And The Writer Is...with Ross Golan

And The Writer Is

Every week, we sit down with an acclaimed and venerable songwriter to intimately discuss what happens behind closed doors in the music industry. There are millions of singers, thousands of artists, and only 40 top songs per genre at a time... this podcast is about the people who make them. Produced by Joe London & Ross Golan in association with Big Deal Music & Mega House Music. And The Writer Is... ™ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Ep. 249: Rick Beato | Songwriters Got Poorer. AI Is Next. So Where Is Music Going?

    HÁ 19 MIN.

    Ep. 249: Rick Beato | Songwriters Got Poorer. AI Is Next. So Where Is Music Going?

    Today's guest is a multi-instrumentalist with a master's in jazz and one of the most-watched independent music voices online. His real story isn't the channel he accidentally built when a 90-second video of his son's perfect pitch hit 80 million views overnight, it's his incredible value to the music community and the conversations he sparks online about the state of the music industry and his conversations with some of the biggest creators within it's orbit. This is one of the more unflinching conversations we've had about what's actually happening to music. Two musicians from different generations of the same fight, working it out in real time. Where do you stand when the rules of the music industry keep changing under your feet? And The Writer Is... Rick Beato! In this episode of And The Writer Is, we go deep on: How getting dropped in 1999 built a YouTube empire 16 years laterWhy Ringo would be a co-writer of every Beatles song in 2026The Eli Mercer experiment: building a fully fake AI artist with Claude — and what happened when he uploaded itThe NPR EDM stunt: 4 million monthly Spotify listeners, 6,300 followers, and what that math says about AIThe 90-second video of his son's perfect pitch that hit 3 million views by 10pm and 80 million total"There's no two current artists with the gravity of Bob Dylan and Stevie Wonder" — and Ross's case for their modern counterpartsWho is the Michael Jordan of pop music? Queen at 3 billion streams enters the chatWhy Ross is still bullish on songwriting — and what the Music Modernization Act got right that the No Fakes Act needs to finish And much more... Hit subscribe and turn on notifications. Every week, we go deep with the most interesting creatives in music. Follow us on socials: @andthewriteris A special thank you to our sponsors for making these conversations possible. Our lead sponsor, NMPA — the National Music Publishers Association. Your support means the world to us. Chapters 0:00 Intro 2:14 The beginning of Rick Beato's music career 3:11 The rollercoaster of an early music career 5:32 The Napster era and the dawn of digital recording 9:16 Producing Shinedown — and how "Simple Man" became the hit 10:54 Why "Yellow Ledbetter" was a B-side — and why bonus tracks are back 12:48 What country radio still gets right about hits 14:54 Inside Nashville sessions and the number triangle 17:28 The future of AI in music — and the No Fakes Act 21:20 The future of prompting and curating music 23:54 Would The Beatles be a four-way publishing split in 2026? 25:39 The modern music economy: are album tracks worthless now? 27:58 American writers are chasing global stars now 34:30 The Eli Mercer experiment: a fake artist built with Claude 36:52 The NPR EDM stunt and what it proved about AI on Spotify 41:18 4M monthly listeners. 6,300 followers. AI is winning the algorithm. 42:58 How Rick Beato built a YouTube empire 45:22 The "What Makes This Song Great" era 51:49 1984 vs now — and the search for a modern Bob Dylan and Stevie Wonder 54:18 Who is the Michael Jordan of pop music? 55:51 Queen at 3 billion streams — what counts as "biggest" 1:00:28 Golden, Blinding Lights, and what makes a 2020s standard 1:06:53 Songwriter similarities and the lawsuits that never happened 1:09:42 "Best era of pop music. Am I wrong?" 1:13:56 1998: how Clear Channel and Cumulus consolidated radio 1:20:14 The Music Modernization Act and what's actually next 1:24:54 Is the future of songwriting still bullish? Credits: Hosted by Ross Golan Produced by Joe London & Jad Saad Edited by Jad Saad Post-Production VFX by Pratik Karki Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 26min
  2. Ep. 248: Rogét Chahayed | From Pianist to Sicko Mode, Kiss Me More & APT.

    28 DE ABR.

    Ep. 248: Rogét Chahayed | From Pianist to Sicko Mode, Kiss Me More & APT.

    Today's guest is a prolific producer behind Sicko Mode, Broccoli, Bad at Love, Kiss Me More, Laugh Now Cry Later, First Class, and APT. — but whose real story isn't the catalog. It's how most of those songs happened by accident. A classically trained concert pianist who spent his teens grinding through Liszt and Prokofiev knuckle-busters, Rogét quietly became one of the most important producers in modern pop and hip-hop — and almost none of it happened the way he planned. This is one of the more honest conversations about what mastery is actually for — what happens when a decade of preparation collides with a 9pm pull-up, a stock preset, and a flute sound turned on by accident. When the world keeps rewarding your simplest moves, who do you become? And The Writer Is... Rogét Chahayed! In this episode of And The Writer Is, we go deep on: Years of grinding Liszt and Prokofiev — and a first big check from four major triads on a flute The three-week run in 2016 that produced Broccoli, Skywalker, Bad at Love, and the seed of Sicko Mode The Mr. Miyagi era under Doctor Dre's right-hand man — and a pajama meeting at Dre's hidden studio Sicko Mode — made on a stock preset in a closet-sized vocal booth — and the moment he heard it open Astroworld Kiss Me More — a 2-5-1 with a walk-down — and what jazz school actually trained him to do Co-executive producing Jack Harlow's album from 4pm to 4am for a year — and how First Class came together APT. — the song he forgot about until Bruno Mars mentioned it at a friend's barbecue And much more... Hit subscribe and turn on notifications. Every week, we go deep with the most interesting creatives in music. Follow us on socials: @andthewriteris A special thank you to our sponsors for making these conversations possible. Our lead sponsor, NMPA — the National Music Publishers' Association. Your support means the world to us. Chapters 0:00 Intro 2:12 "How does a classical pianist come up with the chords for Broccoli? By turning the keyboard on." 4:24 The 9pm Yachty pull-up and the original Korg stock piano 6:35 Hearing his flute everywhere — Macklemore, Drake's Portland 7:50 The early break that taught him how the music business actually works 13:39 "I believe in the good of the business — we can be the generation that watches each other's backs" 15:59 Lebanese father, Argentine mother, and a meet-cute at a gas station 17:00 Why his dad named him Rogét 19:35 Discovering jazz at 15 and the chord that opened the world up 24:14 College, hip-hop, and reading liner notes for Scott Storch and Ryan Leslie 33:30 Telling Eastern parents he was leaving Juilliard-track for hip-hop 37:03 Getting kicked out, teaching 25 piano students a week to survive 41:45 The Mr. Miyagi era — Mel-Man, strip-club errands, and getting hazed 46:17 The pajama meeting at Doctor Dre's hidden studio 50:08 His Lebanese dad hearing Broccoli on the radio 52:17 NMPA 54:36 Bad at Love — the beat he made and forgot 57:50 What is a songwriter? Rogét's answer 1:01:28 Skywalker, Hit-Boy, and the arpeggios that became the splish 1:04:00 Sicko Mode: a stock preset, a closet-sized vocal booth, and Travis pulling up 1:07:08 "Drake comes in and says 'Astro' and I lost it" 1:14:23 Laugh Now, Cry Later: a Big Sean intro session to a Drake single in a month 1:18:15 Kiss Me More: "the perfect riff" — a 2-5-1 with a walk-down, sped up 1:23:15 "Genius comes out of editing" — Miles vs. Dizzy and what jazz actually trains 1:24:54 First Class and a year co-EPing Jack Harlow's album from 4pm to 4am 1:30:39 APT. — the song he forgot until Bruno mentioned it at a barbecue 1:36:04 What he'd tell a 16-year-old version of himself in the Valley right now Hosted by Ross Golan Produced by Joe London and Jad Saad Edit by Jad Saad Post Production VFX by Pratik Karki Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 38min
  3. How Dan Nigro Builds Superstars | Ep. 195 | Rewind

    23 DE ABR.

    How Dan Nigro Builds Superstars | Ep. 195 | Rewind

    Today's guest is the Grammy Producer of the Year who built the two biggest pop breakthroughs of the last five years back to back — and whose real story isn't about the hits. It's about the three years he spent making nothing and the rule he wants every producer in the game to understand. From indie rock frontman in As Tall As Lions to pop's most trusted collaborator, Dan built his career against almost every industry instinct. He carries three things at once that most producers never figure out how to hold: the commercial ear of someone who's had back-to-back Grammy runs with Olivia Rodrigo, the patience of a craftsman who sat on "Good Luck, Babe" for 18 months before it ever left his hard drive, and the conviction to say no — to every rushed demo, every session hop, every label note that doesn't serve the artist. This is one of the more honest conversations about what it actually takes to build a superstar. And The Writer Is... Dan Nigro! In this episode of And The Writer Is, we go deep on: • The three years he spent making nothing — and what finally broke it • Why getting Chappell dropped from Atlantic was "the greatest thing that ever happened" • "We're building like an icon here" — the real work behind Chappell Roan's rise • Why Dan refuses to send demos • 20 days with one artist, not 20 sessions with twenty • Meeting Dua Lipa in 2014 — "this girl is a superstar" • Artist development, finding your lane • Writing good songs sucks — and why that's fine And much more... Hit subscribe and turn on notifications. Every week, we go deep with the most interesting creatives in music. Follow us on socials: @andthewriteris A special thank you to our sponsors for making these conversations possible. Our lead sponsor, NMPA — the National Music Publishing Association. Your support means the world to us. And @splice — the best sample library on the market. Period. Chapter timestamps: 0:00 Intro 3:01 Why Atlantic dropping Chappell was "the greatest thing that ever happened" 4:16 Atlantic's note: cut one of the Pink Pony Club guitar solos 8:20 Self-releasing Karma, Naked in Manhattan, and building a label with Island 11:33 "We're building like an icon here" — Bowie, Madonna, the Chappell blueprint 13:13 What makes somebody "have it" — the gut call you can't fake 17:21 "There are no more superstars" — the article that pissed Dan off 19:34 20 days with one artist, not 20 sessions with twenty 21:27 Good Luck Babe's million rewrites — the "Good Luck Jane" era 22:59 Why Dan refuses to send demos — ever 24:54 18 months on the hard drive 26:01 Justin Tranter asks: how do you have the confidence to dive that deep? 28:04 Three years. Ended up with nothing. 33:12 The Madonna model — outside songs, finding your lane 43:21 Taking five months off after Olivia and Chappell 46:41 Steph Jones asks: rituals, guilty pleasures, happy accidents 51:43 Amy Allen asks: has your feeling ever been wrong? 52:58 "The most egotistical thing I've ever said" — never wrong about an artist 53:20 Meeting Dua Lipa in 2014 — "this girl is a superstar" 55:55 Vampire — and the label that thought it was "three songs in one" 62:39 People need to take more risks 63:37 Writing good songs sucks — and why that's fine 68:21 Five for five — As Tall As Lions, Sour, Guts, Amusement Records 70:31 The second-album mountain 72:58 Playing Olivia and Chappell for his daughter Credits: Hosted by Ross Golan Produced by Joe London & Jad Saad Edited by Jad Saad Post-Production VFX by Pratik Karki Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 16min
  4. And The Update Is… Live Nation Ruled an Illegal Monopoly, D4VD Arrested for Murder, Udio Pays Up on AI

    17 DE ABR.

    And The Update Is… Live Nation Ruled an Illegal Monopoly, D4VD Arrested for Murder, Udio Pays Up on AI

    Every week, And the Writer Is brings you the most important news moving through the music industry — straight, sharp, and no fluff. This week: a jury ruled Live Nation and Ticketmaster violated antitrust laws and operate as illegal monopolies, with a judge now weighing whether to force a breakup or sale. Max Lousada and Julie Greenwald — the A&R legends behind Warner's modern run — launched a new long-term international label with Sony Music investment and distribution. And Udio signed a licensing deal with Kobalt, becoming one of the first AI companies actually paying creatives for training on their work. Plus: D4vd arrested on murder charges and dropped by Interscope, Foster the People ink a new deal, and Ella Langley's "Choosin' Texas" holds the #1 song. Follow us on socials and don't miss our new episodes every Tuesday — the hottest conversations in music, with the people making it. This week: Jury finds Live Nation and Ticketmaster violated antitrust laws — a judge will now decide whether to break them upMax Lousada and Julie Greenwald launch a new international label with Sony MusicUdio signs a licensing deal with Kobalt — the first real AI-pays-creatives move of the cycleD4vd arrested on murder charges; Interscope removes him from their rosterFoster the People sign a new dealElla Langley's "Choosin' Texas" remains #1 song of the weekRoss previews live episodes coming from Stagecoach and the week's Billy Corgan drop Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    3 min
  5. Ep. 247: Billy Corgan | How He Built Smashing Pumpkins Into a 30-Million Album Empire

    14 DE ABR.

    Ep. 247: Billy Corgan | How He Built Smashing Pumpkins Into a 30-Million Album Empire

    Today's guest is the architect of alternative rock who sold 30 million albums and defined the sound of an entire generation — but whose real story begins after the hits stopped mattering to him. From the suburbs of Chicago to the apex of 90s mainstream success, Billy Corgan built an empire. Then he spent the last 20 years quietly dismantling the idea that commercial success is the same thing as real value. He carries three things simultaneously that most artists never figure out how to hold at once: the ambition of someone who was never going to settle for the midwest, the technical genius of a classically-trained musician who produces every layer of his own work, and the philosophical rigor of someone willing to completely reimagine what success actually means. This is one of the more unflinching conversations about what staying relevant actually costs — not the version that gets posted on socials, the version that gets lived in the real decisions you make about art, money, independence, and how you want to spend your time. When the gatekeepers are gone and nobody's controlling the narrative anymore, who do you become? And The Writer Is... Billy Corgan! In this episode of And The Writer Is, we go deep on: • The trap of being defined by your greatest hits — and why he refuses it • His father's failed music career, and the moment his dad finally understood • Chicago's inward-facing indie scene and the cost of communities that don't believe in themselves • How the value of artists gets assessed in rooms — and why that's broken • What "influence" actually means vs. commercial success • The gatekeepers are gone — what that really means for independent artists • Owning 100% of your publishing and why that changes everything • Building a new world where direct artist support is how things actually work • Why legacy thinking is changing, and what comes next And much more... Hit subscribe and turn on notifications. Every week, we go deep with the most interesting creatives in music. Follow us on socials: @andthewriteris A special thank you to our sponsors for making these conversations possible. Our lead sponsor, NMPA — the National Music Publishing Association. Your support means the world to us. And @splice — the best sample library on the market. Period. Chapter timestamps: 0:00 Intro 2:30 Why Billy doesn't prefer to talk about his hits, and how his legacy has adjusted 5:00 Dad's bitterness: you got lucky 6:30 Dad's realization "You're one of the best songwriters in the world" 8:00 Independent music, 'selling out', and Chicago's music scene 10:30 The touring economics of the 90's 13:15 Rigged charts and the beginning of Pop music 16:00 Representation of Rock music in the charts / award shows 19:30 Ross on the future of music in a digital world 20:30 Numbers mean nothing if no one gives a sh*t. 21:00 Pop vs Rock: The future of music 28:30 Women archetypes in music 38:21 Billy's advice: What you need to survive in the music industry 40:00 World building and songwriting advice 43:31 How to define your value as an artist in a commercial world 44:40 Billy's Batman story 49:00 Breaking 'Landmine' because of Courtney Love 51:50 How he meets Courtney Love 54:08 How he learned to play guitar 57:00 His guitar hero inspiration… 1:01:10 Meeting the band 1:03:20 Finding a world class drummer hiding in plain sight 1:07:05 Fighting for his band when no one believed in them 1:15:29 Keeping your mouth shut when it's not your session 1:16:02 Fight for your copyright. The band struggling with his sole writing credit 1:18:00 AI in music… and Billy's take on it Credits: Hosted by Ross Golan Produced by Joe London & Jad Saad Edited by Jad Saad Post-Production VFX by Pratik Karki Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h10min
4,9
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Sobre

Every week, we sit down with an acclaimed and venerable songwriter to intimately discuss what happens behind closed doors in the music industry. There are millions of singers, thousands of artists, and only 40 top songs per genre at a time... this podcast is about the people who make them. Produced by Joe London & Ross Golan in association with Big Deal Music & Mega House Music. And The Writer Is... ™ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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