Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 153: Where Do Our Songs Come From? | Ear Biscuits Ep.153
Episode Date: July 23, 2018On this week's Ear Biscuits Throwback episode, Rhett & Link dig into their musical process, share some previously unreleased demos of their hit songs, chronicle the Bacon Bot's birth, and more. To... learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're gonna take you back to an analysis
of our songwriting process in order to explore the question,
where do songs come from for us?
Yes, and again, this is the.
And then where do they go?
This is the last of our throwback episodes
in our little break.
Next week we will be back with another fresh,
freshly baked biscuit for your ears.
I'm excited for you to hear this one though.
Again, this is from season one.
We would occasionally do some Rhett and Link only
conversations and I brought to the table
much audio evidence, some weird demos.
Yeah.
So it's kind of like a, there's a case study
of a number of songs in how we wrote those and there were some weird moments.
I was a bit vulnerable in sharing our,
well and vulnerable on your behalf I think
in sharing some of the demos that I had.
Yeah, because a few of them were very embarrassing
when the songs were in their infancy stages.
Yeah, so listen to that.
It's entertaining, I think.
Also, speaking of entertainment,
if you're listening to this
and you're not watching the video version,
you may have a chance to get into a show in Australia,
the Tour of Mythicality.
We don't know if they've sold by now or not,
tourofmythicality.com, but we really wanna let you know
about the North American dates.
We are gonna be in Toronto on November 8th.
We're gonna be in Atlantic City on November 9th.
And then we're gonna be in Connecticut
at Foxwoods Resort Casino on November 10th.
So if you know somebody in that area
and it's not you or you already have your tickets,
be sure to let them know, tourofmythicality.com.
Yes.
And now enjoy the journey into our songwriting process.
We're opening the curtain and I just did a motion
as if it was me opening a robe,
which I shouldn't have done.
We're opening our robes.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting, we have us.
Yay!
The two of us and you.
Hope you're not disappointed.
I picture you in some sort of seat listening to this.
It could be a moving vehicle seat.
What if they're jogging?
I mean, some people aren't sitting down.
Some people are jogging.
You could be jogging, but I don't picture you jogging.
Maybe on a skateboard.
Not that you're not in shape. It's just that you're not jogging. You could be jogging, but I don't picture you jogging. Maybe on a skateboard. Not that you're not in shape.
It's just that you're not jogging.
Someone is on rollerblades right now.
Think about that, Link.
Oh, gosh, I am.
Somebody's on rollerblades.
They look cool.
They look really cool.
When they go by, everybody's thinking,
that guy must be listening to Ear Biscuits.
Yeah, that's what they're thinking.
That's an Ear Biscuits man.
See, he's got those big headphones on,
and the rollerblades, that only means one thing, Ear Biscuits. Okay. That's in Ear Biscuits, man. See, he's got those big headphones on and the rollerblades.
That only means one thing, Ear Biscuits.
Okay.
That's happening.
Well, here's what's going to happen on this Ear Biscuit.
As you know, if you've been listening for any time,
we started doing this thing on a semi-regular basis
where we just talked to one another.
And it's been fun.
We've learned some things about one another.
We've taken questions from you, the Ear Biscuits listeners, and asked them to one another.
We're going to continue in that tradition tonight.
And what we're going to talk about is the creative process as it specifically relates to our music.
Because...
Songs, yeah.
Yeah.
Well, not because,
but one of the things that's going to happen to illustrate this
is we're going to play a lot of music tonight,
and that includes a lot of tracks
slash demos
slash maybe even not quite demos
that have never seen the light of day
that I don't think anyone other than just the two of us
has ever heard.
Never hit anyone's ears.
I mean, there's some things that I found on my phone
that you had never heard.
Right.
Voice memos.
I mean, we're going into voice memo demo level tonight,
not because we think we're like the Beatles or something
and we're opening up the archives
and you're going to be blown away,
but because it's embarrassing
and hopefully entertaining and hopefully informative to
those of you who are trying to do something creative out there.
If you're an aspiring songwriter, then maybe this will give you confidence that you can
certainly do better than we can.
And if you're just a rollerblader, I mean, hopefully this will just be entertaining.
Yeah, I think you don't even have to like music to get a kick out of some of the things that we have tried.
So we have some questions that we've gotten off Twitter
that we're going to go through.
But first, I think a good place to start, Rhett,
is with the first comedy song that we wrote together.
Now, I mean, we were in a band together in high school,
the Wax Paper Dogs. It was comical, but it was not intentionally comical. There were
no comedy songs written. Right. So the first intentionally comedic song we wrote, I guess
it was 2001. I mean, this was our third roommate in college, Greg. It was 2000.
With three Gs.
It was the year 2000 because you guys got married in 2000.
Right.
You and then Greg in December of 2000.
So we decided to write a funny song making fun of Gregreg in at his rehearsal dinner we were going to perform it live at his
rehearsal dinner in order to embarrass him in front of not only his family but his uh fiance
jen's family right so um we wrote a song which i i somehow have like the demo recording of us
practicing the song
before we performed it.
And I guess we should go ahead and tell them
that this song was then adapted.
Well, here's what we realized.
We realized a song about a guy who you lived with
for three years and making fun of him
before he gets married
is not something that has a wide audience.
Yeah, not a lot of broad appeal.
So we decided to change the words
and keep the tune and the guitar part,
and that became the Unibrow song.
Right.
Which I'll play a little bit of that right now.
How did I get here in this awkward position?
My two eyebrows have formed a coalition.
My two eyebrows have formed a coalition So the Unibrow song actually ended up being
one of our first music videos on our YouTube channel
that went big.
It was featured on the homepage of YouTube.
That's right.
Back in the day.
And you can still watch that music video
which features Rhett's father as one of the guys
in the barber chair that we shave his unibrow.
Yeah. The good looking one.
So to go back to this rehearsal dinner with Greg, we wrote this song and the bridge was,
well, I'll just play it and see if you can hear what we said.
We sing Greg naked, soon you will too hope you
enjoy it
more than we do
didn't we know that
you were meant for each
other
the best of friends
soon to be the best of
lovers
didn't we know that The best of friends, soon to be the best of lovers.
Didn't we know that you were meant to be together?
Two peas in a pod, two birds of a feather.
Okay, so that's a little embarrassing, I gotta say. A couple of things to note is we sounded like absolute rednecks.
We were.
Still are rednecks, just kind of reformed a little bit.
We could not sing well at all.
The harmonies were so flat.
I think a dog actually barked as a result of one of your harmonies.
He's in torture.
Yeah.
But the interesting thing was-
We've seen Greg naked, soon you will too.
Hope you enjoy it more than we do.
But it was a hit.
The thing I would like to stress-
At the rehearsal dinner.
As, not a nationwide hit, you know.
As bad as that sounds,
as embarrassing as the play for you,
it was an absolute hit at the rehearsal dinner.
So much so that one of the most formative conversations
that we have had about our careers
took place right after that.
You remember this?
Yeah, sitting in the car with our wives.
With our wives.
With my fiance at the time, your wife of six months,
and I was gonna get married to my wife in six months and they
it went over so well they said you guys need to do something with this like you can't just get up
there and sing this song and have everybody respond like that and just move on to the next
thing you've got to keep doing this you've got to pursue this and I think that was the beginning of
us thinking and first of all I'm so thankful they said that because based on that recording,
no one should have ever thought there was any promise,
there was any reason to keep pursuing it.
Yeah, I'm very thankful for our wives
for seeing the potential.
They were like our Simon Cowell.
But in fairness, the live performance
was much more dynamic and much more practiced.
The whole reason of recording that
was so that we could not forget it
when we started to practice it a little bit later.
Right as we were writing it.
What can give us
the benefit of the doubt?
So we started writing
intentionally funny songs
after that
and I mean,
it wasn't like
immediate success.
We wrote the Unibrow song
pretty much right after that
but we also wrote
Fartin' Girl,
which I don't know why I'm playing some of this,
but just because it's so embarrassing.
Okay, and there's a lot of voices in this one.
This was many of our friends joined in,
many who could sing and many who could not sing,
as you'll be able to tell as you hear the chorus of voices.
Tina. Then she might have to go and lose you on to a show.
Oh, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, fart, Okay, so that, ladies and gentlemen, was Fartin' Girl.
An international hit from Rhett and Link.
Now, that actually went on an album that was sold at some point.
Just mail us the Grammy.
And I don't believe that is...
Out of a trunk.
That is available to be bought anywhere, thank goodness.
No.
But one of the things that was very much
a part of the process
at that point
in our comedy
and especially
in our music was
as soon as we wrote it,
as soon as we came up
with it,
a line,
we wrote it.
And moved on.
And there was never
an evaluation of,
hold on,
what just happened?
What did we just write?
Did we just really
write a song that says,
Tina gets the laughs when she farts in a group?
Have you ever been in a party where a girl named Tina farted?
And gets the laughs?
And gets the laughs?
It was all a setup.
That's another thing.
It was all a setup for poop.
Which is stupid.
Because poop and group rhyme, see, Link?
Yeah.
And so as soon as we figured out, oh, listen, it'll be great if we can just say,
if she farts too much, she'll poop.
So, hey, let's just start it with something about group.
Oh, Tina gets the last, if she farts in a group.
The thing is, we just established that we are married men at this point writing this song.
We're not in like third grade.
And we put it on an album.
I mean, our eight and nine-year-old sons
wouldn't have had more decency now
to not write a song like this.
My kids don't even know about this song.
My kids would be singing this song left and right
all throughout the house if I were to play this for them.
But the reason we wanted to play that
is not just because we thought you'd laugh
at how horrible it was.
It was because the process, I will give us some credit.
Over the past 14 years, the process has changed significantly.
And I think, for me, one of the things that I've noticed is that it's so much more iterative than it used to be.
Because where it was, oh, poop rhymes with group, boom,
let's sit down, let's record this,
invite some friends over, let's record this with them.
It's so much more iterative where it starts with an idea
and that idea, and whether it's the chorus
or whether it's the melody or whether it's the music itself,
takes a lot of different forms before it takes its final form.
Well, okay, so I've got a Twitter question here,
and I think we can get into that.
Junus Pupo.
Pupo.
That's appropriate.
Yeah.
He asks,
when we start a project,
do we already clearly know
what the finished product will be like,
or does the idea evolve?
I think he may be talking about
like a concept for like for a particular song
but i think what you're saying is that the song does evolve as you go on a perfect example i think
we can walk through uh it's my belly button one of our most recent songs just to kind of take it to the other extreme. You've been hiding. It's time that we unwrap this gift.
Let's bring back the mailman drift.
It's my belly button.
My belly, belly button.
I won't pretend like it's nothing.
Cause my belly, belly button's really, really something.
Something I want to show to you.
That's what the belly button song or It's My Belly Button, became.
But the song started in a much different place than that.
We actually have the demo version that we did
right when we came up with this idea.
We sat down, we wrote some music for it,
and then Link recorded a melody
of some of the lyrics that we had
written see if this is in any way similar to the final version Meddra has a little spot, like I have been shot.
Can you remember me ever being shot?
Can you explain this spot that I got?
I don't recall you ever getting a gunshot.
Whoa, oh snap, I've got one too.
What are the chances?
We were both shot in the stomach In the same place then recovered
And we both had the memory of it
Improbable, highly improbable
What was that?
I mean, I think you had, I was working on something else
And you sat down at like the computer and the keyboard
and kind of developed that backing track,
which was just playing in the room,
and then I took it and tried to come up with some sort of melody.
And we had talked about the concept.
And a few of the lyrics.
Right.
But the thing that we had talked about was,
we want to do a song about grown men who discover their belly buttons.
They think that maybe they've been shot
and they both healed in the same spot
and they've got a scar in the same spot.
What are the chances?
Oh, highly improbable.
That's highly improbable.
And we wanted that to be what the song was.
Then months later, because that was-
In a very weird sounding song.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
That was in 2013, actually.
That was in October of last year that we
conceptualized that. Lots of time
passed, and then we revisited it
this year, and I
remember saying, you know what? I want to take a day
and I'm going to... You were working on something
and I was like, I'm going to take a day and I want to revisit this
belly button song and see if I can move it along.
And I sat down and listened to exactly what we just listened
to, and I was like, oh, this is horrible.
We can't do this.
Right.
And it's funny because I pulled it up in order to email it to you so that you'd have it.
And when I pulled it up and listened to it, I was like, this is horrible.
We can't do this.
But I sent it to you anyway.
And I was like, this is his problem today.
And then you came back and said, I didn't use that.
And I was like, okay, yeah.
But the funny thing is, is that I listened to it and I was like, you know what?
We should handle this whole discovery of the belly button
and the conjecture as to what it might be.
Let's handle that in a sketch at the beginning of this thing.
And then let's just let the song be about celebrating the belly button.
Right, like post-realization.
And so then I updated it with this version,
which is a little bit more like the final version,
but still a little different.
I can't believe we live to be this old
And never notice this little extra hole
So much potential right under my shirt.
Thinking of the lost years makes my stomach hurt.
I'm not about to hide this gift.
It's time for us to bring back the mill mid-ring.
I'm gonna decorate my temple with jewels
I'm gonna do it, do it for you
It's my wedding, it's my birthday
I won't pretend like it's nothing
Cause it really is something
Something I wanna show to you, baby.
You added a baby at the end.
You were really reaching.
I was singing it to a woman.
It was, you were?
Yeah.
I mean, it was very emotional.
It was very dramatic version.
It was supposed to be overdramatic, like these guys, they discover their belly button,
and then they sing this really dramatic song.
But then, you know, I never played that for you.
Because I played that.
Yeah, this is like the first time I'm hearing it.
Right.
And I'm like, oh, gosh, maybe we should do that one too.
And so I never played you that version because I listened back to that,
and I knew that that wasn't good enough.
And another couple of weeks passed, and then when I revisited it again,
I said
This needs to be
This has got to be happier
More ridiculous
This should be
A pop song
And then that ended up
You can see that the chorus
Was almost there right
Right
But lots of things changed
It ended up being the
Belly belly button
Really really something
It became
The hook really
But it's just
That's how the song got
to the sound that
it ended up having. But let's talk about
how the concept
changed. Did you have another version, though?
I thought you had one more demo to play.
I have
basically what
is the very last version
before we change the concept.
Here we go.
I can't believe we've lived to be this old
And somehow we have never seen this whole
I can't believe we've lived to be this old
And somehow we have never seen this whole
Okay, so that, it was kind of repetitive at this point in the demo.
That was just like, okay, it's going to have more of a pop beat.
It's going to have a little...
It's going to be a beat in the...
Right, more poppy, that piano and that kind of thing.
And so then, at that point is when I brought it back to you.
Right.
And we were in our office and I was like, okay, here's the updated version.
I think we're on to something here in terms of the sound.
And you had the chorus too because that was the best part.
It's my belly button.
You also had that.
Right, the chorus was there.
And then we kind of just added some jokes and added the rap and all of that,
and started to structure it.
But we had to figure out where the song was going to go.
I think that's always the second question.
The first question is, what's this song about?
What's the comedic angle?
Two guys discover their belly button,
but then it has to go somewhere because I don't think that concept
is enough to support a song.
And we decided,
we didn't have the trees yet, right?
Well, we did.
We had telescopes going into the belly buttons.
Well, the thing that we said was,
this song has got to go crazier, right?
It's got to go more in the left field.
And so the first idea we came up with,
oh, let's get to the point where these guys start selling uh basically charging look at in their belly buttons
with with the telescopes and somehow i don't know i can't remember exactly what we this how we came
up with this but it was we were also going to give away magazines about horse manes.
Horse manes.
Horse mane magazine.
It was really-
Miniature horse mane magazine.
It was crazy.
If you came and looked at the belly button,
you got a free subscription to Miniature Horse Mane magazine.
And then we said, okay, but before we get to crazy town
with Miniature Horse Mane magazine,
let's try some things like we didn't
have the nugget yet because i made that up later but we had a couple of the other things including
trees bedazzling it and and putting a seed in there and a tree growing out of the belly button
but then when we revisit it we said hold on let's let's if we keep running with the trees
it could actually be logical we don't have to go to horseman magazines, which doesn't make any sense. So we can carve and offset ourselves. And then the song kind
of, it just went from there. But you, so you can see what we're saying. This is kind of
the iterative process of writing a song. I mean, since last October.
Yeah. And so it's been, it gets to the point where it becomes, it's not just a song about belly buttons, it's a song about, somehow about,
it's almost an Earth Day song,
kind of an anti-Earth Day song almost in an ironic way.
But it took five steps to get to that point.
Right, couple other questions.
But first, Ear Biscuits is supported by Oatly.
Now, I have been doing these Oatly ads
by my lonesome
for the past couple of weeks.
Thank you for that.
I've been making up the things that I thought
that you would say about it, but thankfully you are here,
you're present now.
All positive, I hope.
Yeah, well mostly, some weird, but mostly positive.
Can you say what you actually think?
About Oatly?
Yeah.
Well, yeah, I've been on an Oatly excursion,
that's why I've been gone.
I've been nothing but gathering more Oatly for myself
because I do absolutely love this stuff.
I mean, I've said that it is now my preferred version
of creamer in my coffee and I drink it on its own
and it's, you just have to taste it.
Straight from the container, huh?
Like an udder.
When, when,
Like an oat udder.
When my kids aren't in the kitchen, yeah,
because I don't want them to do that.
You don't want to spread bad habits.
I just want to keep them onto myself.
Well the people at Oatly have been making
that oat milk over in Sweden since the early 90s
and now all of a sudden, here it is in the US.
This vegan oat milk might seem like a trendy new thing
but it's actually more like a boring, old, great tasting thing.
Great.
That's been around since we were teenagers.
Yeah man, teenagin' it up in the US,
not even knowin' about it.
Yes, for more details about Oatly,
the really untrendy and delicious oat milk,
go to oatly.com, that's O-A-T-L-Y.com.
And look for Oatly at your local supermarket
or your favorite coffee shop.
Ear Biscuits is also supported by Mattress Firm.
How you sleeping lately?
Well last night, Jade vomited in the bed.
So not great.
I'm like disoriented, I'm waking up,
and we're like stripping the bed.
But luckily we had enough layers over the mattress
that it didn't soak all the way to the mattress.
Well what was it, I mean, is she okay?
It was, oh she was fine.
She ate something that the kids dropped, man.
Who knows what it was, pizza.
Well that was a very specific problem.
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Now back to the biscuit.
Sort of Sam asks,
is one of you more of an idea-centered person
whereas the other acts as a filter for the ideas?
Well, I think that this belly button song
is the perfect example of how we work a lot of times.
Yeah.
And that is,
and we may have,
I don't know if we've ever
talked about this specifically.
First of all,
both of us come up
with all kinds of ideas
and both of us help finish
and filter lots of ideas.
Sure.
Our process is
incredibly collaborative
and I'm not just making this up.
It is truly the case
that a lot of the time we do not remember who came up with
the idea. When we think back on a specific idea, it's like, I think maybe you've said something in
a conversation and then I immediately had another idea that built on it. And then we're off to the
races and we build ideas. That's how we always work. But I do think that I'm more forward thinking
than you and you're more detail-oriented than I am.
We established that when we talked about our personality differences
on an episode of Good Mythical Morning.
And what that lends itself to a lot of times is I'll come up with 15 different ideas for songs.
You'll help establish what the best idea is.
And then if we move forward with an idea and I kind of get it off the ground,
like this Bell belly button song, I probably would have just been fine finishing the song, making it
sort of an ode to belly buttons. But we were sitting there and you're like, we got to take it.
It's got to go somewhere else. It's got to go to a new level. And that's when the whole left field
conversation started happening. And it became the song about belly button trees and carbon offsets.
I think that is, I think that's the answer to the question is that a lot of times there's this,
I might have an idea, but it never, it never becomes what it's going to be until you marinate
on it and turn it into what it is. Because that's how our brains work as a default, but certainly
it works the other way as well. Yeah. I have ideas and you make them better.
Smith Brent 518 tweeted,
who makes the witty comebacks or do you create your own parts
like in Epic Rap Battle,
Nerd Geek or Manliness
or just the original Epic Rap Battle?
I guess what he's asking is,
do we each separately write our own parts
of the rap battle
so we're legitimately rap battling?
And the answer is no.
I hate to crush your hopes there, Smith Brent 518.
Yeah, I mean, it's still just very collaborative.
I think until the very last, when we're dividing it up,
we kind of divorce the lyrics and the whole writing of the rap
from who's going to be delivering it, because that wouldn't be fair. And it doesn't matter,
at least at that point. I mean, once the song is written, then we have to determine who's going to
say what. But as we're writing the lines, we don't know who's saying what or how we're going to
divide it up. We're just trying to make the best song ever.
Right.
Because we both win if it's a great song.
Right.
And I'd say that you're more of a student of rap than I am.
You listen to more rap.
And so typically what we do,
and I think this has become... And it's also a detail or anything for me to kind of take...
Right.
To craft a rap.
So it's something like the Texpert. I'm a Texpert rap, me to kind of take. Right. To craft a rap. So with something like the Texpert,
I'm a Texpert rap, one of our most recent raps.
What I'll do is I'll sit down
and I'll just write a lot of concepts.
Like this would be funny.
It'd be funny if there was a joke
about texting with your feet.
It'd be funny if there was a joke about a masseuse,
a Swedish masseuse giving you thumb shiatsu
and I could have a yogi.
But I don't think about the rhyme scheme.
I don't think about the flow.
Just come up with different ideas,
and then kind of you take it all.
I move on to something else.
We're always working on something.
I move on to something else,
and you'll kind of sit there in the office
and kind of toy with the lyrics
until you kind of land at something.
Then bring it back to me as a demo, and then I'll kind of toy with the lyrics until you kind of land at something then bring it back to
me as a demo and then i'll kind of say well i think i'd rather say it like this or maybe it
would be funny if we did it like this or it would be a better and then we the final version is
collaborative again so the typical process is and i think this is probably typical of lots of
people who work together which i i would say that one lesson learned, or I don't even know what it would be
like to create things apart from you, apart from Link. It's such a collaborative process of handing
things back and forth, like two guys working on the same project and kind of like, all right,
you take this for a while. I'm going to go work on something else. Give it back to me when you've
moved it along. I would say that's an encouragement to if you're having trouble creatively you come to creative roadblocks
find somebody to work with because i think so many of the creative breakthroughs that we've had
have been related to the fact that we hand things back and forth until it becomes what it's going to
become and only recently i think in the past, have we determined that we should spend more time on writing jokes
and coming up with funny concepts and the beginning, middle, and end of a song
before we start crafting the song itself, especially for a rap.
I mean, there's so many more jokes crammed into a rap.
We learn to write as many jokes as we could, and then you kind of have
things to choose from to kind of make your rhymes
in the second half, whereas before we would just start
at the beginning and start writing and rhyming as we went,
and you would end up with filler and things that didn't work.
Well, related question to that,
it says Ellie Brash X asks,
do you write lyrics first or compose the music first?
By the way, love you guys.
You weren't going to read that part?
I wasn't going to say that, but it's in the tweet.
Heart hearts.
Yeah, two actual icon hearts there.
For me.
Two hearts for me.
You didn't get a heart.
I don't know why.
Well, I think one of them's for me.
It says you guys.
I'm going to take one of those hearts.
I don't even know this girl.
Maybe I'm not going to take any hearts
you can have all the hearts
I got a wife
well they were both for me anyway
so I've got them
I think
when it's a rap
like Link was saying
a lot of times
it's very much
jokes
even lyrics first
and then
I can't write the lyrics
without the music
I actually tried that
because I tried I thought I tried to change the music i actually tried that because i try i thought
i tried to change the music on text for halfway through and i was like whoop can't i can't change
the tempo it's not working yeah so well so usually we do have the beat uh that we've gotten uh someone
to make for us that's another thing with with raps we a lot of times we have a producer create
something and then we kind of help guide that process. With our songs, we always write the music for those.
So we're writing the music for the songs
and then trying to come up with the melody slash lyrics.
And a really funny example, something that we found
when we were going through all these old demo levels.
This was on my phone.
It was another voice memo
when we were working on the My Hair song,
which I remember how that one worked.
I don't remember whose idea it was,
but I know that you came up with the hook,
like the piano hook for the, that goes,
I think it goes from the verse through the chorus.
My hair goes up, my hair goes down. My hair goes up. My hair goes down.
My hair goes up.
My hair goes down.
My hair goes up.
My hair goes down.
Down, down, down, down.
The beginning of the idea
was I was like,
I got an idea about a song
for hair going up and hair going down
because my hair goes up,
your hair goes down.
All I got is this,
and it was just the chorus. And then we played a little bit like, well, goes down. All I got is this, and it was just the chorus.
And then we played a little bit like, well, but the verse could be something like this,
but I have no idea what the lyrics are going to be.
I have no idea what the melody should be.
But we had this little, we had a beat and we had a chord progression.
And then, and that was all we had.
And you had that on your computer.
Yeah.
And then you started working on the second caption
feel. And I said, all right, I'm going to work on this melody. And then I kind of had something.
I kind of worked on a melody and recorded as I went so I wouldn't forget it. Because what you
learn when you're writing songs is you get something great and then you're like, I'm never
going to forget that. You go to lunch and you come back and you do not remember it. So that's why we
have so many voice memos on our phone was because we forgot things that we thought were genius actually you're just
documenting proof that what you came up with really wasn't genius as you'll see so this is
the my hair goes verse melody i was just making up words off the top of my head and trying to
come up with the melody something that was catchy catchy. Check one, two. Testing.
Testing.
This is My Hair Goes Up.
Oh, I wonder if you would.
And if I wrote the song and you sang it with me, would the people depend?
And if we went down like this and up like this And then up all around the world
Then everybody would be singing this song
And passing it on to girls
Yeah, I'm trying to remember this way to sing
So I can sing it with these new words
And when I add in the words and you sing along
It'll be like two floating turds.
And if floating turds are cool and we are cool, then we can float along with them.
And you can roof us and roof us and roof us and roof us them.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh, gosh.
That's embarrassing, man.
I didn't know that that existed. Again, I'm hoping, first of all, if you know us, you know that we result or resort to bathroom humor.
It's natural.
That was a perfect example of it.
It's in your brain naturally.
Stream of consciousness.
The turds are going to come out.
The brain turds are going to come out.
You can't help it.
But I'm hoping that-
And something about girls?
I said something about girls in here? The girls will share it. Share it with- People will share it with girls. I'm hoping that, you know. And something about girls. I said something about girls.
The girls will share it.
Share it with, people will share it with girls.
I think that's what you said.
Which is, I mean, that's great.
We want people to share our music with girls and guys.
But I do hope that, you know,
I remember when we were first getting started.
I mean, I started playing the guitar when I was 17.
In the band, we had already started. Because we were two lead singers. And then I was like the guitar when I was 17. In the band, we had already started
because we were two lead singers.
And then I was like, well, one of us needs to play an instrument.
And at that point-
Oh, and you know what?
Patricia Joyce 94 asked you,
how long did it take you to learn to play guitar?
What was your favorite song to play?
I don't know what my favorite song to play was,
but I do know that I learned in a matter of weeks.
I remember I got the guitar. You learned,
you bought a fake book.
That's what they're called, right? Where they tell you how to play
guitar. It's called a fake book.
I don't know why, but I think that's what
it's called. You mean where it just has chords?
It's got the fakes in it.
You got the Eagles one,
and you got Lynyrd Skynyrd.
The Eagles one was great because the Eagles have so many just chords thatner. Yeah, and it was kind of, the Eagles one was great
because the Eagles have so many just chords that make up.
Acoustic strumming.
Yeah, but the Leonard Skinner was just,
I had all these electric guitar riffs for like.
Give me back my bullets.
Yeah, that kind of thing.
The point I am making though is that I think about that process
of trying to learn how to write songs
and we kind of felt our way through it and we didn't have a whole lot of people telling us
what to do. But these little tips like, you know, if you come up with a melody,
sing it immediately so you won't forget it. If you don't have what the song's going to be about,
go ahead and record yourself singing about turds or whatever,
because you're going to help establish what the song is going to become. Obviously, we didn't
write a song about turds. Not that we're above it. We started this thing off talking about a girl
that farts in a group and then ends up pooping. So we're not above it. But I think for anybody
out there who's aspiring to be a songwriter, those are some tips that we would throw your way,
is that just get something out there. Open it up. Don't wait until you've got it completely
formulated in your mind. Adane09 asks us, how do you come up with the premise or concept for your
songs? I think we've got three or four different ways that we come up with the concept.
I mean, something, as we've already established,
obviously just an idea will pop in our brains.
I don't know how you came up with the idea of writing a song
about two guys discovering their belly buttons in their 30s.
It was a sketch.
I thought it would be a funny sketch.
Okay, but how did you come up with the idea for that period?
I have no idea.
You were like looking at your belly button.
I think I may have seen something about, I know what it was.
I saw something on television about self-awareness and how at a certain age,
babies realize that their bodies are like, they have some sort of self-
Part of them.
Part of them.
Right.
Like they look at their hands and stuff.
What if grown men realize that?
Oh, they might find their belly button.
Right.
You know, and then it just, from there.
Okay.
Yeah, I remember coming up with a,
I'm a thoughtful guy.
I was driving into the Fatburger parking lot.
I was gonna get me a Fatburger.
And there was an ad on the radio.
It was a dating ad on the radio,
and it said something about I'm a thoughtful,
you know, if you want to meet a thoughtful guy.
And I was like, well, I'm a thoughtful guy.
But I'm like, well, I don't need a date.
But that's kind of funny.
It could also just mean that you think a lot.
And then I just jotted that down.
And then two weeks later,
I was looking through a list
when we were talking about song ideas and it came up.
But I mean, I'm not gonna say it's a sad fact.
A lot of the ways we come up with our songs,
A Day in 09 is through sponsorship.
I mean, all of our rap battles started with a sponsor.
Dentine wanted to, they wanted to do something
that tied gum together with confidence
to start a relationship.
And that led to Epic Rap Battle.
And then when we pitched Epic Rap Battle
to Manliness to a sponsor,
and then same thing with Tiger Direct and Nerve vs. Geek.
Right.
So a lot of it has to do with somebody just saying,
we want something that speaks to a certain thing.
And we approach that kind of like a math problem.
And I don't want to talk about it too much because it's, it could be boring.
Well, I think,
it's nice to have a constraint
or,
we a lot of,
we're reactive sometimes
and I think that's a good thing
is having something,
having somebody request
that you write something for them
can help you come up with ideas
that you would not have come up with
if it was just you writing along
listening to the radio and hearing a commercial about a dating website well
I mean, that's why why we came up with the five word song title idea
I mean the indie machines guys our friends they came up with the idea for films and they gave us permission to use it for
songs too, but and
Really when we first started making YouTube videos we were already doing that not. Not five-word song titles, but just submit a song title.
The Fear of Frogs song, one of the first songs on our channel after Unibrow.
And that was part of the viral boom, right?
No.
It was after that.
But it was a submit a song idea within our fan base.
Someone submitted that idea.
And then when we came back with the idea to do five-word
song titles, we made a video where we said, hey, we want to write a song based on your suggestions.
The first one that we wrote was Nill Away for Top Hat Time. We saw that. We said, okay, surely
there's a song in Nill Away for Top Hat Time. Wrote a very quick and easy uh song and did a live performance of it for our
music video but then uh a number of months passed and it surprisingly we asked people to
uh submit five word song ideas and there might be i remember going through and looking at the
suggestions for those five word songs looking at like a thousand in one sitting.
Oh yeah.
And not being able to find one
that I thought we can make into a good song.
I don't know what it was.
It was just like, man,
I thought that there would be so many of these
that would work.
But so many of the people's suggestions
were things like purple dinosaur kitten donut hole
or something like that.
You know what I mean?
Like it's not really a concept there.
And then all of a sudden,
uh,
I wish I knew who suggested this.
It's in,
we gave him the credit in the video.
Yeah,
it's there.
Uh,
we saw rub some bacon on it.
It's like,
that is funny.
Uh,
and that's,
that's actually surge underscore BT's question was how did you come up with the rub some
bacon on it?
Uh,
idea.
Well,
it was a suggestion
that was one of the five word songs now you have a demo of that we had a really hard time writing
rub some bacon on it i definitely remember that is it so yeah two things about that first thing is
we wrote the chorus for rub some bacon on it at least four times. So that Beach Boys style, Rub Some Bacon on it chorus.
Rub some bacon on it.
That was after we had visited many different choruses
that we didn't like over several weeks.
Then we finally land on that chorus
and then we've got this Rub Some Bacon on it chorus,
additional line in the chorus that we wanted.
And this is originally what it sounded like,
just me singing it as a demo.
Rub some bacon on it.
Rub some bacon on it.
Rub some bacon on it.
Rub some bacon on it.
Now, I remember as we were writing that and recording that,
listening to it back and being like,
man, we just sound like dumb as dirt, like knuckleheads singing.
Either that or some type of frat guy that you don't want to hang out with.
And we're like, I don't know what to do.
We couldn't come up with anything better.
And then it was, the idea was, what if a robot sang it?
What if it was a robot voice?
And we kind of knew we could do that using Logic.
So we changed it to a robot sound effect, and it sounded cool.
It didn't sound like a couple of numbnuts singing,
roll some bacon on it, you know?
But then we thought, we've got this robot singing in the song.
What are we going to do in the music video?
We've got to have a robot in the music video.
So the bacon, this is just an example of how it isn't totally ever determined
from the beginning.
The bacon bot, which is the focal point
of the entire music video,
and ultimately the point,
like the application point at the end,
it was only created because we didn't like
the way we sounded in the chorus
and added a robot voice
and then needed a robot to sing it
and then decided, well, let's just build this.
Jason ended up building that robot in my backyard
over a number of days because we were like,
we got to have a robot.
How do you build a robot?
Well, we can use a trash can and we can get an old phone
and then we can put Nick Bishop in it.
And the robot has to be able to fry bacon.
So therefore, let's make the head out of a functioning George Foreman grill.
It ended up not being functional.
Yeah, it wasn't plugged into anything.
And now he's dead.
He fell off the top of the refrigerator, and his whole head busted.
But he's still there.
I mean, I think he could be repaired.
Yeah, if need be, he could be salvaged.
But, I mean, those are kind of the ways that we come up with ideas from our brains, from sponsors, from fans.
But there are some times, and we don't have the luxury of a lot of time just to do this anymore,
but maybe we never did, but I know there were certain points
that we would just say, you know what, today,
let's write a song with no constraints.
Let's just sit down with a guitar and a notepad
and just open our brains and just vomit out whatever comes out.
Hopefully it just won't be like more poop humor.
And we found a demo that we recorded.
Right.
So this is one we recorded.
We were down at the beach.
This is a number of years ago.
This is before we moved to California.
So this is probably four years ago.
And we were sitting there, just what Link said,
we want to write something that has no constraints.
And it was a song about a dream that we had.
And this is, let me tell you, this is a very early demo.
This is kind of catching us in the middle of a writing session
and trying to kind of capture what we had.
The song would be conversational.
And so you would be telling me about a dream that you had last night
and I would be responding to it.
Right.
And then there would be a second verse where I would have a dream and you had last night and I would be responding to it. Right. And then there would be a second verse
where I would have a dream
and you would respond to it.
We never wrote the second verse about my dream,
but we kind of ran with your dream just because
and tried to draw a conclusion on the end of it.
And I think I was like really far back from your iPhone,
which was recording this thing.
Yeah, so it's hard to hear me.
It's not a great recording.
Link sounds like he's across the room because he was.
But, you know, I actually still like this song.
You'll get the idea.
Let me tell you about a dream I had last night.
Okay, why don't you tell it?
I was selling colored pencils on the roadside
in a world of black and white
And then I noticed I was wearing nothing but my drawers
And then a big panda bear came out of nowhere holding the key
He said, is this yours?
I opened my mouth and, but nothing came out but Pffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff Then she lit a purple flare immersed in the air summoning a committee
for the de-urbanization of cities.
She was giving a presentation
the woman who wants to put the bear.
She invented a two-seater scooter
that was fueled by facial hair.
I shaved my whole face
and then I took my trimmer
and shaved both my legs
like an Olympic swimmer.
And once she had all my hair
Then she went back into a van
Hold on, were you there?
I don't know, that's up to you
And then she ate it all
She what?
My hair
And then she went
Nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom
Are you sure she didn't go And then she went nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom
Are you sure she didn't go nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom
No, it's more of a mix of the two.
More like nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom
Do the longer one there. Nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom
And then she exploded. My hair went everywhere and the world became color.
I think it means something.
Of course it means something.
You know what it means something. Of course it means something. You know what it means. Don't, don't trust a woman who makes you shave your facial hair.
Especially if moments ago she was a panda bear.
Don't trust a panda that just ate your body hair.
Especially if it's got a key
in your underwear.
Don't buy a scooter
that runs on facial hair.
Especially if you don't want
to end up hairless and alone.
To end up hairless and alone Cleaning up a dead panda bed
Don't ride a scooter that runs on facial hair.
We had a lot of facial hair humor in there.
We did.
We could salvage that song.
There's something in there.
It's kind of nuts, but it could work.
It reminds me of that song we wrote a long time ago,
A Tribute to Friends.
A Tribute to Friends, yeah.
It was kind of a story, and it was based on nonsense.
Yes, well, there's a lot of nonsense there.
And I think it's a good answer to this question from Miranda Renee.
Three.
Three.
She says, can you tell us some of the ideas that you haven't followed through with well
there's one right there miranda i mean uh we've got a lot of these there's a lot that we won't
play for you but um things that we we had an idea and we kind of ran with it and then we got to a
point where we're like well this this probably doesn't need to go public um it usually the ideas
that we develop do find their way onto the internet,
right? But occasionally,
especially in the past, we would try
a lot of different things that might not make it.
Like this dream song. I don't remember exactly
why we decided, you know what?
We just open up our brains. Why did we decide not to do it?
Just not to follow through. Just because we got back from the beach
and we had other stuff to do and we never got back
to it. Right. I mean,
that's how it happens a lot of times.
Okay, I found another one that we will never go back to.
Well, we're going to it right now though.
This is what you get when you listen to Ear Biscuits.
And we are, no one's ever heard this thing.
Now when I played this for you earlier,
did you remember that we had done this?
Vaguely.
This song's got it all, people.
It has, it has, people. It has,
it has,
it's like a,
it has bathroom humor.
It has potty humor, literally.
It's all about the bathroom.
It is about
that awkward situation
when you're in a public restroom
that's like a one person at a time,
but somebody knocks on the door
and you have to figure out
what you're going to say before they like try to like shimmy the door open thinking no one's in there.
But the genres that we combined for this are...
I was just messing around.
I don't know why you made the voice that you made.
It's so horrible.
It was just crazy.
We're like, let's just do the craziest thing.
Let's throw this drums on there.
You can sing in a nasal voice.
I'm going to try out all these things in GarageBand I've never used before.
That's many years ago.
It's called Public Place. This bathroom is made for one, but someone is not king.
I was taking a walk just to find my own.
Enjoying nature when all of a sudden nature coming on my biological phone.
I said, son, found the nearest restroom.
Just a black way, what's the most you stole?
Well, the Chinese restaurant next door.
Chinese.
The restroom was only for a customer, so I'll be in the back. Give me an egg roll to go. Chinese. Oh man
I never know what to say
When this happens
Oh man
Should I trust the lock
And say nothing
Oh snap
I'm in here
That's crazy.
I love the Indies.
I really like where that song goes.
Boom, boom, boom, boom.
That is possible.
I'm in a public place trying to do a private thing.
Oh, man.
That is quite possibly the stupidest thing we've ever done.
I'm sort of liking it now.
The third or fourth time I've heard it today as we've prepared for this.
Maybe we should make it into a music video.
Yeah, so again, things have changed a lot.
And the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Well, the interesting thing is, you know,
we work in a different way today.
I mean, one of the things that's changed about the way we work is
we have a team of people.
We have things scheduled out more in advance.
And so there's not just time necessarily for us to sit around and
write that but back when that was written it was just the two of us we're just for the fun we just
come into the to the office and we say all right well i got an idea for this public place private
thing and then it's like all right well i'm gonna do this weird drum beat to this country thing that you've come up with. We would never let ourselves do that now.
But hopefully, I'm hoping there can be a time.
I do want to do this thing where we rent a cabin
and go up there for an extended period of time.
And write a whole album.
Just a whole album.
And it might end up singing like this again. Every song.
And you could do the percussion thing.
That would be great.
Who knows what will happen?
It could be a whole new genre.
Yeah, whether people will listen to it is another story or question.
Okay, listen.
I found one more song, and this is a complete demo that I found.
I found one more song,
and this is a complete demo that I found.
And based on what the song is written about,
I'm kind of deciphering that it was written maybe still while we were engineers.
But the quality of the demo is so good
that I think it's later,
but we're certainly pulling on principles
from the engineering days.
Don't block my YouTube.
So it had to be after 2005.
That's true, that's true.
But all the humor was based on...
Based on being in the workplace.
Yeah, here's the angle.
The song that no one has ever heard
is called Don't Block My YouTube,
and it's written from the perspective of someone
like an engineer who works in a cubicle job,
and he's just getting started
and his biggest fear
is that the boss will block YouTube
at his place of work,
which happens.
Oh, yeah.
They won't let you look at YouTube
because you'll waste your time
and not get your job done.
We would never write a song like this today
because it's too geared towards the workplace
and that's not where a lot of our fans are at
or care about that type of thing so we're not going to write cubicle humor but i did think it
was interesting that this was like a complete almost it sounded like almost produced demo i
only start singing at the end i remember you wrote most of the song and i wrote this thing at the end
and started singing it yeah so there's like two and a half minutes, and all of a sudden there's like Link comes in and it's like,
it's good, it's a surprise, I like it.
Well, we just spoiled the surprise.
Ladies and gentlemen, the world premiere of Don't Block My YouTube.
The first thing you'll notice is that you're beginning to gain some weight.
Face it, dude.
Because you don't reach your target heart rate on your commute.
Before you know it, you'll be parting your hair and tucking in your business casual shirt.
Because your faux hawk and Miller genuine draft t-shirt just don't work at work.
At first, you will be averse to doing number two in the restroom.
You think, what if my boss comes in? He would know me by my shoes.
But just give it two months, you'll be relishing your precious time in the john.
Because it's the only time you can have conversations with anyone from second level management.
You'll go crazy, trapped there in that cube.
If your boss ever makes that dreadful decision To put a block up on you too
There will be a certain girl at work
You would have never noticed back in school
But here in the office setting
She seems hot
In her pinstripe pantsuit
You're thinking about asking her out
But let me set your perspective right
What you think is a ten on Monday morning
Is a five on Friday night
You'll go crazy
Cooped up in that cube
Backhand your boss if that sucker decides
To put a block up on YouTube
And don't forget those meetings, meetings
What's with all these stinking meetings
Leading up to you leading your own freaking meeting
About meetings, meetings, meetings
Just to make more meetings
Let's call a meeting so we can minimize our meetings
Don't block my YouTube
It's the only thing I've got
Boss man, boss man
Don't block my YouTube
Take it from me
YouTube, YouTube, YouTube
It took you a while to come in there,
but you really came in strong.
And you really finished strong.
I like that song, man.
I just, I mean.
It's like a Nickelback ripoff or something.
Well, I sound very weird Al.
Very nasally weird.
You're very high singing.
There will be a certain girl at work you would have never noticed back at school.
That was harsh.
That whole logic there that I came up with.
Yeah, we would never say that publicly now. It's kind of sexist. That was harsh. That whole logic there that I came up with. Yeah, we would never
say that publicly now.
It's kind of sexist.
A little bit.
But still,
a completely formed song
that no one's ever heard
until right now
on this Ear Biscuit
because you decided
to stick around
and hang out with us
for this amount of time.
So we're truly grateful.
I think the,
hopefully one of the things that
has been demonstrated here is that um if you think that some of our music is actually good
which hopefully you do uh you see that the only way that that even has a chance of happening is
a whole lot of bad to happen yeah you know you you have to churn out so much stuff, uh, creatively, uh, in order
to get to the things that you actually want to share with people. Uh, but you just that you've
got to get that engine going. You've got to get the machine working. So something will come out
of it. So then you can say, okay, I got this out of the way so I could get to the next thing. And
maybe the next thing or the thing after that
will be the thing that I actually wanna share.
But I don't know, sitting and listening to this stuff
and kind of being reminded of,
you know, we've been doing this a long time.
That's the thing I'm struck with.
Some of these songs are from,
I mean, the first one's from the year 2000
yeah that's that's about 14 years ago it's kind of depressing um actually i mean the thing that
struck me having going going back through this is the amount of fun that we had developing this
i don't know if i would call it a skill but developing this, I don't know if I would call it a skill, but developing this practice of collaboratively writing a song.
I've seen footage of comedy writing duos who can just sit down
and they can write a script.
And we do very little of that,
but we do very much of that when it comes to a song.
It's funny how a song kind of brings out the best in both of us
in terms of being able to contribute to something and create something
because our brains do work differently.
And we care about the same things, but then we also have the capacity
to care about different things at the same time and make a...
But mostly I'm saying it's fun to write a song.
I mean the best part about high school was being in a band,
writing crappy music, and then you know,
whenever we would sit down in college,
and ever since then, when you sit down,
we have to divide things up a lot,
but there's a lot of fun and there's like a magical thing
that happens when you can sit down and kind of craft of craft a song that that comes together and it's the this cohesive thing that you want to you can
listen to a whole bunch well and there's just there's just something about this is why i really
hope and i think this will be the case that music will continue to be a cornerstone of what we
create there have been times where we've gotten a little bit slack
with the amount of songs that we're putting out, right?
Yeah.
We've gone for long periods of time
where we're not putting out songs,
not writing new music,
not putting out music videos.
But there's just something,
when you go back and listen to things like this,
it's just totally different experience
to go back and listen to an old song,
to hear the iterative process of those five different stages of a song as it was being written.
It's something that doesn't happen when you go back and watch a video.
You know, because that's not how you make videos.
You don't make the video five times.
Hopefully not.
You talk about it and plan it and script it and then you go shoot it and then you edit it.
And maybe there's a couple of different edits,
but there's just something about music,
just from a creative standpoint,
that is different, is better.
And talking about these, listening to this,
listening to these old songs that we haven't listened to,
some we're hearing for the first time as we're playing for each
other, makes me want to write more.
Yeah, I feel energized.
Let's go write a song. What are we gonna,
are we gonna give them the scoop on something that we're,
the next song we're gonna write?
Well, I can tell you the voice I'm gonna sing it in.
It's gonna be up in here.
I'm singing our next
song
in a nasal voice
I hope that's okay with you
let us know hashtag ear biscuits
well not what you think of that
I know what you think of that
what you thought of this episode
again it's you know there's an experimental nature
to the two of us having a conversation guest-less
we're certainly not going to give up our guests
and you can count on that next week
but give us some hashtag Ear Biscuits feedback.
I will say one thing, though, as you're putting together your tweets, hashtag Ear Biscuits,
or leaving your comment or review and rating on iTunes, which, again, as we've established, helps a whole lot.
Please do that.
Great way to support the show.
again, as we've established, helps a whole lot.
Please do that.
Great way to support the show.
I don't think I want to do much more unintentionally country music.
I think that's one of the things that I hear in a lot of what we've done is that we would write a country song not realizing it was a country song
just because we come from such a country background.
And so much of what we listen to is just naturally country.
And when we start singing,
the chords that we'll play
and the melodies that we will sing
naturally fall into that country thing.
We've gotten to this place
where we have to be like,
no, no, guys, this is a rock song,
or this is a pop song,
or this is a rap song.
It cannot be a country song.
Not because country's bad,
but because when you write a song
that you want to be a pop song, and then somebody listens to it, and they're like, huh, is that a country song? It cannot be a country song. Not because country's bad, but because when you write a song that you want to be a pop song and then
somebody listens to it and they're like, huh, is that a country song?
It doesn't work.
It ruins the comedy because the clarity
of the comedic angle
that we're trying to get across is ruined.
So, I don't think I'm gonna
be singing like this
and having you do some weird percussion.
Unless we
decide to just do a,
no, this is a legitimate country song,
which I do have an idea for a country song
about grilled cheese.
Remember that one?
I think that's half written already.
But, you know, maybe, I don't know,
maybe we shouldn't go there.
I need to dig up that demo.
That's a good one.
Okay.
Thanks for hanging out with us.
Like I said, you can count on us
to speak into your ears
via a biscuit
next week
and every Friday
thanks for leaving
that iTunes review
and for
supporting our
musical endeavors
yes
great way to do that
is by listening to it
oops
what else
what else do you want to say
Rhett
nothing
me neither
bye