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Reply #120 posted 02/20/16 8:41am

jjhunsecker

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Graycap23 said:

Any one and everyone who followed the Beatles after seeing the success that they had put some time into understanding what and how they went about their business. That is just common sense, but the level of influence is minimum in my opinion. The Beatles made simple music for the masses. It's just simple for me. This topic is tiresome at this point.

If you believe the Beatles influenced folks making Blues, Funk, R&B, Soul, House, Trance, etc........that is on you. My EARS and knowledge of music suggest otherwise. That is not meant as disrespect to you, that is simply my opinion.

If you listen to the early Beatles recordings, yes, they are "simple", because they were emulating and were influenced by the pop and rock and r&B music that came before them- Elvis, Buddy Holly, Smokey Robinson, the Isley Brothers, Girl Groups, Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Little Richard. But as time went on, their music became more complex, and they ventured far out of the mainstream. Have you heard "Revolver" or "The White Album" ? Do you know "Tomorrow Never Knows" or "A Day in the Life" or "Within You Withou You" or "I Want You" or "Happiness is a Warm Gun" or even "Hey Jude" (at the time the longest single ever released)....or even someting like "Revolution #9" ??? The amazing thing was that such challenging music WAS also massively successful (which is probably a comment on that era as opposed to the current day, where the biggest hits are usually the simplest, and where people think Nicki Manaj and Kanye West actually have talent....)

#SOCIETYDEFINESU
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Reply #121 posted 02/20/16 8:45am

jjhunsecker

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SeventeenDayze said:

MickyDolenz said:

Being an icon and being known are 2 different things. You said The Beatles are not known in Africa like nobody there has heard of them.

So would you say that the Beatles are more loved in Africa than Michael Jackson?

Actually one of the biggest non-African stars in Africa for many years was...country star Jim Reeves ! Go figure that one out ...

#SOCIETYDEFINESU
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Reply #122 posted 02/20/16 8:50am

SoulAlive

My opinion is the Beatles are one of the greatest bands of all time.There's no need to analyze or debate it.Either you like them or you don't.

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Reply #123 posted 02/20/16 8:53am

SoulAlive

even Prince was influenced by the Beatles in some ways.

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Reply #124 posted 02/20/16 8:53am

MickyDolenz

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jjhunsecker said:

Actually one of the biggest non-African stars in Africa for many years was...country star Jim Reeves ! Go figure that one out ...

Garth Brooks seems to be known in Malawi


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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Reply #125 posted 02/20/16 9:03am

unknowncheese

I can't believe this is even a serious topic. It seems like it was made because someone is upset that the Beatles were bigger than certain black artists.

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Reply #126 posted 02/20/16 9:16am

SeventeenDayze

unknowncheese said:

I can't believe this is even a serious topic. It seems like it was made because someone is upset that the Beatles were bigger than certain black artists.

If you have something to contribute to the conversation that's sincere by all means do so. No one is "upset" about anything. What exactly do you mean by "bigger than black artists"? Why is it hard for SOME of you to admit that the Beatles fame was because they imitated black music? I can't believe some of you just can't admit this. But, many of you are QUICK to post a bunch of videos of black artists doing cover songs as if the Beatles weren't first influenced by black artists themselves. How ridiculous. This question is whether or not the Beatles impacted MUSIC (not the business side but the MUSIC itself).

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Reply #127 posted 02/20/16 9:19am

SeventeenDayze

jjhunsecker said:

Graycap23 said:

Any one and everyone who followed the Beatles after seeing the success that they had put some time into understanding what and how they went about their business. That is just common sense, but the level of influence is minimum in my opinion. The Beatles made simple music for the masses. It's just simple for me. This topic is tiresome at this point.

If you believe the Beatles influenced folks making Blues, Funk, R&B, Soul, House, Trance, etc........that is on you. My EARS and knowledge of music suggest otherwise. That is not meant as disrespect to you, that is simply my opinion.

If you listen to the early Beatles recordings, yes, they are "simple", because they were emulating and were influenced by the pop and rock and r&B music that came before them- Elvis, Buddy Holly, Smokey Robinson, the Isley Brothers, Girl Groups, Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Little Richard. But as time went on, their music became more complex, and they ventured far out of the mainstream. Have you heard "Revolver" or "The White Album" ? Do you know "Tomorrow Never Knows" or "A Day in the Life" or "Within You Withou You" or "I Want You" or "Happiness is a Warm Gun" or even "Hey Jude" (at the time the longest single ever released)....or even someting like "Revolution #9" ??? The amazing thing was that such challenging music WAS also massively successful (which is probably a comment on that era as opposed to the current day, where the biggest hits are usually the simplest, and where people think Nicki Manaj and Kanye West actually have talent....)

Did you really put Kanye West and Nicki Minaj in the same sentence? Kanye is really talented. Not sure he's a musical "genius" as some in the industry have said but there's no denying he's very creative.

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Reply #128 posted 02/20/16 9:25am

SeventeenDayze

EmmaMcG said:

In terms of influencing younger people to become musicians I think the Beatles had a big impact due to the fact they were VERY popular. They were everywhere so it stands to reason they influenced young people of the era. As for having a big impact on the sound of music that followed, I don't think they had THAT big an impact because a lot of music the Beatles did wasn't new or original so the young musicians at the time who were encouraged to get into music by The Beatles had their sound influenced by the black acts that influenced the Beatles. Unfortunately there was a lot of great black singers at the time doing this music who didn't get airplay precisely because they were black. The Beatles were fans of "black music" and when they did it, they were popular. I think had the world been more enlightened the black acts would have been more popular and the Beatles would have been seen as just another RockNroll band. As a side note, I must confess that having listened to every Beatles album, I really struggle to see what the big deal is. Honestly, I think they're one of the most overrated bands of all time. John Lennon and George Harrison was better solo.

I agree. I think it's obvious that their music helped define their generation but in terms of originality, their earlier music was basically copied from Little Richard, The Isley Brothers, etc. There are people in this thread (and of course in this country) who have a big problem with acknowledging this as fact. There's nothing wrong with the fact that they were fans of black music and of course no one can predict what will happen once a band is created and an album is released but it would be really silly to assume that the Beatles success wasn't a direct result of them copying black artists. There are a lot of music critics who have said the Beatles were overrated so you're not the only one who thinks that. I don't think the musical sound of the Beatles had the same longevity and cultural significance that music such as James Brown did. After all, James Brown's music gave birth to hip-hop. That's an entire genre of music influenced by James Brown. The Beatles didn't do that.

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Reply #129 posted 02/20/16 9:31am

SeventeenDayze

Shawy89 said:

Yes, anybody who says otherwise clearly has no idea how far these guys went...

They impacted the music as an art and as a form of entertainement.

Helter Skelter was probably the first "heavy metal" song even if it wasn't labeled as such at the time it was released.

Revolver, Sgt Pepper, Rubber Soul were albums that defined a whole era of music, let alone the fact that those albums saw The Beatles explore new heights musically, lyrically and sonically. (Even if The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds was essential in establishing that sound that was a hybrid of baroque music, psychedelic rock, chamber pop...etc, yet, The Beatles done it best)

Basically, when you talk about the 60's and the counterculture of the 60's, you had to talk about black people's rights movements, JFK's assassination, Cuban war, Moon landing AND The Beatles' arrival in America.

Good points but would you say that the Beatles impact was mostly within that generation alone though? What I am getting at is this....beyond the 60s and early 70s did the Beatles continue to impact music? Can you point to any modern artists of today that are clearly copying The Beatles? I can't think of any off hand. But, I can think of many artists of today who are still clearly influenced by Michael Jackson and I think 50 years from now there will still be artists influenced by Michael Jackson. I think when it comes to long term impact, there's no question that the Beatles can't touch Michael when it comes to that.

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Reply #130 posted 02/20/16 9:33am

SeventeenDayze

hausofmoi7 said:

I find it interesting to see which artists are popular and listened to in countries where there is censorship and where music marketing and hype does not reach the audience. In those places the Beatles are not so popular,listened to. Chris DeBurgh is huge in Iran. Michael Jackson still well received and huge without marketing.

It's interesting how some people in this thread are pretending like Michael's music and impact was above and beyond the Beatles....I wonder why.

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Reply #131 posted 02/20/16 9:36am

NorthC

You guys are still going on about this? Of course The Beatles influenced music. Why is this so hard to believe?
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Reply #132 posted 02/20/16 10:03am

free2bfreeda

SeventeenDayze said:

EmmaMcG said:

In terms of influencing younger people to become musicians I think the Beatles had a big impact due to the fact they were VERY popular. They were everywhere so it stands to reason they influenced young people of the era. As for having a big impact on the sound of music that followed, I don't think they had THAT big an impact because a lot of music the Beatles did wasn't new or original so the young musicians at the time who were encouraged to get into music by The Beatles had their sound influenced by the black acts that influenced the Beatles. Unfortunately there was a lot of great black singers at the time doing this music who didn't get airplay precisely because they were black. The Beatles were fans of "black music" and when they did it, they were popular. I think had the world been more enlightened the black acts would have been more popular and the Beatles would have been seen as just another RockNroll band. As a side note, I must confess that having listened to every Beatles album, I really struggle to see what the big deal is. Honestly, I think they're one of the most overrated bands of all time. John Lennon and George Harrison was better solo.

I agree. I think it's obvious that their music helped define their generation but in terms of originality, their earlier music was basically copied from Little Richard, The Isley Brothers, etc. There are people in this thread (and of course in this country) who have a big problem with acknowledging this as fact. There's nothing wrong with the fact that they were fans of black music and of course no one can predict what will happen once a band is created and an album is released but it would be really silly to assume that the Beatles success wasn't a direct result of them copying black artists. There are a lot of music critics who have said the Beatles were overrated so you're not the only one who thinks that. I don't think the musical sound of the Beatles had the same longevity and cultural significance that music such as James Brown did. After all, James Brown's music gave birth to hip-hop. That's an entire genre of music influenced by James Brown. The Beatles didn't do that.

: http://www.whosampled.com...pled/?sp=1

many hip hop groups have sampled the beatles recordings

was sampled in
was sampled in

and many etceteras. check it out.

THE FIVE BEST SONGS THAT SAMPLE THE BEATLES

: http://www.houstonpress.c...es-6499083

1. Wu-Tang Clan, "The Heart Gently Weeps"

2. Beastie Boys, "The Sounds of Science"

3. RZA featuring Cilvaringz, "You'll Never Know"

4. Animal Collective, "Unsolved Mysteries"

5. MF Doom feat. MF Grimm, "Tick, Tick...

rolleyes

oh, and

Related image <<-------- it will save you valuable time and embarassment.

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #133 posted 02/20/16 10:05am

MickyDolenz

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SeventeenDayze said:

It's interesting how some people in this thread are pretending like Michael's music and impact was above and beyond the Beatles....I wonder why.

It's interesting that some people can constantly make up theories about a "Beyoncé conspiracy" but not write one sentence about why rock is seen by some blacks as "white music" in the USA.

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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Reply #134 posted 02/20/16 10:23am

SeventeenDayze

MickyDolenz said:

SeventeenDayze said:

It's interesting how some people in this thread are pretending like Michael's music and impact was above and beyond the Beatles....I wonder why.

It's interesting that some people can constantly make up theories about a "Beyoncé conspiracy" but not write one sentence about why rock is seen by some blacks as "white music" in the USA.

You keep generalizing black people and I'm getting sick of it. Have you met all 33 million of us in this country? How many black rock artists aren't promoted by their label? How many black rock singers are out there doing this kind of music? You have no problem blaming black people for not "calling it black music" but you can sit here and DENY AND IGNORE that the Beatles routinely and repeatedly copied black music and it was the foundation of their success.

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Reply #135 posted 02/20/16 10:32am

NorthC

How many black rock artists love The Beatles? wink
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Reply #136 posted 02/20/16 10:35am

luvsexy4all

ask any artist within any form of music and chances r they mention the beatles...

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Reply #137 posted 02/20/16 11:03am

purplethunder3
121

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SeventeenDayze said:

MickyDolenz said:

It's interesting that some people can constantly make up theories about a "Beyoncé conspiracy" but not write one sentence about why rock is seen by some blacks as "white music" in the USA.

You keep generalizing black people and I'm getting sick of it. Have you met all 33 million of us in this country? How many black rock artists aren't promoted by their label? How many black rock singers are out there doing this kind of music? You have no problem blaming black people for not "calling it black music" but you can sit here and DENY AND IGNORE that the Beatles routinely and repeatedly copied black music and it was the foundation of their success.

[Edited 2/20/16 11:04am]

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #138 posted 02/20/16 11:07am

purplethunder3
121

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MickyDolenz said:

SeventeenDayze said:

It's interesting how some people in this thread are pretending like Michael's music and impact was above and beyond the Beatles....I wonder why.

It's interesting that some people can constantly make up theories about a "Beyoncé conspiracy" but not write one sentence about why rock is seen by some blacks as "white music" in the USA.

^^^ This gif you post cracks me up every time. lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #139 posted 02/20/16 11:11am

free2bfreeda

woohoo nod

dancer smileySmileyfunny dancing stickman emoticondancing stickman emoticonrocking stickman emoticonhappy times emoticondancing kitten emoticonipod dance emoticoncarlton dancing emoticondancing chicken emoticondancing rose emoticon

[Edited 2/20/16 11:29am]

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #140 posted 02/20/16 11:19am

MickyDolenz

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SeventeenDayze said:

You keep generalizing black people and I'm getting sick of it. Have you met all 33 million of us in this country? How many black rock artists aren't promoted by their label? How many black rock singers are out there doing this kind of music? You have no problem blaming black people for not "calling it black music" but you can sit here and DENY AND IGNORE that the Beatles routinely and repeatedly copied black music and it was the foundation of their success.

Point out where I denied anything. If I know who one of The Beatles engineers is, then obviously I know about their influences. I mentioned in another thread that George Harrison & Paul McCartney were fans of ukuele player George Formby. I also made a thread about George remaking Got My Mind Set On You by soul singer James Ray and put both versions in it. I even said in this thread that Led Zeppelin was more known than Howlin' Wolf, one of the blues acts they actually copied from. Anyway, the race of rock bands are irrelevant. You can tell the generally popularity of an act by looking at the Billboard charts. Hootie and The Blowfish was a really popular group with a black singer, but they had little if any presence of the R&B chart. The kind of white acts that usually got big R&B hits were people like Hall & Oates, Average White Band, Wham!/George Michael, Teena Marie, & Michael McDonald, who were all R&B/soul/funk based. They were not rock or blues based like Stevie Ray Vaughn or Eric Clapton.

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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Reply #141 posted 02/20/16 11:34am

MickyDolenz

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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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Reply #142 posted 02/20/16 11:49am

teezee

SeventeenDayze said:



NorthC said:


SeventeenDayze said:


You DO realize that The Beatles and Rolling Stones ALL credited singers such as Little Richard and Chuck Berry right???? I would also argue that Michael Jackson had a more global impact than the Beatles.



Chuck Berry is a good example. He was a singer-songwriter, but he didn't have a band. The Beatles were a self-contained band that wrote and performed their own music. They basically created the whole concept of the rock band. They influenced Bob Dylan to explore rock music and start recording with a band. And Dylan influenced The Beatles, The Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Sly Stone. Pop music is a criss-cross of influences. Like a Rolling Stone was influenced by Muddy Waters, but there's no way Muddy could ever have written about "a diplomat who carries on his shoulder a Siamese cat". And if you're looking for an artist who's had a worldwide impact, it's not The Beatles... It's not Bob Dylan... It's not Michael Jackson... The one artist you hear everwhere in the world and who everybody knows is... Bob Marley.

Thanks for your comments. What about Little Richard though? Besides, since when was not being in a "band" tantamount to not being an architect of a particular genre??? Do you HONESTLY believe that Bob Marley had more of an impact on music worldwide than Michael Jackson? That's ridiculous. People WEAR Bob Marley t-shirts and listen to his music but to suggest that the biggest star on the planet has ever or will ever be anyone other than Michael is absurd.



I don't think he's wrong. Bob Marley is more of an international icon than MJ. His music touches everyone, not only rastafarians like some people seem to think. Look, to put it in perspective I don't even live in the States or in Europe... and when MJ died, the first thing that came to people's mind is "oh yeah, the guy who invented the moonwalk". I was just about to finish high school and the only MJ song they knew was Thriller. There was also this one dude who kept mixing up Michael Jackson and Michael Jordan lol. Bob Marley, on the other hand.... everyone knows about this guy. And when I mean everyone, i mean absolutely EVERYONE! My very same buddies who ignored MJ's musical contributions were the same guys that i often caught them singing 'Three Little Birds', 'Could You Be Loved' or 'Get Up Stand Up' every now and then lol
I think he might be right. Bob Marley is the biggest music icon ever.
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Reply #143 posted 02/20/16 11:59am

NorthC

Thanks for your comment, teezee. Just out of curiosity, where do you live?
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Reply #144 posted 02/20/16 12:18pm

alphastreet

According to people I know alive in the 60s living in Africa, they were really big there and parts of Asia. They fused Asian and African styles with their music and appealed to audiences cross culturally as a quartet, on a global scale. And the effect lasted for years after the 60s. About India , the Middle East and some parts of Africa when it came to Michael Jackson, since he was brought up in the thread, I've heard people I know say they didn't know any other western artist but him during Thriller and apparently j5 was popular along with boy bands like the osmonds , he was big or they had bootleg of his music, though I think a lot of artists from the UK were equally as big throughout the 80s like George Michael. Back to the Beatles, timing could have been part of it too like with most people, and clever marketing but they were very talented, charming, proper
[Edited 2/20/16 12:20pm]
[Edited 2/20/16 12:22pm]
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Reply #145 posted 02/20/16 12:28pm

Shawy89

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I think with facebook and social media, the current & next generations will basically be aware of many legends in the making.

Take David Bowie for example, dude was only known in the UK & some parts of the US, his death made him more famous in many other countries..

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Reply #146 posted 02/20/16 12:33pm

teezee

NorthC said:

Thanks for your comment, teezee. Just out of curiosity, where do you live?

Latin America biggrin

Won't say which country for fear of being tracked down by ppl who dwell too much on the internet.
As I stated before, I don't think MJ has had that kind of impact on a worldwide scale. Quite frankly, I think he's being overrated by mostly US fanatics. Though he is this world's most famous dancer and performer, I'll give you that wink
Bob Marley's music however is much more in tune with the world. His lyrics resonate to people of all races and social-statuses. My pops showed me his music when i was small, and later i kept hearing it on the radio too. During my high school years i could spot at least 10 potheads within my school that were repping that Rastafarian lifestyle lol He is the Reggae icon, the original mothafucka who popularized the whole style and persona of a lazy pothead, but also he's much more than that. He's undoubtedly the voice of peace and love in music. He gives good vibes wherever you are, his lyrics are simple and easy to sing along to. I don't think that low-income struggling people want to hear much about The Beatles or Michael Jackson. They want those good vibes that'll get them through the end of the day. They want to hear 'No Woman No Cry', 'Jammin', 'Is This Love', 'Three Little Birds', 'Buffalo Soldier', etc
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Reply #147 posted 02/20/16 12:36pm

Shawy89

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SeventeenDayze said:

Shawy89 said:

Yes, anybody who says otherwise clearly has no idea how far these guys went...

They impacted the music as an art and as a form of entertainement.

Helter Skelter was probably the first "heavy metal" song even if it wasn't labeled as such at the time it was released.

Revolver, Sgt Pepper, Rubber Soul were albums that defined a whole era of music, let alone the fact that those albums saw The Beatles explore new heights musically, lyrically and sonically. (Even if The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds was essential in establishing that sound that was a hybrid of baroque music, psychedelic rock, chamber pop...etc, yet, The Beatles done it best)

Basically, when you talk about the 60's and the counterculture of the 60's, you had to talk about black people's rights movements, JFK's assassination, Cuban war, Moon landing AND The Beatles' arrival in America.

Good points but would you say that the Beatles impact was mostly within that generation alone though? What I am getting at is this....beyond the 60s and early 70s did the Beatles continue to impact music? Can you point to any modern artists of today that are clearly copying The Beatles? I can't think of any off hand. But, I can think of many artists of today who are still clearly influenced by Michael Jackson and I think 50 years from now there will still be artists influenced by Michael Jackson. I think when it comes to long term impact, there's no question that the Beatles can't touch Michael when it comes to that.

Oh, Tame Impala is an australian band that is BASICALLY influenced by The Beatles, just take a listen to Canyons Sunrise Reprise and you'll see what I'm talkin about. Beach House, Arctic Monkeys, Radiohead, Coldplay..

Plus, MJ himself was influenced by The Beatles and was a big admirer of Paul McCartney (as you know Paul is arguably one of the first to ever sing pop as in the pop MJ sang). So is Joni Mitchell, Bruce Springsteen, Dylan, The Eagles, David Bowie, The Police...etc. (Everyone I mentioned covered at least a song by The Beatles or has a song that is similar to something that was already done by them).

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Reply #148 posted 02/20/16 12:50pm

alphastreet

Shawy89 said:

I think with facebook and social media, the current & next generations will basically be aware of many legends in the making.

Take David Bowie for example, dude was only known in the UK & some parts of the US, his death made him more famous in many other countries..



He was popular before his death in Canada too. There was a whole exhibit dedicated to him for months a few years ago, and generally respected as a legend
[Edited 2/20/16 12:51pm]
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Reply #149 posted 02/20/16 3:56pm

sexton

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duccichucka said:

when people approach a recording artist's album expecting to hear one grand and cohesive artistic statement as opposed to just a collection of singles, this is due to the Beatles and their approach to recording an album and using it as a veritable medium for {recording} art.


This post seems to have been forgotten, but it's the truth. Artists making albums that have any unifying themes (that includes R&B artists too) are influenced by the Beatles whether they realize it or not.

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