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Reply #90 posted 06/03/07 10:03pm

Afronomical

LittleBLUECorvette said:

Afronomical said:



That "Next Stevie" thing actually makes sense then as to why they tried that.

He should have been promoted as the new "Sylvers" brother.







[Edited 6/3/07 21:18pm]


lol
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Reply #91 posted 06/03/07 10:05pm

Afronomical

mirrorbestfriend said:

Afronomical said:



How do you have a top 10 list without Prince but WITH Chaka Khan? eek razz

Prince is rock and pop not randb


lol lol Just let me take a toke of whatever you're smoking because I'm jealous that you're the only one high in this thread. lol
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Reply #92 posted 06/03/07 10:09pm

mirrorbestfrie
nd

Afronomical said:

mirrorbestfriend said:


Prince is rock and pop not randb


lol lol Just let me take a toke of whatever you're smoking because I'm jealous that you're the only one high in this thread. lol


prince was rand b back in the day but now he wants the pop life

guitar dont sound rand b to me
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Reply #93 posted 06/04/07 1:50am

BlaqueKnight

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I can see how Prince COULD get omitted from a top 10 list (certainly not a top 100, though)
Well, as Paligap said, there would be some debate as to what the term R&B really encompasses but using it in its standard commonly-known definition, here's 10 that would sit on my list above Prince:
Stevie Wonder
The Isley Brothers
Marvin Gaye
Luther Vandross
Patti LaBelle
Sam Cooke
Michael Jackson (Jacksons era up to Off The Wall)
The Temptations
The O'Jays
Smokey Robiinson

I could do 20 but not putting him in the top 50 would really be stretching it and ignoring his early and mid 80s output. Prince has almost always kept a bit of R&B in his ballads but after PR, a lot of what he did would not be considered R&B if done by another artist. Much material was hybrid. If you're into R&B, you could have picked up the Parade album and not really liked anything other than Kiss and Anotherloverholenyohead or "LetItGo" off the "Come" CD.
Controversy, 1999 and Purple Rain (barely) are probably his purest contributions to R&B music. I would mention the "Prince" album but it was almost insignificant for him and didn't have a whole lot of public impact. "For You" was damn near a disco album.

10 more:
Aretha Franklin
Curtis Mayfield
The Four Tops
Eddie Kendricks
Donny Hathaway
Gladys Knight and the Pips
Roberta Flack
Teddy Pendergrass
Jackie Wilson
Otis Redding
The Stylistics
Barry White

A lot of R&B purists would agree with me that most of these artists helped shape what is generally known as R&B before Prince made any real strides. I'm not even gonna mention James. He's an entity unto himself. I'm not doing a hundred. F**k that. Too much listing for me. I'm tired at 20 and I hate lists. biggrin

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Reply #94 posted 06/04/07 9:20am

Afronomical

Stevie Wonder
The Isley Brothers
Marvin Gaye
Luther Vandross
Patti LaBelle
Sam Cooke
Michael Jackson (Jacksons era up to Off The Wall)
The Temptations
The O'Jays
Smokey Robiinson

Prince has almost always kept a bit of R&B in his ballads but after PR, a lot of what he did would not be considered R&B if done by another artist. Much material was hybrid. If you're into R&B, you could have picked up the Parade album and not really liked anything other than Kiss and Anotherloverholenyohead or "LetItGo" off the "Come" CD.
Controversy, 1999 and Purple Rain (barely) are probably his purest contributions to R&B music. I would mention the "Prince" album but it was almost insignificant for him and didn't have a whole lot of public impact. "For You" was damn near a disco album.


Ok, but here's the issue I have with that - "Off The Wall" was basically disco. R&B has had many sounds and disco was one of those sounds, like you said in another thread like New Jack Swing and Neo Soul. Plus, P as a solo artist has had more R&B albums than MJ has had as a solo artist, easily. I can then see putting the J5 on their but not MJ if you're going by solo albums of R&B.

But it all boils down to criteria for everyone, that's why I'd easily have P in the top 10 - Contribution, Longevity, Influence, and Productivity.
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Reply #95 posted 06/04/07 11:43am

BlaqueKnight

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Afronomical said:



Ok, but here's the issue I have with that - "Off The Wall" was basically disco. R&B has had many sounds and disco was one of those sounds, like you said in another thread like New Jack Swing and Neo Soul. Plus, P as a solo artist has had more R&B albums than MJ has had as a solo artist, easily. I can then see putting the J5 on their but not MJ if you're going by solo albums of R&B.

But it all boils down to criteria for everyone, that's why I'd easily have P in the top 10 - Contribution, Longevity, Influence, and Productivity.



Even without "Off The Wall" Michael's work with the Jacksons had a huge influence on R&B even to this day. Usher, Chris Brown, Ne-Yo, Mario, Omarion, Donell Jones, etc,, etc. have all based their style around Michael. Prince dominated the mid 80s (between Mike's albums) but R&B has never been based around Prince's work beyond that. The artists I named help make R&B what it is.
Productivity has little to do with it. D'Angelo only has two CDs and has had a huge impact on "neo-soul" or rather the resurgance of soul into contemporary R&B. You wouldn't say that Raheem DeVaughn helped formulate neo-soul because those lines have already been defined since his coming on the scene. Such was the case with R&B and Prince. A few rose to the top and made changes like Luther, who became the blueprint for black male balladeers for quite some time. Prince's strides have been in making alternative hybrids of funk, R&B and rock. For instance, I would never call Prince a soul singer. He is not. Johnny Taylor, Lattimore, Teddy Pendergrass and Al Green are soul singers. Prince has influenced a lot of artists and has contributed a lot of music but that music was not necessarily primarily R&B music. Prince gets his own box. (not nearly as big as James Brown's) He is a hybrid artist. He started out R&B but post Purple Rain, he's been "alternative." He's more funk/rock than R&B but there's no "funk/rock" box and he's black so he got cast as R&B most of the time in the 80s. If he were white, he'd be considered rock but his genre bending and rise to superstar status made him one of the one-named superstars that needs no genre box. Ironically, Lenny is considered rock most of the times, even though he has some soul in his earlier work. Sorry, I'm off topic.
My list stays. Peace.
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Reply #96 posted 06/04/07 12:24pm

Afronomical

BlaqueKnight said:

Afronomical said:



Ok, but here's the issue I have with that - "Off The Wall" was basically disco. R&B has had many sounds and disco was one of those sounds, like you said in another thread like New Jack Swing and Neo Soul. Plus, P as a solo artist has had more R&B albums than MJ has had as a solo artist, easily. I can then see putting the J5 on their but not MJ if you're going by solo albums of R&B.

But it all boils down to criteria for everyone, that's why I'd easily have P in the top 10 - Contribution, Longevity, Influence, and Productivity.



Even without "Off The Wall" Michael's work with the Jacksons had a huge influence on R&B even to this day. Usher, Chris Brown, Ne-Yo, Mario, Omarion, Donell Jones, etc,, etc. have all based their style around Michael. Prince dominated the mid 80s (between Mike's albums) but R&B has never been based around Prince's work beyond that. The artists I named help make R&B what it is.
Productivity has little to do with it. D'Angelo only has two CDs and has had a huge impact on "neo-soul" or rather the resurgance of soul into contemporary R&B. You wouldn't say that Raheem DeVaughn helped formulate neo-soul because those lines have already been defined since his coming on the scene. Such was the case with R&B and Prince. A few rose to the top and made changes like Luther, who became the blueprint for black male balladeers for quite some time. Prince's strides have been in making alternative hybrids of funk, R&B and rock. For instance, I would never call Prince a soul singer. He is not. Johnny Taylor, Lattimore, Teddy Pendergrass and Al Green are soul singers. Prince has influenced a lot of artists and has contributed a lot of music but that music was not necessarily primarily R&B music. Prince gets his own box. (not nearly as big as James Brown's) He is a hybrid artist. He started out R&B but post Purple Rain, he's been "alternative." He's more funk/rock than R&B but there's no "funk/rock" box and he's black so he got cast as R&B most of the time in the 80s. If he were white, he'd be considered rock but his genre bending and rise to superstar status made him one of the one-named superstars that needs no genre box. Ironically, Lenny is considered rock most of the times, even though he has some soul in his earlier work. Sorry, I'm off topic.
My list stays. Peace.


Right, but you stated that you were using MJ's solo career as a criterion for why he made the top 10 and the truth of it is, MJ's solo career has very little to do with R&B, and MUCH MUCH more to do with Pop, while P's solo career has more to do with R&B than MJ's solo career does. Can anyone even name the last R&B album MJ did? "Off The Wall"? "Thriller"? And Thriller, MJ was about headed into Rock/Pop area, especially with 'Beat It'.

Also, if you ask the artists that are the REAL musicians, you will almost ALWAYS hear these main 3 names thrown out there - Stevie, Prince, and JB. Ne-Yo and Usher - Just dancers so that's why they name MJ because he's influenced them "entertainer-wise" as opposed to true artists like D'Angelo, Saadiq, Bilal etc. who list Prince as one of their major influences. Those artist all fall under R&B.

The thing is, if there is no Prince, then there is no Neo Soul since D' patterned himself after Prince. D' and Saadiq - The Godfathers of Neo Soul - always list Prince as their major influence.

Prince delves into many genres but he's known more as R&B, the thing is, once the white public picks you up, all of a sudden you become "crossover" even though you're still doing R&B. Black Sweat was an R&B song. Prince is: R&B/Funk/Jazz/Rock - A hybrid that has to be included in R&B, Funk, and Rock, and in some instances, Jazz, but his impact is more-so on the R&B front than of ANY of those aforementioned genres.
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Reply #97 posted 06/04/07 12:59pm

FuNkeNsteiN

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Afronomical said:

BlaqueKnight said:




Even without "Off The Wall" Michael's work with the Jacksons had a huge influence on R&B even to this day. Usher, Chris Brown, Ne-Yo, Mario, Omarion, Donell Jones, etc,, etc. have all based their style around Michael. Prince dominated the mid 80s (between Mike's albums) but R&B has never been based around Prince's work beyond that. The artists I named help make R&B what it is.
Productivity has little to do with it. D'Angelo only has two CDs and has had a huge impact on "neo-soul" or rather the resurgance of soul into contemporary R&B. You wouldn't say that Raheem DeVaughn helped formulate neo-soul because those lines have already been defined since his coming on the scene. Such was the case with R&B and Prince. A few rose to the top and made changes like Luther, who became the blueprint for black male balladeers for quite some time. Prince's strides have been in making alternative hybrids of funk, R&B and rock. For instance, I would never call Prince a soul singer. He is not. Johnny Taylor, Lattimore, Teddy Pendergrass and Al Green are soul singers. Prince has influenced a lot of artists and has contributed a lot of music but that music was not necessarily primarily R&B music. Prince gets his own box. (not nearly as big as James Brown's) He is a hybrid artist. He started out R&B but post Purple Rain, he's been "alternative." He's more funk/rock than R&B but there's no "funk/rock" box and he's black so he got cast as R&B most of the time in the 80s. If he were white, he'd be considered rock but his genre bending and rise to superstar status made him one of the one-named superstars that needs no genre box. Ironically, Lenny is considered rock most of the times, even though he has some soul in his earlier work. Sorry, I'm off topic.
My list stays. Peace.


Right, but you stated that you were using MJ's solo career as a criterion for why he made the top 10 and the truth of it is, MJ's solo career has very little to do with R&B, and MUCH MUCH more to do with Pop, while P's solo career has more to do with R&B than MJ's solo career does. Can anyone even name the last R&B album MJ did? "Off The Wall"? "Thriller"? And Thriller, MJ was about headed into Rock/Pop area, especially with 'Beat It'.

Also, if you ask the artists that are the REAL musicians, you will almost ALWAYS hear these main 3 names thrown out there - Stevie, Prince, and JB. Ne-Yo and Usher - Just dancers so that's why they name MJ because he's influenced them "entertainer-wise" as opposed to true artists like D'Angelo, Saadiq, Bilal etc. who list Prince as one of their major influences. Those artist all fall under R&B.

The thing is, if there is no Prince, then there is no Neo Soul since D' patterned himself after Prince. D' and Saadiq - The Godfathers of Neo Soul - always list Prince as their major influence.

Prince delves into many genres but he's known more as R&B, the thing is, once the white public picks you up, all of a sudden you become "crossover" even though you're still doing R&B. Black Sweat was an R&B song. Prince is: R&B/Funk/Jazz/Rock - A hybrid that has to be included in R&B, Funk, and Rock, and in some instances, Jazz, but his impact is more-so on the R&B front than of ANY of those aforementioned genres.


Well, we could sure as hell do without Neo Soul. What a lameass genre.
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Reply #98 posted 06/04/07 1:00pm

BlaqueKnight

avatar

Afronomical said:



Right, but you stated that you were using MJ's solo career as a criterion for why he made the top 10 and the truth of it is, MJ's solo career has very little to do with R&B, and MUCH MUCH more to do with Pop, while P's solo career has more to do with R&B than MJ's solo career does. Can anyone even name the last R&B album MJ did? "Off The Wall"? "Thriller"? And Thriller, MJ was about headed into Rock/Pop area, especially with 'Beat It'.

Also, if you ask the artists that are the REAL musicians, you will almost ALWAYS hear these main 3 names thrown out there - Stevie, Prince, and JB. Ne-Yo and Usher - Just dancers so that's why they name MJ because he's influenced them "entertainer-wise" as opposed to true artists like D'Angelo, Saadiq, Bilal etc. who list Prince as one of their major influences. Those artist all fall under R&B.

The thing is, if there is no Prince, then there is no Neo Soul since D' patterned himself after Prince. D' and Saadiq - The Godfathers of Neo Soul - always list Prince as their major influence.

Prince delves into many genres but he's known more as R&B, the thing is, once the white public picks you up, all of a sudden you become "crossover" even though you're still doing R&B. Black Sweat was an R&B song. Prince is: R&B/Funk/Jazz/Rock - A hybrid that has to be included in R&B, Funk, and Rock, and in some instances, Jazz, but his impact is more-so on the R&B front than of ANY of those aforementioned genres.


Did you not really READ what I said? Look at my list. It said Michael Jackson - Jacksons' era up to "Off The Wall". I don't know how old you are but it would seem to me that you may not have been around in the 70s/early 80s. The genre of R&B was already formed. Michael Jackson influenced a LOT of singers. I just named some of the contemporary ones but without a doubt there are many. Mike became the blueprint for the black male solo artist early on. The FACT that you are trying to dodge is that Michael was already popular, already influencing and already helping to shape R&B when Prince was in Andre's basement. By the time Prince came along, R&B was already a genre. Prince influenced fusion of styles and adding more elements to R&B but R&B itself was already there when Prince came along, hence most of the artists I listed are earlier pioneers. Who's to say if there would be no neo-soul without Prince? It may sound different but it could easily exist since Prince didn't really do soul music. Neo means new. If someone came along and started a new soul movement based off 60/70/80s soul singers, it would be "neo-soul". Prince was NOT part of the soul movement and soul is the basis of R&B just like blues and gospel are. Singers like Anthony Hamilton have little to no Prince influence in their work. Prince influenced a lot of artists but he could be easily excluded from a top 10 R&B list. If you want to be real about it, you could list just pioneers like Etta James and even Little Richard and fill up the first 20 spots bewfore getting to Prince's name. R&B didn't start in the 80s.
Prince's impact was more on R&B because he was marketed that way because he was black and it was the 80s and the industry is racist. Like i said, if he were white, he would have been marketed to the rock crowd post Purple Rain. There were many mainstream listeners that thought Purple Rain was Prince's first album back in the 80s. I'm not trying to deny Prince influence but there was R&B long before Prince.

[Edited 6/4/07 13:02pm]
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Reply #99 posted 06/04/07 1:01pm

Afronomical

FuNkeNsteiN said:

Afronomical said:



Right, but you stated that you were using MJ's solo career as a criterion for why he made the top 10 and the truth of it is, MJ's solo career has very little to do with R&B, and MUCH MUCH more to do with Pop, while P's solo career has more to do with R&B than MJ's solo career does. Can anyone even name the last R&B album MJ did? "Off The Wall"? "Thriller"? And Thriller, MJ was about headed into Rock/Pop area, especially with 'Beat It'.

Also, if you ask the artists that are the REAL musicians, you will almost ALWAYS hear these main 3 names thrown out there - Stevie, Prince, and JB. Ne-Yo and Usher - Just dancers so that's why they name MJ because he's influenced them "entertainer-wise" as opposed to true artists like D'Angelo, Saadiq, Bilal etc. who list Prince as one of their major influences. Those artist all fall under R&B.

The thing is, if there is no Prince, then there is no Neo Soul since D' patterned himself after Prince. D' and Saadiq - The Godfathers of Neo Soul - always list Prince as their major influence.

Prince delves into many genres but he's known more as R&B, the thing is, once the white public picks you up, all of a sudden you become "crossover" even though you're still doing R&B. Black Sweat was an R&B song. Prince is: R&B/Funk/Jazz/Rock - A hybrid that has to be included in R&B, Funk, and Rock, and in some instances, Jazz, but his impact is more-so on the R&B front than of ANY of those aforementioned genres.


Well, we could sure as hell do without Neo Soul. What a lameass genre.


Well like it or not, it's here and without P we don't have D'Angelo.
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Reply #100 posted 06/04/07 1:03pm

FuNkeNsteiN

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Afronomical said:

FuNkeNsteiN said:



Well, we could sure as hell do without Neo Soul. What a lameass genre.


Well like it or not, it's here and without P we don't have D'Angelo.

Ndeed. And without JB, Sly, Hendrix, Little Richard, The Beatles and many others, we wouldn't have Prince.
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Reply #101 posted 06/04/07 1:25pm

Afronomical

BlaqueKnight said:

Afronomical said:



Right, but you stated that you were using MJ's solo career as a criterion for why he made the top 10 and the truth of it is, MJ's solo career has very little to do with R&B, and MUCH MUCH more to do with Pop, while P's solo career has more to do with R&B than MJ's solo career does. Can anyone even name the last R&B album MJ did? "Off The Wall"? "Thriller"? And Thriller, MJ was about headed into Rock/Pop area, especially with 'Beat It'.

Also, if you ask the artists that are the REAL musicians, you will almost ALWAYS hear these main 3 names thrown out there - Stevie, Prince, and JB. Ne-Yo and Usher - Just dancers so that's why they name MJ because he's influenced them "entertainer-wise" as opposed to true artists like D'Angelo, Saadiq, Bilal etc. who list Prince as one of their major influences. Those artist all fall under R&B.

The thing is, if there is no Prince, then there is no Neo Soul since D' patterned himself after Prince. D' and Saadiq - The Godfathers of Neo Soul - always list Prince as their major influence.

Prince delves into many genres but he's known more as R&B, the thing is, once the white public picks you up, all of a sudden you become "crossover" even though you're still doing R&B. Black Sweat was an R&B song. Prince is: R&B/Funk/Jazz/Rock - A hybrid that has to be included in R&B, Funk, and Rock, and in some instances, Jazz, but his impact is more-so on the R&B front than of ANY of those aforementioned genres.


Did you not really READ what I said? Look at my list. It said Michael Jackson - Jacksons' era up to "Off The Wall". I don't know how old you are but it would seem to me that you may not have been around in the 70s/early 80s. The genre of R&B was already formed. Michael Jackson influenced a LOT of singers. I just named some of the contemporary ones but without a doubt there are many. Mike became the blueprint for the black male solo artist early on. The FACT that you are trying to dodge is that Michael was already popular, already influencing and already helping to shape R&B when Prince was in Andre's basement. By the time Prince came along, R&B was already a genre. Prince influenced fusion of styles and adding more elements to R&B but R&B itself was already there when Prince came along, hence most of the artists I listed are earlier pioneers. Who's to say if there would be no neo-soul without Prince? It may sound different but it could easily exist since Prince didn't really do soul music. Neo means new. If someone came along and straed a new soul movement based off 60/70/80s soul singers, it would be "neo-soul". Prince was NOT part of the soul movement and soul is the basis of R&B just like blues and gospel are. Singers like Anthony Hamilton have little to no Prince influence in their work. Prince influenced a lot of artists but he could be easily excluded from a top 10 R&B list. If you want to be real about it, you could list just pioneers like Etta James and even Little Richard and fill up the first 20 spots bewfore getting to Prince's name. R&B didn't start in the 80s.
Prince's impact was more on R&B because he was marketed that way because he was black and it was the 80s and the industry is racist. Like i said, if he were white, he would have been marketed to the rock crowd post Purple Rain. There were many mainstream listeners that thought Purple Rain was Prince's first album back in the 80s. I'm not trying to deny Prince influence but there was R&B long before Prince.


Bro, chill, I grew up in the 70s and 80s, so I certainly know the genre. No one said R&B "started in the 80s" and this isn't about who "created" the genre, this is about who has helped shaped the genre that is STILL around today.

Again, you bring up MJ but you fail to realize that when MJ was small, he was imitatimg who? James Brown - That was who he was "channeling" in their audition tape for BG. So MJ's influence on "A LOT of singers" as you say was already around by artists like JB and Marvin and Smokey to be influenced by, whom MJ pulled from as well.

That's why you can't say P didn't shape anything because there were already artists before him that shaped R&B but then turn around and say MJ did just that when MJ was influenced GREATLY by JB and then the Motown sound altogether.

But I just don't understand why you want to act like P "really isn't R&B" just because he tends to incorporate other genres. MOST artists from all genres do that, so why ridiculously single P out for doing that? And isn't that what great artists DO anyway? - Fuse genres and create others in the process?

It's like you want to hold the fact that he's a musical genius against him, especially because how the "racists" and "white media" want to categorize him. Fuck the media. They can categorize them all they want but the man's roots are in R&B, without a doubt. He'll even tell you that himself.

Both MJ and P need to be in the top 10. You can't have one without the other because they both shaped R&B, especially in the 80s, even when BOTH artists used Rock and Disco in their R&B sound. Thing is, P is still shaping the music to this day, no matter how many subtle changes it has gone through from the 50s to now.
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Reply #102 posted 06/04/07 1:27pm

Afronomical

FuNkeNsteiN said:

Afronomical said:



Well like it or not, it's here and without P we don't have D'Angelo.

Ndeed. And without JB, Sly, Hendrix, Little Richard, The Beatles and many others, we wouldn't have Prince.


Exactly, which goes back to my original point of "Everyone is influenced by someone before them."
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Reply #103 posted 06/04/07 1:30pm

FuNkeNsteiN

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Afronomical said:

FuNkeNsteiN said:


Ndeed. And without JB, Sly, Hendrix, Little Richard, The Beatles and many others, we wouldn't have Prince.


Exactly, which goes back to my original point of "Everyone is influenced by someone before them."

Yea, that's true. But I consider George Clinton, Sly & JB to be more influental than Prince. I found it odd that you didn't include Sly OR GC in your top 10. I mean those guys sure as hell are influental figures in black music.
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Reply #104 posted 06/04/07 1:37pm

BlaqueKnight

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Afronomical said:


Bro, chill, I grew up in the 70s and 80s, so I certainly know the genre. No one said R&B "started in the 80s" and this isn't about who "created" the genre, this is about who has helped shaped the genre that is STILL around today.

Again, you bring up MJ but you fail to realize that when MJ was small, he was imitatimg who? James Brown - That was who he was "channeling" in their audition tape for BG. So MJ's influence on "A LOT of singers" as you say was already around by artists like JB and Marvin and Smokey to be influenced by, whom MJ pulled from as well.

That's why you can't say P didn't shape anything because there were already artists before him that shaped R&B but then turn around and say MJ did just that when MJ was influenced GREATLY by JB and then the Motown sound altogether.

But I just don't understand why you want to act like P "really isn't R&B" just because he tends to incorporate other genres. MOST artists from all genres do that, so why ridiculously single P out for doing that? And isn't that what great artists DO anyway? - Fuse genres and create others in the process?

It's like you want to hold the fact that he's a musical genius against him, especially because how the "racists" and "white media" want to categorize him. Fuck the media. They can categorize them all they want but the man's roots are in R&B, without a doubt. He'll even tell you that himself.

Both MJ and P need to be in the top 10. You can't have one without the other because they both shaped R&B, especially in the 80s, even when BOTH artists used Rock and Disco in their R&B sound. Thing is, P is still shaping the music to this day, no matter how many subtle changes it has gone through from the 50s to now.


part of what you are saying is true and part is your own personal opinion. I can have a top 10 greatest R&B artist list without Prince or MJ. You can't. Its opinion. Stop trying to refute mine. I don't see you going at anyone else's choices. Get off my nutsack, dude. You seem to have issues with MJ and see MJ and Prince as same era when in actuality, MJ preceeded Prince and...listen to this closely...PRINCE TOO WAS INFLUENCED BY MICHAEL JACKSON. MJ is not the point. All of the artists I listed are valid and their influence can still be heard today.
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Reply #105 posted 06/04/07 1:44pm

Afronomical

FuNkeNsteiN said:

Afronomical said:



Exactly, which goes back to my original point of "Everyone is influenced by someone before them."

Yea, that's true. But I consider George Clinton, Sly & JB to be more influental than Prince. I found it odd that you didn't include Sly OR GC in your top 10. I mean those guys sure as hell are influental figures in black music.


Well, because my list was JUST based off "influential" it was based on other things like "longevity", "productive output", and "relevance" for starters.

Then again, by BK's argument, Sly would be more so considered Rock right? Would you agree with that assessment?
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Reply #106 posted 06/04/07 1:45pm

Afronomical

BlaqueKnight said:

Afronomical said:


Bro, chill, I grew up in the 70s and 80s, so I certainly know the genre. No one said R&B "started in the 80s" and this isn't about who "created" the genre, this is about who has helped shaped the genre that is STILL around today.

Again, you bring up MJ but you fail to realize that when MJ was small, he was imitatimg who? James Brown - That was who he was "channeling" in their audition tape for BG. So MJ's influence on "A LOT of singers" as you say was already around by artists like JB and Marvin and Smokey to be influenced by, whom MJ pulled from as well.

That's why you can't say P didn't shape anything because there were already artists before him that shaped R&B but then turn around and say MJ did just that when MJ was influenced GREATLY by JB and then the Motown sound altogether.

But I just don't understand why you want to act like P "really isn't R&B" just because he tends to incorporate other genres. MOST artists from all genres do that, so why ridiculously single P out for doing that? And isn't that what great artists DO anyway? - Fuse genres and create others in the process?

It's like you want to hold the fact that he's a musical genius against him, especially because how the "racists" and "white media" want to categorize him. Fuck the media. They can categorize them all they want but the man's roots are in R&B, without a doubt. He'll even tell you that himself.

Both MJ and P need to be in the top 10. You can't have one without the other because they both shaped R&B, especially in the 80s, even when BOTH artists used Rock and Disco in their R&B sound. Thing is, P is still shaping the music to this day, no matter how many subtle changes it has gone through from the 50s to now.


part of what you are saying is true and part is your own personal opinion. I can have a top 10 greatest R&B artist list without Prince or MJ. You can't. Its opinion. Stop trying to refute mine. I don't see you going at anyone else's choices. Get off my nutsack, dude. You seem to have issues with MJ and see MJ and Prince as same era when in actuality, MJ preceeded Prince and...listen to this closely...PRINCE TOO WAS INFLUENCED BY MICHAEL JACKSON. MJ is not the point. All of the artists I listed are valid and their influence can still be heard today.


Well, isn't that why we're even going at it, bro! lol - For me to refute your opinion and for you to refute mine? That's the beauty of this stuff! thumbs up!, so it's all good in the end. Both of us are wrong and both of us are right and everyone else will end up with the same finality - No one's right and no one's wrong.
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Reply #107 posted 06/04/07 1:53pm

krayzie

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What Afronomical said about Prince is pretty much what I've always reproached to Prince fans. They tend to give him WAY too much credit, and forget everything before.

"P plays several instruments", like if nobody was able to play several instruments before.
"P created his own sound" like if nobody created his own sound before.

Now Afronomical gives P all the credit for the Neo Soul mouvement... lol

The Neo soul acts are also Stevie Wonder fans, Curtis Mayfield fans, Marvin Gaye fans and Sly Stone fans etc. Neo soul music is very 70's like.


But Afromonical still wants to GIVE all the credit to P and only P. lol
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Reply #108 posted 06/04/07 1:53pm

FuNkeNsteiN

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Afronomical said:

FuNkeNsteiN said:


Yea, that's true. But I consider George Clinton, Sly & JB to be more influental than Prince. I found it odd that you didn't include Sly OR GC in your top 10. I mean those guys sure as hell are influental figures in black music.


Well, because my list was JUST based off "influential" it was based on other things like "longevity", "productive output", and "relevance" for starters.

Then again, by BK's argument, Sly would be more so considered Rock right? Would you agree with that assessment?

Based on relevance, Sly and George etc, would still rank highly smile
Anyways, no, I don't consider Sly to be a rock act. He is something of a hybrid, psychedelic rock/pop/funk/soul etc.
It is not known why FuNkeNsteiN capitalizes his name as he does, though some speculate sunlight deficiency caused by the most pimpified white guy afro in Nordic history.

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Reply #109 posted 06/04/07 2:00pm

Afronomical

krayzie said:

What Afronomical said about Prince is pretty much what I've always reproached to Prince fans. They tend to give him WAY too much credit, and forget everything before.

"P plays several instruments", like if nobody was able to play several instruments before.
"P created his own sound" like if nobody created his own sound before.

Now Afronomical gives P all the credit for the Neo Soul mouvement... lol

The Neo soul acts are also Stevie Wonder fans, Curtis Mayfield fans, Marvin Gaye fans and Sly Stone fans etc. Neo soul music is very 70's like.


But Afromonical still wants to GIVE all the credit to P and only P. lol


lol Here this kid is STILL afraid to give us HIS list yet he can talk all day about who SHOULDN'T be on the list. Ya gotta love the background people with opinions.

One day you'll drop that top 10 list right bro? It just won't be in THIS thread that's for sure. thumbs up!
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Reply #110 posted 06/04/07 2:01pm

Afronomical

FuNkeNsteiN said:

Afronomical said:



Well, because my list was JUST based off "influential" it was based on other things like "longevity", "productive output", and "relevance" for starters.

Then again, by BK's argument, Sly would be more so considered Rock right? Would you agree with that assessment?

Based on relevance, Sly and George etc, would still rank highly smile
Anyways, no, I don't consider Sly to be a rock act. He is something of a hybrid, psychedelic rock/pop/funk/soul etc.


I can dig that then. thumbs up!
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Reply #111 posted 06/04/07 2:06pm

FuNkeNsteiN

avatar

Afronomical said:

krayzie said:

What Afronomical said about Prince is pretty much what I've always reproached to Prince fans. They tend to give him WAY too much credit, and forget everything before.

"P plays several instruments", like if nobody was able to play several instruments before.
"P created his own sound" like if nobody created his own sound before.

Now Afronomical gives P all the credit for the Neo Soul mouvement... lol

The Neo soul acts are also Stevie Wonder fans, Curtis Mayfield fans, Marvin Gaye fans and Sly Stone fans etc. Neo soul music is very 70's like.


But Afromonical still wants to GIVE all the credit to P and only P. lol


lol Here this kid is STILL afraid to give us HIS list yet he can talk all day about who SHOULDN'T be on the list. Ya gotta love the background people with opinions.

One day you'll drop that top 10 list right bro? It just won't be in THIS thread that's for sure. thumbs up!

I need to come up with mine too. Hmm, I'll try to think about it at work tomorrow and try to come up with something to post smile
It is not known why FuNkeNsteiN capitalizes his name as he does, though some speculate sunlight deficiency caused by the most pimpified white guy afro in Nordic history.

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Reply #112 posted 06/04/07 2:52pm

whatsgoingon

avatar

BlaqueKnight said:

Afronomical said:


Bro, chill, I grew up in the 70s and 80s, so I certainly know the genre. No one said R&B "started in the 80s" and this isn't about who "created" the genre, this is about who has helped shaped the genre that is STILL around today.

Again, you bring up MJ but you fail to realize that when MJ was small, he was imitatimg who? James Brown - That was who he was "channeling" in their audition tape for BG. So MJ's influence on "A LOT of singers" as you say was already around by artists like JB and Marvin and Smokey to be influenced by, whom MJ pulled from as well.

That's why you can't say P didn't shape anything because there were already artists before him that shaped R&B but then turn around and say MJ did just that when MJ was influenced GREATLY by JB and then the Motown sound altogether.

But I just don't understand why you want to act like P "really isn't R&B" just because he tends to incorporate other genres. MOST artists from all genres do that, so why ridiculously single P out for doing that? And isn't that what great artists DO anyway? - Fuse genres and create others in the process?

It's like you want to hold the fact that he's a musical genius against him, especially because how the "racists" and "white media" want to categorize him. Fuck the media. They can categorize them all they want but the man's roots are in R&B, without a doubt. He'll even tell you that himself.

Both MJ and P need to be in the top 10. You can't have one without the other because they both shaped R&B, especially in the 80s, even when BOTH artists used Rock and Disco in their R&B sound. Thing is, P is still shaping the music to this day, no matter how many subtle changes it has gone through from the 50s to now.


part of what you are saying is true and part is your own personal opinion. I can have a top 10 greatest R&B artist list without Prince or MJ. You can't. Its opinion. Stop trying to refute mine. I don't see you going at anyone else's choices. Get off my nutsack, dude. You seem to have issues with MJ and see MJ and Prince as same era when in actuality, MJ preceeded Prince and...listen to this closely...PRINCE TOO WAS INFLUENCED BY MICHAEL JACKSON. MJ is not the point. All of the artists I listed are valid and their influence can still be heard today.


I doubt a Prince fan would like to hear that Prince was influence by MJ lol , but your right, because it has been said again and again that Prince has many influences including the J5 wink .
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Reply #113 posted 06/04/07 4:25pm

Afronomical

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Reply #114 posted 06/04/07 4:33pm

Afronomical

FuNkeNsteiN said:

Afronomical said:



lol Here this kid is STILL afraid to give us HIS list yet he can talk all day about who SHOULDN'T be on the list. Ya gotta love the background people with opinions.

One day you'll drop that top 10 list right bro? It just won't be in THIS thread that's for sure. thumbs up!

I need to come up with mine too. Hmm, I'll try to think about it at work tomorrow and try to come up with something to post smile


razz I already know which 2 are DEFINITELY gonna be on your list!
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Reply #115 posted 06/04/07 7:49pm

FuNkeNsteiN

avatar

Afronomical said:

FuNkeNsteiN said:


I need to come up with mine too. Hmm, I'll try to think about it at work tomorrow and try to come up with something to post smile


razz I already know which 2 are DEFINITELY gonna be on your list!

biggrin
It is not known why FuNkeNsteiN capitalizes his name as he does, though some speculate sunlight deficiency caused by the most pimpified white guy afro in Nordic history.

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Reply #116 posted 06/05/07 5:49am

SoulAlive

Afronomical said:

SoulAlive said:

hmmm this is a tough one,but I'm pretty sure that these artists would be in my Top 10:

Stevie Wonder
Aretha Franklin
Marvin Gaye
Al Green
James Brown
Smokey Robinson and The Miracles
The Temptations
Barry White
Sly Stone
Chaka Khan


How do you have a top 10 list without Prince but WITH Chaka Khan? eek razz


I wanted to include at least two women in my Top 10 list,so it wouldn't be dominated by males lol and come on,Chaka and Aretha are as soulful as it gets.

This isn't my finished list...I'm just tossing around names that I would probably place in my Top 10.I considered Prince and Michael Jackson,but I think there are many other artists who stayed true to R&B/soul and didn't really jump on the "pop" bandwagon.My Top 10 must be made up of true R&B artists hmph! Prince would probably be somewhere in my Top 20,though.
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Reply #117 posted 06/05/07 9:15am

mirrorbestfrie
nd

SoulAlive said:

Afronomical said:



How do you have a top 10 list without Prince but WITH Chaka Khan? eek razz


I wanted to include at least two women in my Top 10 list,so it wouldn't be dominated by males lol and come on,Chaka and Aretha are as soulful as it gets.

This isn't my finished list...I'm just tossing around names that I would probably place in my Top 10.I considered Prince and Michael Jackson,but I think there are many other artists who stayed true to R&B/soul and didn't really jump on the "pop" bandwagon.My Top 10 must be made up of true R&B artists hmph! Prince would probably be somewhere in my Top 20,though.


TRUE but most women can only sing they dont write and produce and play like men
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Reply #118 posted 06/05/07 10:57am

Afronomical

SoulAlive said:

Afronomical said:



How do you have a top 10 list without Prince but WITH Chaka Khan? eek razz


I wanted to include at least two women in my Top 10 list,so it wouldn't be dominated by males lol and come on,Chaka and Aretha are as soulful as it gets.

This isn't my finished list...I'm just tossing around names that I would probably place in my Top 10.I considered Prince and Michael Jackson,but I think there are many other artists who stayed true to R&B/soul and didn't really jump on the "pop" bandwagon.My Top 10 must be made up of true R&B artists hmph! Prince would probably be somewhere in my Top 20,though.


Oh ok. I can dig that thumbs up!
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Reply #119 posted 06/06/07 5:54pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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I finally got my top 10 together after about a week of research and what not:


1.) James Brown [ & the JB's ]
2.) Stevie Wonder
3.) Ray Charles
4.) Aretha Franklin
5.) Marvin Gaye
6.) Sam Cooke
7.) Otis Redding
8.) Little Richard
9.) Jackie Wilson
10.) Sly & the Family Stone


numbers 11 through 30 I will have up on tomorrow ...
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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