Philly76 said:
U shouldn´t take lists like these too serious. Many artists are randomly placed. Ozzy on #7 speaks for itself. This dude can´t even sing. Roger Daltrey on 4? I really have to get the shit the author smoked. for real...WTF? | |
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It's like the audience for adult contemporary and teen idols (the singers & bands you might see in Tiger Beat & Right On!) is majority female. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Prince should be higher and how in the world did Barry Gibb not even make the list? | |
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If you're going to put him, then might as well have El DeBarge, Frankie Valli, & Philip Bailey. The Bee Gees are no more rock than they are You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Yeah I don't like any of those lists. It's just one person's opinion ( and usually a white male at that). Ignore it. If you like Prince you know he is special no matter what any list of the 100 best whatevers says. | |
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That's the misguided perception, but the Bee Gees certanly were rock. Like Prince, the Bee Gees spanned all genre's. For the first half dozen years of their career they were considered rock. Had their career ended then, they woudl still be known as a 60s rock band. What genre are songs like Loney Days if not representive of that era's Rock? Had the Beatles recorded them, they certainly woudl be considered rock? Even the title track to the very last Bee Gees album, "This is where I came in", was a rock song. At least that's what it'd be called if anyone else recorded it.
Barry Gibb and the Bee Gees get so criminally underrated, and the root cause is the unprecidented level of success he had as a singer/songwriter/producer in 1978. Nobody else in the rock era had the level of success he had that year, not peak Elvis, not peak the Beatles, not peak Michael Jackson. Yet instead of being the cherry on the top of a great career, it completely overshadowed everything else they did.
[Edited 9/7/19 19:29pm] | |
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Little Richard's placement is criminal. I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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