(I haven't yet but I could...)
Same here.MSFC Aggie said:
Many Saturdays have disappeared going down his youtube rabbit holes
These are condensed versions for what Youtube calls their Shorts. I'm pretty sure each of the above songs and a whole lot more are available in longer form.DG-Ag said:
Never heard of him or these videos but I think I could get into it (even though I'm not a musician).
Are they all this short or are these just snippets of longer videos?
maroon barchetta said:
Desmond Howard the Heisman winner?
Corporal Punishment said:
Professor of Rock is a Hipster dork.
Plus, he pays homage to a lot of artists I like.Philo B 93 said:Corporal Punishment said:
Professor of Rock is a Hipster dork.
I don't know the guy personally, but his channel has almost 1 million subs, so I assume some younger people are learning rock history from him. That's a good thing in my book.
I believe I recall Redstone saying he started watching in late 2017 on episode 1, when he had about 198k subscribers.62strat said:
Started watching beato in early 2018 on episode 2, every little thing she does is magic by the police.
By no means have watched all of them, but have been a fan since.
When I first saw that video, he had about 200k subscribers. I feel like he bumped up 30-50% when he started getting the big name interviews.
I like your post except I partially disagree with the bolded part. He was definitely opinionated, but it seems like it was just a band of multiple hard-headed people.Big Al 1992 said:
Rick is great. His interviews are great - Sting, Billy Corgan, Kirk Hammett, Michael MacDonald, and many others (his Stuart Copeland interview made it obvious why the Police broke up - Stuart seemed like a dick)
Wishlist interviews - Elliot Easton, Neal Schon, Edge.
He makes a great point how some bands won't let him use their music - Eagles, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin because of royalties etc but without them making themselves available to the youtube/insta community the youngsters likely won't hear of them.
Part of that, I think, is Copeland's personality and sense of humor. I listened to this podcast a few days ago and he makes lots of references to "Stingo" and how they used to clash. But seems like they've come out the other side as friends. (Copeland even babysat for Sting back in the day so they must be somewhat close.)Chipotlemonger said:I like your post except I partially disagree with the bolded part. He was definitely opinionated, but it seems like it was just a band of multiple hard-headed people.Big Al 1992 said:
Rick is great. His interviews are great - Sting, Billy Corgan, Kirk Hammett, Michael MacDonald, and many others (his Stuart Copeland interview made it obvious why the Police broke up - Stuart seemed like a dick)
Wishlist interviews - Elliot Easton, Neal Schon, Edge.
He makes a great point how some bands won't let him use their music - Eagles, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin because of royalties etc but without them making themselves available to the youtube/insta community the youngsters likely won't hear of them.
for some reason those reaction videos came into my algorithm pretty early on as well.Redstone said:
Have closely followed Beato since well before he became known.
I was also viewing reaction videos of Black content creators commenting on primarily white musicians (ie becoming huge RATM and Metallica and AC/DC fans) long before that became popular.
More recently, I've secured many First Comments on pro wrestling reaction videos, primarily Jim Cornette.
EclipseAg said:Plus, he pays homage to a lot of artists I like.Philo B 93 said:Corporal Punishment said:
Professor of Rock is a Hipster dork.
I don't know the guy personally, but his channel has almost 1 million subs, so I assume some younger people are learning rock history from him. That's a good thing in my book.
This is a whole genre unto itself. A popular one to review is Dire Straits "Sultans of Swing"Quote:
reaction videos of Black content creators commenting on primarily white musicians
Redstone said:
Have closely followed Beato since well before he became known.
I was also viewing reaction videos of Black content creators commenting on primarily white musicians (ie becoming huge RATM and Metallica and AC/DC fans) long before that became popular.
More recently, I've secured many First Comments on pro wrestling reaction videos, primarily Jim Cornette.