diezman
Senior Member
The Beatles
anyone wanna duke it out with me?
be behind the lunchroom after school!
anyone wanna duke it out with me?
be behind the lunchroom after school!
newdawnfades said:None of this is making me any less than cool. If you think i'm being condescending you are going to have to point it out because I don't see it.
I am not sure many of these points are relevent to determining what 'embodies rocknroll'. If we are talking about a form of music with the cultural impact that rocknroll had then how can you really turn a blind eye to the cultural impact of Elvis. You've almost completely devalued it however and it was one of the most important aspects of understanding Rock and how it seeded itself into our psyche. I am not sure how 'writing and arranging your own songs' rates higher if we want to talk about the spirit of rocknroll.
Screaming, taken literally, doesn't sound good no matter how much talent you have in performing it.
I thought we were referring the vocal singing form of emitting your voice. Elvis was known for taking his vocals in a higher, elevated sort of way.
Well I am not a singing teacher, and I don't think you are. So would you mind elaborating what technical limits you are talking about?
I do have to say we aren't talking about opera singers here. You only had to be effective in certain registers and you can be versatile WITHIN the ranges you sing. Eddie Vedder doesn't have an extraordinary range, but it's how he plays around with the range he has that makes him a great vocalist.
It doesn't matter whether you have a collection of singers you think are technically better than Elvis HE IS at least ONE of the best in your book. Or am I wrong on this?
I can go on for quite a while, taking you from song to song detailing the intricacies of his style and the subtle variations and inclusions in his vocal style that made it complex, highly underrated, and very effective.
Just look at the styles and genre's he has covered with that ONE VOICE. Gospel, RocknRoll, Blues, RockABilly, Jazz, Slow Ballads, Pop, Rhythm and Blues. Pretty impressive for a voice that according to you isn't very versatile.
Oh, and he didn't only sing in different genres but he was a smashing success in those genres.
You probably COULD name many vocalists who were better PURE RocknRoll singers, and I highlight PURE because you state how you don't think he's versatile and your reasoning for that is that there are many better 'rock-specialized voices'. So I am a little confused by your reasoning there.
But you have to judge an artist on THEIR merits, THEIR contributions. Obviously when you are evaluating where Bob Dylan sits in the rankings you aren't going to look at 'vocal versatility'. Or if you look at Chuck Berry you won't disregard what he did with his guitar. Vocals were Elvis's strong point, and everyone in the world practically can identify an Elvis song right off of the bat based on his unique vocal style.
What you are basically saying is that 'writing and arranging' are IMPORTANT TO YOU therefore ALL artists will be judged accordingly.
But you probably are better at writing and arranging right? Or at least that holds your interest and takes up more of your time?
Whether Little Richard wrote and arranged his own material, of which we don't have a definitive answer, I still don't hold it in the same regard as artist who arrange and write harder and more complex material.
LR's strength was in his stage performance. I think he could have written just about anything and still sounded great because he had the tools to get that across.
Well if you put it in this light then i'd say the writer and arranger is only the 'mother' during the first part of the 'birthing process'. A good portion of the process and the actual babies delivery arrives out of the nanny's (using your example), for lack of a more benign word, vagina. That's why you see Elvis getting writers credit on some of his songs, that's why you many singers get writers credits on songs. They are involved in the process. This is not a new thing.
Well to answer you, he did write lyrics to some of his songs,
he did adjust tempo and rhythm in the studio to most of his songs, he did help arrange and produce much of his music. He did play guitar in 3/4 of his songs. He wasn't involved in it in such a way that many singer-songwriters were, but he had his hands in alot of the music.
I think Elvis got alot of offers from writers to sing their songs as well. He'd often been given a song and asked to see 'what you could do with it'.
Every manner of song fell on his desk too. Gospel, RnB, Country, Blues, Jazz. He took these songs and, much like what Zeppelin did with many blues standards, he turned them in to something much more alive and electric.
newdawnfades said:This is going to be a hatchet job I am going to enjoy.![]()
Martin Q. Blank said:Well if you're gonna go into it with that attitude, I'm not even going to bother posting my thoughts.
Martha Washington said:I think the true spirit of rock and roll is best embodied
by Lester Rosenblatt of Hales Corner, Wisconsin!
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WAY TO GO, LES!!!!
LittleWillie said:lmao![]()
Chuckles the f**kstick? A stagename that suits him well.