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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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alright Monty
tell me who you think is a sublime singer with a great sense of style and showmanship. And the answer David Bowie isn't allowed
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:30, 2 replies, latest was 16 years ago)
Robert Plant, for one.

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:34, Reply)
he is the shiznit

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:37, Reply)
I like Robert Plant
and I like Led Zeppelin. But nothing on this earth would make me credit Robert Plant with extreme helpings of those qualities mentioned above.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:37, Reply)
he is by far the best frontman I've seen live
and that includes Maiden, Metallica, Alice Cooper, Dio, Deep Purple, Tool and many others from different genres whose names escape me.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:39, Reply)
I've never had the privilige
of seeing him live sadly, so it could be that. My dad did though and he thought he was pretty ace
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:41, Reply)
I saw him with his band The Strange Sensation a few years ago
and I suspect it will forever be the best gig I've ever seen.

His voice is incredible live, even more so than on record and I'd never really experienced it before, but he just exudes this aura of awesomeness.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:43, Reply)
Well
I'd certainly go see if I had the opportunity, but a quick glance on his website reveals only a US tour
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:46, Reply)
I can't recommend it enough
I'd kill to see him and Alison Krauss in concert. I suspect that it might make me weep tears of joy.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:48, Reply)

joy man-milk from my 'eye of Hirohito'
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:52, Reply)
that too

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:54, Reply)
I feel
like I've missed out on a lot of good stuff by virtue of youth (not even that young)
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:53, Reply)
how old?

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:55, Reply)
21

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:56, Reply)
perhaps slightly then
I'm 28 though, and started my gig attendance quite late, so there is still time.

Trouble is, the real legends who are left are starting to get on a bit now. I've just been lucky I think.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:58, Reply)
I've seen a few good things
Motorhead etc, but as I think I mentioned once Iron Maiden are absolutely jinxed for me
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:00, Reply)
you'd better not fuck up them playing at sonisphere this year
or me and my mrs will not be impressed
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:03, Reply)
neither of you
could do anything to me that I would not be doing to myself if that happened. But it it makes you feel better the things that have prevented me from seeing have only happened to me, rather than preventing the band playing to all the other people with tickets
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:07, Reply)
that is a reassurance
thanks :-)
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:12, Reply)
it'll
probably be a broken neck this time.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:14, Reply)
Lemmy and Hendrix
both the perfect singers for their style, both excellent musicians at the same time and neither of them an embarrassing uncool knob. A million, million miles away from Dickinson's excruciating personality.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:38, Reply)
I think the thing is
Dickinson perfectly suits their music, which is a technically good, yet kind of tongue-in-cheek type of thing.

and if you don't like that, you won't like him.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:40, Reply)
Lemmy is a bass player and is therefore not a good musician :p

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:42, Reply)
don't let Mr Crow hear you say that

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:45, Reply)
TOO LATE.
An accomplished bass guitarist (i.e., not Sting) is the anchorpoint for the band's rhythm section, and the more modest counterpart to the show-off on lead guitar.

Vipros is going to post that cartoon now, isn't he?
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:53, Reply)
I might

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:53, Reply)
Go for it
You can't dent my pride now: I had a truly awesome spell on bass at a blues jam in Soho last night.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:56, Reply)
can't be arsed
also, I love playing bass, especially jamming crazy stuff.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:57, Reply)
Finally! Got it in writing
I always suspected you really wanted to trade in that gorgeous Strat for a Fender Precision...
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:00, Reply)
as if
I've got a Stingray copy, and if I got an expensive bass it'd be a Stingray. Bass player in my band has a gorgeous purple Stingray. A snip at £1600
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:03, Reply)
I've never had the pleasure of playing one, I must confess
I've always been put off by the position of the pickup though: I've never really taken to bridge-position pickups on basses. However this is doubtless a bias from years of playing a Precision copy, and I know you can get variants with a 2nd pickup. Probably shouldn't knock it until I've tried it.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:09, Reply)
they are a really nice shape
and the necks are very nice.

I can't say I have enough experience on the bass to have considered pickup position
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:10, Reply)
My other bass
has neck and bridge pickups. I guess it depends what sound you're after, but I've found that for all the combinations of sounds it produces, the only worthwhile one is the neck pickup alone. Though it does have a much smaller body and neck profile than a Precision or a Stringray, so that might have something to do with it.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:16, Reply)
pretty sure one of my mates had the 5 string equivalent of that
nice bass to play
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:22, Reply)
They are a delight in that respect
Really easy to get your hands around. Still, every band I've played with has said they preferred the sound of the Precision to the Aria. Again, maybe it's just down to playing style, but the Aria just doesn't have quite the same clout to it. Still lovely to play though...
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:30, Reply)
I think
the fundamental divide here Monty is that you need some level of 'cool' in a standardly defined sense from your rock icons, whereas I don't as such. And while I'm hardly an authority on Hendrix apart from his music I think he's a bit of a twat (unsure what tense to use there.)
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:44, Reply)
I cannot actually believe I'm reading this.
Hendrix (upon whom I really am something of an authority) had some weaknesses - he found it hard to say no to people and was easily pushed around, but I challenge you to find a single account of a contemporary of his saying anything other than that he was a really, really nice, shy, pleasant man.

He also had more talent in his little toe than pretty much any other musician that I'm aware of. Maybe Miles Davis was as able, but I know nothing of him or his work, I confess.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:47, Reply)
But Monty
it's personal opinion. What I've read (obviously I'm too young to have seen him) and what I've heard simply strikes no chords.
I think that was a bad pun, but anyhow the point stands. My grounds for rejecting Hendrix as a personal icon (though obviously musically brilliant) are personal ones.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:52, Reply)
It's a personal opinion, but it's one
I share with every single person who has ever had anything to say about the man.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:59, Reply)
I'm thinking about it
and I can't recall ever hearing anyone say anything about his personality (other than you of course)

this may shock you Monty, but while I obviously have an appreciation of how awesome he was, aside from a select few, I don't really care to listen to his stuff.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:00, Reply)
^
Pretty much this. Sorry Monty but being in complete agreement with everyone else simply isn't cool remember ;)
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:02, Reply)
That's a daft remark.
I've based my opinions on years of researching contemporary accounts, you've classed him as a 'twat' based on, it seems, nothing at all.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:13, Reply)
I don't
like him enough to do research into him. I don't think anything about him seemed especially likable or decent or warranting further enquiry into someone whose music while as I said brilliant, leaves me emotionally cold and un-connected with it
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:16, Reply)
As a guitarist I'm really surprised to hear you say that.
I could watch him perform or listen to his records all day long. To my ears his work creates almost a year 0 for rock, like years BC or AD. The studio innovation and stylistic variety in his output, not to mention the technical ability simply amazes me.

Each to their own, of course. When my father played me Hendrix when I was about 7 or 8 I was floored. No-one since has affected me anywhere near as much.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:12, Reply)
it's not that I don't like it, or appreciate how good it is
and there are a number of his songs that I really really love.

I think it is probably the case that I don't know enough of his stuff, and the ones I do know are the obvious ones which get overplayed.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:14, Reply)
I regard 'Driving South'
on the BBC sessions LP to be the best guitar playing, by anyone, ever.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:16, Reply)
I will check it out then
I assume you've heard the recent album. I've heard a few bits, and have to say that the version of Sunshine of your love is fucking awful.
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:20, Reply)
I'd like to proffer
'St Pancras' by Quintessence as a strong contender for that title. For all the daft mystic chanting, Alan Mostert did play some superb lead guitar. But that recording of 'Driving South' is excellent - is that BBC session worth having on the whole?
(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 12:27, Reply)
brace yourself

(, Wed 7 Apr 2010, 11:48, Reply)

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