SPCodex:Social media/Rick Rubin: Difference between revisions

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|original_date=1963-03-10
|original_date=1963-03-10
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{{Social media/Instagram|Happy {{nth|{{#expr:{{CURRENTYEAR}} - 1963}}}} birthday to the legendary Rick Rubin! He first worked with The Smashing Pumpkins on "Let Me Give the World to You" in 1998, then later on Shiny and Oh So Bright: Vol. 1, and Billy Corgan's second solo album, Ogilala.
{{Social media/Instagram|Happy {{nth|{{#expr:{{CURRENTYEAR}} - 1963}}}} birthday to the legendary Rick Rubin! He first worked with The Smashing Pumpkins on "Let Me Give the World to You" in 1998, then later on Shiny and Oh So Bright: Vol. 1, and Billy Corgan's second solo album, Ogilala.
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In 2017, Rubin teamed up with Corgan again for Ogilala, followed by SP's Shiny Vol. 1 in 2018. In a Forbes interview, Corgan said of Rubin: "I think he has an incredible ear for clarity. If you present something three different ways he’ll pick the way that is most clear … that would then translate to people all over the world. What he’s attracted to is what a lot of other people would be attracted to … He has a way of navigating to the heart of the matter. As an artist, that can be kind of weird because, in many ways, it feels like it’s not enough, like there should be more. I’ll give you a perfect example, during the recording sessions he played me one of his favorite Neil Diamond songs that I never heard … He was literally in tears because he loved the song so much. And his point for showing me the song was to illustrate a certain emotional quality that Neil captured on the song. And that was his way of communicating, “Gee, I wish you would get some of this in what you’re doing.” But he wouldn’t tell you how to do that, nor would he try to manipulate you."
In 2017, Rubin teamed up with Corgan again for Ogilala, followed by SP's Shiny Vol. 1 in 2018. In a Forbes interview, Corgan said of Rubin: "I think he has an incredible ear for clarity. If you present something three different ways he’ll pick the way that is most clear … that would then translate to people all over the world. What he’s attracted to is what a lot of other people would be attracted to … He has a way of navigating to the heart of the matter. As an artist, that can be kind of weird because, in many ways, it feels like it’s not enough, like there should be more. I’ll give you a perfect example, during the recording sessions he played me one of his favorite Neil Diamond songs that I never heard … He was literally in tears because he loved the song so much. And his point for showing me the song was to illustrate a certain emotional quality that Neil captured on the song. And that was his way of communicating, “Gee, I wish you would get some of this in what you’re doing.” But he wouldn’t tell you how to do that, nor would he try to manipulate you."


<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>
<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>
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|photo1=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/43/RickRubinSept09.jpg
|tags1=rickrubin
|tags1=rickrubin
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|photo2=https://spcodex.wiki/images/thumb/f/fa/Billy_Corgan_and_Rick_Rubin%2C_Sound_City.png/450px-Billy_Corgan_and_Rick_Rubin%2C_Sound_City.png
|tags2=wpccodex, smashingpumpkins
|tags2=wpccodex, smashingpumpkins
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In 2017, Rubin teamed up with Corgan again for Ogilala, followed by SP's Shiny Vol. 1 in 2018. In a Forbes interview, Corgan said of Rubin: "I think he has an incredible ear for clarity. If you present something three different ways he’ll pick the way that is most clear … that would then translate to people all over the world. What he’s attracted to is what a lot of other people would be attracted to … He has a way of navigating to the heart of the matter. As an artist, that can be kind of weird because, in many ways, it feels like it’s not enough, like there should be more. I’ll give you a perfect example, during the recording sessions he played me one of his favorite Neil Diamond songs that I never heard … He was literally in tears because he loved the song so much. And his point for showing me the song was to illustrate a certain emotional quality that Neil captured on the song. And that was his way of communicating, “Gee, I wish you would get some of this in what you’re doing.” But he wouldn’t tell you how to do that, nor would he try to manipulate you."
In 2017, Rubin teamed up with Corgan again for Ogilala, followed by SP's Shiny Vol. 1 in 2018. In a Forbes interview, Corgan said of Rubin: "I think he has an incredible ear for clarity. If you present something three different ways he’ll pick the way that is most clear … that would then translate to people all over the world. What he’s attracted to is what a lot of other people would be attracted to … He has a way of navigating to the heart of the matter. As an artist, that can be kind of weird because, in many ways, it feels like it’s not enough, like there should be more. I’ll give you a perfect example, during the recording sessions he played me one of his favorite Neil Diamond songs that I never heard … He was literally in tears because he loved the song so much. And his point for showing me the song was to illustrate a certain emotional quality that Neil captured on the song. And that was his way of communicating, “Gee, I wish you would get some of this in what you’re doing.” But he wouldn’t tell you how to do that, nor would he try to manipulate you."


<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>
<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>
}}
}}
{{Social media/Twitter|Happy birthday @RickRubin! MTV named him "the most important producer of the last 20 years" in 2007 and he made Time's 100 Most Influential People in the World. He produced SP's "Let Me Give the World to You" in 1998 and later Shiny Vol 1 and WPC's Ogilala <nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>}}
{{Social media/Twitter|Happy birthday @RickRubin! MTV named him "the most important producer of the last 20 years" in 2007 and he made Time's 100 Most Influential People in the World. He produced SP's "Let Me Give the World to You" in 1998 and later Shiny Vol 1 and WPC's Ogilala <nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/Rick_Rubin</nowiki>}}

Latest revision as of 17:00, 2 August 2023

This page defines the social media posts for Rick Rubin.

This post is scheduled to deliver on March 10 at 16:00 UTC.

NOTE: The structure must follow the guide at SPCodex:Social media exactly for the automated posts to work.

  • [1]
    • rickrubin
  • [2]
    • wpccodex, smashingpumpkins