21:46because their kids are listening to them, but they're sick,
00:21:48but because they're so accessible in a capacity,
00:21:50even though they still have really heavy moments
00:21:52and breakdowns and all this stuff, they're so accessible
00:21:53where like, you know, the parents will be like,
00:21:56oh wow, I really, that's such a good chorus,
00:21:58I love this singing.
00:21:59My mom does, grew up, did not, you know, listen to metal.
00:22:03She was lovely, always supportive,
00:22:05but definitely when I was, she told me a story one time
00:22:07of like, very funny, she was like, oh my goodness,
00:22:11you know, Nicola, like when you were growing up,
00:22:13there was one point you told me you like, you know,
00:22:15this metal music and I couldn't sleep for a week.
00:22:17Like, you know, 'cause she--
00:22:18- My mom and dad got worried too.
00:22:19- She thought I was, I don't know,
00:22:20I was gonna be possessed or something.
00:22:21- My mom and dad got worried as well that too.
00:22:22- Yeah, and like, I didn't grow up in her time,
00:22:24which I get looking back on the history,
00:22:26like the satanic panic and all that,
00:22:27she's like, oh, okay, like I get it, like the perception
00:22:29of that music was different.
00:22:30- It was kind of like first wave the way,
00:22:32like what would have been prior to 2004,
00:22:37like what's the genesis of the genre in the '90s and the '80s?
00:22:42The sound is so different.
00:22:45Like if you put a boy brush red on now,
00:22:48and then you play a sleep token afterwards,
00:22:52or you play omens or something, you're like, oh yeah,
00:22:55yeah, I kinda get how that's like, you know,
00:22:58it's in the same sort of lineage or whatever.
00:23:02But I don't think if you did the same thing
00:23:0420 years before 2006, 1986,
00:23:08you're not gonna get the same sort of lineage
00:23:10that you could track throughout the sound.
00:23:11So maybe it's literally just that what you listen to
00:23:14when you're a teenager, you get locked into,
00:23:16and that's still the best, like for me,
00:23:18Taken Back Sunday, both of their albums from like 2004, 2006,
00:23:22are gonna be the greatest albums that I've ever heard.
00:23:25But I'm happy for someone else to come along
00:23:27and try and have their shot, and I'm still in that.
00:23:30And because the music's evolved, but not changed necessarily,
00:23:34I think I'm still prepared to listen to it.
00:23:36- Yeah, for me, it's like, I go back in that stuff
00:23:39I grew up with, like Alexis on Fire and like Bullet.
00:23:42Dude, Alexis on Fire needs more love.
00:23:44- Bro, Dallas Green, fucking happiness,
00:23:46happiness by the killer.
00:23:47I'm gonna, Jared, give me the thing.
00:23:49I just wanna listen.
00:23:51This is gonna kill the fucking retention, and I do not care.
00:23:55I do not care at all,
00:23:56because fucking Happiness by the Killawatt
00:23:58is just one of the fucking most insane,
00:24:01and a bunch of people that I know.
00:24:04- Watch out, self-titled in crisis, it's just a trilogy.
00:24:08- What a fucking insane run.
00:24:10I mean, what is this?
00:24:12Oh, turn it up, Jared.
00:24:14(upbeat music)
00:24:16- Dude, it's good vibes, man.
00:24:19- Absolute retention killer, and I couldn't give a fuck.
00:24:22- I think also, man, with this time,
00:24:25it was this beautiful transition of youthful music, right?
00:24:30- Bro.
00:24:35- I'm not a drummer, I don't know what I'm doing with that.
00:24:38- It's so fucking beaut, and then this atmospheric,
00:24:41so this is very prescient, super fucking prescient.
00:24:45I saw Dallas Green released an album recently.
00:24:47- I haven't kept up with Dallas.
00:24:49I remember in the 2000s when City of Color was massive,
00:24:52and everyone in Canada was like,
00:24:53oh my God, you're like, you know, this is,
00:24:55'cause that broke through, obviously,
00:24:56just the metal heads, that was like,
00:24:58oh, this is like mainstream here.
00:24:59Like, this is like, you're a huge star here, which is crazy.
00:25:03And I would hear that on the radio all the time.
00:25:05And then I would always laugh when people would discover
00:25:08he's in "Alexis on a Fire," 'cause that's what I knew about.
00:25:10- Yeah, I knew Dallas through "Alexis,"
00:25:12not the other way around.
00:25:13I'm like, oh, this guy's got a solo project, cute.
00:25:15- Dude, that era of music, I think, is my favorite.
00:25:18I talk about it all the time when I have people
00:25:20kind of old our age, where like we grew up
00:25:22in the late '90s, 2000s, and it's like such a special era
00:25:26where we still went outside, but we had games,
00:25:30and we had the internet.
00:25:31Like, it existed, but it wasn't life.
00:25:33- You had the distribution without the capture.
00:25:35- Exactly, and it wasn't,
00:25:36you're consuming everything you were doing,
00:25:38and that's something that's so beautiful about it.
00:25:40- I gotta bring it up.
00:25:40Have you heard the new fucking "Seiassen"?
00:25:42- It's sick.
00:25:43- Oh my God. - It's nostalgic.
00:25:44- "Seiassen" was my fucking, why can't I find it?
00:25:48It's just reaction. - Fucking reaction.
00:25:49- These are your fucking fears, dude.
00:25:52I don't want the fucking reaction.
00:25:54I want to see the actual song, please.
00:25:57Thank you very much.
00:25:58Oh my God, dude.
00:25:59This is sickening.
00:26:02- Intelligible.
00:26:03(upbeat rock music)
00:26:06- Yeah, and they got Phil now in the band,
00:26:08who was, I mean, he was in "As Of Late Night"
00:26:10for the longest time, and like,
00:26:12you hear it in that riffing, dude.
00:26:14It's just...
00:26:18- When I heard this guy's vocals come back in,
00:26:20I was like, I'm 19 again.
00:26:22I'm 19 again, I'm 19.
00:26:26I'm at my friend's house.
00:26:28I've got a beer hat on with two straws going into my mouth.
00:26:31I'm playing Guitar Hero.
00:26:32- 'Cause dude, that's how I started guitar.
00:26:34I played, I started by playing Guitar Hero.
00:26:37That was the first thing ever in my introduction,
00:26:38but that's why that era, dude,
00:26:39like between Guitar Hero, MTV, Tony Hawk, Pro Skater,
00:26:44like all these games were influenced so much with music.
00:26:46- The snowboarding games.
00:26:48- Oh, Amped. - Yes.
00:26:49- Amped, massive.
00:26:50- That was where I learned about Static X.
00:26:52- Yep.
00:26:53- Who the fuck else was on that soundtrack?
00:26:55- Dude, there was even like the sports games.
00:26:57The sports, you know, I didn't play many of them,
00:26:59but like the- - Madden.
00:27:00- Madden, yeah, Madden, the, I don't know.
00:27:02- NBA. - Yeah.
00:27:03It was always, 'cause they wanted energy.
00:27:06They wanted energetic music, and right at that moment,
00:27:09that was obviously coming from the alternative
00:27:11and metal scene, whether it was nu metal,
00:27:12whether it was like melodic metal core,
00:27:14whether it was post-hardcore.
00:27:15- Fucking Limp Bizkit did the track
00:27:16for a Mission Impossible movie.
00:27:18- Yeah, dude, that's massive.
00:27:19And like, it was funny, 'cause if you go back then,
00:27:21I was pretty young, but I can remember it being like,
00:27:24oh, nu metal, like, this is stupid.
00:27:25You know, like, you're not a real metal head.
00:27:27Like, you gotta listen to it.
00:27:28- Yeah, I want old metal.
00:27:29- Yeah, I want proper, I want either,
00:27:30and that was a crazy time too, 'cause it was,
00:27:33everyone was fighting of like, well, real metal at that time
00:27:35was still Metallica, you know, Slayer.
00:27:37Like, that is metal.
00:27:38- That was when people had a problem with scene kids.
00:27:40- Yes. - Right.
00:27:41When it was like, it wasn't cool to be seen,
00:27:42but kind of the music's moving in that way,
00:27:44and everyone secretly listens to that music.
00:27:47It's like, I don't want to have the fringe,
00:27:48but I kind of can't not have the fringe.
00:27:50And like, well, fucking Bring Me's crushing it at the moment.
00:27:52So like, I do want to listen to them and they are cool,
00:27:54but like, everybody kind of wants to hate them a little bit.
00:27:56And like, I feel like I should be in the Lamb of God
00:27:58and Megadeth, but there's no melody in there
00:27:59and I don't really get it.
00:28:00I don't really understand what's going on.
00:28:02- It was such a tricky time,
00:28:03but some of the best music ever.
00:28:04And that's why I had a conversation with,
00:28:07I think it was JC from Era or someone from one of the--
00:28:10- Fucking love Era, dude.
00:28:11- Dude, Era is so sick.
00:28:13Where I went back and I was kind of like,
00:28:15dude, like, I don't know if I'm just a boomer now, you know,
00:28:18like I, or if it's, if it's nostalgia bait,
00:28:20but like I go back and listens to these records, you know,
00:28:23like that I grew up with.
00:28:24And I'm like, this is still the best music
00:28:27I think I've ever heard.
00:28:28- What would you, what would you put up that?
00:28:30What do you go back to when you're listening to stuff
00:28:31that's from that era?
00:28:33- So, okay, let's not fire watch or self-titled and crisis.
00:28:36Is that true?
00:28:37If I listen to one, I have to listen to the whole trilogy.
00:28:38- Correct, yeah, yeah.
00:28:39It's like watching the first Lord of the Rings.
00:28:41You're like, I'm locked in until the end.
00:28:42- He throws a fucking ring in Mordor.
00:28:43- Exactly, I'm locked in.
00:28:46Bullet the Poison is so classic because it just,
00:28:49it embodies that youthful time with, again,
00:28:52I don't even care about the lyrics or any of that capacity.
00:28:54It's just the feeling, the vibes of these aggressive riffs,
00:28:57like these, these like emo British kids
00:29:00that are like trying to be as metal as they can,
00:29:02but they're still like kids at that time.
00:29:04But they blended it in a way
00:29:06that embodies that youthfulness so well.
00:29:08- That first architect EP.
00:29:09- That first, yeah, that is, that's when they were math core.
00:29:12- Yeah.
00:29:13- It's very different to now.
00:29:14- Yeah.
00:29:15- I think that Kill Switch as Daylight Dies
00:29:17is a big one for me.
00:29:18Like, oh my goodness.
00:29:21All Our Mains, Fall of Ideals,
00:29:23that was more on the guitar side.
00:29:24- Trae You?
00:29:25- Trae You with the Curse.
00:29:26- Yep.
00:29:27- Yep, that's a big one.
00:29:28- What a fucking era, dude.
00:29:30- It was, nah, stop.
00:29:30- You know, 'cause what I've started to do,
00:29:32we do these vlogs for when I'm on tour,
00:29:34and I was like, I'm always looking,
00:29:36I'm gonna use Seya Sen, that new track is so fucking amazing.
00:29:39We've used Sleep Token, we've used Omens,
00:29:41we've used a bunch of bands,
00:29:42'cause it's cool, we have a playlist for the show
00:29:44that's not a podcast, which is just my music,
00:29:46which is just like all of his metal core stuff.
00:29:49But I was thinking, I wanna do something a bit different.
00:29:52So the most recent vlog that we just put out
00:29:55was Taken Back Sunday, A Decade Under the Influence,
00:29:59and The Used.
00:30:00- The Used.
00:30:01- And I was like, what?
00:30:03That whole era as well, for me,
00:30:06reintroducing people now to that music,
00:30:09'cause it's, as far as I can see,
00:30:10and maybe this is just what my dad felt like
00:30:13when I was 10 and he was saying, listen to Whitesnake,
00:30:16and I was like, I don't get it, Dad.
00:30:18I don't know if I can take someone who listens to,
00:30:20who's got used to the production quality of Omens
00:30:23and Sleep Token and introduce them
00:30:27to like Dashboard Confessional or Hawthorne Heights.
00:30:31- It's a hard transition, and that's where,
00:30:35I think it depends, some of those records, particularly,
00:30:38like I would say the transit, like obviously Bring Me,
00:30:41with them redoing Count Your Blessings.
00:30:43It's funny, I think that's gonna be,
00:30:45like they defined a generation with the--
00:30:47- Are they gonna try and redefine a generation
00:30:49with the same songs?
00:30:49- I think they're gonna literally do that,
00:30:51because there's already been the movement
00:30:52of like reintroducing 2000 Death Corps.
00:30:54Like there's this band, Reverand.
00:30:56Psycho Frame is probably, I would say,
00:30:57this band that does it the best,
00:30:59where like, if you like the cleansing by Suicide Silence,
00:31:02you'll like that.
00:31:03They basically took that kind of sound,
00:31:06and they're like, okay, let's do it our way
00:31:07in a way that's modern and just ace it.
00:31:09And like, that's a band that absolutely kills it.
00:31:12And there's a few other bands kind of revolved around there
00:31:14where, you know, they have the snare
00:31:16that sounds like a trash can, you know?
00:31:17Like the-- - Bonk.
00:31:18- Yeah, the old school Saint Anger snare,
00:31:21which Death Corps then stole.
00:31:23They have the 808s that literally make your speakers
00:31:26actually explode, not like kind of like,
00:31:29ah, it's clipping a little bit.
00:31:30No, like the intent is that it clips so hard
00:31:33that the rest of the 10 seconds of music following it
00:31:36is quiet because it's ducking and so compressed
00:31:40that it's so funny to listen to
00:31:42with just nonstop breeze and all of this.
00:31:45So that's something which is really exciting to see.
00:31:47And that's why I do think, like, a band like Bring Me,
00:31:49who, you know, they're like, I love that trajectory
00:31:52of we're Death Corps, we're the most, you know,
00:31:53one of the most extreme things we could be at that time,
00:31:56right, obviously there's like Death Metal and Tech Death
00:31:58and Black Metal and all that stuff,
00:31:58and all these like extreme, extreme genres
00:32:01that are more old school and less modern with the core,
00:32:04you know, at the back of it.
00:32:06And let's go through, all right, we did Death Corps,
00:32:08we did Metal Corps,
00:32:09then we did kind of alternative rock, metal,
00:32:12and then we did literally a pop record with ammo.
00:32:15And then we kind of dabbled a little of New Metal's
00:32:16post-human and then Emo Corps.
00:32:19And now let's go back to Death Corps.
00:32:20You know, it's like a band that's gotten that big
00:32:22off that trajectory.
00:32:23There's not, I don't see another band that says,
00:32:25hey, we started Death Corps, made a pop record,
00:32:27and now we're making Death Corps music again.
00:32:29Like that does not happen, you know, 'cause that's-
00:32:31Ollie's the fucking man.
00:32:32Dude, I've been friends with him for maybe like 12 years now.
00:32:36Jordan joined the band, he had a problem with Ableton.
00:32:39I tweeted him about it.
00:32:40They needed to go out in Newcastle
00:32:41when they were playing a gig.
00:32:42So I saw them play Newcastle University,
00:32:45and it must've been to 750 people.
00:32:48This was pretty, after Jordan joined.
00:32:51So not that like early in the band's trajectory,
00:32:54but still they would just about play,
00:32:56they played the O2 Academy the next time
00:32:57they came back around.
00:32:58Did they drop sound paternal yet?
00:32:59No, this would have been before that.
00:33:01Okay, 'cause that I know, that was like the, whoa.
00:33:04When was that the spirit?
00:33:05Was that before sound paternal?
00:33:06After, that was 2015.
00:33:07But so it would have been Count Your Blessings.
00:33:11Then what was the one that they did the dubstep remix of
00:33:14with the girl holding her guts?
00:33:16There was Count Your Blessings.
00:33:18That was Suicide Season.
00:33:19Suicide Season, and then There's a Hell was after that.
00:33:21Right, okay, so it was around about that time.
00:33:22Anyway, so I go out and I hang out with the boys,
00:33:25and I've just like kept in touch with them
00:33:27throughout all of the stuff that they've gone through,
00:33:29and like during COVID, Matt had a fucking shoulder issue.
00:33:32So I'm on FaceTime to him,
00:33:33like trying to explain how to do external rotation.
00:33:36Like just little cute things,
00:33:38but to see guys that you know,
00:33:41just be really fucking brave at following,
00:33:44we're gonna not be constrained by what is even popular.
00:33:49What was that?
00:33:50They did a lo-fi release.
00:33:51They were, all of the songs were like just file names,
00:33:55like stupid file names and stuff.
00:33:56Like we literally don't care.
00:33:58We'll do a collaboration with MGK and Travis Barker.
00:34:00Like there's no limits at all.
00:34:02I think that's really cool.
00:34:03- Yeah, well, they're one of those bands,
00:34:05which everyone, you know, not everyone,
00:34:07but a lot of people in the modern metal scene are like,
00:34:08oh, what did they just do?
00:34:09Okay, let's do that.
00:34:10You know, and it's just,
00:34:11they kind of did the trend setting for a long time,
00:34:13especially I think After Cent Paternal.
00:34:15That was the big one of like,
00:34:16okay, wow, every band now has production and synths,
00:34:19and the weird eight,
00:34:20the only nerdy ass guitarist will understand this,
00:34:22but like 8503/88504 chord progressions
00:34:27kind of get integrated into this stuff now
00:34:29where you hear that like very major sound,
00:34:31but it's dark and frigid and all that shit.
00:34:33And you're like, oh, okay.
00:34:34Like, thank you, bring me, you know what I mean?
00:34:35Again, not the first band to do these things,
00:34:37but the band that made it massive
00:34:40so all these other bands could come along and be like,
00:34:42oh, you made it work because this wasn't supposed to work.
00:34:46- Just because you can do it
00:34:47doesn't mean that you put it in a record
00:34:49because the point isn't to be able to do it.
00:34:51The point is for it to be done and it be popular.
00:34:53And it takes someone, so I was listening to,
00:34:56you know Cody Rhodes is the WWE guy with the blonde hair.
00:34:58- I don't, I don't.
00:34:59- Okay, so I don't watch WWE much,
00:35:01but I was listening to this part
00:35:02and it was really fucking interesting.
00:35:03And he was saying that it doesn't matter who did it first.
00:35:07It matters who did it best and who popularized it.
00:35:10So he was talking about Hulk Hogan and he said,
00:35:12Hulk Hogan did the power up thing.
00:35:15So he's kind of losing a fight
00:35:17and then someone hits him and he shakes it off.
00:35:20And then they hit him again.
00:35:21He shakes it off and he hit him again.
00:35:21And then he turns the fight around and he wins.
00:35:24Nine wrestlers had done that before Hulk Hogan.
00:35:28Also the finger thing, like the finger point
00:35:30that was kind of classically owned by Hulk Hogan.
00:35:33He stole that from a ton of other people
00:35:35that had done it before,
00:35:37but they hadn't done it to the point
00:35:38where they got saturation and popularity and owned it.
00:35:41And it's kind of not too dissimilar with this
00:35:44'cause architects with doomsday,
00:35:45like there's a fucking wonderful line I love,
00:35:48which is originality is just undetected plagiarism.
00:35:52- Oh dude, nothing is new anymore.
00:35:53- Yeah, technically. - Sam will say himself.
00:35:55He's, oh, well, yeah, dude,
00:35:56you know, he's listening to this thing or that.
00:35:57I mean, listen to Jordan Fish, like Jordan's fucking inspo.
00:36:00There's so much of the shit that he did.
00:36:02He's like coming from weird video games
00:36:04and like watching cyberpunk stuff and all, you know,
00:36:06real crazy out there stuff.
00:36:07And you go, okay, so it wasn't original,
00:36:09but you were the first one to do that thing well,
00:36:12popularly in this genre.
00:36:15And once that's done,
00:36:16like how many people are trying to recreate
00:36:18the cum metal, like rap?
00:36:20- That should never have been a type of thing.
00:36:22- Cum metal, I think cum metal is a perfect descriptor
00:36:24for what bad omens and token are.
00:36:26- You know that- - Baddiecore.
00:36:28- What is it? Baddiecore. - Baddiecore.
00:36:29It's more sophisticated.
00:36:30(laughing)
00:36:32Yeah, there you go.
00:36:33- What's the sound of this?
00:36:35- That's, it's vibes.
00:36:37It's night drive vibes, dude.
00:36:39- Correct.
00:36:39- Yeah, there you go, with the windows down,
00:36:41the easy breeze, you know, you're just like chilling.
00:36:43But yeah, that one is, oh, it's, nothing is new anyway.
00:36:48And that's the crazy thing with music
00:36:50'cause I think a lot of bands try, you know,
00:36:54I think have accepted that to a capacity.
00:36:56And you know, you can't do a new chord progression.
00:36:58- Thank you, go on a beer, an AB beer,
00:37:01like a non-alcoholic beer.
00:37:02- Cheers, dude.
00:37:03- All right, cheers, dude.
00:37:04- Like you can't do a new chord progression.
00:37:08I don't think you physically can.
00:37:10I think in terms of music,
00:37:12every single one has ever been done is done.
00:37:14You know what I mean?
00:37:15In terms of a sequence of notes,
00:37:16you can't technically create a new sequence.
00:37:18They've all been done in the history of music.
00:37:20Can you do them at a specific sequence,
00:37:22in a specific key, in a specific BPM,
00:37:25with a specific chord progression under,
00:37:27with a specific groove under that?
00:37:29These are the differentiators that make it more unique.
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00:38:28Does that not mean then, if that's the case,
00:38:31would that not suggest that vocals, lyrics,
00:38:34the kind of things that are most front and center,
00:38:40the songwriting and the lyrics
00:38:41should be the biggest differentiator
00:38:43that people still have now?
00:38:45Is that not the case?
00:38:46- I don't, I mean, it could be, but also,
00:38:49and this is way out of my realm of understanding,
00:38:52you know, I would probably attend more
00:38:53to like understanding human psychology more
00:38:56'cause a lot of the lyrics, particularly in middle two,
00:38:58are very, you know, like damn, shit sucks, you know?
00:39:02And like, why does shit suck?
00:39:03- Life's hard and I wish it wasn't and I'm alone,
00:39:06but maybe there's a bit of hope, but there's probably not.
00:39:08- Yeah, or, and I mean, or telling stories, right?
00:39:11Which, I mean, then that's,
00:39:13that probably takes more of a history degree again
00:39:15than my dumb ass on the internet,
00:39:16figuring that out of like understanding,
00:39:18like I'm sure in history, stories have been retold
00:39:20and retold in different ways and new masks of it.
00:39:23You know what I mean?
00:39:24Where that's why it's like yes or no when it comes to lyrics
00:39:27'cause I think they're still running into that same problem.
00:39:28You can only use so many words.
00:39:30I mean, you can also saturate words like the undertone,
00:39:34my God, band, stop using that fucking word, right?
00:39:36Like, you know, I'm stuck in the undertone.
00:39:37Like there is, or call outs and shit like this
00:39:39where like there's so many-
00:39:42- Cliche. - Cliche lines.
00:39:43Exactly that like, yeah, we can avoid that,
00:39:46but in terms of thematically, you know,
00:39:50or using the particular words to describe a feeling
00:39:53and emotion that's the theme of the song.
00:39:54I mean, that's something that's so tricky
00:39:56and hard to find, again, uniquely, but that's why,
00:40:00because there's so many elements of a song, right?
00:40:02There's lyrics, there's the vocals,
00:40:04there's the types of cadence.
00:40:05You know, you can have a song that everything is the same
00:40:09in terms of the lyrics, the concept of the theme,
00:40:11the groove, the BPM, the melodies.
00:40:14And you can have one do a deathcore version
00:40:15and one do a country version, you know what I mean?
00:40:18And you can, technically that would be a cover
00:40:20because they're so similar, right?
00:40:21But at the same time to a listener,
00:40:23a lot of people would not even know they're the same song.
00:40:26- Sonically, they don't sound anything like that.
00:40:27- Exactly, right?
00:40:28Even though conceptually on paper,
00:40:30you have all the things written down
00:40:32and that's why I see things happening in the scene sometimes
00:40:34of like, this band copy, this band, this band copy, this band.
00:40:37I'm like, yeah, you know, but like under what factors?
00:40:41You know what I mean?
00:40:42Like there's so many elements and variables.
00:40:44Like what defines that?
00:40:45You know, I'm not making the copyright laws,
00:40:47that's for sure.
00:40:48My YouTube channel says I'm not, you know what I mean?
00:40:50With how many claims I get.
00:40:51So it's like in terms of making music
00:40:54and how similar it is to something else
00:40:56and it being considered like new, at what point?
00:41:00Like if the melody is the same
00:41:02and the lyrics are almost like 90%, I don't know,
00:41:05based on fucking chat, GPT are the same or this,
00:41:09but like you're three BPM faster, like is this,
00:41:12you know what I mean?
00:41:13- How different enough is different enough?
00:41:14- Yeah, and then that's something that's really tricky
00:41:16and when we start to get into like the grassroots of that,
00:41:18that's when it's just like--
00:41:19- Well, Ed Sheeran had that big pull up, right?
00:41:21Maybe a few years ago where he's like, look,
00:41:23I can play every big hit from the last 50 years
00:41:26on like these few chords.
00:41:28- Yes.
00:41:29- And yeah, I don't know, I haven't seen much,
00:41:31at least coming out of metalcore,
00:41:33I haven't seen much by the way of beef from this band,
00:41:37took from this band, took from this band.
00:41:39I think maybe because it's so small,
00:41:41the scene is sufficiently small
00:41:43that the likelihood of you encountering them at Rockville
00:41:46or at fucking download or something is,
00:41:49there's not enough bands to go around, you know?
00:41:52So it's like podcast partners with what we do.
00:41:56If you get to a certain level,
00:41:58there's only a handful of partners that have the money
00:42:02to be able to sponsor shows of a certain size.
00:42:04That means that you can't piss them off, right?
00:42:07You can't because either word will get around
00:42:10and or you need them at some point.
00:42:12I'm gonna be the equivalent of a supporting band
00:42:15or headlining with a part,
00:42:17I'm gonna be at some fucking conference somewhere
00:42:19or whatever, like need someone to loop me in
00:42:22with the guy from Ate Sleep
00:42:23or the dude that does fucking better help or whatever.
00:42:25Like it's the same thing.
00:42:27- Yeah, the scene is very big and small at the same time.
00:42:31And that's kind of for me, again, a person,
00:42:32like I'm not in a touring band,
00:42:33I'm not part of that specific segment of that world,
00:42:37even though I work with all the bands.
00:42:39I, you know, in terms of the label industry side,
00:42:42like I work with them in the back end in terms of like,
00:42:43hey, you know, at least back then they would be like,
00:42:46hey, we got this coming out, you know?
00:42:47So I was very in tuned always with like PR
00:42:48and like then being like,
00:42:50hey, we got these releases coming up.
00:42:51Hey, do you want this person on your show to shoot the shit?
00:42:54Or, you know what I mean?
00:42:54Do you want to do some kind of content and whatnot?
00:42:57So that's my knowledge base of that.
00:42:59But in terms of even just that circle
00:43:01and talking to people, like everyone kind of knows everybody.
00:43:05So if you're a dick, it's really obvious.
00:43:07Just don't be a dick to people
00:43:09and then you'll usually be fine.
00:43:10And obviously part of that is you trying not to copy paste
00:43:13someone's song session,
00:43:14'cause it can be very like super obvious.
00:43:17- The other way through that
00:43:19is to almost make being a dick your brand,
00:43:21which is what Ronnie Radke does.
00:43:22- There's a few people that I think have done that
00:43:25so successfully and mad kudos.
00:43:28They, you know, they do it to a point where it's like,
00:43:30damn, like to be consistent at doing that is like exhausting.
00:43:33So if you can pull that off, holy shit.
00:43:34- It's almost like, do you know what it is?
00:43:36And I think he's fucking fascinating.
00:43:38Ronnie's going to come on the show soon,
00:43:39which is going to be cool.
00:43:39Like it's basically like being the heel
00:43:43in wrestling a little bit.
00:43:44Like the heel can have the belt.
00:43:47He can be the best in the world at a thing,
00:43:49but also it's kind of happy to be the person.
00:43:52What's your job?
00:43:53Oh, my job's to piss everyone off.
00:43:55Like my job is to give zero fucks
00:43:56and to just piss everybody off.
00:43:58- Yeah, that's a few bands, I think.
00:44:01I think particularly during like the MySpace/Warp Tour days,
00:44:05that was like a thing to do.
00:44:07Like, let's go try, like be the extreme band.
00:44:09Like let's go piss people off.
00:44:10Like fuck you, we're rock stars.
00:44:12You know what I mean?
00:44:12- Have you ever seen the video of when Bring Me did,
00:44:16was it the Brit Awards and Oli stood on Coldplay,
00:44:20Chris Marlin's table and kicked his like champagne
00:44:23off and stuff.
00:44:24And that was huge beef.
00:44:25And I remember thinking at the time, never in my life,
00:44:29did I assume that I would be seeing Oli Sykes
00:44:32and Chris fucking Martin from Coldplay
00:44:35having beef with each other.
00:44:36- Every, a lot of people know each,
00:44:37and that's why it's like, I think it is somewhat segmented
00:44:40in terms of like, okay, you're a metal band
00:44:42or you're a poppers, but like a lot of it,
00:44:43there's so much overlap.
00:44:44I mean, a lot of people have the same, I mean,
00:44:46labels to a capacity.
00:44:49The metal ones are usually like on the smaller ones,
00:44:50you know, subsets, but like, you know, PR,
00:44:53a lot of them have similar booking agents and stuff like that.
00:44:56So like there's overlap always.
00:44:57And it's, and a lot of also the top 50, the metal,
00:45:00the, you know, even country artists are like,
00:45:02they're metal heads.
00:45:03They grew up listening to-
00:45:04- All of their band are made up of metal heads.
00:45:06- Yes, all the touring musicians are always seeing kids.
00:45:09And that's really funny.
00:45:10I had, I chatted with Johnny from Bill Murray
00:45:13and 'cause I was like, how, you know,
00:45:15I've never been in Nashville.
00:45:15Like how was it in Nashville?
00:45:16I know that's the country place,
00:45:17but also a lot of metal heads are there.
00:45:18And he, and he was also mentioning like, dude, yeah,
00:45:21like everyone's a metal hood.
00:45:22Like even if they write country,
00:45:23it doesn't matter this or that.
00:45:24Like everyone just is, they're hardcore dudes.
00:45:27They're from the scene, they're seeing kids,
00:45:28like whatever it might be.
00:45:29They all love that music, which is really cool.
00:45:32It's, it's cool to see, because again,
00:45:34if you were to listen to the music, you're like, that's,
00:45:37that is different than Breeze and-
00:45:38- Technically proficient the way.
00:45:39- Yeah.
00:45:40- Like technically proficient,
00:45:41which I think that lineage allows you
00:45:43to then become really successful.
00:45:45Like if you can play good metal,
00:45:49you can probably end up playing most other things.
00:45:51Cause most of the things are going to be not derivative,
00:45:53but at least like less complex than most of them.
00:45:56- Especially nowadays, because,
00:45:57because modern metal is so focused on production
00:46:00and songwriting, I guess, to a capacity,
00:46:03depending on which subset.
00:46:05Cause there's a subset of obviously, like I said,
00:46:07death metal tech, death, all that stuff.
00:46:08That's, that's still death metal.
00:46:09That's riff first, you know, figure everything else out.
00:46:12Like the drummer is going 500 BPM or however fucking fast
00:46:14he wants to go on the double kicks.
00:46:16And they're figuring that out, right.
00:46:17And it's super sick and it creates this very extreme,
00:46:20brutal, intense music,
00:46:22which doesn't have necessarily a lot of production.
00:46:24You know, there's, there's not a synth layer
00:46:26in the background and that's like, whoa, what?
00:46:28You know, meanwhile now with the particular
00:46:31modern metal bands, it's like you record guitar
00:46:34and you have the MIDI ready to put the synth to it.
00:46:37Like there's no question.
00:46:38If you're going to have synth layered in,
00:46:41the producer is going to just do it for you.
00:46:43If you didn't think of it anyways.
00:46:45And then there's going to be usually quad tracks.
00:46:47There's going to be four guitar tracks, just deal with it.
00:46:49You know what I mean?
00:46:50The drums, you want those raw drums, buddy?
00:46:52Okay, sure.
00:46:53Go record the raw drums.
00:46:54We'll, yeah, it's all raw.
00:46:56Okay. You know, we'll figure it out later.
00:46:57Meanwhile, you know, the producer was like, yeah, okay.
00:46:59Obviously you guys.
00:47:00- Molesting everything.
00:47:01- Yeah, because like.
00:47:02- Can you explain to me?
00:47:03I heard this story about the drummer from Slipknot
00:47:07just got a relatively new drummer to Slipknot,
00:47:10which has kind of given them a fresh breeze of light.
00:47:14What's the story there?
00:47:15Cause I only know half of it.
00:47:17- I don't know the backend story.
00:47:19I just know they, I mean,
00:47:20obviously they had Joey way back when, the legendary.
00:47:22And then they had Jay for quite some time.
00:47:24And then I don't know, a falling out or something.
00:47:27It's the usual PR stuff of like.
00:47:30- Creative differences.
00:47:31- Yeah, man.
00:47:32And that's why when you see that, you're just like, okay.
00:47:34You know, you kind of move along again.
00:47:35I don't know any of those guys personally.
00:47:37So that's why I just, and same thing.
00:47:38Most fans just go, oh, no, that sucks.
00:47:41And then they got Eloy who was super sick.
00:47:44He was in a Sepulcher if I'm not mistaken.
00:47:45And yeah, he's a bad-ass drummer.
00:47:48And then, you know, people are stoked on that.
00:47:49And I don't think they've released music
00:47:51with him yet or anything.
00:47:53- I've seen some of the videos of it happening live though.
00:47:55- Which is.
00:47:56- He's a beast.
00:47:57- Some of the most insane shit.
00:47:59- He's a beast.
00:47:59And that's why like that music back then,
00:48:02it's so aggressive and primal.
00:48:04That do that 2000s era.
00:48:05Cause there was so much happening.
00:48:06You know, we're talking obviously about like the,
00:48:08the emo stuff and then the metal core stuff.
00:48:10But that new metal phase that broke through the barrier,
00:48:13I think bigger than any of the other kind of metal bands
00:48:15at that time.
00:48:16Like the Slipknots, the Lincoln Parks,
00:48:17the System of a Down.
00:48:19You know, the fact that kids grow up now
00:48:20and they're like, I don't know, 10 or whatever.
00:48:22And you see like, my favorite song's Chop Suey.
00:48:25It's like, first of all, you're probably too young to,
00:48:28for that to be your favorite song.
00:48:29You know, like for the lyrical context of that.
00:48:32But number two, how the fuck did you find that song?
00:48:34Because I found that when I was 10.
00:48:36You know what I mean?
00:48:37Like, that's crazy.
00:48:38- Let's watch some of those videos.
00:48:39Jerry, can I have the screen?
00:48:40- Oh, it's nostalgic.
00:48:40Let's go.
00:48:41- I need to, I want to watch some of the live stuff
00:48:43of the new Slipknot.
00:48:46- This is eight months ago, this is about right.
00:48:48- Yeah.
00:48:49- He's also built like an absolute fucking brick shit house.
00:48:53- Yeah, I think for extreme drumming,
00:48:55like that should be a requirement nowadays.
00:48:58It's such a physical thing.
00:49:01You know, guitarists, we sit there,
00:49:02you fucking strum a chord, you strum breakdowns.
00:49:04- You can be as weenie as you want.
00:49:05- You can be as weenie as you want, exactly.
00:49:07But like drums, I mean, unless it's all a backtrack,
00:49:10you can't be weenie.
00:49:12You got some beef to it.
00:49:17- Yeah, that's probably, that's...
00:49:19- Imagine taking a drumstick to the face from that guy, man.
00:49:25Holy shit.
00:49:27- Dude, if only I could be that stare.
00:49:28- I know.
00:49:29No, thank you.
00:49:32But even with this, that's some sequencing going on
00:49:37down the bottom, eh?
00:49:38Like some pads, some something here.
00:49:40- Yeah, I'd imagine, I mean, most bands probably,
00:49:43they have usually the laptop because with the satin
00:49:45or whatever or something.
00:49:46- But there's something, maybe like drum pads,
00:49:48whatever this is, straight in front of us.
00:49:49- Yeah.
00:49:50- Yeah, just freakish, dude.
00:49:53And it's, I don't know, it's just cool
00:49:54that you've got someone who has kind of brought new eyes
00:49:59to a band that's been around for so long.
00:50:03- Dude, Slipknots, oh man, it's, is it 30 years?
00:50:0790, no, okay, 99 was self-titled.
00:50:10I don't know when the EP was.
00:50:11Eat, mate, feed, repeat, whatever the fuck the EP was called
00:50:15with the first singer.
00:50:17They've been a band for like 30 years.
00:50:20That is psycho.
00:50:21That's like, how long has Killswitch been around?
00:50:23Oh my goodness.
00:50:26I don't know when they technically,
00:50:28'cause it's always weird.
00:50:29The album is not when the bands usually start.
00:50:31Usually they grind for five years in local shows
00:50:33and like their parents' garage, so like when they're four.
00:50:37Alive and Just Breathing was 2000, oh my God, two, one.
00:50:44Either two, either one, two, three, or four.
00:50:46No, End of Heartache was 2004.
00:50:48As Daylight Dies was 2006.
00:50:51I think it was 2002 around there.
00:50:53Old, old, but they wouldn't,
00:50:56they're consistent, they've been going at it,
00:50:57and they're timeless.
00:50:58When you make bangers like that,
00:50:59it's something that's so special.
00:51:00- Kanye West, dude.
00:51:01Kanye West, if you make bangers, you can keep on doing it.
00:51:04- You can keep on doing it.
00:51:05- Metal's sort of becoming increasingly self-aware
00:51:08and ironic, I think, especially in its positioning,
00:51:10the way the sort of people put it across.
00:51:12What do you, why do you think that's happening?
00:51:14What's that say about the audience, the industry, the music?
00:51:17- I think it has to do with a lot of things
00:51:20we've actually talked about so far.
00:51:21It's like, there's a lot of nostalgia built in
00:51:24with the new modern age of people going back
00:51:26and being like excited about that.
00:51:28So when they also look back,
00:51:29I think that's part of the irony and somewhat of the joke,
00:51:32because back then, a lot of the metal was so like random
00:51:36and like kids in their garage, like Job for a Cowboy,
00:51:38or like, especially during the Myspace days,
00:51:40when like the song titles were like,
00:51:42tell Jimmy to get the fuck out of the garage
00:51:44or like, whatever it is, you know what I mean?
00:51:45Like, it's, they're just such random names back then,
00:51:49where that, for that, you know, these bands weren't thinking.
00:51:52I think a lot of these bands also were like,
00:51:53well, we're not going to be a big band.
00:51:55You know, people don't have to remember these names.
00:51:57They don't have to remember these, these breakdown melodies,
00:52:00these, these sound clips, these, you know, vocal moments,
00:52:03like who's, you know, we're going to be playing
00:52:05to our few fans that like us and we're happy with that.
00:52:07So I think part of that modern day of, of embracing that
00:52:12is revisiting that era because it was so raw like that
00:52:17and kind of making the joke about it again,
00:52:20in a very odd way.
00:52:23- You almost parody yourself.
00:52:24- You're kind of parodying yourself,
00:52:25but then also how the industry has evolved in a way
00:52:30where there's a lot of particular ways to do modern music,
00:52:35even though, funny enough, it's more genre fluid than ever.
00:52:39I would say in terms of like, I get you listen
00:52:41to like a Sleep Token and they have a black metal part
00:52:43with like a pop song.
00:52:44Like that's, that's cool.
00:52:45That's crazy.
00:52:46But it still comes down to you got to have good songwriting
00:52:48or like no one's going to care after the first initial
00:52:50like TikTok that goes.
00:52:51- Oh, that's interesting.
00:52:52- Yeah. - That's different.
00:52:53- Yeah. Oh, that's, that's cool.
00:52:54Okay. Like not, if you don't add it to the playlist,
00:52:56no one, it's gone, right?
00:52:57Like it's, it's in the abyss and then it's like, okay.
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00:54:04- It is interesting if you look at,
00:54:06like Token's a good example of this.
00:54:08The Summoning is their most played track, I think.
00:54:10- Oh yeah, I remember that moment.
00:54:11- But that breaking through,
00:54:14like what makes a song, especially a metal song,
00:54:16break through to that kind of a level
00:54:19versus this is a fucking awesome song.
00:54:22Like "Caramel" is one of the most catchy songs
00:54:25that I've ever heard.
00:54:27But it doesn't look like it's gonna get
00:54:30to the level of the Summoning.
00:54:31Okay, what is that?
00:54:33Is it the distribution?
00:54:35Is it the repeat listenability?
00:54:37Is it constantly bringing in new people
00:54:40or is it just rinsing the living shit
00:54:42out of the playlist of the ones that let,
00:54:43you know what I mean?
00:54:44I always look at the top songs of a band
00:54:47and think, huh, why that one?
00:54:49What about that one?
00:54:50- I think, 'cause I was around for that moment, particularly.
00:54:54'Cause I felt, you know, I listened to Sleep Token
00:54:56when they were the underground band.
00:54:58'Cause this always happens with these bands.
00:54:59They're the underground band that you see in Reddit,
00:55:01you know, subreddits of like,
00:55:02you guys hear this band or see this band live?
00:55:04They just play it to like 50 people.
00:55:05They're really sick.
00:55:06You know, I really like this record.
00:55:08You know what I mean?
00:55:09Like, oh, that's cool.
00:55:10You listen to like the offering.
00:55:12You heard the offering?
00:55:13Dude, this is so cool and like different.
00:55:14It's got piano.
00:55:15And like, you know, you can tell like it's kind of pop
00:55:18mixed with like Meshuggah and shit.
00:55:20And like, that's sick, right?
00:55:21And then the reach reaches this point.
00:55:24And I see this has happened
00:55:25with multiple of these modern metal bands
00:55:29where they have a really good catalog.
00:55:32And that's the smartest thing I've seen those bands do
00:55:33with upside point.
00:55:34Like they just, they're consistent.
00:55:35Make bangers.
00:55:36Don't just chase a trend or do this.
00:55:38Like for every songs of bangers,
00:55:40even though there's not that many people listening,
00:55:42those people are very, very happy, right?
00:55:45So these bands nowadays making a good catalog of bangers,
00:55:49grinding, and then there's a moment.
00:55:53And then that moment has to coincide usually
00:55:56with another huge banger, one of their best bangers.
00:55:59So that's a band where they were having the momentum
00:56:02for when I saw, again,
00:56:03I didn't get into them when they did the EP,
00:56:04but I started to get into them
00:56:05when they did like the offering, that album,
00:56:07and then the album after that.
00:56:09Something about tomb is where you fucking, the long-
00:56:12- This place will become your tomb.
00:56:12- Thank you, yeah.
00:56:13This place will become your tomb.
00:56:14And so even Alkaline.
00:56:16And I actually thought they were about to explode
00:56:18with that song 'cause I heard that was like-
00:56:20- It's got everything.
00:56:21- It's got everything.
00:56:21This is sick.
00:56:22Like, okay, do the thing.
00:56:23'Cause the offering, I already saw all that stuff happening.
00:56:25And then Alkaline was like, oh, cool.
00:56:27But there wasn't a moment around it.
00:56:29It was just, oh, another really sick banger.
00:56:31And now this band's a little bit more hype,
00:56:33kind of like grinding their,
00:56:34I'm going to use nerdy-ass gaming terms.
00:56:36Like you're ELO, like you're ranking like really slowly,
00:56:39but consistently, you're not losing any matches.
00:56:41But the rate at which you're gaining points in MMR
00:56:43is kind of like at a particular pace.
00:56:45You're not going to all of a sudden shoot up
00:56:46unless something happens.
00:56:48So they had all this built up hype with the underground,
00:56:50I think kind of like being like, this is great.
00:56:53And that's where the band was underground.
00:56:56And then they dropped the summoning.
00:56:58And because it had a moment in it
00:57:00and the song was really good
00:57:02and the band had this massive catalog
00:57:05and then the internet took notice.
00:57:08It was just, it was the perfect storm.
00:57:09- How much do you think that can be engineered?
00:57:12- I think it can be pretty engineered.
00:57:14It's something where I don't think you can engineer
00:57:16making the bangers part of it, right?
00:57:18That's be good.
00:57:19Don't fucking suck.
00:57:20And that's something a lot of bands,
00:57:22I think are starting to take a lot more seriously
00:57:24and not just be like, well, let's just chase the trend
00:57:26and whatever works with the gimmicks, right?
00:57:28Make a banger.
00:57:29And that's, I love that.
00:57:30That's number one, right?
00:57:31That you can engineer.
00:57:32Make a banger, don't suck, right?
00:57:34The other stuff I think you can engineer to a point,
00:57:37especially in modern day with the internet.
00:57:40You know, again, I haven't seen it happen myself.
00:57:43- You're giving me the eyes of someone
00:57:45that fucking knows way too much.
00:57:47- This is the thing.
00:57:48I know enough not to a point of talking
00:57:50with a bunch of people and someone being like,
00:57:52yeah, I did this.
00:57:52We caused this exact way, but in terms of seeing it
00:57:55from the sidelines of a music listener
00:57:57and understanding it and also understanding the industry
00:58:00and how social media works as a content creator, right?
00:58:02- How come so many of these different accounts
00:58:04seeded that rumor about that record coming out
00:58:08at that time on different, I wonder if these are-
00:58:12- Again, where I don't actually have zero backend knowledge
00:58:14of that, but you see that and you're like,
00:58:16I see what you're doing.
00:58:17- Something's happening.
00:58:18- Like that's cool, but this is before it was cool
00:58:21to do maybe something like that.
00:58:22- Yeah, it's cool too, right?
00:58:23Now it's like, Reddit is something taken seriously
00:58:27by the scene.
00:58:28I'm not surprised if people post Reddit posts
00:58:30of their brand new band and it's like the label
00:58:32actually getting a new account or something
00:58:34where they're posting a bunch of, or clip farming with that.
00:58:37You know what I mean?
00:58:37And trying to find clips that make that big
00:58:39where it's just some random clip guy they found in Europe
00:58:42that they paid like 20 bucks.
00:58:44- It's just an army of Vietnamese repurposes.
00:58:46- Yes, right?
00:58:47And that's something where I,
00:58:49that's going to happen more and more.
00:58:50That happens a lot in your content.
00:58:52- Jared, give me the screen.
00:58:53I want to show you, keep going.
00:58:53I want to show you this geese thing
00:58:54while you're talking about it.
00:58:55- Oh dude, I forgot about the quack, dude.
00:58:57Let's go.
00:58:58- I know, have you heard of geese?
00:58:59- No.
00:59:00- I hadn't, but I'd heard that there was a band called geese.
00:59:02And I thought, oh, that's-
00:59:03- It's Knock Knock Goose, is it?
00:59:04- That's a knocked goose, dude.
00:59:07You could imagine that.
00:59:08I want to use whatever that AI thing is to do-
00:59:12- Tsunno, yeah.
00:59:13- Tsunno, take the band knocked loose
00:59:16and replace all of the members with geese
00:59:19and tell me what that sound is.
00:59:20- See, that's what AI should have been used for.
00:59:23That is the best use of it, for fun.
00:59:27But it has changed.
00:59:28- Okay, the fanfare around the band geese
00:59:31was actually a psyop.
00:59:33TLDR, a tech company that has learned-
00:59:36- On Fantano forever, of course.
00:59:38- The algorithm created the momentum
00:59:40that made geese go viral.
00:59:42Record industry has always done things like this
00:59:44and everything on the internet is fake.
00:59:45This was it, so it's this wide article.
00:59:47The Brooklyn band geese was labeled as an industry plant
00:59:50by those who questioned its sudden ubiquity.
00:59:52Maybe it was.
00:59:54Brooklyn and New York geese shot to the heights
00:59:56of rock and roll fame at the end of 2025.
00:59:59Released in late September, dominated the top 10 lists.
01:00:02Explosion on the scene seemingly out of nowhere
01:00:03led to an inevitable backlash.
01:00:05Haters called them a psyops and questioned
01:00:06their seemingly sudden rise to stardom,
01:00:08calling them an industry plant.
01:00:10Others, while acknowledging their talent,
01:00:12attribute their fame to savvy marketing.
01:00:14The band blows up.
01:00:15In late March, the co-founders of the digital marketing
01:00:19company Chaotic Good Projects, who provide,
01:00:22per its Instagram, digital experiments and musical mayhem
01:00:26appeared on the Billboard's On the Record podcast.
01:00:30In the episode South by Southwest,
01:00:32he explained how viral marketing methods work.
01:00:35Wow, the firm creates networks of social media pages
01:00:37on TikTok and used them to drive the band's music
01:00:39into the recommendation algorithm.
01:00:41Songs are dropped into the backgrounds of videos.
01:00:43Live clips are shared.
01:00:44Sometimes burner accounts, comments,
01:00:45and whole ecosystems of interactions can be fabricated
01:00:48out of digital cloth, stoking and sometimes
01:00:50completely manufacturing discourse around an artist.
01:00:53These ginned up interactions push the songs
01:00:55and the discussion around them, higher up platforms,
01:00:57algorithm rankings, social media platforms
01:00:59increasingly where real fans discover new music.
01:01:02We can drive impressions on anything at this point,
01:01:04Spelman told Billboard.
01:01:06We know how to go viral.
01:01:07We have thousands of pages.
01:01:08Spelman has dubbed the process trend simulation.
01:01:12The campaigns themselves are referred to by Chaotic Good
01:01:16as narrative or UGCV.
01:01:19So confirmed the engineered campaigns
01:01:22for both geese and camera in winter.
01:01:23I don't know who that is.
01:01:24We help distribute clips of them performing
01:01:27and doing some interviews on TikTok, said via email,
01:01:30understand industry plant discourse is inevitable.
01:01:32We've had the pleasure of being geese fans since 2021.
01:01:34Yeah, dude, I mean, this kind of marketing seems
01:01:37to be what it takes to cut through the algorithmic noise.
01:01:40But the problem with this is that you end up
01:01:42with kind of a race to the bottom.
01:01:44It gamifies it.
01:01:45If no matter how good the track is,
01:01:48I can't win unless I do that.
01:01:50That now becomes not a performance enhancer
01:01:53or even a cheeky kind of exploit.
01:01:56It becomes the minimum level of marketing
01:01:59in order for me to get something good out of my track.
01:02:03Yeah, I think the scene,
01:02:05there's such a gamification of it
01:02:07because, again, the metal scene's a little behind,
01:02:11usually the content scene,
01:02:12like the more mainstream scene.
01:02:14That stuff happens in YouTube
01:02:17and the content creator scene for a while.
01:02:20That's something where it's like,
01:02:21oh, okay, that's not necessarily new,
01:02:23like people using clips,
01:02:24or there's people doing burner accounts
01:02:25and stuff like that and promoting.
01:02:26Okay, that's the game.
01:02:29You see these people on these Twitch streamers
01:02:31with 20,000 live concurrent,
01:02:33and you're like, who are you?
01:02:35What is it?
01:02:36- Well, the guy on the CEO of Cake
01:02:38said pretty much every big creator's viewbotting.
01:02:41You saw that clip a little while ago.
01:02:42- Yeah, that's, I mean,
01:02:44I did not know how prevalent that was until now.
01:02:47It's like a thing to talk about,
01:02:49and it's like, oh shit, you know what I mean?
01:02:50But yeah, obviously in the content scene,
01:02:52that's something it's like, all right, dude, I don't know.
01:02:55I grew up in good old 2014 YouTube
01:02:57where PewDiePie was doing dumb shit in Sweden and stuff,
01:03:01and watching that and getting inspired by the OGs.
01:03:04And now all of this stuff has been gamified so much
01:03:07because there's so much monetization ways,
01:03:11and there's so many just reasons that these bands
01:03:16want to figure it out, break through the holes.
01:03:19- With incentives, right?
01:03:20- Right, incentives.
01:03:20And with stuff like that, again,
01:03:22I haven't noticed, that's so funny.
01:03:27The band's name is Geese.
01:03:27That's one where it's like, yeah, that can happen.
01:03:30You know what I mean?
01:03:31Where if, again, a label just knows what they're doing
01:03:34in a particular way, and they just want to push it.
01:03:36- Well, look, I fucking adore them.
01:03:38They're probably my favorite band
01:03:39over the last 12 or 18 months.
01:03:42But President had an unusually large launch
01:03:45off the back of being on Future History
01:03:47and riding the anonymous, pseudonymous mask,
01:03:52sleep token thing in a not too dissimilar sound
01:03:55that's really of the moment and is fucking great.
01:03:57And their songs are straight bangers.
01:03:59I don't know, I haven't listened to Knocked Geese.
01:04:01(laughing)
01:04:02- I don't think there's a band.
01:04:03- Locked Geese, I haven't listened to them.
01:04:05- With President though, that's the thing.
01:04:06And they're like the epitome of you go on Twitter now
01:04:08and you'll see a new President song
01:04:10and then you'll see people say Industry Plant.
01:04:12And that's where it's tricky because stuff
01:04:14like the geese thing maybe happened and it's like,
01:04:16oh, okay, shit, I guess that's going
01:04:18if that's what happened, right?
01:04:20But a band like President, if you bring it down,
01:04:22okay, it's a guy who was in all their really big band.
01:04:25- Lots of other really big bands for a long time.
01:04:28- For a long time, I use gaming references a decent amount
01:04:31to kind of explain stuff.
01:04:32It's like, okay, so he has max characters.
01:04:35Maybe then I have the best gear.
01:04:36And he rolled an alt and knew exactly
01:04:38how to get all the gear.
01:04:39Okay, when I see that, I'm like the guy,
01:04:42they know what they're doing, you know what I mean?
01:04:44- Well, think about exactly what we're talking about here.
01:04:46I don't know how good Geese's music is.
01:04:49It's still strange referring to those geese.
01:04:50I don't know how good their music is,
01:04:51but that was their fourth album.
01:04:53And this one is the one that said you're an industry plant.
01:04:55You go, well, is it that
01:04:56or is it just really fucking good money?
01:04:58Guerrilla marketing on a ground floor.
01:05:00What's the difference between doing that
01:05:02and a flyer campaign?
01:05:04Where you're giving out an interesting flyer
01:05:05or fake $1 bills that have got the band's QR code on them
01:05:10or something that you can redeem.
01:05:12You know, a classic old school marketing campaign.
01:05:14That just seems like people are always gonna feel
01:05:19slightly uncertain and a bit icky
01:05:22about somebody getting something
01:05:24that they don't feel is deserved.
01:05:26- Yeah, I think in the metal scene,
01:05:27it's particularly tricky because the metal fans are hardcore.
01:05:31Like they're, they support,
01:05:33I think harder than majority of any other scenes.
01:05:35And that's amazing.
01:05:36It's really cool to see in a scene where like,
01:05:38if you're a metal fan of a band and they're smaller,
01:05:40most of the time, if they're in your town,
01:05:42you will go take the trip to the show.
01:05:44You will go buy merch.
01:05:45You will actually buy the CD,
01:05:47even though you have Spotify or iTunes.
01:05:49You know what I mean?
01:05:50Like it's something that's cool to see in that scene.
01:05:52So I think a lot of metal fans are more,
01:05:55are more invested in like the actual band.
01:05:59And it means a lot more to them than just like,
01:06:01oh, another like, you know, pop record or rap record.
01:06:03You know what I mean?
01:06:04- This is going to be a part of my life.
01:06:05I'm going to personally invest myself into this band
01:06:07and their journey.
01:06:08And I'm going to buy their merch and get tickets.
01:06:09- Which is amazing, but also has the weird off, you know,
01:06:13the bad part of it of, okay,
01:06:14well now if this band does something, maybe,
01:06:17maybe shifts their style you don't like.
01:06:19Metal heads will be the loudest to say this sucks ass now.
01:06:22They'll also be-
01:06:23- Well, it feels like a personal insult.
01:06:24- Yes, exactly.
01:06:25Cause I think it's, you're much more attached to these bands.
01:06:27- I'm sure that some people are very attached
01:06:30to Megan Thee Stallion,
01:06:31but something tells me less so if she takes a pivot
01:06:35and does acoustic country than if Sleep Token
01:06:37were to do the same thing.
01:06:38- That would be hard.
01:06:39She should do Baddiecore.
01:06:40- That would be good.
01:06:41She already kind of is Baddiecore in a way.
01:06:42- She's Baddiecore without,
01:06:43just put the fucking guitars, dude.
01:06:45- Why don't you reach out to Megan Thee Stallion,
01:06:47get her on stream and you can do,
01:06:49hey, tell me about this new fast songwriting thing.
01:06:52- Oh dude, yeah.
01:06:54- You're launching a new channel.
01:06:55- No, so not a new channel.
01:06:56So basically I think I used to do was like,
01:06:59I did the series called How to Do Metal.
01:07:01It was like writing song.
01:07:02It was, how do I wear this?
01:07:03I would do shorts of like,
01:07:05'cause a lot of people loved a lot of these bands
01:07:06and I love a lot of these bands.
01:07:07I grew up, like I said, listening to a bunch of bands
01:07:08and I'm like, at this point I've written enough music.
01:07:11I've also listened to enough music
01:07:13and I understand how it kind of works.
01:07:15I kind of describing factors we were talking about,
01:07:17like the particular types of BPM
01:07:19or these intricacies of like-
01:07:20- Metal Rick Beato.
01:07:21- Yeah, metal Rick Beato.
01:07:23Respect to Rick Beato.
01:07:24He's sick by the way.
01:07:25- He's the man.
01:07:26- I used to do these How to Do in 30 seconds.
01:07:28So I would kind of do a short of like, okay.
01:07:30Like I grew up loving under oath.
01:07:33So like, okay, I want to,
01:07:34here's how to under oath in 30 seconds.
01:07:36You know what I mean?
01:07:37'Cause I also was having fun
01:07:37of like understanding short content.
01:07:39Again, I come from the old YouTube world
01:07:41of make a video, not make a clip.
01:07:44You know, I was like, what the fuck's a clip, right?
01:07:46How am I supposed to make something?
01:07:47First of 'cause I didn't grow up with like Vine on my end.
01:07:50It was like, how do I, you know,
01:07:52how do I bring something of value to someone
01:07:53for like in like 10, 30 seconds?
01:07:55This is weird.
01:07:56Like I need to do more.
01:07:57So I kind of tried with this and I was like,
01:07:59so for under oath example, I'd be like, you know,
01:08:01how to under oath in 30 seconds, you know, dissonant chords,
01:08:04you know, pterodactyl screech, you know,
01:08:07like you can do stereotypical things.
01:08:08Sometimes they're more funny meme attributes
01:08:11and sometimes they're more like musician knowledge attributes
01:08:16and you kind of combine those.
01:08:17And like at the end of 30 seconds,
01:08:19I'd play like kind of like an eight second riff
01:08:21of that kind of outlines that sound
01:08:23and try to get as close as I can to that style
01:08:26while not actually taking any of their songs, obviously,
01:08:28'cause that defeats the purpose.
01:08:30So I did that for so many bands.
01:08:32And when I saw people were like, yo, this is sick,
01:08:34like full version when?
01:08:35When are you doing the full?
01:08:36And I'm like, you really?
01:08:38You want the full version of this?
01:08:39Like, okay.
01:08:40So I would go on stream and I would write the whole thing
01:08:43in two and a half hours, two to three hours live,
01:08:46because I thought it was fun, you know?
01:08:48I'm like, all right, well, I already have the hardest part
01:08:49to write, the riff and the vibe.
01:08:51So like I kind of got commit.
01:08:52Anyways, I would do that and then I would put it on DSPs
01:08:54and kind of make it a whole rollout on YouTube.
01:08:56So I did that and that was probably the peak
01:08:58of when I was doing YouTube and like going hard
01:09:00and doing a lot of crazy shit.
01:09:02And I would do that once a week, release a song once a week,
01:09:05do one of those once a week.
01:09:06It was a little psychotic, but it was fun.
01:09:08And then fast forward kind of a year later,
01:09:11I took a break for many reasons, but you know,
01:09:13especially burnout and doing that for a while.
01:09:15And then when I came back, I noticed, you know,
01:09:18hey, you know, when I was gone, you know,
01:09:20I was taking care of myself.
01:09:21I was going outside and like, you know, working out,
01:09:24caring about like under learning.
01:09:26I missed learning so much about macros, micros even.
01:09:28I was like, oh my God, like what the fuck is this world?
01:09:30I never, I haven't taken time to learn new things, right.
01:09:33And with that also learning production,
01:09:35learning more songwriting, learning a lot of that.
01:09:37And I noticed I spent most days just also writing music,
01:09:40hanging with my wife and feeding squirrels,
01:09:41like going to the park and going to Costco.
01:09:43Like that was my life.
01:09:45And coming back, I came back with a song,
01:09:48which was really sick, a nocturnal track that I was like,
01:09:50you know, let's combine like these really obscure references,
01:09:52like dance, electronic music and funk and fall music,
01:09:56like Valjarta and Marar and all this stuff.
01:09:57And see what happens.
01:09:59And kind of made that a new project.
01:10:01And as I came back, the focus of me wanting to write,
01:10:06I started to get a little distracted of like,
01:10:08oh, like this is fun, like YouTube, like, yeah,
01:10:09I guess let's make you like videos and stuff.
01:10:11And like, I had a lot of fun doing that,
01:10:13but very quickly to avoid going back to, you know,
01:10:17the cycle of, oh shit.
01:10:20I caught myself very quickly.
01:10:22'Cause again, that time off, I never had time off.
01:10:23I did YouTube for 11 years at that point.
01:10:26Yeah, 11 years straight.
01:10:28I don't think I ever did not upload for a week.
01:10:31And again, best job in the world.
01:10:33It's hard work, but in a different capacity, you know,
01:10:36it's very mentally exhausting.
01:10:38There is no such thing as clock out.
01:10:39It is, you think about it, it's all you do,
01:10:41it's all you think about, right, forever.
01:10:43But obviously in terms of like, versus a real job, you know,
01:10:46it's much easier.
01:10:47Like I much prefer to do that, right.
01:10:49But yeah, I came back and I was starting to do these things
01:10:52and I'm like, oh, this is fun too.
01:10:53Like, yeah, I kind of want to explore.
01:10:54Like I want to test the grounds.
01:10:55Like, what do I feel?
01:10:56Like this is, you know, I left the internet and took my break
01:11:01and have this new perspective on life to a capacity,
01:11:05but particularly about what I want to do with my life
01:11:07every day and with what I want to give to people
01:11:11and share with people and what I want to spend my time doing.
01:11:15And it's been a bit of a trial period until kind of
01:11:19a few months ago.
01:11:20I was like, okay, like I understand.
01:11:21I tried a little of this, I tried a little of that again.
01:11:23Like that's definitely not for me.
01:11:24I definitely don't want to be the reaction guy.
01:11:26'Cause like, I feel like I can offer the world
01:11:28more than watching a song, you know.
01:11:30And it's really tricky 'cause particularly
01:11:32with what I've done with the channel
01:11:33and what I've done with myself is I love sharing music.
01:11:36That's what it came down to.
01:11:37That's why, you know, I started, when I started my channel,
01:11:40I would do guitar covers
01:11:42because I didn't know how to talk really, you know.
01:11:45I was just an awkward kid, you know, just finishing high school
01:11:49and I didn't really know how to talk to people.
01:11:50I didn't really, I didn't know what being a YouTuber was.
01:11:53I just played guitar and I had a lot of cool music on guitar
01:11:57that I wanted to share with people.
01:11:59So the channel has always kind of been revolved
01:12:00around sharing new music in different capacities,
01:12:02whether later on it's reactions,
01:12:04whether it's through memes, et cetera, et cetera.
01:12:06And then again, nowadays it's like, okay, well,
01:12:09how do I do that while still not going back
01:12:13to kind of old ways of like, oh, well, here's the news.
01:12:15Let's talk about it.
01:12:16But like the news is kind of always fucked up.
01:12:20You know, there's not, unfortunately in the metal scene,
01:12:22there are really good things that happen and really amazing.
01:12:24Like hell yeah, like that's a big feat, you know,
01:12:26like Knock Loose playing Kimmel
01:12:27or like Spirit Box playing like the Grammys.
01:12:30Like that's amazing, right?
01:12:32But there's also a lot of like, oh, this guy got canceled.
01:12:34And like that guy texted someone at her age
01:12:37and you're like, okay, this is not, you know,
01:12:39I don't want to go live and talk about this with people.
01:12:41This is not what I want to bring energy into my life.
01:12:44First of all, I don't want to absorb this.
01:12:46- But you're kind of obliged to because you're in the scene
01:12:48and this is news in the scene.
01:12:49- Exactly.
01:12:50- Hey, when are you going to talk about such and such?
01:12:52- Dude, when I was gone and Ozzy died, that shit was so sad.
01:12:57And like the only thing I was like, fuck man.
01:13:01Like I grew up, you know, one of the first metal songs
01:13:04I ever heard was Crazy Train in general.
01:13:05And like, fuck man, this sucks.
01:13:07And I was gone from the internet.
01:13:09So the only thing I had was like, thank fuck,
01:13:11I do not have to talk about this
01:13:13because this is like, this is not my place.
01:13:16This is not something I want to go live and discuss
01:13:19and like share it.
01:13:20You know what I mean?
01:13:21Like this is, it's, it's really tricky.
01:13:24Cause you also want to, with the community
01:13:26and you build a community for so long, you know,
01:13:28just like you celebrate the winds,
01:13:29you have to celebrate the elves and the sad parts, right?
01:13:32And when there's some things too, when it's like,
01:13:35I don't add value to this conversation
01:13:38beside maybe slightly consoling a few people,
01:13:43but it's also like, I'm not in the right space
01:13:45to do that anyway.
01:13:46So I'm not, I'm not going to bring any positive energy
01:13:49to this by doing anything with this.
01:13:50So like a lot of things like that happen and it really sucks.
01:13:53And that's something, again,
01:13:54I was in a space of what I was doing before, which I had fun.
01:13:56It was great.
01:13:57And I feel like community-wise,
01:13:58like it became something really strong
01:14:00and a lot of people would go and look for it and like,
01:14:01hey, there's news, this, this, that.
01:14:03But when it came down to it, it still was like,
01:14:06it was too much of like a slippery slope of, of like,
01:14:09hey, this really cool thing happened.
01:14:10Great, yeah, this really shitty thing happened.
01:14:13Oh.
01:14:14- Guess I need to talk about that as well.
01:14:15- Yeah, and it's ironic because obviously
01:14:17in the content space, the negative stuff will do better.
01:14:20And a lot of people get really excited.
01:14:23- Dude, "Fantana vs Radke" was like
01:14:25the heavyweight battle of 2025.
01:14:28- There's, the scene's lovely, Chris.
01:14:29It's a crazy place where like from the sidelines I see
01:14:32and I'm like, I'm kind of like,
01:14:33I'm happy I can just chill on the sidelines.
01:14:35- You are aware that this is the same
01:14:36in like every industry though, right?
01:14:38Like in podcasting, it's just as tight.
01:14:41- There's entire ecosystems dedicated to reporting
01:14:45on the drama that's going on.
01:14:46Not reporting on what they're reporting on.
01:14:49- Yes.
01:14:49- Reporting on what's happening between the people
01:14:51who do the reporting.
01:14:52- Yes, between who do the reporting
01:14:54and then reacting to the video of them reporting.
01:14:55- What I can't wait for is when people react
01:14:58to the people who do the reaction.
01:15:00- Yes, exactly.
01:15:01- I want derivative content all the way up.
01:15:02I want to be able to have, what were those fucking,
01:15:04what was the reason that the entire financial crisis happened?
01:15:07What were they, CFDs or whatever they were called?
01:15:10Like those like fucking derivative things
01:15:12where people were bundling together a ton of debt.
01:15:15I want the bundle together debt of the bundle together debt
01:15:18of the bundle together.
01:15:19Like all of the gossip of the gossip of the gossip.
01:15:20And I want to be like fucking two guys at the top.
01:15:22- Yeah, I feel, yeah.
01:15:24That goes on a lot in the content space for sure.
01:15:26And I think in the metal scene too,
01:15:27like it has bled through a lot.
01:15:28And that's why it's like, if I'm gonna, like when I left,
01:15:31I was like, I'm content with my legacy and I genuinely am.
01:15:34I'm like, if I actually-
01:15:35- You're happy to just leave it forever?
01:15:37- I am so, I am, I'm proud of what we did
01:15:42and the thing I brought to the internet for those years.
01:15:45You know what I mean?
01:15:46Like I look back on it and sure,
01:15:47I screwed up and did dumb shit.
01:15:49You know what I mean?
01:15:49Like, so does everyone.
01:15:50And it's one of those where it's like,
01:15:51I am proud that I feel like over those years,
01:15:54I was a net positive to the space in terms of which I,
01:15:59which I worked and ended things with.
01:16:01You know what I mean?
01:16:02And that, I was like, I'm cool with this.
01:16:03Like if this is actually it, that's great.
01:16:04You know what I mean?
01:16:05Like I'm gonna take a break,
01:16:07but like, I'm not gonna pressure myself of like,
01:16:09I need to come back 'cause I need to be at peace.
01:16:12And I told my wife this too.
01:16:13I was like, if I leave at all,
01:16:14I need to actually be at peace that I'm gone.
01:16:16Like-
01:16:17- And leaving, not taking a break.
01:16:18- Yeah, like I need to have that mentality.
01:16:20However, I don't, I also don't want to always close things,
01:16:23you know, so I don't want to just be like definitive, like,
01:16:26'cause I know I love it, right?
01:16:27So that's something really tricky.
01:16:28I love the space and I love this.
01:16:29And even if I do something in a different capacity,
01:16:31it's like, okay, I want like, I'm gonna,
01:16:34let's take a break 'cause I need to figure out my,
01:16:36I need to take a break anyways,
01:16:38but I need to still at this point be content
01:16:41if that's not just a break, you know what I mean?
01:16:43And like, especially 'cause I've never taken a break.
01:16:45So doing that, you learn a lot of shit about yourself
01:16:48and you learn a lot of things about what's priorities in life
01:16:51and just like what matters and-
01:16:52- What was that like?
01:16:53A lot of people, even if they don't make videos
01:16:55on the internet can relate to being hard charging.
01:16:58You've said, I've never actually taken the time
01:17:00to not just burn, right?
01:17:02This always on candle at both ends thing.
01:17:05Talk to me about the deceleration of attention,
01:17:10progress, even your habits.
01:17:12You wake up and research what's going on
01:17:14on rock sound or whatever.
01:17:15And then that would be part of the thing.
01:17:18And your girlfriend, wife, you're like, well, fucking,
01:17:21you know, like she does the same thing as me
01:17:23or similar thing to me.
01:17:23And like, maybe 'cause I'm not doing this thing anymore,
01:17:25but who's my identity?
01:17:26How am I after this?
01:17:27Can you just explain the suite of challenges
01:17:31and how you dealt with them
01:17:32as you went through your hiatus?
01:17:34- That's a big chat probably with a psychologist
01:17:37for like two hours, but I'll dump it down to more like,
01:17:39yeah, it's one of the big things you mentioned too.
01:17:42Like my wife does the same thing I do, which is awesome.
01:17:45Like she's a musician, she produces,
01:17:46and she used to also play guitar and do guitar concept too.
01:17:50And like, that's so cool.
01:17:52And one of those things of just being like,
01:17:55I'm so lucky doing what I do
01:17:59and especially what I did at that time.
01:18:00And I'm so grateful for it.
01:18:02And that's why it's so tricky to be so grateful for something
01:18:05and want to also show that, you know,
01:18:08'cause I don't want people to also be like,
01:18:10hey dude, like you're not feeling,
01:18:11like what, you get to be a YouTuber and what, you're sad?
01:18:13Like what's your fucking problem?
01:18:14You know what I mean?
01:18:15And it's like, yeah, 'cause life can happen.
01:18:18You know, there's other aspects of life,
01:18:20but also it being a thing of like, you know,
01:18:22like my wife is here and like, she also does the same thing.
01:18:25However, I'm still playing like single player in my career
01:18:29because of how I set it up for the past 12 years.
01:18:31You know, my career is based around me doing this,
01:18:33this and this and this and this and this.
01:18:35Meanwhile, my wife's there also doing her own thing,
01:18:36which she's never complained about.
01:18:38She's the most supportive, amazing woman ever.
01:18:40But it's still one of those things of like,
01:18:41I remember I would, you know,
01:18:42something would happen in the scene or like a comment.
01:18:44Like I'd be like, oh, I gotta go do this video
01:18:46and do this thing.
01:18:47Once again, less job, but it's one of those of like,
01:18:49I see my wife there like writing music there by herself.
01:18:51And I'm like, I just want to write music with you.
01:18:54Why the fuck am I doing this?
01:18:55- Well, you're living life.
01:18:56This is one of the problems when you have two people
01:18:58who have big lives,
01:19:00especially lives that start to get separated.
01:19:02The most meaningful things that you do in your work life
01:19:05occur separately.
01:19:06- Yes.
01:19:07- Like you have your highest highs of your career
01:19:10and you're not sharing them with your person at all.
01:19:12- Yeah. And I'm so,
01:19:13I am so fortunate that my person does all those things.
01:19:17So that's why-
01:19:18- At least she can speak the language,
01:19:19even if she's not there when it happens.
01:19:21- Exactly. And she's always, she's always been so supportive,
01:19:22like do your thing.
01:19:23And that's something I'm so grateful for.
01:19:24And you know, that was something I noticed
01:19:26when I took a break and just spending time,
01:19:28us doing like just writing dumb music, having fun,
01:19:30writing, not even metal shit.
01:19:31We wrote like funk beats and like Brazilian funk shit
01:19:34and like electronic music and dance stuff.
01:19:36And it was like so fun.
01:19:37We're like, there was no one around.
01:19:39It was just us.
01:19:40- No pressure.
01:19:41- Yeah. Writing music.
01:19:42We would turn on like the strobe light
01:19:43just for the vibe for us.
01:19:44You know, there's no cameras.
01:19:45We didn't care, right?
01:19:46It's something so special, but like,
01:19:48that was a big thing of like, this is so special.
01:19:51You know what I mean?
01:19:52And I want, I want to make every day like this if I can.
01:19:54You know, I'm fortunate enough to have a career around this.
01:19:57So why, why not spend time figuring out what life can be
01:20:02now that I'm like an adult?
01:20:04Because when I started this, I was 17, 18.
01:20:07Your, your, your brain is not fucking fully formed
01:20:10until like you're like 30.
01:20:12I don't know.
01:20:12Like, you know, like as, especially as a metalhead, you know,
01:20:14like it takes a while.
01:20:16And that's something where you, you grow so much
01:20:18and you become just a diff, not a fully different person,
01:20:22but you just evolve as a human, obviously, as you get older.
01:20:25And you know, that's something where all I ever knew was this,
01:20:30like I went to school, I even finished my degree.
01:20:33I have a shitty accounting degree
01:20:34that I can use as toilet paper
01:20:36'cause it didn't do fuck all for me in my life.
01:20:38But like, actually when I was going to school,
01:20:40it gave me the contrast and context
01:20:42to actually appreciate what I did even more,
01:20:44which is something kind of funny.
01:20:46So I thank going to school,
01:20:47but also like it didn't itself do anything for me
01:20:49other than provide something that was a distraction for,
01:20:52you know, me just wanting then the thing I wanted to do more.
01:20:55But that made me want to do this even more
01:20:57because I saw the other side.
01:20:59I was like, oh my goodness, like that's that life?
01:21:02Like I'm so unhappy doing that.
01:21:04Like I can do it, but it's not,
01:21:07that's not how I want to live my life, right?
01:21:09So I put so much emphasis of not trying to make it
01:21:13because even back then, you know,
01:21:14I was making 50 cents on YouTube AdSense a year.
01:21:16Like it was hilarious because all my stuff was covers.
01:21:19So copyright claims.
01:21:20But I was doing it 'cause I loved it.
01:21:22I just didn't care.
01:21:23I was like, I'll figure it out.
01:21:24I'll teach lessons, I'll do this, I'll figure it out, right?
01:21:27But I had so much fun,
01:21:29especially during that time of just figuring it out
01:21:32and putting my whole life into this.
01:21:34And then when you start to actually,
01:21:36like a year goes by or two years go by and you're like,
01:21:39oh, I'm paying rent at my own place.
01:21:43Like I wrote a track with this person that I looked up with.
01:21:48Like I looked up to, you know what I mean?
01:21:49Like when I was a young kid, like,
01:21:51oh, I got to chat with this person.
01:21:53Oh, like, you know what I mean?
01:21:55Like it just becomes your whole life.
01:21:56And you're like, whoa, like this is overwhelming.
01:21:59Cause there was no expectations of me going into what I,
01:22:02what I do with my life, you know, in terms of consecration,
01:22:04writing music, that whole world.
01:22:07And for it to actually,
01:22:08for me to somewhat manifest things
01:22:10without having the intent of, you know,
01:22:12it's almost like a delusion in a way of like,
01:22:14I was delusionally like, oh yeah, we'll make it.
01:22:16We'll get the million subs, you know,
01:22:18like we'll write music and pretend we won't be homeless.
01:22:20Like, but it was delusionally talking that somehow
01:22:24manifested it to happen.
01:22:27And then when it does happen, you're like, oh my God,
01:22:31I need to give more of me now and more and more and more
01:22:34and more because I'm never going to go back to that kid
01:22:37that stared in class,
01:22:38writing polymeters and polyrhythms on my fucking, you know,
01:22:41sheets and in, in accounting expense class,
01:22:43like I'm not going to do that.
01:22:44That's not going to be me.
01:22:46So there's so many like emotions and elements that get
01:22:50embedded and then your, you know, my brain particularly
01:22:53basically evolved and grew up with that.
01:22:56Just, this is it.
01:22:58Bring the most value to the space.
01:23:00Be the most productive.
01:23:01Don't be fucking lazy.
01:23:02Give it your all.
01:23:04Fuck going to Jake's party on Friday or whatever.
01:23:06Like what, why is, you know, that's, that's not important.
01:23:09You know, go, go be something, go, go be someone
01:23:11with your life.
01:23:12And, and that was the end all be all,
01:23:15which I'm very happy I did with my life
01:23:17because my life is what it is now.
01:23:19But at the same time, it's such a tricky thing,
01:23:21which I had no balance in life.
01:23:23I'd never understood balance of like acting like there,
01:23:27there's days I didn't go outside, which, you know, like is,
01:23:30again, do you get to work at home and make music?
01:23:33Shut the fuck up.
01:23:33You know, you don't have to go outside.
01:23:35But at the same time, it's like, no dude, like I didn't go,
01:23:37I didn't get sun.
01:23:38Like you need that for your like,
01:23:40that's why the sun's there to absorb, you know,
01:23:43like you need that for your health.
01:23:45So like, it was really tricky for me to learn work-life
01:23:48balance because my life was, you know, work.
01:23:51It was my passion and it was so embedded.
01:23:54And because it was such a self rewarding circuit,
01:23:59almost of like, I do get to do what I love and it's my job
01:24:03and it's everything I care about in my life.
01:24:05Why would I do anything else?
01:24:07And you quickly realize how unstable you can,
01:24:11like your life can become because then you,
01:24:13your self worth is basically only this.
01:24:16This is all you are as a human is what you, you know,
01:24:19your YouTube channel or the song you write
01:24:22or the video you make, that's who you are as a human.
01:24:24So if it does poorly, you're a shitty person too, you know?
01:24:27So that's a lot to unpack, yeah.
01:24:30But that's kind of like what taking that break,
01:24:34like I needed to get that balance.
01:24:35I needed to be a human.
01:24:36I needed to be like, I'm an adult.
01:24:38Like I basically haven't had this moment of clarity
01:24:40of doing anything other than this in my life.
01:24:41Like who am I?
01:24:42You know, like I still love breakdowns and breeze
01:24:46and you know, 808s that explode my speakers, right?
01:24:48Like, do I like, I think so, right?
01:24:51I still love playing guitar.
01:24:52I still love this.
01:24:54And that moment and that space brought me a lot closer
01:24:59to the things of all of those things.
01:25:00And made me realize like, I fucking live for this.
01:25:03You know, it's not just because I'm in the cycle.
01:25:05Like I live for this, but I need balance.
01:25:08That was a big thing.
01:25:09- Because if you're doing something and you've never stopped,
01:25:11momentum can carry you through
01:25:12and you don't actually take a moment to go,
01:25:15do I want to do this?
01:25:17- Yeah.
01:25:17- Is this actually my thing?
01:25:18- It's also really tricky when again, there's,
01:25:21I'm very grateful for what I've have
01:25:24and the channel and everything.
01:25:24And the people that support me over all these years.
01:25:26Like I still see people from when I started and they're like,
01:25:28dude, I remember the guitar covers.
01:25:29And I'm like, dude, I haven't done that in 10 years.
01:25:31You're OG, that's so cool, right?
01:25:34And like you, I know I'm very fortunate in that capacity.
01:25:39So that's another thing of like, again,
01:25:43who are you to complain?
01:25:44Like tough it out, you know?
01:25:46And that's something I would tell myself
01:25:47in a very unhealthy way.
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01:27:05I have a theory about this.
01:27:06I'd be interested to know what you think.
01:27:09How many bands or comedians do you know of
01:27:12that have suffered with creator burnout
01:27:14or something similar?
01:27:15- Oh, I think majority of them in a capacity, no matter what.
01:27:19- To the point that they've had to take a break
01:27:20from doing the band at all?
01:27:22- A few of them, yeah.
01:27:24- Some? - Yeah, yeah, some.
01:27:26- How many creators that make YouTube videos
01:27:28do you know that have done the same thing?
01:27:30I'm stepping away from YouTube.
01:27:31I need to take a break.
01:27:32Ryan Trahan just fired his entire team.
01:27:35I saw him and his wife walking down the street the other day
01:27:37and he was like, yeah, man, it's just me and my iPhone
01:27:39and I'm gonna be doing 12 hour days,
01:27:41like logging all of this
01:27:42'cause I didn't wanna manage people anymore.
01:27:44Here's my point.
01:27:45- Yeah.
01:27:46- Creator burnout happens to YouTubers
01:27:49and podcasters and Instagram people
01:27:52at a rate so much higher than you'd anticipate
01:27:55if you just heard what their jobs were.
01:27:57So you go, okay, so on one side of the table,
01:28:00you've got bands that have to be on tour all the time.
01:28:05They're away from their families.
01:28:06They miss their kids growing up.
01:28:08They don't spend time with their partner.
01:28:10They're in sweaty tour buses.
01:28:11Sometimes they're nice.
01:28:12Sometimes they're not nice.
01:28:13They've got places to be.
01:28:14They have to travel the world,
01:28:15the time zones, the sleep deprivation,
01:28:17all of this shit, the pressure, the highs, the lows,
01:28:20the pullback, all that, the unpredictability
01:28:22of whether the band's gonna make it, all the rest of it.
01:28:23Like, if you look at that as a lifestyle,
01:28:26if you just say what it's like, it doesn't sound,
01:28:29the same for comedians, the same for DJs.
01:28:31DJs is a little bit different,
01:28:32but the same for comedians.
01:28:33Go, you're on the road all the time.
01:28:35You're with one other person who's your support
01:28:36and maybe a tour manager if you're lucky.
01:28:38You go to these random places and say these things
01:28:41and you've got the pressure
01:28:41of whether or not you're gonna perform.
01:28:43And what do you do if you're a content creator?
01:28:45Well, you do it from the comfort of your home.
01:28:46You get to have dinner delivered to your house
01:28:48every single day.
01:28:49You've got Uber Eats.
01:28:50You can go to the gym on the morning if you want to.
01:28:52Yeah, sure.
01:28:53Maybe you don't get to see sunlight that much or whatever,
01:28:55but like, you're doing what you love
01:28:56from the comfort of your home.
01:28:57You don't even need to put pants on.
01:28:58Like, this is the dream.
01:29:00The objective difficulty of your job and my job,
01:29:05way lower than it is of something like comedy
01:29:08or being in a band.
01:29:09Exactly.
01:29:09So why is it the case then that content creators,
01:29:12people that do YouTube and podcasting,
01:29:14burn out at a way higher clip than bands and comedians?
01:29:17It's my opinion that that's because of the speed
01:29:21and the amplitude of the feedback.
01:29:23Bands get screaming fans immediately.
01:29:26You do something cool, sing a good note,
01:29:28you immediately see the positive reinforcement
01:29:31of the people in the front row
01:29:32and the hundreds of thousands of rows beyond that.
01:29:35You get to see it happening.
01:29:36You are a comedian.
01:29:37You tell a joke.
01:29:39Immediately, you get that feedback.
01:29:40Dopamine, da, da, da, da, da.
01:29:42We do a video.
01:29:43I mean, for you, you're live streaming,
01:29:44so it's a little bit different.
01:29:46The speed is quick, but the amplitude is so small.
01:29:48It's just bleeps and bloops on a screen.
01:29:51It's emotes.
01:29:52Yeah, correct, thank you.
01:29:53Good, very good, well done.
01:29:54Thank you, da, da, da, da, da.
01:29:55And then you hit a million subs and you go,
01:29:57"Wow, that was just a bigger number on a screen."
01:30:01That was a crazy moment.
01:30:02But still, if you were to do the equivalent in a band,
01:30:06whatever that would be, to sell out your first arena,
01:30:09let's say, right?
01:30:10'Cause I think that that's probably comparable
01:30:13in terms of where you get to in your career
01:30:17versus where you get to as a band.
01:30:19It wouldn't be a stadium.
01:30:20A stadium would probably be 10 mil.
01:30:23So I've played my first sort of 7,000, 8,000 cap show.
01:30:27Wow, I sold it out in advance.
01:30:29That's my million play sub thing.
01:30:31How different is the experience of playing
01:30:34in front of 7,000 people sold out in an arena for you
01:30:37versus this moment that you do something
01:30:41that's really meaningful to you
01:30:42and thank you so much to the community for being here.
01:30:44But it's so much smaller and quieter comparatively.
01:30:47And this is why I think that creator burnout,
01:30:49there's a long-winded way of my bro signs theory
01:30:51that probably isn't true, of me saying,
01:30:54I think creators burn out
01:30:55because they don't have sufficiently loud
01:30:58and sufficiently quick feedback mechanisms
01:30:59to give them the positive reinforcement
01:31:02that bands and comedians and DJs get
01:31:04when they go on the road.
01:31:06- I think also the creator lifestyle
01:31:08is more naturally encouraging of being a bit of a DJ,
01:31:11you know, like in a fun way, it's like-
01:31:12- Not seeing sun.
01:31:13- Yeah, like, yeah, literally not seeing sun,
01:31:15like doing nothing.
01:31:17- Being on your own.
01:31:18- Yeah, very, it is a very isolating thing.
01:31:21You know, I think a lot of people attribute to it.
01:31:23It's like, oh, you see the big YouTubers,
01:31:24they're all in their party houses and shit.
01:31:26I'm like, come on guys, you know, like that's, no, no,
01:31:29you know what the YouTuber is doing?
01:31:30He's editing at 5 a.m. and going to the local grocery store
01:31:33to get like some like Doritos.
01:31:35Yeah. - Chips, exactly.
01:31:36- And then coming back.
01:31:37And that's the equivalent, you know, of that.
01:31:40And then going back to the room while, you know,
01:31:43their fam and, you know, friends already are asleep
01:31:46or something, or like their partners, you know,
01:31:47have been in bed since 12, you know,
01:31:49like a normal human and then has to wake up.
01:31:52- You're missing as much life as you would on tour
01:31:54without the benefit of the experiences and the memories.
01:31:56- Well, it's true.
01:31:57I think particularly the mental aspect of it,
01:32:00'cause it's also so weird of like, physically,
01:32:02you are at home, you are there, right?
01:32:04Which is a gift.
01:32:05It is much easier, of course, than being on a road.
01:32:08Holy shit, right?
01:32:08That's intense.
01:32:11I'm surprised there's so many people that tour
01:32:14that are able to mentally deal with it.
01:32:16- As I understand, I understand what you mean
01:32:18that the objective level of comfort is greater
01:32:21when you're at home.
01:32:22But I think that although it's true,
01:32:25it kind of misses what comfort feels like
01:32:28and where meaning and satisfaction come from,
01:32:31which is going through something hard
01:32:32and coming out the other side okay with people, right?
01:32:35That's what it is.
01:32:36- Yeah, there's always people around.
01:32:37Even if your whole band's busy, I don't know,
01:32:40your photographer's there,
01:32:41your front-of-the-house guys are there.
01:32:42- Exactly, the LD's there, the TM's there.
01:32:44Like you can go for dinner with somebody.
01:32:45You get to share in the failures and in the successes,
01:32:48both at the same time.
01:32:49It's not the same.
01:32:52It's just, it's simply not the same.
01:32:53So again, like I understand the like throat-clearing
01:32:56land acknowledgement you've got to do of saying,
01:32:58I understand I'm in a privileged position
01:33:00and I don't need to leave the house
01:33:01and who am I to complain and da, da, da, da, da.
01:33:03And that is true, but I think it just misses,
01:33:08people who have a problem with that and say,
01:33:10well, there's no reason the creator
01:33:11should be getting burned out.
01:33:12They just simply don't understand
01:33:14where meaning and motivation come from.
01:33:17And they don't come from comfort.
01:33:20It's not what you want.
01:33:22It's what you need.
01:33:23And sometimes what you need isn't always what you want.
01:33:25For instance, I'm friends with a bunch of people in bands
01:33:28that are at the transitionary period
01:33:29from where they've just been on a bus, sleeper bus,
01:33:33to now being able to afford hotels each night.
01:33:36They want the hotel room each night.
01:33:39They need to be on the bus with the band
01:33:41because they finish a show, they go back to a hotel
01:33:44and now they're on their own.
01:33:45And even though that's what they want,
01:33:46it's not what they need.
01:33:47And I think that mental health will decline
01:33:52in line with how separated the members of a band get.
01:33:56You know, there's duos that have separate tour buses.
01:33:59- Yeah, oh yeah.
01:33:59- You know what I mean?
01:34:00And they're touring together.
01:34:02Homeboy's conga lining their way from Atlanta
01:34:04to Pittsburgh or whatever.
01:34:06And you go, well, why is that happening?
01:34:08Well, because we can afford it and I want that.
01:34:10You go, yeah, but are you happier?
01:34:12Or were you happier when you and Homeboy
01:34:14were bunking on top of each other?
01:34:16Because I reckon that you actually were more,
01:34:18anyway, all of that is to say that just because
01:34:21what you want might be to sit in your comfortable seat
01:34:24at home and have your air conditioning
01:34:26and your Uber Eats come here
01:34:27and not need to put pants on.
01:34:29- Depends on the video.
01:34:31- That doesn't mean that it's the highest level of motivation
01:34:34and reinforcement that you want.
01:34:35And this is where, I mean, it's never gonna work.
01:34:37It's me and you, no matter how much we try to warn people,
01:34:40it's never ever gonna work.
01:34:41But what is it?
01:34:43The number one job that young kids want is YouTuber
01:34:46and the second one is influencer.
01:34:48- That's great.
01:34:49- Back in my day, dude, it was still
01:34:51fucking doctor and astronaut.
01:34:53So I don't know what the hell is happening.
01:34:55Like if everybody, you know, if someone gets like,
01:34:57I don't know, a big cut now, if they're just fucked
01:34:59'cause it's just a YouTuber coming to save them,
01:35:00like, I don't know what's gonna happen with that.
01:35:02- I really wanted to be a creator,
01:35:03but I couldn't cut it on YouTube.
01:35:04So I'm here, I think we put, we pull some,
01:35:07we'll pull some of this beer on, it'll be fine.
01:35:09- Yeah, beer, Polysporin fixes everything,
01:35:10don't worry about it, you know what I mean?
01:35:11Like, fuck it.
01:35:12But it's, that's where it's tricky.
01:35:14'Cause I grew up in that era.
01:35:14YouTube wasn't a job still in the early 2010s, right?
01:35:19There was like some of the bigger YouTubers,
01:35:21like the PewDiePies and the Markiplier.
01:35:24I think Markiplier was around mid, mid-tens.
01:35:26And those guys doing stuff and that's great.
01:35:30But you could tell, again, it's a different vibe too.
01:35:33Like they're just being dumb asses and having fun.
01:35:35Like they're having fun.
01:35:37They're already-
01:35:38- Even PewDie's fucking done his retreat
01:35:40from the internet though.
01:35:41- Yeah, dude, I love his new vibe.
01:35:42He's just like, I got my fam, I'm living my life
01:35:46and I'm doing Linus shit.
01:35:47Like I'm vibing, dude.
01:35:48Like he's just doing his own thing.
01:35:50And I'm like, good for you, bro.
01:35:51- I wrote this essay a couple of weeks ago,
01:35:53the fuck you family.
01:35:54So there's three different stages
01:35:57that people can say fuck you at.
01:35:58Fuck you money.
01:36:00Don't need to ever worry about what something costs.
01:36:04You're not even that beholden to the limitations
01:36:08of going to work.
01:36:08You don't need to have a boss.
01:36:10Wonderful.
01:36:11Fuck you freedom, which is maybe you're on a ranch,
01:36:14somewhere out here in Texas.
01:36:15You kind of don't even need to adhere to the laws
01:36:17if you keep yourself quiet enough.
01:36:18So they're usually facilitated by fuck you money,
01:36:20but it's a little bit different too.
01:36:22Sometimes you can get it in a different sort of a way.
01:36:24You could imagine the van life people
01:36:25have got fuck you freedom without fuck you money.
01:36:28But there's a third level, which is fuck you family.
01:36:31And fuck you family is realizing that all of the games
01:36:36that you played to try and get a claim and respect
01:36:39and recognition from the people in your industry,
01:36:43admiration from the people you admire, all that stuff,
01:36:47kind of doesn't matter anymore
01:36:48because the only people that I need to care about
01:36:50are in the bed next to me or in the room across the hall.
01:36:54And they think that I'm the coolest, richest, smartest,
01:36:57most heroic person on the planet.
01:36:58So as long as my wife and my babies love me
01:37:02and think that I'm awesome, fuck you.
01:37:05And that I think explains this,
01:37:08you could call it just the dad pivot
01:37:11that a lot of guys go through
01:37:12and it's sick to see PewDie do it too.
01:37:14Someone who really was sending the living shit out of it,
01:37:16like at the top of his game to just be like,
01:37:19I'm good, man, I'm out.
01:37:21I can't wait for that.
01:37:22I'm so ready to do this from a place of peace, I'm out.
01:37:27- Yeah, it's so tricky.
01:37:31When people make it like that and kind of go,
01:37:35somewhat unscathed, 'cause no matter what,
01:37:37you can't escape with a little--
01:37:39- PewDie fucking escaped the entire industry.
01:37:41- Considering the situation that happened--
01:37:44- Correct, you came out essentially
01:37:46with not a scratch on him.
01:37:49- Yes, so that's why, and I think other people,
01:37:52one of my fucking Filthy Frank
01:37:54being one of those OG YouTubers too,
01:37:55where it's like, that dude quitting at the perfect time,
01:37:58he knew, he knew what was coming.
01:38:01- Selling Bitcoin at the top of the market.
01:38:02- Yeah, dude, it's better than that.
01:38:04And then being able to also do
01:38:06exactly what he wants with Joji is like,
01:38:08whoa, that's like a different kind of fuck you.
01:38:11That's like a-- - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:38:13- That's like a fucking transcendent fucking--
01:38:15- Escape velocity.
01:38:16- Yeah, man, I'm like, how did you?
01:38:19Yeah, we're like, especially when,
01:38:21it's crazy when you have a cataloger like that,
01:38:25you're just uncancelled.
01:38:26I love that, that's why, because you're out.
01:38:28What's someone gonna do?
01:38:29What's someone gonna do? - Sorry, take me down.
01:38:31I'm not making anything big.
01:38:32- Yeah, I'm Joji, I love that, you know what I mean?
01:38:34- I would love to see the residuals
01:38:39that somebody like PewDiePie is getting
01:38:41if he just doesn't upload anything else.
01:38:43You know what I mean?
01:38:44Because you've just got--
01:38:45- How many limited ads you've got on those videos.
01:38:47Dude, that's a tricky thing.
01:38:49And when it comes to YouTube,
01:38:51and also part of the reason I had a lot of trouble
01:38:54'cause I drive so much of my worth and value of YouTube,
01:38:56not necessarily always 'cause of the numbers.
01:38:58Like, you know, if a video didn't do so well,
01:39:00I wouldn't be like, oh, I'm gonna go end everything now.
01:39:03It was just tricky.
01:39:05It's like your baby, the thing you really care about.
01:39:06And it feels like it's not growing.
01:39:09When I was younger, that would hit me a lot.
01:39:10And then over time, start to diversify, right?
01:39:14As the thing with YouTube or just one particular platform.
01:39:17And I would always advise this to other content people
01:39:20and as well as even musicians of just like,
01:39:21please God, do not just trust this one thing.
01:39:23'Cause YouTube can sit there and just be like,
01:39:26here's a new policy.
01:39:29Yeah, you know the edgy content you did with those guys?
01:39:32It's all limited ads now.
01:39:33You make 10% of what you made before
01:39:36'cause advertisers are, you know,
01:39:38the better advertisers are not shown on it.
01:39:40Now it's only like the whatever,
01:39:41gamble crazy shit that that's on there.
01:39:43Sorry, it's, sorry, you know.
01:39:45And you just have to stare at it and be like,
01:39:46okay, so I have 5% of my income now.
01:39:49Like that's how it goes, right?
01:39:50And that's a tricky thing unless you diversify
01:39:53of being like, okay, well, oh, okay.
01:39:54Like YouTube fucked me, but whatever.
01:39:56I'm streaming on Twitch.
01:39:57Oh, I got Patreon supporters too.
01:39:58Oh, I have signature this, I have signature that.
01:40:01I have affiliate links.
01:40:02You know what I mean?
01:40:03If you diversify yourself,
01:40:04you're also much less of a susceptible
01:40:07to like just a platform,
01:40:11which does not, any of these platforms don't deserve,
01:40:13I think, any particular loyalty to, you know,
01:40:15the content creators.
01:40:16There's no loyalty from them to you.
01:40:18Yeah, exactly.
01:40:18So it's like, why the fuck?
01:40:20You know, if one day, like I said,
01:40:22a Spotify or an Apple Music just wants to be like,
01:40:24yeah, man, I don't know, dude.
01:40:26Like, Suna's kind of lit, so fuck it.
01:40:28Like all of our money's there.
01:40:29Like real musicians are only getting like 10% now.
01:40:32Like that's a hilarious and extreme,
01:40:33but you know what I mean?
01:40:34What do you think's happening with the state of Spotify,
01:40:37streaming stuff at the moment?
01:40:39Because there was a long time, and still is,
01:40:41of artists being quite disgruntled
01:40:44with a variety of different streaming services.
01:40:47Title seemed to be pretty good
01:40:49in the eyes of at least artists,
01:40:51but who the fuck uses title?
01:40:53I don't know the single person in my life who used to.
01:40:56You know what I mean?
01:40:57So what's the sort of overview
01:41:00of how artists and streaming platforms
01:41:03are relating at the moment?
01:41:05- I mean, everyone always is pissed,
01:41:08and you know, I've been like.
01:41:11(laughing)
01:41:12- That's just a summary of the world, though.
01:41:15- Yeah, particularly with the music.
01:41:17Like that is one of probably the biggest complaints
01:41:20in the music industry of like streaming doesn't pay enough.
01:41:23And it's tricky 'cause yeah,
01:41:26Spotify pay more, what the fuck?
01:41:27But at the same time,
01:41:29a lot of bands also are on contracts,
01:41:32and a lot of the on those contracts,
01:41:34they're not realizing maybe,
01:41:35hey, they signed off like all of their royalties
01:41:38or all of their streaming revenue.
01:41:40Or hey, you still have like your $5 million loan
01:41:45you got to pay back
01:41:46before you actually get any streaming revenue.
01:41:48So like, I think a lot of those stories
01:41:51get pushed extremely hard with those bands.
01:41:55And they're like, you know, there'll be a band that's like,
01:41:56I have like 50 million streams
01:41:58and I made like 20 bucks on my song.
01:41:59And it's like, okay, well, yes,
01:42:01Spotify should pay more,
01:42:03but there's other stuff involved.
01:42:04- Who paid for that record?
01:42:05- Yeah, yeah, like there's-
01:42:07- Who paid for the promo?
01:42:07- Uh huh, yeah.
01:42:08- Who paid for the video?
01:42:09Who paid for your shoot?
01:42:10Who paid for, who fronted the tour?
01:42:12- I think bands are now becoming more aware of deals.
01:42:15'Cause you know, back in the day, it's like,
01:42:16oh, I signed to a record label.
01:42:17Oh my God, we made it, we did it.
01:42:18We signed whatever piece of paper.
01:42:19Oh my God, $200,000.
01:42:21We're all rich, let's go drink.
01:42:22You know what I mean?
01:42:23Let's go buy a car instead of realizing like,
01:42:26oh, we owe a lot, like we have to pay this bad guys,
01:42:30you know, like the capacity.
01:42:32- Do you remember that documentary
01:42:34that was done about 30 seconds to Mars
01:42:36when they had to make their album?
01:42:38Bro.
01:42:39- I have to.
01:42:40- So this, I only ever saw it once.
01:42:42It might actually be a fucking fever dream.
01:42:44It might not exist.
01:42:45So, but let me see if I can find it.
01:42:4730 seconds to Mars, documentary Sony.
01:42:51So it was when they were in Artifact.
01:42:55It's a 2012 award-winning documentary by Jared Leto
01:42:58that follows 30 seconds to Mars
01:43:00during the 2008 legal battle against EMI.
01:43:03The film documents the band's $30 million lawsuit
01:43:06while they recorded the album, "This is War,"
01:43:10provides an intimate look into the music business
01:43:12and the fight for creative freedom.
01:43:13So this is available.
01:43:16It's available on Netflix, apparently.
01:43:18Everyone should go and watch this.
01:43:19I remember seeing this pretty much just after it came out
01:43:23and it fucking rules and it is, Jared Leto is using
01:43:27like war dogs money or whatever the fuck that movie was in
01:43:31that he was in with Nick Cage.
01:43:35- Or a Scuicide Squad?
01:43:36- No, he was where he was,
01:43:37he was the like second in command to a dude.
01:43:39Anyway, like he's using money from acting
01:43:43to fund the band recording the record
01:43:47because the deal that they've got is it's,
01:43:50fuck 360, it's like 720.
01:43:52They've got like a 720 deal
01:43:53and they just eat everything for the rest of the time,
01:43:55the rest of the time, the rest of the time.
01:43:57- Jesus. - And it is gnarly.
01:43:59This, I can't believe that it kind of,
01:44:02maybe 'cause of when it came out, like 2012,
01:44:04who would have done a reaction to it?
01:44:06I reckon your audience would eat this shit up,
01:44:09especially if you did a breakdown.
01:44:11I think it's fucking fantastic.
01:44:12So yeah, basically eight stars on IMDb out of 5,000 reviews.
01:44:17- Jeez. - So yeah, it ripped.
01:44:19But yeah, these big 360 deals.
01:44:21I mean, I saw the top line
01:44:24of one of these deals the other day.
01:44:25And the first thing of a 12 page record deal contract
01:44:29is something along the lines of this is a long standing
01:44:34and completely binding legal document.
01:44:38It is crucial that you fully understand this
01:44:41because it involves the rest of your life.
01:44:43It is highly advisable to get legal advice to...
01:44:46Like up top it is, but I guess if you're in a band
01:44:50that's been grinding for so long and it's like,
01:44:52yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, fuck the small print.
01:44:54Where's the, where's the, where's the, ooh, 750 grand.
01:44:57- Yeah, I mean, I think nowadays,
01:45:01a lot of those deals have become better
01:45:02'cause artists have become more aware
01:45:03and also labels have become more,
01:45:05I think the right word might be accommodating.
01:45:08I'm not sure of like, oh, okay,
01:45:09like we need to be a bit more creative
01:45:12instead of it just be like these classic like--
01:45:14- I need to fuck you in an inventive way.
01:45:15- In an inventive way.
01:45:17I'm like, yeah, where it's, and also I remember,
01:45:21I mean, I would see, I would talk with bands, right?
01:45:23And understand a bit and talk with labels too.
01:45:24I'd be like, I learned a lot of that knowledge
01:45:28more working within the scene from my perspective,
01:45:30which was different.
01:45:31Again, I'm not, I wasn't in a signed band.
01:45:33I wasn't with that.
01:45:34I was working with a lot of labels.
01:45:35I was working with a lot of signed bands
01:45:37and a lot of friends with a lot of signed bands
01:45:38and a lot of friends, you know,
01:45:39with the A&Rs and labels and stuff and working as a,
01:45:42again, content creator YouTuber space, right?
01:45:44But my space is usually not as coincided with that world.
01:45:47It's like, you are content, DIY, random,
01:45:50figure it the fuck out guy.
01:45:51You make, you do Photoshop and you go make memes, right?
01:45:53- Good luck.
01:45:54- And here you go, these people make the real music, right?
01:45:56And actually deal with the real business.
01:45:57Like that's, that was kind of the relationship.
01:45:59Maybe, you know, I wish less years ago, but you know,
01:46:03like quite a few years ago.
01:46:05And that's something where I've seen over the years,
01:46:07I remember talking to someone and being like,
01:46:09oh, so what like the industry standard for like how many,
01:46:10how many records you own?
01:46:12It's like, you know, it would be, someone would say like,
01:46:14yeah, we only, we still owe our label like five records.
01:46:18And I'm like, I would sit there and I'd be like,
01:46:21what do you mean?
01:46:22'Cause I it's, as a, again, as a concept for,
01:46:24especially as a person who's-
01:46:25- You mean singles or album?
01:46:27No, albums. - Albums.
01:46:28- Albums, I owe them like 60 tracks.
01:46:31- Yeah, and I just, okay, so math.
01:46:33If we do the two year cycle of most majority of bands
01:46:36of release schedule, you signed away 10 years of your life.
01:46:41I don't know when you plan on dying brother,
01:46:43but that's more than 10% of your life.
01:46:45And I, especially with a lot of these musicians,
01:46:48they seem to want to be musicians 'cause they love music
01:46:50and come into this space to not be conventional
01:46:53and not want a normal job and not have someone tell them
01:46:55what they can and can't do.
01:46:58And I would see a lot of musicians and it would be very sad
01:47:01of like, that seems more of a lock in corporate bullshit
01:47:05than just going to work at, you know, the bookkeeping firm.
01:47:09- Because it's taking what was your passion
01:47:11and turning it into an engine.
01:47:13- Yeah, which to the credit of some labels
01:47:16that are able to do it very well and successfully,
01:47:18obviously there's sometimes big bands that otherwise maybe,
01:47:20especially in the 2000s, like they didn't have a label.
01:47:22Maybe there's a lot of musicians that do not have
01:47:25the best business side of things, you know,
01:47:27they just want to play music.
01:47:28You know, they grow up, they fucking love Nirvana,
01:47:30they love Metallica and they just want, I want to make that.
01:47:33I want to do that, I want to do it now.
01:47:34I don't give a fuck about business.
01:47:36I don't care.
01:47:37They don't, I don't want to look at my bank account, right?
01:47:38Like none of this and kudos to them, right?
01:47:41They want that, but then they do need that business person.
01:47:43They do need that label to, or manager at the very least,
01:47:46right, to figure shit out for them.
01:47:48And yeah, they're going to get taken advantage of
01:47:50because that's how the industry works, right?
01:47:53If the, you know, you're kind of just going with the flow.
01:47:55I don't know where, unless you find someone that's just,
01:47:57I don't know, the very rare person that has, you know,
01:48:00but is a bit more empathetic and is like,
01:48:02hey dude, you know what?
01:48:04Like, I know I can fuck you for this,
01:48:07but I'm only going to fuck you for this because you're cool
01:48:10and I want to see you succeed.
01:48:12You know what I mean?
01:48:13And that's a tricky line to, to go ahead with.
01:48:16Where like five years, it's like, bro, like what?
01:48:20Or even, I mean, three years left.
01:48:21I'm like, or not three years, three albums.
01:48:23And I'm like, that's six years of your life at least.
01:48:25Like that's, dude, you are a different person in six years.
01:48:28Like you, you, you, you even going to like this type of music
01:48:31in six years?
01:48:32Like that's such a long commitment.
01:48:35It's like a marriage to the business entity,
01:48:38which would be a label.
01:48:39And then you're also married.
01:48:40You're in a band, so you're married to all your band members.
01:48:42You're trying to make,
01:48:43how many marriages are you trying to work out there, bro?
01:48:45- Yep.
01:48:46- Like, you know, a lot of people have tricky with one
01:48:48and you want to make, you know, your five band members,
01:48:50you're married to them.
01:48:51You see them more than your family.
01:48:53You eat together.
01:48:53You know all your habits, you know, and piss each other off.
01:48:56You know what I mean?
01:48:57You, you guys earn income together.
01:48:58You lose income together.
01:49:00And you have the corporate entity over you and management
01:49:04and whatever else that's attached to that.
01:49:06Which again, some, some musicians fucking need this
01:49:08because they're, they need to, they need guidance
01:49:10in a capacity.
01:49:11But for some of those deals, especially the,
01:49:14like 2000s or way back when, it's like, holy shit, bro.
01:49:18How do you like, that's, that's too much commitment, man.
01:49:22How are you doing that?
01:49:23- Given that nobody doesn't listen to music.
01:49:25- Yeah.
01:49:26- No one, everybody has some music.
01:49:27Some people are more into music than others.
01:49:29Some people are more into some music than others,
01:49:31but everybody listens to some sort of music.
01:49:33- Yeah.
01:49:34- I can't believe how retarded the music industry is.
01:49:37- It is fucking wild, dude.
01:49:39When I found out about how distribution works,
01:49:42but like DistroKid and, and if you want to put,
01:49:45if I want to put a podcast on the internet,
01:49:47I've got even a decade ago when I started researching,
01:49:51doing the podcast, pod's like eight and a half years old.
01:49:53I used old school RSS on Libsyn 4.
01:49:57And the only reason that I used that is because
01:49:59it was what Rogan used back, back, back in the day.
01:50:01It's like an old school RSS feed converter
01:50:03that you manually plug into all of these different things.
01:50:05And then after a while, it gets a little bit more,
01:50:08I remember I was uploading it to like,
01:50:10JB, what's that, what's that Ghanaian streaming service.
01:50:14It's called like Ana or something.
01:50:16There's like, there was like, we were putting it on Deezoo,
01:50:19we were putting it on SoundCloud,
01:50:19and we were putting it on all of these different things.
01:50:21There's like, there's one,
01:50:23the only one that you can get in all of Africa at the time.
01:50:26I'm like manually going in and adding the RSS feed
01:50:29to all of this stuff. - Every episode?
01:50:31- No, once, but then sometimes it would like time out
01:50:34or shit would change on the backend
01:50:36and I'd need to go in and check link health.
01:50:39And I did that for five or six years.
01:50:42And then we moved to Megaphone.
01:50:43Megaphone got bought by Spotify and now everything,
01:50:45it's plug and play.
01:50:46It's the, it's like fucking Squarespace, right?
01:50:50For making a website.
01:50:51So I don't need to learn to code anymore.
01:50:53I just drag and drop and everything happens.
01:50:55- Yeah.
01:50:56- Not the same apparently,
01:50:57if I want to put a song on both Apple Music and Tidal
01:51:00and Spotify at the same time.
01:51:02So you can use like the, you can use like a DistroKid now
01:51:04or oh my CD baby, I forget the name of the movie.
01:51:07- But you still have to jump through a fucking shit
01:51:09like way more hoops, right?
01:51:10In order to coordinate that kind of a release.
01:51:12- More than the podcast.
01:51:13So I, and so funny when I, before I left,
01:51:16I would chat with people and I'd have to still use
01:51:18like Podfarm or something.
01:51:19So I had to use the RSS,
01:51:20but it was still a bit more like conjoined.
01:51:22So it was, it wasn't what you were talking about.
01:51:23It was like the next gen of much easier.
01:51:25And now it's literally just like,
01:51:26oh, I uploaded on like creative Spotify.
01:51:27Like, oh, I guess it's there.
01:51:29Like it's done, that's cool.
01:51:30That's the DistroKid stuff.
01:51:32It, and like the music side, it's still, it's not that bad,
01:51:37but it's, it could be more ideal.
01:51:39You know, like it's basically, okay.
01:51:41Title, artwork, date, record label.
01:51:44And if you don't have one, you have to just put, you know,
01:51:46that's why you see some fun, like, you know,
01:51:47bands that are independent.
01:51:48They say like, whatever, you know,
01:51:49whatever the fuck record is that?
01:51:50Like, I hate you brother, like whatever.
01:51:52They make up some random names just to put something in there.
01:51:55And then you have to make sure you have the right audio.
01:51:57You have to make sure, you know, you,
01:52:00you check if it's like explicit and all this shit.
01:52:03Like it's basically a checklist of, oh my God,
01:52:05I've done it enough times at this point.
01:52:06Probably like five to 10 things.
01:52:10Every song, unless it's an album.
01:52:12So every, every release is maybe better wording for that,
01:52:14that you have to do.
01:52:15And then after it's the setup, you got to add the lyrics.
01:52:18You got to add this and that.
01:52:19It's starting to become a bit more automated.
01:52:21So it is a bit easier,
01:52:22but also considering how before you just needed a record,
01:52:27label, as far as I knew,
01:52:29maybe there was also specific, just distribution companies.
01:52:32I'm sure there was, right.
01:52:33That just did that.
01:52:34And you didn't need to be like signed to the label,
01:52:35but then again, mistake me if I'm wrong.
01:52:37You probably still have to be signed
01:52:39to the distribution company in that capacity.
01:52:41So that's why when this stuff came out,
01:52:44I think a lot of independent musicians became very happy
01:52:46because again, we don't ask, don't ask for much.
01:52:49So it's just- - Just want to bypass
01:52:50the bullshit.
01:52:51- Yeah, that, cause that made, I saw a lot of bands
01:52:53and you can always tell when they're independent.
01:52:55Like I said, cause the default is like some like
01:52:57at just DK number, number, number as your record label.
01:52:59So when you see that as an upload, you're like,
01:53:01oh, these are kids that just like just uploaded,
01:53:03just figured it out, you know what I mean?
01:53:05And that's something really funny.
01:53:07And then you see them get like signed later.
01:53:08So now it's like, oh, so a lot of these independent artists
01:53:11have more of a say of at least how they can do it.
01:53:13Even SoundCloud, that was a pretty big one.
01:53:17And even the, not the metal scene as much.
01:53:19I know there was like literally a genre SoundCloud rap.
01:53:22So I know in the rap scene, it was like big.
01:53:25In the metal scene, it wasn't as popular,
01:53:27but some musicians used it, particularly content.
01:53:29Musicians used that back in the day.
01:53:31So it's better than before.
01:53:33That's why, but in comparison to how easy I see it is
01:53:37to use like the Spotify podcast thing now, I'm like,
01:53:40you guys got to up your fucking technology music scene.
01:53:42Cause like it's taken a bit.
01:53:44- Have you seen song DNA on Spotify yet?
01:53:48- No, it's not good.
01:53:49- So I've only just seen this for the first time.
01:53:50Okay, so I decided to do it on "Can You Feel My Heart?"
01:53:52- Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:53:53- So if you go onto the track and then at the,
01:53:56like below the lyrics and about the song
01:53:59and all the rest of it is song DNA.
01:54:01So if I click explore, this is all of the different people.
01:54:06So this is like Ted Jensen, the mastering engineer,
01:54:09Dan Graziano, the editor, Annie Skates, a contractor.
01:54:14And then like Matt Nichols, drums,
01:54:16and then how many collaborators
01:54:17and how many songs he's on, Matt Nichols.
01:54:19So like if I open up like Jordan Fish, composer, three roles.
01:54:24So like, and now I can go into worked with 275 artists,
01:54:29recorded 473 songs, top songs with like,
01:54:33and now I can go in there and this is all of his stuff.
01:54:36So this is kind of like a matrix or a web
01:54:40where you can explore how all of the different people
01:54:43are associated with different stuff.
01:54:45- Cause before, yeah, before it was just,
01:54:46you would right click and it would say song credits
01:54:47and they updated it now before it was so pathetic.
01:54:51It was just performer, writer, and producer.
01:54:54And most of the time it would be glitched
01:54:56and not always super accurate anyways.
01:54:58But like, if you were a co-producer, for example,
01:55:01it wouldn't even show.
01:55:02So it was just the main producer.
01:55:04It was just the performers and whoever else has primary,
01:55:07if you want to, you know,
01:55:07get some extra Spotify plays with you, go for it, right?
01:55:10And then the songwriters, but it wouldn't say mixer,
01:55:12it wouldn't say engineer, it wouldn't say fuck all,
01:55:14even though when you distribute,
01:55:15you have the option to put all-
01:55:17- To tag everything.
01:55:18- So all that metadata is usually in there
01:55:21if you take the time to input it, right?
01:55:23- If you go to, what's the website that lists
01:55:25like every single person that's involved in a record,
01:55:28it's like the legal requirement for it.
01:55:30- Oh, like the public, like actual publishing, like BMI?
01:55:33- Yeah, maybe, yeah.
01:55:35And that seems to be a little bit more granular.
01:55:38- They don't screw around.
01:55:39Well, that's how a lot of artists
01:55:40who are anonymous get leaked.
01:55:41- Yes.
01:55:42- Because you know, when it comes to publishing
01:55:44and like they're like, you know-
01:55:45- Yeah, cute, cute that you're supposed
01:55:47to not know who you are.
01:55:47Put your fucking legal name on this website, dude.
01:55:49Thank you.
01:55:50- Yeah, that happens really quickly.
01:55:51And it's like, but like, you know,
01:55:53hey, we, you know, we're anonymous and it's like,
01:55:55okay, so I don't give a fuck about your stage name.
01:55:57I need your legal name or you're not getting published.
01:55:59So like, it's kind of that, you know, that's why I like-
01:56:04- Yeah, yeah, nice one, Dark Danny.
01:56:07We'll have your full fucking Daniel Robertson.
01:56:10We'll have that down.
01:56:11- It's way more lame if they had to go Dark Danny.
01:56:14It's gonna, yeah, yeah.
01:56:16- What is the worst thing do you think about?
01:56:19Oh, actually, what's your prediction
01:56:22for the sort of next five years or so of alternative music?
01:56:26Are you, what are you worried about
01:56:27and what are you positive about?
01:56:29- Ooh, that's a big question, man.
01:56:31It's, okay, what I'm positive about is I think
01:56:38the scene is becoming more and more genre-less,
01:56:42which I get excited about because then the focus is not,
01:56:45hey, can we make a deathcore or a metalcore or a pop,
01:56:48you know, popcore, whatever the fuck, banger.
01:56:50It's can we just make a good song, you know?
01:56:52Like, and you know, I love that
01:56:55because then there's gonna be a higher quantity
01:56:57of good music.
01:56:58I think that's always kind of my end goal with it.
01:57:01It's just like, whatever route leads to like,
01:57:03can we just get more actual good shit that doesn't suck?
01:57:06Like, that's all I really care.
01:57:07So I feel like the scene is going that way in a healthy way.
01:57:12The bad side of that is I think also
01:57:15because metal is, the good and the bad,
01:57:18metal's becoming more popular than ever,
01:57:20but now it's also almost like cool to like it.
01:57:23So it's being more gamified.
01:57:26It's becoming more of like a specific structure
01:57:30of how to write like an octanecore song, right?
01:57:33And that's no showing an octane
01:57:34'cause octane being metal radio or rock radio,
01:57:37actually it has breakdowns now.
01:57:39That's sick.
01:57:40You know, it has heavy parts.
01:57:41It has screaming, right?
01:57:42Like that's something where I'm like,
01:57:43that's cool now that people would go there before
01:57:45and just listen to like, hell yeah, brother.
01:57:47You know what I mean?
01:57:48And like have a good time with like respect to Nickelback,
01:57:49but with Nickelback or with like Creed
01:57:51or with like Classic Rock.
01:57:53Now you're hearing like the bad omens,
01:57:55the sort of sleep tokens, the spirit box
01:57:58and stuff like that on there, right?
01:57:59And that's really good to see.
01:58:00But also it becoming much bigger,
01:58:03meaning that there's more industry and labels
01:58:07and monetization in this space
01:58:10that maybe didn't exist as much.
01:58:12- So there's more of an incentive for people to do fuckery.
01:58:15- To do fuckery and to be like, oh, well this style is big.
01:58:18So just make, create, you know, create seven bands.
01:58:20That's just that style.
01:58:21You know what I mean?
01:58:22Like octanecore is legitimately a-
01:58:24- What is octanecore, who would be in that?
01:58:26- Like, and again, this isn't a derogatory,
01:58:28like of like, oh, you're octane, it's-
01:58:30- The people who are derivative of this might be,
01:58:32it might be derogatory.
01:58:33- Yes, exactly.
01:58:34But like Bad Wolves is a big one,
01:58:37Five Finger Death Punch, for sure.
01:58:39That is the best description, that one.
01:58:42But it also leave is again,
01:58:44like you'll see Bad Omens in there.
01:58:45You'll see a spirit box.
01:58:46You'll see like Bill Murray even to a point, right?
01:58:47And he's kind of more extreme and fun, right?
01:58:50But it's basically music that is,
01:58:52it's radio friendly, active rock or slash alternative metal.
01:58:57And the boundaries is what makes it interesting now
01:59:02is that now you can have double kick.
01:59:05Now you can have screaming.
01:59:07Now you can tune down your guitars.
01:59:09- And get away with more.
01:59:10- And you can get away with more.
01:59:11Exactly, so that's what is cool about what octanecore is.
01:59:15But because of that, it is very formulaic.
01:59:18And a lot of bands see that and see the success
01:59:20and be like, wait, my band can make breakdowns
01:59:22and get on radio?
01:59:23What the?
01:59:24- That's the route to fame.
01:59:25- That's the route to money.
01:59:27Yeah, you know?
01:59:27And definitely fame to a capacity where it's like, oh, sick.
01:59:30So that's something where it comes with the good and bad.
01:59:34Again, heavy music is getting more popular, great.
01:59:36And that's getting injected in a way
01:59:37where bands are becoming more creative with it,
01:59:39but then also bands are becoming more sterile with it
01:59:41and being like, this is, oh, well, let's just do this.
01:59:43- Samey copycat.
01:59:44- Samey copycat.
01:59:45Just work, write the same chorus every time,
01:59:48use the exact same melody, use the same lyrics
01:59:51with slight differentials so we don't get sued
01:59:53by the other band.
01:59:54And like, let's all try to be Linkin Park again.
01:59:57'Cause like Linkin, it's so crazy to me
02:00:00that it took so long for everyone
02:00:01to copy/paste Linkin Park again,
02:00:02considering how massive they were in 2000s.
02:00:04But like, yeah, that's the epitome of like
02:00:07the most successful sound, I think,
02:00:10in the modern metal sphere.
02:00:11If you can pull off a good hybrid theory, you're eating.
02:00:15You're gonna eat well, you know?
02:00:16So yeah, again, it's always tricky
02:00:19because I'm excited for bands to get heavier
02:00:21and that'd be more things that young kids get into,
02:00:23but I'm also like, fuck.
02:00:24- It's gonna dilute down the sound?
02:00:26- Yeah, it's gonna make it a little diluted,
02:00:29which is, it is what it is.
02:00:30But also I hear a lot of bands within that
02:00:32making very weird shit because there's no genres.
02:00:34Like there's this, I don't know if you listen
02:00:36to much of these smaller bands like Marar
02:00:37or like Disembodied Tyrant.
02:00:39- Nope.
02:00:40- There's these new subsets of bands that are so extreme
02:00:44that they basically can't be extreme anymore
02:00:46in just that sub-genre of the metal sphere they're in.
02:00:49So like Deathcore.
02:00:50Okay, you're already as extreme as you can be.
02:00:52Like Lorna did it, you know, like, okay.
02:00:54And like Whitechapel exists, Suicide Silence,
02:00:56and like there's all these new bands, right?
02:00:58So a band like Disembodied Tyrant is like,
02:00:59well, we're doing that,
02:01:00but now we're also gonna have like dubstep moments.
02:01:03So we're gonna take, we're gonna do-
02:01:04- The heaviest thing of a different heavy genre
02:01:06and put it into our heavy genre.
02:01:07- Exactly.
02:01:08So like, I'm like, that's sick.
02:01:10Or Marar, which is this smaller, thal band.
02:01:12Like bands like Valjarta, Jumea's Last Breath.
02:01:14I don't know if you know Buster, he also has Throne.
02:01:17Throne you might.
02:01:17- Yeah, I know Throne.
02:01:18- Okay, he's the drummer and songwriter also with that band.
02:01:20And his like more progressive bands are Jumea's Last Breath
02:01:23and Valjarta.
02:01:24And Thal is this genre which is like super gent.
02:01:28- Okay.
02:01:29- It's, man, I'm gonna be such a fucking weirdo
02:01:32trying to explain this of like-
02:01:33- That's what we're here for.
02:01:34- I will explain Thal on your podcast, yeah, I got you.
02:01:36So gent was da da da da da, I'm a sugar.
02:01:39Okay, cool.
02:01:40Then after time kids got bored of da da da da da da da da
02:01:42and became da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da.
02:01:47- Periphery?
02:01:49- No, 'cause periphery da da da da da da da da da da.
02:01:52- Okay.
02:01:53- So it's more of a rhythmic group thing where that genre,
02:01:56Thal kind of took all those elements,
02:01:59added more of an atmospheric element,
02:02:01dialed down the polyrhythmic confusing rhythms
02:02:04and made it more-
02:02:05- Less mathy.
02:02:05- Less mathy, exactly.
02:02:06More of like group.
02:02:07Funny enough, more extreme yet more accessible,
02:02:10which is ironic, I would say.
02:02:12So there's bands that do that.
02:02:14I've been doing that for a while.
02:02:14And then there's a band like this small band, Marar,
02:02:16which they took that and they're like,
02:02:18oh, Dubstep's sick.
02:02:18Oh, I love like Beethoven.
02:02:20And so they infuse, you know what I mean?
02:02:22So they infuse that with these sounds.
02:02:24And it's like a whole nother world of like music.
02:02:27And not just as a music fan,
02:02:28but as a musician and a guitarist,
02:02:30I sit there like dumbfounded of like-
02:02:32- It's fucking cool.
02:02:33- This is so sick.
02:02:35So that aspect excites me because music is so heavy now.
02:02:38Bands are literally trying to find, you know,
02:02:41more excitement and heaviness in weird places,
02:02:43which will make more unique music as at the same time,
02:02:46it's becoming more sterile and streamlined.
02:02:48- Yeah, that's a great point, dude.
02:02:49A fucking fantastic answer.
02:02:51I think it's kind of surprising
02:02:53because everybody can reach the market freely.
02:02:58There are no, if you don't,
02:02:59you don't even need a record label.
02:03:00You can just put same as me with the podcast.
02:03:02I've never been a part of the network.
02:03:03- You need TikTok.
02:03:04- Yeah, exactly.
02:03:05Just put it up.
02:03:06And that would suggest that things would get more weird
02:03:08and more niched.
02:03:09But as people sort of take their eyes
02:03:11off the ball of mainstream,
02:03:12what that means is the people who can get there
02:03:14have even more prestige.
02:03:16Because I always say this about mainstream TV.
02:03:18People think that it's like lame stream, it's old school.
02:03:22No one gives a fuck about CBS or 60 Minutes or whatever.
02:03:25And you go, hey, there is an unlimited amount of YouTube
02:03:29that gets uploaded every single day.
02:03:30There are only 24 hours a day on MSNBC or CNBC or Fox
02:03:34or whatever.
02:03:35If you take up 15 of those minutes,
02:03:37that's 15 minutes not going to something or someone else.
02:03:39That means that you have value in a way
02:03:42that simply uploading a YouTube video doesn't.
02:03:45It's cool and subversive and rebellious, man.
02:03:48And there's no fucking person telling me what to say.
02:03:50And that's sick about the YouTube thing,
02:03:53but it's a little prestige for precisely the same reason.
02:03:56Anyone can do it.
02:03:57So anyone can do it.
02:03:59And I think that this is sort of the bifurcation
02:04:02of what you're seeing here.
02:04:02It's like, who is going to be placed on the new Madden game?
02:04:07Like who's going to be in that?
02:04:08Yeah.
02:04:09- For sure.
02:04:10- Of course.
02:04:11Who is going to get to play the Grammys?
02:04:14Who is going to get to play at the BAFTAs?
02:04:16Who's going to get to play these different award ceremonies
02:04:19and who's going to get put on radio?
02:04:20And if you manage to do that,
02:04:22because so many people are looking
02:04:24toward the independent side,
02:04:25that is going to create an incentive.
02:04:27So I think you're right.
02:04:28But you're going to end up with sort of two scenes
02:04:30splintering off in additional directions.
02:04:33- Yeah.
02:04:34And I hope the middle scene embraces it too
02:04:36when it comes to those smaller bands,
02:04:38because there's so much smaller music now
02:04:40and smaller underground bands.
02:04:42And what happens with the middle scene,
02:04:43and it happens with bands like Sleep Token,
02:04:45with bands like Spirit Box, even with Bad Omens,
02:04:47anytime these bands,
02:04:48when they're kind of small and underground,
02:04:51they have that moment.
02:04:52Like Sleep Token had the summoning, right?
02:04:53All of a sudden, yo, this band's like,
02:04:56oh, you know, they're not that good.
02:04:58- They sold out.
02:04:59It was cool to hate.
02:05:00The fact that it's fucking cool to hate Sleep Token
02:05:02fucking blows my mind, dude.
02:05:04Give me a break.
02:05:05- Well, it's funny particularly
02:05:07because their discography is not metal really, right?
02:05:11It is, they're more of a pop leaning band
02:05:14with metal elements, which is great.
02:05:17So I think because metal head's almost like,
02:05:20we're like, you're ours.
02:05:21You know what I mean?
02:05:22Like you're, this is ours.
02:05:22Like this is sick.
02:05:23You know, we can listen to pop with it too.
02:05:26That when they do the pop stuff,
02:05:28particularly like with their new record right there,
02:05:29even Arcadia, definitely more pop leaning.
02:05:31That was great.
02:05:32Had like top 50 bangers,
02:05:33but then also had some of the most extreme,
02:05:35I'm gonna use the word extreme instead of heavy,
02:05:37extreme moments, right?
02:05:38And because of that correlation between those two things
02:05:42and like the scene being like,
02:05:43well, no, you're ours.
02:05:46We made you big.
02:05:47You know, you did that thing
02:05:48and then we all were in on it.
02:05:50- Serve us what we want.
02:05:50- Yeah, so like, no, you're not allowed to now
02:05:53like be just like a band.
02:05:55You're our metal band or you're not.
02:05:58You know what I mean?
02:05:58Or we hate you and you're just some shitty pop band.
02:06:00- I also think a lot of criticism came from the mainstream
02:06:04of saying this is shitty mainstream music.
02:06:06I can't remember who the guy was.
02:06:07Maybe in the Times, it was a British reporter
02:06:10who did a review of the album.
02:06:12It was album of the year,
02:06:12but he said it was like the worst thing he's ever heard.
02:06:15Like, dude, it made me sad.
02:06:19Especially, we can cut this if this isn't known.
02:06:22Do people know that Sleep Token are from the UK?
02:06:24Do they know that they're British?
02:06:26- They have to.
02:06:28They're definitely British.
02:06:29- Fine, you said it.
02:06:30- I said it.
02:06:31Sleep Token, they're British bro.
02:06:33They're like, oh wait, fuck, I'm Canadian.
02:06:35- Bro, it's fine.
02:06:36- Yeah.
02:06:37- I'll give you license to be able to say that word.
02:06:39That's our word.
02:06:39You can culturally appropriate for the time being.
02:06:40- Okay, I got you.
02:06:41Like, hey, we're not exactly fucking showering ourselves
02:06:45in glory as a country at the moment.
02:06:47You know what I mean?
02:06:48But we should take every Grammy nomination that we can get.
02:06:51- Take the dub, dude.
02:06:52- We should take every single Grammy nomination.
02:06:54We should take all of that because it would be good.
02:06:57- Well, you guys have tons of sick metal bands,
02:06:59which is fucking crazy.
02:07:00- We're punching above our weight.
02:07:01- You have this one, I mean, okay, Loathe, Sleep Token.
02:07:04I mean, if you're classics,
02:07:06I mean, Bullet obviously is massive.
02:07:09- Architects.
02:07:10- Architects, dude.
02:07:12- Bring me President.
02:07:13- Yeah, exactly.
02:07:15- So we're ripping.
02:07:17- You guys are ripping and that's where it's like,
02:07:19that's sick.
02:07:19You know, Canada.
02:07:21Now I'm always proud of Canada 'cause Lex is on fire.
02:07:23- Are they Canadian?
02:07:24Is Dallas Green Canadian?
02:07:25- Yeah, yeah.
02:07:26I think they fucking from Hamilton.
02:07:28I might just get so roasted by all of them.
02:07:30(laughing)
02:07:31I'm pretty sure they're from fucking Hamilton.
02:07:31- They're fucking idiot, dude.
02:07:33Pittsburgh.
02:07:33- Yeah.
02:07:34(laughing)
02:07:35Dude, you're so fucking, no, they're,
02:07:37well, I know that too because you know why
02:07:39when I live in Canada my whole life.
02:07:42Canadians, you'll go at like,
02:07:43it's just a very particular scene in Toronto
02:07:46with metalheads and it's always fun.
02:07:48And when you go to shows, for some reason,
02:07:51the metalheads in Toronto lean Prague
02:07:54and like, and post hardcore.
02:07:56- Okay.
02:07:57- Out of all the things.
02:07:58- So who do they listen to?
02:07:59- So protest the hero.
02:08:00- Okay, fucking hell, that is an insane refresh poll.
02:08:03- It is.
02:08:03- Jesus Christ.
02:08:04I've listened to protest the hero in like a decade and a half.
02:08:07- Any musician I ever met that literally said
02:08:09I like heavy music or anything to play guitar,
02:08:12I was like, what's your favorite protest hero?
02:08:13No matter what.
02:08:14- Fuck.
02:08:15- Without a doubt.
02:08:16- Okay, yes, that's very proggy, yeah, yeah, yeah.
02:08:17- It's that and then it was Alexis on Fire.
02:08:19- Okay, fine.
02:08:20- Good.
02:08:21And then it was like, like intervals
02:08:22and like kind of like the jazz gent dudes
02:08:24from like the 2010s, you know, like that whole like,
02:08:26like sit the way plenty intervals.
02:08:28Polyphia came from that scene,
02:08:30but they're not that really sound anymore.
02:08:32So like that sound.
02:08:33And then like Billy Talent, which is not metal at all.
02:08:36- I fucking love Billy Talent.
02:08:38- Billy Talent's sick.
02:08:38- Billy Talent rules.
02:08:40- Yes, all right.
02:08:41- And I remember I did a media studies assignment in,
02:08:44like when I was 16, 17 in sixth form college
02:08:46and I did it to a Billy Talent song, so cool.
02:08:49- Dude, I used to jam like the river and like,
02:08:51what was it, I think it was Billy Talent two,
02:08:53I forgot the fucking numbers.
02:08:55Those albums like all together, nonstop bangers, man.
02:08:59- Give me, let's listen to a couple of tracks from bands
02:09:02that you think that people need to know more about.
02:09:04Like just whatever, cool.
02:09:05- I've got a couple that I want to show you.
02:09:07- Oh shit, I mean, you did Alexis, so like, I'm happy.
02:09:11- Well, that's fucking cool.
02:09:13That's nice to be able to throw that back.
02:09:15- Yeah.
02:09:15- But yeah, who else, what else should we look at?
02:09:17- I mean, Billy Talent has some bangers
02:09:20and I don't think in America they're very well known,
02:09:23which is always weird to me 'cause they're a big band,
02:09:25but anytime you talk to someone from a try honesty,
02:09:29I think probably Fallen Leaves
02:09:31is probably like they're like a little edgier banger, yeah.
02:09:35- This sound dude, so cool.
02:09:38- The guitarist is so sick in this fucking band.
02:09:45You can tell that's like a death metal dude
02:09:48that was like, you know what?
02:09:49I just want to play like punk shit instead.
02:09:51- That's a fucking hell of a head of photo.
02:09:53- Yeah.
02:09:54- Oh dude, I'm back in middle school
02:10:01in the fucking frozen north.
02:10:02Hey there bud, go to Timmy's for lunch break, dude.
02:10:06- All right.
02:10:07All right.
02:10:09- You gotta hit me, you gotta hit me with one.
02:10:09- All right.
02:10:10- Are you not going to get like a thousand copyright claims?
02:10:12- I don't care, I don't care.
02:10:14- Dude, respect man.
02:10:16- Holy Water, are you familiar with Holy Water?
02:10:17- No, I don't know Holy Water.
02:10:18- Oh, so they just released their album.
02:10:22- Is this a new band?
02:10:23- On Friday, they supported Architects, bro.
02:10:26Fucking three quarters of a mil.
02:10:27Now, what do I like from this?
02:10:32So this is the new album and the most interesting track,
02:10:35probably give me a show.
02:10:36I'll show you this cause it goes pretty hard,
02:10:37but then we'll listen to a bit of Nightmaster.
02:10:39- Okay, okay.
02:10:40Yeah, I've never heard of this band.
02:10:42- So they supported Architects.
02:10:44Were they, they were second support,
02:10:47so fucking Arrow were first support.
02:10:49- Oh yeah.
02:10:50- And I saw them in Houston
02:10:51and these guys are really fucking cool.
02:10:53- It's like that progressive metal quarry space.
02:10:56- It's just, I don't know, they did a...
02:10:59Yeah, so this came out April 17th.
02:11:02This is why I asked you whether or not you'd,
02:11:04how much you listened to it for the weekend.
02:11:06I was like, "Fuck, I hope he hasn't listened to the new..."
02:11:08- No, I haven't listened to this.
02:11:10Oh shit, dude, we back in the 2000s.
02:11:17Fuck yeah.
02:11:18That is a kid that grew up,
02:11:25I don't know who the fucking guitarist is.
02:11:27He grew up listening to Under Oak.
02:11:29Chasing safety.
02:11:30100%.
02:11:32- It's got a bit of shoegaze in it, which is cool.
02:11:34I mean, Deftones is sick now.
02:11:35- And then...
02:11:40- Yup.
02:11:45- Dude, fucking fire.
02:11:46So that's my first one for you.
02:11:48And the second one,
02:11:49I'm so glad that you've never heard of them.
02:11:50That's like, to be able to slipstream you
02:11:53with an unknown band, I feel like I've just fucking,
02:11:56like, I feel like I've headshotted someone
02:11:57from across the map.
02:11:58- Dude, that's a...
02:11:59- I've just fired a bullet randomly and it's gone punk.
02:12:03- No scope, bro.
02:12:05- Say six.
02:12:07- I know say six.
02:12:07- Oh, I thought I got two for two.
02:12:08- Yeah, do Thalen B Kaur.
02:12:10- Fuck.
02:12:11- So okay, the guitar types of style that they have,
02:12:13that's particularly the metal aspect, that's Thal.
02:12:16- Right.
02:12:16- That shit.
02:12:18- Yeah.
02:12:19- They're sick.
02:12:20- What do I like from this?
02:12:21So I think the Devotion's just so,
02:12:24I mean, what would you call this genre?
02:12:26'Cause this is very...
02:12:27- Thalen B.
02:12:29- Really?
02:12:29- Or modern.
02:12:30This is the thing, there's so many stupid genre names
02:12:31that it's all modern metal, basically.
02:12:33But yeah, Thalen B, 'cause it's Thal with R and B.
02:12:36- It's like, how token inspired is all of this stuff?
02:12:39Or is it before that?
02:12:41- It's, the token did many coins, bro.
02:12:44- So cool.
02:12:50All right, give me one more from you.
02:12:51- Okay, I have to show you Marar now.
02:12:53'Cause this is...
02:12:54- How do I spell it?
02:12:55- M-I-R-A-R.
02:12:57I gotta show you these guys.
02:12:58These are fucking, okay, yeah.
02:13:01So, classical dubstep thal.
02:13:04- Okay, I like this cover on.
02:13:07- They literally take old school paintings and shit.
02:13:10I don't know if they draw it
02:13:10or they just take it from the internet
02:13:11'cause it's no longer copyright.
02:13:13- 50K monthlies is a fucking good pull.
02:13:15- Yeah.
02:13:16Oh dude, they're so sick.
02:13:20It's just two dudes.
02:13:23Two dudes, no vocals.
02:13:25- Oh, okay.
02:13:26(dramatic music)
02:13:32- That's a guitar.
02:13:33He's making that noise with a fucking guitar.
02:13:37It's fucking nutty.
02:13:48(laughing)
02:13:59- All right, that's sick.
02:14:00All right, what else?
02:14:01- You have to go to the drop.
02:14:02- Where is it?
02:14:03- It's a little, 130, 130.
02:14:07130.
02:14:08- I'll leave it blank.
02:14:11- Okay.
02:14:12It's one of those where it is one of the coolest moments
02:14:15I've heard in music in the past like 10 years
02:14:17that like, it's simple,
02:14:19but you'll hear the electronic element to it.
02:14:21But it's so fucking extreme.
02:14:23This is two nerdy kids.
02:14:25- What a nationality of it.
02:14:31I think Leo is French and Marius is,
02:14:35oh God, Swedish or Finn, Norway.
02:14:39One of them's one of the Scandinavian.
02:14:40I think, I think sweet.
02:14:41Right here.
02:14:42This will get you the extra pump at the gym.
02:14:44I don't give a fuck how heavy it is.
02:14:46(dramatic music)
02:15:01(upbeat music)
02:15:03- A guitar, psycho.
02:15:06- Yeah, that's crazy.
02:15:07That's fucking insane.
02:15:08- Yeah.
02:15:09- All right, what else?
02:15:09One more.
02:15:10- Oh shit.
02:15:11Okay, do you know Boundaries?
02:15:12- No.
02:15:13- Okay, I got to show you Boundaries.
02:15:14So it's, they're a mix of kind of like that 2000 nostalgic
02:15:18stuff with a very modern, heavy edge.
02:15:20You want something more melodic or heavy?
02:15:24- Let's go melodic.
02:15:25- Easily erased, second one.
02:15:28(upbeat music)
02:15:29- Very melodic.
02:15:30- It has a chorus at least.
02:15:32(laughing)
02:15:33(upbeat music)
02:15:36- He goes for it, dude.
02:15:47(upbeat music)
02:15:50- Two singers?
02:15:58- Yeah, the drummer is clean singing and then the vocalist
02:16:00is screaming.
02:16:01- Right, okay.
02:16:02- Yeah.
02:16:03(upbeat music)
02:16:06- You got the ambience, you got like the melodic kind
02:16:09of hardcore metal core vibes and then you get screaming.
02:16:12It's very that and then breakdowns all that shit, dude.
02:16:17- Dude, very good.
02:16:19Very good.
02:16:20The scene continues to live on as fucking old as we get.
02:16:22- Hell yeah, dude.
02:16:23- Bro, I think you fucking rule.
02:16:25I love your stuff.
02:16:26I'm so glad that you're back.
02:16:27I'm glad you took a break, but I'm also glad that you're back.
02:16:30So where should people go to check out all the shit
02:16:32that you've got going on?
02:16:34- You'll probably be forced to see my face
02:16:36if you listen to Breakdown somewhere.
02:16:37Unfortunately, on the internet,
02:16:38my dumb ass face will pop up going, ooh!
02:16:40But yeah, @nicknocturnal on everything.
02:16:42And I'm gonna, I don't know when you guys drop these,
02:16:45but like in a week or two,
02:16:46we're just getting the studio ready
02:16:47and we're gonna be doing this crazy concept of,
02:16:51actually what I was saying earlier,
02:16:52when I was doing the How to Metal thing.
02:16:53- That's right.
02:16:54- We're gonna be writing songs every day on stream
02:16:57from start to finish with crazy rave lights controlled
02:17:01with the actual songs.
02:17:03And basically that is gonna be just content.
02:17:05Write an entire banger every single day, live, no bullshit.
02:17:08No, that's why there's no anything in the background.
02:17:11It's just write the banger right there from start to finish.
02:17:13- And you're gonna release them?
02:17:15- If people want them enough.
02:17:16So it's gonna be based fully on demand.
02:17:17So I'll probably put them on, like, I don't know,
02:17:18if someone wants to go get on,
02:17:20like I'll put the demos, whatever, on a Patreon.
02:17:22Someone, hey, go, there you go.
02:17:23Listen to them if you really like them.
02:17:24But like, if it's a song, you know, again,
02:17:27that people are like, yo, full right now, like go right now,
02:17:30full campaign, I'll do the music video in the fucking room
02:17:32or like in, you know, in the swamp in Florida,
02:17:34we'll figure it out, dude.
02:17:35- It's the best idea, I really think,
02:17:37because I would love to see what goes into making a track
02:17:39from start to finish and the fact that you can do,
02:17:41you're doing it with your missus.
02:17:43- Some of them I will.
02:17:43I told them, 'cause my wife,
02:17:45she used to do the content creation stuff a lot more,
02:17:46but she used to do it in Brazil.
02:17:48It's 'cause she speaks mainly Portuguese.
02:17:49She speaks English very well though.
02:17:50But like, you know, she just wants to make music.
02:17:52She's not a talker in terms of-
02:17:54- Bring her in, hey, she can be the fucking workhorse.
02:17:57Come up with some nice riffs.
02:17:58Do some of that stuff for me.
02:17:59I'll explain what's going on.
02:18:00- Well, she's gonna be producing and doing her own stuff.
02:18:02So I told her, I was like, yo,
02:18:02so you're gonna make beats in this shit
02:18:04and do shorts or whatever you wanna do, right?
02:18:05'Cause she wants to like also do, she writes.
02:18:07We both write.
02:18:08I'm like, great, write thing.
02:18:09And then when something goes crazy
02:18:11and you wanna do it together, let's go.
02:18:13We'll do it together on stream.
02:18:14And yeah, it'll be crazy.
02:18:15- Dude, I'm really happy for you.
02:18:16I'm really happy for you.
02:18:17When you left the world of metal and the scene,
02:18:21you basically got eulogies from some of the biggest guys
02:18:24in all of metal, which was pretty hilarious.
02:18:26It was like you died, kind of.
02:18:28- Yeah, they never talked to me while I was there,
02:18:29but yeah, exactly.
02:18:30That's how it goes.
02:18:31- Well, you're back, you're back.
02:18:32And I'm glad that you're back and you're fucking awesome, dude.
02:18:34So let's do this again.
02:18:35- Of course, thank you for having me.
02:18:36I love what you do.
02:18:37- I love you, bro.
02:18:38All right, goodbye everybody.
02:18:39- Goodbye.
02:18:40- Thank you very much for tuning in.
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