Ben Grimm
👃Smells like teen spirit
- Dec 10, 2007
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- 6,253
You think Lenny Kravitz is more talented than Jimi Hendrix? That’s a take for sure. Wonder is well above both and I adore Hendrix. Kravitz isn’t even a top 100 IMO.Voted Stevie wonder, but I got Lenny Cravits probably most talented.
Lenny plays every instrument on his albums,he is a massive tallent.You think Lenny Kravitz is more talented than Jimi Hendrix? That’s a take for sure. Wonder is well above both and I adore Hendrix. Kravitz isn’t even a top 100 IMO.
Thank you.Frank Zappa
Was in a venue in Denver long ago and there was a woman act who opened a Cappella ,very much like Nina Simone .she was amazing and was carrying notes I sware I was looking at glasses on tables waiting for them to shatter, Never seen /herd anything like that before or since.Thank you.
I'd probably vote Zappa and Nina Simone/Diamanda Galas for the women side, if we're only talking about artists related to music. But well, as everybody knows by now, I'd have to throw in Patton somehow, John Zorn too, and well, I guess a shitload of others would follow, from Marshall Allen to Trey Spruance...
Lenny plays every instrument on his albums,he is a massive tallent.
Poll should be best American [genre] artist because he’s only going to include stuff he likes lol. The entirety of rap is missing and that’s by far one America’s biggest cultural exportsThe list samples multiple genres but does justice to none.
If you have Louis Armstrong (who I'd vote for) and Miles Davis, you need Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Sinatra, Billie Holiday, etc.
If you've got Elvis, Stevie and Prince, you have to include Michael Jackson, Smokey Robinson, and Chuck Berry, not even counting groups like The Temptations and The Supremes.
Regardless of whether you like their music or not, The Beach Boys, Springsteen and The Eagles are on every list of greatest American artists.
And how do we rank the people who actually crafted the music? Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Leonard Bernstein, Carole King, and other geniuses were part of New York's songwriting factory that produced some of the last century's greatest tunes.
That's the 'problem' with the US - it gave birth to so many musical pioneers who were behind so many musical pillars, we can't cram them into one poll.
wasn't strange at all for the time. elvis was a performer and an entertainer, not a songwriter. same thing with sinatra and a lot more big names of the time. of course there were exceptions like buddy holly and bob dylan, but the concept of the singer-songwriter in rock really didn't become common until the beatlesI love Elvis Presley but find it strange he never wrote any of his songs.
even elvis had a dozen or so songwriting credits as a result of whatever deal his publishing company would strike with the original artists. usually something like offering them a large sum of cash to surrender part of their royaltiesActually, in addition to Holly, most of the '50s rock 'n' roll pioneers wrote/co-wrote much of their own stuff (Chuck Berry, Eddie Cochran, Bo Diddley, Fats Domino, Little Richard, Carl Perkins...). Jerry Lee Lewis didn't write a lot, but has at least some credits. So I think Elvis indeed was a bit of an exception among that bunch.
You're right – add rap & hip-hop to America's immense contribution to music. I should've mentioned it, but my old brain doesn't compute anything newer than 1990.Poll should be best American [genre] artist because he’s only going to include stuff he likes lol. The entirety of rap is missing and that’s by far one America’s biggest cultural exports
I did not realize this thanks for sharing.wasn't strange at all for the time. elvis was a performer and an entertainer, not a songwriter. same thing with sinatra and a lot more big names of the time. of course there were exceptions like buddy holly and bob dylan, but the concept of the singer-songwriter in rock really didn't become common until the beatles