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Who are some of the best vocalists in prog?

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Topic: Who are some of the best vocalists in prog?
Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Subject: Who are some of the best vocalists in prog?
Date Posted: April 08 2011 at 18:39
I want singers who've had at least some degree of vocal training, and don't sing with a glottal voice.

Who are some of your favorites? Which bands have really good vocalists? I like Neal Morse and Steven Wilson's voice.



Replies:
Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: April 08 2011 at 21:25
From the more famous bands that I know, I go for John Anderson, Annie Haslam, and Freddy Mercury... and then many of the female fronted metal bands too. Very special mention and better than most, are italian singers Francesco di Giancomo (from Banco del Mutuo Socorso), and Jimmy Spitaleri from Metamorfosi.


Posted By: Mushroom Sword
Date Posted: April 08 2011 at 21:34
Geoff Tate. No doubt, he has an amazing voice. Like Dellinger said above, Freddie Mercury (probably the best rock vocalist of all time) and Jon Anderson.
Cedric Bixler-Zavala of TMV can wail pretty well.

Edit: oops. Fixed it!


Posted By: Harry Hood
Date Posted: April 08 2011 at 22:43
As far as range and technical prowess go:

Daniel Gildenlow
Peter Hammill
Steve Walsh (in his younger days)
Dan Swano
Fish (in his younger days)
Ross Jennings (lesser known, he's in a band called Haken and has an incredibly diverse range)

Then theres the singers who aren't as technically gifted but can still belt out some tunes with some real intensity:
Fish (in more recent years)
Steve Hogarth
Steve Walsh (more recently)'
Hasse Froberg
Roine Stolt
Nad Sylvan
Rob Sowden
Peter Nichols
Chuck Schuldiner


In many ways I actually prefer the latter singers to the former.


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 08 2011 at 23:31
I endorse the suggestions of Haslam, Gildenlow and Walsh.  Also, doesn't really have a huge range but a very pleasant voice: Richard Sinclair.  Phil Collins in the four man Genesis days too, especially the song Ripples.  Not particularly trained, these last two but given that you mentioned Morse and Wilson, I am not sure that is exactly what you're looking for.  Would also suggest The Gathering's singer Anneke van Giersbergen, especially the album How to Measure A Planet. 


Posted By: Man Overboard
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 00:11
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Not particularly trained, these last two but given that you mentioned Morse and Wilson, I am not sure that is exactly what you're looking for.  

Glad somebody said it LOL


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https://soundcloud.com/erin-susan-jennings" rel="nofollow - Bedroom guitarist". Composer, Arranger, Producer. Perfection may not exist, but I may still choose to serve Perfection.

Commissions considered.


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 01:47
Always loved Bryan Ferry's strange 'wobbly' voice.
 
On an emotional level Pete Nicholls (IQ) does it for me. I also like Matt Bellamy for sheer intensity (check out Sing For Absolution)
 
Technically the best imo:
Chris Thompson
Bruce Dickinson
 
The worst:
The guy from Eloy although I love the band
 


Posted By: SimZeppelin
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 03:13
Personal favourites of mine are Peter Nicholls (IQ),  Rikard Sjoblom (Beardfish) and Derek Shulman (Gentle Giant).

Then of course there are the all-time prog greats like Gabriel, Mercury, anderson and Geddy Lee.

Although Andy Tillison's voice has never been great, I always appreciated that his songs were very personal, so I guess good vocals aren't always so important LOL


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Going to trial with a lawyer who considers your whole lifestyle a crime-in-progress is not a happy prospect.


Posted By: Billy Pilgrim
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 03:36
Originally posted by Mushroom Sword Mushroom Sword wrote:

Omar Rodriguez Lopez can wail pretty well.


Omar is the Voltas guitar player. Cedric is the singer.




Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 03:48
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL


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Posted By: martinprog77
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 03:55
Patrik Lundström  from ritual and kaipa  has an amazing voice

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Nothing can last
there are no second chances.
Never give a day away.
Always live for today.




Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:36
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL

While I agree that Bruce is not technically the best, there's much more to his singing than just screaming.  He used to sing at the top of a tenor's range all the time in the 80s so that is very demanding. Sure, we have so very many of those metal sirens by now but it's still not for everyone. And not just the fact that he hits those notes, he belts them powerfully. And he sings in tune all the time, so it's not screaming in the Tom Araya-sense at all.  Lacked adaptability and favoured an overwrought style of emoting but that's a different story.  


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:41
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL

While I agree that Bruce is not technically the best, there's much more to his singing than just screaming.  He used to sing at the top of a tenor's range all the time in the 80s so that is very demanding. Sure, we have so very many of those metal sirens by now but it's still not for everyone. And not just the fact that he hits those notes, he belts them powerfully. And he sings in tune all the time, so it's not screaming in the Tom Araya-sense at all.  Lacked adaptability and favoured an overwrought style of emoting but that's a different story.  

I meant shouter rather than screamer. My mistake. He shouts. 


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:45
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL

While I agree that Bruce is not technically the best, there's much more to his singing than just screaming.  He used to sing at the top of a tenor's range all the time in the 80s so that is very demanding. Sure, we have so very many of those metal sirens by now but it's still not for everyone. And not just the fact that he hits those notes, he belts them powerfully. And he sings in tune all the time, so it's not screaming in the Tom Araya-sense at all.  Lacked adaptability and favoured an overwrought style of emoting but that's a different story.  

I meant shouter rather than screamer. My mistake. He shouts. 

Well, maybe my objections come across as semantic, but Bruce is simply belting hard at high pitch. It's not shouting because he's very much in tune.  The last lines of Hallowed Be Thy Name, for example, are SUNG.  With a lot of power and fury, yes, but it's still singing. I would not call it shouting or screaming because trying to shout out those notes like that day in day out in concert can wreck the singer's voice. Bruce was absolutely in control and knew what he was doing.


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:47
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL

While I agree that Bruce is not technically the best, there's much more to his singing than just screaming.  He used to sing at the top of a tenor's range all the time in the 80s so that is very demanding. Sure, we have so very many of those metal sirens by now but it's still not for everyone. And not just the fact that he hits those notes, he belts them powerfully. And he sings in tune all the time, so it's not screaming in the Tom Araya-sense at all.  Lacked adaptability and favoured an overwrought style of emoting but that's a different story.  

I meant shouter rather than screamer. My mistake. He shouts. 

Well, maybe my objections come across as semantic, but Bruce is simply belting hard at high pitch. It's not shouting because he's very much in tune.  The last lines of Hallowed Be Thy Name, for example, are SUNG.  With a lot of power and fury, yes, but it's still singing. I would not call it shouting or screaming because trying to shout out those notes like that day in day out in concert can wreck the singer's voice. Bruce was absolutely in control and knew what he was doing.

Lets get this clear...to me he is a shouter. Nothing you say will sway that opinion.Smile


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:52
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

Lets get this clear...to me he is a shouter. Nothing you say will sway that opinion.Smile

Fine, but I raised the objection only because you are questioning another's assessment of Bruce's technical abilities based on what appear to be somewhat inaccurate observations.  You are free to call him what you like, but factually, Bruce is a singer, he's not a typical thrash metal shouter sort at all. 


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 04:55
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

Lets get this clear...to me he is a shouter. Nothing you say will sway that opinion.Smile

Fine, but I raised the objection only because you are questioning another's assessment of Bruce's technical abilities based on what appear to be somewhat inaccurate observations.  You are free to call him what you like, but factually, Bruce is a singer, he's not a typical thrash metal shouter sort at all. 

He shouts. Belting a song throughout is shouting. And of course factually he is a singer. So is mark Knoppfler factually a singer even though he talks. he's a talker. Don't pull this my opinion are true nonsense.


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:00
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

He shouts. Belting a song throughout is shouting.

Wrong. Belting is simply maintaining chest resonance even at pitches where you'd normally be required to move to head.  Sounds of the Sea chorus is as much belted as Hallowed...., just used for different purposes.

 
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 And of course factually he is a singer. So is mark Knoppfler factually a singer even though he talks. he's a talker. Don't pull this my facts are true nonsense.

I really haven't heard enough Dire Straits to relate to that analogy but if your point is simply that any vocalist is a singer, that's not what I was saying at all.  A vocalist projecting tuneful melodies is a singer.  Bruce definitely meets that criterion, whether he sings gently or at the top of his voice is irrelevant.  If your point was that he cannot emote over gentle or sparse settings, many technically accomplished singers don't fare very well at that either so diversity or adaptability has nothing to do with technical skill.  


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:04
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

He shouts. Belting a song throughout is shouting.

Wrong. Belting is simply maintaining chest resonance even at pitches where you'd normally be required to move to head.  Sounds of the Sea chorus is as much belted as Hallowed...., just used for different purposes.

 
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 And of course factually he is a singer. So is mark Knoppfler factually a singer even though he talks. he's a talker. Don't pull this my facts are true nonsense.

I really haven't heard enough Dire Straits to relate to that analogy but if your point is simply that any vocalist is a singer, that's not what I was saying at all.  A vocalist projecting tuneful melodies is a singer.  Bruce definitely meets that criterion, whether he sings gently or at the top of his voice is irrelevant.  If your point was that he cannot emote over gentle or sparse settings, many technically accomplished singers don't fare very well at that either so diversity or adaptability has nothing to do with technical skill.  

You're wrong ( to use your term)
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.

Having said that, I love Iron Maiden and Bruce.( just wish he wouldn't shout so much)


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Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:08
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

I want singers who've had at least some degree of vocal training, and don't sing with a glottal voice.

Who are some of your favorites? Which bands have really good vocalists? I like Neal Morse and Steven Wilson's voice.

Even singers WITH training use "glottal voice" (I presume you mean "head voice"); you can't reach certain high notes without using head voice. If you don't believe me read the wikipedia entry about vocal resonation:
http://vocal%20resonation" rel="nofollow - http://vocal resonation
Vocal training only teaches you  how to switch between them effortlessly and to support the sung note with the diaphragm.



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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:10
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.



No such thing as that, shouting in tune (which is not what he does, once again) is still singing, I am not going to call it anything else and also the claim that a singer who belts all the time cannot be technically the best is off base.  Once again, what your opinion of Bruce is and what you choose to call him is not my concern, but the conclusions you have drawn are inaccurate.    


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:12
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.



No such thing as that, shouting in tune (which is not what he does, once again) is still singing, I am not going to call it anything else and also the claim that a singer who belts all the time cannot be technically the best is off base.  Once again, what your opinion of Bruce is and what you choose to call him is not my concern, but the conclusions you have drawn are inaccurate.    

And I insist that my description is wholly accurate. 


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http://www.last.fm/user/Snow_Dog" rel="nofollow">


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:14
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


Even singers WITH training use "glottal voice" (I presume you mean "head voice"); you can't reach certain high notes without using head voice. If you don't believe me read the wikipedia entry about vocal resonation:

Vocal training only teaches you  how to switch between them effortlessly and to support the sung note with the diaphragm.


  ClapThese people typically assume a high note produced with a good deal of resonance must have been produced from the chest but of course, that is not the case.  Dio's highest notes on Neon Knights are definitely off the head, that they SOUND chesty doesn't mean they are. 


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:18
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

And I insist that my description is wholly accurate. 

I am not talking about your description of Bruce, I am saying the conclusion that a screamer (which he's not) cannot be technically the best is wrong.  Bruce is not technically the best in my opinion either but it's the larger inference that that style of singing by itself is not technically demanding that I object to. 


Posted By: Snow Dog
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:19
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 

And I insist that my description is wholly accurate. 

I am not talking about your description of Bruce, I am saying the conclusion that a screamer (which he's not) cannot be technically the best is wrong.  Bruce is not technically the best in my opinion either but it's the larger inference that that style of singing by itself is not technically demanding that I object to. 

i didn't say he was a screamer. And object all you wish., I'm not saying he has no technical ability.


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http://www.last.fm/user/Snow_Dog" rel="nofollow">


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:24
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 I'm not saying he has no technical ability.

You asked how can a screamer be technically the best.  Sorry, but adaptability has nothing to do with technical ability. Also, implied in your observation is the suggestion that Bruce cannot sing softly, which is false as well.  What you're saying is a bit like asking how can Petrucci be one of the more technically accomplished rock guitarists if he plays at 11 so much?  No, he is.  


Posted By: Kosmonaut
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:30
Gudny Aspaas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AZBtcgx4Ss


Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:45
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.



No such thing as that, shouting in tune (which is not what he does, once again) is still singing, I am not going to call it anything else and also the claim that a singer who belts all the time cannot be technically the best is off base.  Once again, what your opinion of Bruce is and what you choose to call him is not my concern, but the conclusions you have drawn are inaccurate.    

For once I have to agree with Snow Dog: Shouting IS singing. Take for example the opera singer Marlis Petersen, she is a trained opera singer, and she just has been voted singer of the year in Germany for the second time (first time in 2004). She grunts, she shouts, she croaks, whatever is necessary for the role; she definitely is not always singing beautifully.  She received high international praise for the role of Violetta in Verdi's "La Traviata" BECAUSE of this kind of singing. Her comment on that role was: "I can't sing beautifully when I am supposed to suffer from tuberculosis, so I croak. if necessary". In December 2001 she filled in for Natalie Dessay in the role of Zerbinetta for a production of "Ariadne auf Naxos" at the Royal Opera House in London, with tremendous success. She recently had a tremendous success at the Metropolitan opera for her role of Ophélie in "Hamlet" by Ambroise Thomas.
Marlis Petersen is proof that shouting IS singing.



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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 05:49
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.



No such thing as that, shouting in tune (which is not what he does, once again) is still singing, I am not going to call it anything else and also the claim that a singer who belts all the time cannot be technically the best is off base.  Once again, what your opinion of Bruce is and what you choose to call him is not my concern, but the conclusions you have drawn are inaccurate.    

For once I have to agree with Snow Dog: Shouting IS singing. Take for example the opera singer Marlis Petersen, she is a trained opera singer, and she just has been voted singer of the year in Germany for the second time (first time in 2004). She grunts, she shouts, she croaks, whatever is necessary for the role; she definitely is not always singing beautifully.  She received high international praise for the role of Violetta in Verdi's "La Traviata" BECAUSE of this kind of singing. Her comment on that role was: "I can't sing beautifully when I am supposed to suffer from tuberculosis, so I croak. if necessary". In December 2001 she filled in for Natalie Dessay in the role of Zerbinetta for a production of "Ariadne auf Naxos" at the Royal Opera House in London, with tremendous success. She recently had a tremendous success at the Metropolitan opera for her role of Ophélie in "Hamlet" by Ambroise Thomas.
Marlis Petersen is proof that shouting IS singing.


Er, you're missing the point. I simply said belting in a heavy metal song is not shouting. I am not even sure if you understood what I call shouting.  Comparing metal shouting a la Araya to an opera singer is taking it out of context. 


Posted By: AtomicCrimsonRush
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 06:46
Floor Jansen
Bruce Dickinson
Heather Findlay
Annie Haslam
James Labrie
Jon Anderson
Tarja Turunnen
Fish


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Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 07:03
I call ANY vocal perfomance accompanied by music"singing"; even sprechgesang is singing. Or what about throat singing, a technique I discovered by chance when I was a little kid and which I trained to perfection since (without having any idea it was called "throat singing" until I heard a radio feature about it)?  Your vocal range is limited with this technique; on the other hand you can sing more than just one note with that technique.
A famous example where "speaking" is used instead if singing is the wolf's glen scene from Carl Maria von Weber's opera "Der Freischütz". Here the whole scene in two parts:




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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 08:28
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

I call ANY vocal perfomance accompanied by vocal "singing"; 

Fine, but this is again not really in context with what the discussion was about.  I was, clearly, making a discussion between shouting as a vocal technique and singing as it is normally understood. Bruce is still very much a singer, we should go by technique and not effect.  


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 14:11
Yes I'm looking for singers that actually hit notes, instead of screaming or shouting them. I think Neal Morse is a nice melodic emotional voice and it presents the feeling so well on Spock's Beard's 'Snow' album, which is one of my favorite prog albums.


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 14:16
Glottal voice is using air from the lungs, its air being used from a very tensed throat, and this is in turn bad for the throat.

Singing lessons train you to have control over your breath and be in tune with your body. Jazz singers did this too, but they created methods that focused on the falsetto voice.


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 14:22
Whats the difference between technicality and intensity with vocalists? You guys are giving lots of different descriptions.

Oh yeah, I like Chris Thompson. Also I'm surprised nobody's mentioned James LaBrie, while I dislike him, he has amazing intonation. Did James LaBrie study the classical vocal methods?


Posted By: silverpot
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 16:06
Greg Lake is the greatest IMO, not only has he a powerful and beatiful voice, it's also the way he stresses the words and his timing.
I also think David Gilmour and Justin Hayward should get a mention. Lovely voices, mellow and soothing.


Posted By: SayYes
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 19:35
Annie Haslam - Incredibly good voice
Freddie Mercury - Really good voice
Peter Hammill - Lovely good voice
Jon Anderson - Harshly good voice
David Surkamp - Creepy good voice



Posted By: MoodyRush
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 20:01
I don't know if I've read Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull on these lists, but I think he's a great singer. Geddy Lee, Steve Wilson, Opeth's vocalist (however you spell his Swedish names...), Jon Anderson, and Justin Hayward are a few more of my favorite vocalists.

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Follow me down to the valley below.
Moonlight is bleeding from out of your soul.
-Lazarus


Posted By: Luna
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 20:28
Daniel Gildenlow and Peter Hammill


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Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 21:42
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

. Also I'm surprised nobody's mentioned James LaBrie, while I dislike him, he has amazing intonation. Did James LaBrie study the classical vocal methods?


He was mentioned and he's not all that great, imo.  Listen to Daniel Gildenlow or Russell Allen (Symphony X), amazing singers.  And though I have read that LaBrie worked under some vocal coaches, I don't know that he actually learnt classical singing. 


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 23:22
I know who Daniel Gildenlow is, I like his voice, and I really like Russel Allen's voice too. Did Russel Allen study the classical methods? He sounds like a baritone or a tenor. 


Posted By: MillsLayne
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 23:26
I'm not sure if any of the guys I'm going to list have formal vocal training, but I personally think they have great voices.  In no order:
 
Mariusz Duda (Riverside)
Rikard Sjöblom (Beardfish)
Ian Kenny (Karnivool)
Sel Balamir (Amplifier)
Mike Vennart (Oceansize)


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ht


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 23:27
Not that I know of. The trend these days is for singers to work with voice coaches, so they don't necessarily study classical singing.  Annie Haslam studied under a classical instructor for a short time but I don't know of any other of the better known prog singers who did so.  And that was in the 70s before instructional tapes and books by voice coaches became the rage.   


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 09 2011 at 23:57
Whats the difference of singing coaches? What do they teach?

Also why has singing changed so much? do people not sing from the diaphragm anymore? is that an old technical thing.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 00:14
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

Whats the difference of singing coaches? What do they teach?

Also why has singing changed so much? do people not sing from the diaphragm anymore? is that an old technical thing.

They simply teach you the mechanics and anatomy of using your diaphragm.  So, people do still use the diaphragm to sing,  at least those who sing 'correctly' like Allen, so I am not sure what you are referring to when you say singing has changed so much.  As I said before, technique matters, and not effect.  Many heavy metal singers can sing with BIG production, volume and power at the high end of a tenor's range, and they are NOT doing anything they aren't supposed to. Dio, for instance, had lost precious little in his voice right till his last years and he sang for nearly 40 years live. 


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 00:21
For some reason, remembered an awesome singer who hasn't been mentioned yet in this thread, I think. Zach Stevens of Savatage, kicka**! Headbanger


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 00:38
I mean, don't most rock/metal singers use glottal voice? Before Jazz/Blues singers studied the classical methods, and the singing styles of opera singers such as Luciano Pavrotti. Why don't all singers study the classical opera methods?

Jazz/Blues focused more on a head voice.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 00:49
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

I mean, don't most rock/metal singers use glottal voice? 

I don't think so and that is why I cited the example of Dio. He had such a long career and so many shows under his belt but there was barely a dent on his voice through the years.  Bruce Dickinson's voice too held up well over the years.  Halford and Tate ran into problems but that was on account of their lifestyle, particularly excessive drinking.  That is what I have tried to emphasize on this thread. What sounds throaty to the listener may not be so at all, it may be controlled and "safe" singing.  Anyhow, long story short, rock singers going over C5 definitely switch to head voice just like other singers.  What you are suggesting might have applied to Freddie Mercury who apparently contracted some voice problems later on in his career (and again, whether THAT was the cause or something else, I don't know). But high singing in rock/metal from 80s onwards, especially the Allen/Hansi types, is controlled and 'correct'. 


Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 03:16
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

I mean, don't most rock/metal singers use glottal voice? 

I don't think so and that is why I cited the example of Dio. He had such a long career and so many shows under his belt but there was barely a dent on his voice through the years.  Bruce Dickinson's voice too held up well over the years.  Halford and Tate ran into problems but that was on account of their lifestyle, particularly excessive drinking.  That is what I have tried to emphasize on this thread. What sounds throaty to the listener may not be so at all, it may be controlled and "safe" singing.  Anyhow, long story short, rock singers going over C5 definitely switch to head voice just like other singers.  What you are suggesting might have applied to Freddie Mercury who apparently contracted some voice problems later on in his career (and again, whether THAT was the cause or something else, I don't know). But high singing in rock/metal from 80s onwards, especially the Allen/Hansi types, is controlled and 'correct'. 

"Glottal" does not mean "incorrect" or "uncontrolled" at all; it just means using the glottis. Nothing wrong with that at all. And of course metal singers use it. And why not?


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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 06:04
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


"Glottal" does not mean "incorrect" or "uncontrolled" at all; it just means using the glottis.


I said metal singing is not necessarily  uncontrolled or incorrect.  His posts insinuate that rock/metal singers use glottal voice which spoils the throat. And that is what I have responded to.

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

And of course metal singers use it. And why not?


Could you give some examples of say Ronnie James Dio using it because as far as I know you, he uses his chest and head, that's all.  Which singers and what style of metal singing do you have in mind when you say they use glottal voice?


Posted By: Prog Geo
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 06:09
I'll write the best.Mikael Akerfeldt!

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Sonorous Meal show every Sunday at 20:00 (greek time) on http://www.justincaseradio.com


Posted By: rdtprog
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 08:50
Marco Glühmann
Jon Anderson
Fish
Gabriel
Peter Nicholls


Posted By: Horizons
Date Posted: April 10 2011 at 16:35
Peter Gabriel has always had a memorable and fantastic voice.
One of my favorites.


Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 00:44
Benoit David Clap

I mean, the bloke has to be the most ORIGINAL vocalist in prog, right?


Posted By: Gerinski
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 13:12
Some of my favourites:
 
Greg Lake
Peter Gabriel
Fish
Annie Haslam
Freddy Mercury (early years)
Bowie  (and by extension Peter Hamill, even the differences between both I can not help thinking they have very similar timbres)
Emila Derkowska from the polish Quidam
Jon Anderson
Cyrus from Citizen Cain
John Wetton
Paul Wrightson from Arena
Steve Walsh
Chris Squire (as backing vocalist)
 
Thinking about Squire makes me think of extending the question to great backing vocalists. Brian May and Roger Taylor from Queen were excellent!   what about others?
 
 
 
 


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:11
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

From the more famous bands that I know, I go for John Anderson, Annie Haslam, and Freddy Mercury... and then many of the female fronted metal bands too. Very special mention and better than most, are italian singers Francesco di Giancomo (from Banco del Mutuo Socorso), and Jimmy Spitaleri from Metamorfosi.
 
Nice to see Francesco mentioned ... he is indeed very special.
 
It's hard to not think that Peter Hammill is probably the best, but his best work is behind him, and I am not sure that he is being as vital today as he was way back, when his use of the "voice" was unreal, and totally had many people wondering ... wow ... how can he do that? ... you can if you "live" your music --- and it's not just a song!
 
I would consider Freddie as well ... even though a lot of Queen's music might not be considered "progressive", but a lot of the work they did was far more progressive than most of the bands we list in the top 100! And not just a repetition either which tells you that they were about a lot more specific on the content and work they did, than most bands ever consider!
 
From the women's side, the best and worst is in one person, that is really hard for many folks to accept. Renate, from AD2 is an acquired taste, as she can be soft and gentle and then you listen to "Mozambique" and all you can say is ... ohhh my gawd ... it is down right vicious and so Peter Hammill like that it is scary ... not to mention that the lyrics are absolutely unreal and with it on top of it. She used her voice in many different ways and did a lot of different things, and you can see her operatic ability in "Yeti" and some other nice addons in other pieces through out. She is a totally non-conventional singer, and the kind of singer that we're likely to say ... gawd ... she's horrible, but that's like saying that the early days of Iggy were any better!
 
Annie Haslam has the range, but is, otherwise a very conventional singer on an excellent band that helped showcase and back her voice. Not sure how progressive that really is, other than ... just excellent musicianship and composition instead.
 
I have a hard time not including Roy Harper in these lists ... he is a fabulous singer and he can drone and groan and scream and shout with the best of them, and like Peter Hammill, he knows how to accentuate what he is saying ... on his later years he is losing that a bit, but he's still an excellent artist and his period from the mid 70's through the 80's is on par with PH's material and then some. We simply do not have the ear for music and poetry ... and we consider Peter progressive and Roy not ... simply because he uses an accoustic guitar instead of a keyboard.
 
Peter Gabriel is ok in my book. I think he got too infatuated with his fame and wanting to doll himself up with some girls here and there, and I hope that he comes back around and worry less about looking fabulous and instead do more music. He has experimented enough and heard enough, that I think that he has not figured out how to work with or use all that stuff ... but he really could use writing something like The Lamb again ... to help explore his insides better ... and get off the pop routines and material.
 
Jim Morrison is probably the best of them all, though ... there never has been as expressive and poetic a voice as his in rock music, and no one could dally from the weirdest to the most beautiful in such a poetic way. His band is not quite listed as "progressive" and it should be one of the bands that we should look at and appreciate the most. That kind of imagery, poetry, lyrics and creativity to color the words, is what "progressive" was all about ... the rest is not worth discussing!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:13
 
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:


Technically the best imo:

Bruce Dickinson
 


How can a screamer be technically the best?LOL

Easy ... just be named Peter Hammill!
 
Clap


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:17
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:


Even singers WITH training use "glottal voice" (I presume you mean "head voice"); you can't reach certain high notes without using head voice. If you don't believe me read the wikipedia entry about vocal resonation:

Vocal training only teaches you  how to switch between them effortlessly and to support the sung note with the diaphragm.


  ClapThese people typically assume a high note produced with a good deal of resonance must have been produced from the chest but of course, that is not the case.  Dio's highest notes on Neon Knights are definitely off the head, that they SOUND chesty doesn't mean they are. 
 
Wait a minute ... you guys making an assumption that "progressice" this or that, actually knows and understands "resonance" ... ???  Confused


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:24
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

 
 

He shouts. he shouts in tune. But he shouts.



No such thing as that, shouting in tune (which is not what he does, once again) is still singing, I am not going to call it anything else and also the claim that a singer who belts all the time cannot be technically the best is off base.  Once again, what your opinion of Bruce is and what you choose to call him is not my concern, but the conclusions you have drawn are inaccurate.    

For once I have to agree with Snow Dog: Shouting IS singing.
...
 
And in the 60's and 70's there was a lot of work being done having to do with "voice" and experimentation ... and sounds off the voice also counted.
 
I remember the first time we heard Flora Purim, and someone next to me asked ... is that supposed to be singing? ... and unffortunately that means that this person only knows one thing about vocals ... and of course, they have never heard a lot of Eastern Music, that happens to have a lot of "vocal effects" and "variations" that add to the singing and the lyricsof the work at hand.
 
Again ... we're too dang stuck up on an idea of singing to accept anything else possible ... and for people that the vocal this and that is a limitation, not an expression ... then it would not be called "singing" ... and things like this really show how the mentality of western commercial music is really hurting expression!
 
Expression creates singing ... not the other way around! So something being a scream or other ... so what? ... it's a part of the expression, and if you are upset that Jim Morrison screamed ... you can not petition the lord with prayer ... you are obviously going to miss the best part of the trip!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:36
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

I mean, don't most rock/metal singers use glottal voice? Before Jazz/Blues singers studied the classical methods, and the singing styles of opera singers such as Luciano Pavrotti. Why don't all singers study the classical opera methods?
...
 
I'm not sure this is necessary ... since in the end, the restrictions and a lot of the defined details tend to restrict expression and say ... "you can't do that" ... and in the end, the fact of the matter is that the 60's was a time when "voice" was explored ... and this was extremelly visible in the theater circles and there is no reason to see that it was not happening in the music circles, because it was ... many of these people and bands were around a lot of these things and explorations ... and it helped music tremendously, when you see someone like Jim Morrison do his l=poetry on many pieces of music with the excellent use of his voice.
 
Other vocal things were also done, with a lot of modern writers involved with more than one artist, and Mr. Nekkid Lunch has more band connections directly than PA will ever list! And it triggered different music being done and created in the same style that he used to discuss ... which was called 52 stentence pick up ... and the order? ... who cares! ... and you know that the emotional content in that sequence is ... messed up and ... how do you interpret it?
 
Now discussing vocalists is an issue when you get into some of the Eastern voices, that have far more range, and depth than ANY rock, or opera singer out there ... to the point that almost NONE of them have the guts to try different things in the other countries. And western music is easy for many of these eastern singers because the scale is simple by comparison to their scales and notes!
 
But let's not get into "preferences" as the dividing line as to what good singing is ... because 95 out of 100 Western singers ... rarely come close!
 
As for some opera singers ... there are some differences. You can catch Renata Tebaldi and Birgit Nilsson duke it out in Turandot ... and Tebaldi is very soft and smooth, and Nilsson is very powerful and not as smooth and I keep thinking that Nilsson's is more Germanic style of singing, specially Wagner, where the ability to make it through and last out a long time is way more important than otherwise ... most opera singers do not do Wagner, and it becomes an endurance test! Tebaldi, like many Italians is very smooth and clean and it is very much in line with the Italian music, which is expressive and romantic and emotional.
 
I had a name for the men opera singers, the version of Tosca that we have in Santa Barbara, and he is extremelly smooth, while Pavarotti is almost all power ... and I always thought that he lacked the subtlety that softness could add to singing. He was good, mind you, but not complete for my tastes? Just an example ... I'll find out the name of that other singer and update this post.


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 14:59
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Benoit David Clap

I mean, the bloke has to be the most ORIGINAL vocalist in prog, right?
 
I'm not sure that's fair to him ... it's the only voice he has and he is capable of using it ... but he lacks the spiritual and internal side to bring it across any better ... and to me, that is sad and brings YES down some. From the couple of things I have heard, he is a very good singer ... but I am not sure I would ever place him in the same category as Jon at all! ... EVER!
 
Just a thought.


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: akaBona
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 16:44
Jon Anderson, Derek Shulman, Richard Sinclair, Robert Wyatt, Peter Gabriel, Klaus Blasquiz, David Surkamp, Ian Anderson ...


Posted By: hobocamp
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 17:36
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

I endorse the suggestions of Haslam, Gildenlow and Walsh.   
Sounds like a law firm.
Maybe Greg Lake back in the day. He sounds terrible lately.


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 20:21
Its not that i'm afraid that vocalists were exploring new territory. Its that singing went from needing to create resonance from your body to just getting up to a mic and shouting.

The voice is an instrument, and just because someone can talk and shout does not mean that ANYONE can sing, it certainly doesn't mean everyone should be considered a singer. The voice is an instrument that you learn with practice, just like any other instrument. Learning to sing requires an attunement and connection to your mind and body.

Getting up onto a stage and shouting in an open mic, isn't singing.


Posted By: Drew
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 20:34
Has anyone mentioned the vocalist from Katatonia? He sings on a few Ayreon tracks...his name escapes me....


Jonas Renske I believe...


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Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: April 11 2011 at 23:42
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Benoit David Clap

I mean, the bloke has to be the most ORIGINAL vocalist in prog, right?
 
I'm not sure that's fair to him ... it's the only voice he has and he is capable of using it ... but he lacks the spiritual and internal side to bring it across any better ... and to me, that is sad and brings YES down some. From the couple of things I have heard, he is a very good singer ... but I am not sure I would ever place him in the same category as Jon at all! ... EVER!
 
Just a thought.

Yeah, probably not fair to B.D., but I'm still mighty rankled about how all that went down.  I would have preferred for Yes to find a totally different vocalist, rather than someone who quite adroitly mimics Anderson.  

However, their formula isn't to chart new territory, but rather to fill seats of folks anxious to hear the Yes classics & (they hope) some high-quality new material.  It is upon this new material that BD's reputation in this business will be made or broken.   Yes could have selected a young woman and opened up a whole legion of new fans.  Or not. 

If I drop the sarcasm, I'd say that the duet of Gabriel and Collins (singing backing vocals, one octave higher) is especially compelling to my ears.  "Supper's Ready" intro for example....."Walking across the sitting room..."  very nice and subtle, these days it would be done with octave doublers/auto tune etc. 

Bassist Jeff Berlin did some very nice vocals on Bruford's "Gradually Going Tornado," and he is rarely mentioned for his vocals.    I'm also partial to Colin Carter's voice in Flash, although that is something of an acquired taste I guess.   Flash's bassist (now guitarist) Ray Bennett has a very pleasant voice also.  

And, nobody mentioned Gordon Haskell....he of the magnificent scream in KC's "Cirkus" on the LP "Lizard"!!!  


Posted By: giselle
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 03:34
Originally posted by Mushroom Sword Mushroom Sword wrote:

Geoff Tate. No doubt, he has an amazing voice. Like Dellinger said above, Freddie Mercury (probably the best rock vocalist of all time) and Jon Anderson.
Cedric Bixler-Zavala of TMV can wail pretty well.

Edit: oops. Fixed it!
Freddie the best of all time? A fine vocal sound and an excellent range, certainly an outstanding singer, but a horse for a course rather than fitting a category as sweeping as that. The man who took his place was a better singer (Paul Rogers) but significantly, Paul didn't fit with Queen anywhere near as well as Freddie did. Freddie was the best Rock vocalist of all time - for Queen. I thought 'Barcelona' was an outstanding performance for a Rock singer. 
 
Jon Anderson? A tuneful vocalist, with a good range, but an uninteresting and somewhat undefined voice, almost like an ambience rather than a lead vocal. Excellent on harmonies.
 
Geoff tate, no comment.
 
Then again, we all have our opinions!


Posted By: SergiUriah
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 05:07


Of Course.


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http://img229.imageshack.us/i/bonfirma.jpg/">



Posted By: Paravion
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 07:23
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

Glottal voice is using air from the lungs, its air being used from a very tensed throat, and this is in turn bad for the throat.


Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

"Glottal" does not mean "incorrect" or "uncontrolled" at all; it just means using the glottis.
Friede is right. Admittedly, I don't know much about singing techniques, but I am trained in phonetics. 

You need air to sing, air comes from the lungs. On it's way out it has to pass through the glottis (whether your throat is tense or not is a different matter) so all instances of singing or speech, unless artificial, are glottal. "Glottal voice" is a tautological descriptor, and is thus not informative at all unless you need to distinguish between speech-synthesis voice and human voice.    


Glottis is the space between the vocal folds, and it looks like this:
 


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 11:10
Originally posted by giselle giselle wrote:

Originally posted by Mushroom Sword Mushroom Sword wrote:

Geoff Tate. No doubt, he has an amazing voice. Like Dellinger said above, Freddie Mercury (probably the best rock vocalist of all time) and Jon Anderson.
Cedric Bixler-Zavala of TMV can wail pretty well.

Edit: oops. Fixed it!
Freddie the best of all time? A fine vocal sound and an excellent range, certainly an outstanding singer, but a horse for a course rather than fitting a category as sweeping as that. The man who took his place was a better singer (Paul Rogers) but significantly, Paul didn't fit with Queen anywhere near as well as Freddie did. Freddie was the best Rock vocalist of all time - for Queen. I thought 'Barcelona' was an outstanding performance for a Rock singer. 
 
Jon Anderson? A tuneful vocalist, with a good range, but an uninteresting and somewhat undefined voice, almost like an ambience rather than a lead vocal. Excellent on harmonies.
 
Geoff tate, no comment.
 
Then again, we all have our opinions!


Agreed on both counts. Freddie was a great singer but somewhat overrated.


Posted By: King Manuel
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 11:48
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Benoit David Clap

I mean, the bloke has to be the most ORIGINAL vocalist in prog, right?
He has aexcellent, no doubt. Love his work with Mystery. If he is thowever he most original vocalist is another question.
Phideaux Xavier is another of my favourite vocalists who has a very pleasing voice.


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 15:06
Originally posted by Paravion Paravion wrote:

Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

Glottal voice is using air from the lungs, its air being used from a very tensed throat, and this is in turn bad for the throat.


Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

"Glottal" does not mean "incorrect" or "uncontrolled" at all; it just means using the glottis.
Friede is right. Admittedly, I don't know much about singing techniques, but I am trained in phonetics. 

You need air to sing, air comes from the lungs. On it's way out it has to pass through the glottis (whether your throat is tense or not is a different matter) so all instances of singing or speech, unless artificial, are glottal. "Glottal voice" is a tautological descriptor, and is thus not informative at all unless you need to distinguish between speech-synthesis voice and human voice.    


Glottis is the space between the vocal folds, and it looks like this:
 
That looks like some sort of H R Giger creationShocked


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 12 2011 at 18:57
Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

Its not that i'm afraid that vocalists were exploring new territory. Its that singing went from needing to create resonance from your body to just getting up to a mic and shouting.
...
 
Fair enough ... you could say that for almost 3/4's of all rock band singers ... it became about the fame and whatever else, and in some cases it works, because the band helps it sound better.
 
Quote
...
The voice is an instrument, and just because someone can talk and shout does not mean that ANYONE can sing, it certainly doesn't mean everyone should be considered a singer. The voice is an instrument that you learn with practice, just like any other instrument. Learning to sing requires an attunement and connection to your mind and body.
...
 
Carefull here when you say this ... because you are saying that just because the voice is an instrument, it is now "limited" and can not do different things ... like screaming, or other sound effects .... which instruments can do, if people want to have fun with them and try different things ... or you can spend 30 minutes watching "Fellini's Orchestra Rehearsal" ... which is more fun, anyway! ...
 
When you say learning to sing, all you are saying is ... using the 12 notes, and adjust to the chords and notes that he/she is supposed to sing ... and "sounds" can not be used .. has to be words, let's say ... and all of a sudden, this limitation hurts.
 
The other part is ... that we place these invisible limitations on these things. Go listen to many Eastern singers and what they do with their voices and how they meld it to the music (only word for it! ... we sing too much and don't meld or grok very well either!) ... and this is not something that we teach in western cultures ... and the ability to be better and more expressive, is sometimes more difficult.
 
There is a place in time, for everything ... and I don't know ... listen to Jim Morrison do some of his screams, and they are in tune and strong ... but again, we decided that we don't like that attitude, but we like other attitudes ... and then it becomes a serious discussion as to what is and isn't.
 
And then ... guess what rock music has been about for the past 50 years ... I don't have to tell you ... it has been about breaking the process and the definitions ... so different things in front of the microphone will be considered ... wether you or I like it or not ... and I think in the end, this is a very good thing ... we need more emotion in music, so we stop the very "classical" stupidity that states these kinds of passages in music mean this and that and this and that ... and rock music kinda told that off at first (progressive music) and then started using lyrics to help you make believe that A Star is Born is still true!
 
You must see the insanity in it all ... and how singing has been busted up ... and a new standard will be set in 50 years ... but to think that Peter Hammill is not a singer because he screams, or Roy Harper ... is really sad, because some of these people are at the forefront of that school of theater, film and the arts that were magnificent in their use of the "voice" in defining and coming across with their work ... which no one is denying its power, strength and beauty all wrapped up into one idea!
 
Times change ... but "western" singers are severely limited in their abilities and I like the idea and freedom that screaming or anything else ... can be done right and has a place in music ... opera and the "conventional" music simply was never able to find a place for true emotion ... it was always an "idea of that emotion" .... and most rock music, for me anyways ... was about telling those conventions and ideas to go to hell ... including singing ... so Roger Chapman is awesome for me, Peter is great, Roy is fabulous, Renate is insane and out of this world, Mani is the ultimate sound effect, no lyrics guru ... and even the early Greg Lake ... was pure poetry in motion and the music colored the words! ... instead of some lame lyrics telling me what I am supposed to be thinking! ... see the difference between the voice being an instrument and just another singer?
 
As an instrument yeah ... scream.
 
As a singer ... nahh ... go back tot he choir you came from ... ciao baby!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 01:34
Not sure if Demis Rousos has been mentioned but his performance on Aphrodites Child 'The Four Horsemen' is worth noting.
 
I mentioned Bruce Dickinson in my earlier post as one of the best 'technicially'. Then followed a prolonged discussion after being challenged by Snow Dog and well argued from my side by Roger That (thanks!). I would just clarify that I regard him as one of the best because to my ears he is pitch perfect. Heavy metal/Heavy rock singers usually grate on me big time but Bruce 'Air Raid Siren' Dickinson even though he supposedly shouts is still spot on.
btw Greg Lake tried the shouting thing on the Emerson,Lake and Powell album.That was horrible!


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 14:12
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


Agreed on both counts. Freddie was a great singer but somewhat overrated.
 
I just think that his band and his work deserve better attention ... they are not 15 minute cuts per se, but the variation and talent and the ability to make sure the music could color Freddie's emotions ... is something that most any band anywhere in the world would die to have ... and the last thing he recorded is enough to make anyone cry ... which is a wonderful anthrm for pretty much everything that the band and him, gave us ... !
 
But because there was a lot of hits, and we don't think that the stadium song is progressive because the masses are in it (Wink) ... fits ... and it doesn't the mandatory keyboards to tell us to fly and dream ... in many ways, if you break down the restrictions, all of a sudden you have a band that is much more progressive than a good 75% of the bands listed in our top list ... a lot of which is not even original and just a copy of the same thing done before ... you can't really say that about Queen.


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 15:06
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


Agreed on both counts. Freddie was a great singer but somewhat overrated.
 
I just think that his band and his work deserve better attention ... they are not 15 minute cuts per se, but the variation and talent and the ability to make sure the music could color Freddie's emotions ... is something that most any band anywhere in the world would die to have ... and the last thing he recorded is enough to make anyone cry ... which is a wonderful anthrm for pretty much everything that the band and him, gave us ... !
 
But because there was a lot of hits, and we don't think that the stadium song is progressive because the masses are in it (Wink) ... fits ... and it doesn't the mandatory keyboards to tell us to fly and dream ... in many ways, if you break down the restrictions, all of a sudden you have a band that is much more progressive than a good 75% of the bands listed in our top list ... a lot of which is not even original and just a copy of the same thing done before ... you can't really say that about Queen.
 
I hadn't really thought about it that way but seems fair.
 
Queen were the first band I really liked. Freddie strutting across stage like he owned the world.His massive personality perhaps overtook everything else and made you forget what a brilliant vocalist he always was.
 
 


Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 15:19
Upon reflection, I'd agree with a fellow vocalist of mine....Ian Gillian of Deep Purple had one of the most amazing voices back in the early 1970's, both on Purple LPs and "Jesus Christ Superstar."  

Another belter was the late, great Ronnie James Dio!!  Again, tangential to prog, but so is Freddie Mercury I suppose.  

All three had rather remarkable range, vibrato, tone and control.  I haven't seen Gillian in many years & don't know how well he's holding up.  


Posted By: rogerthat
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 20:46
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:


Agreed on both counts. Freddie was a great singer but somewhat overrated.
 
I just think that his band and his work deserve better attention ... they are not 15 minute cuts per se, but the variation and talent and the ability to make sure the music could color Freddie's emotions ... is something that most any band anywhere in the world would die to have ... and the last thing he recorded is enough to make anyone cry ... which is a wonderful anthrm for pretty much everything that the band and him, gave us ... !
 
But because there was a lot of hits, and we don't think that the stadium song is progressive because the masses are in it (Wink) ... fits ... and it doesn't the mandatory keyboards to tell us to fly and dream ... in many ways, if you break down the restrictions, all of a sudden you have a band that is much more progressive than a good 75% of the bands listed in our top list ... a lot of which is not even original and just a copy of the same thing done before ... you can't really say that about Queen.


It is unfair to conclude from a one line post that I call him overrated just because he sang for a band that EVENTUALLY became stadium rock (and used to be one of the most interesting hard rock bands around before the transformation) and not prog (and being that my favourites include Jeff Buckley and Stevie Wonder, I of all people don't attach so much importance to a band's being prog or not). So I refuse to even offer what reasons I may have had for saying so because this is pretty annoying. Dead


Posted By: Padraic
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 21:15
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:



Agreed on both counts. Freddie was a great singer but somewhat overrated.


He is not overrated in the slightest.


Posted By: StrengthandWisdom
Date Posted: April 13 2011 at 23:02
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by StrengthandWisdom StrengthandWisdom wrote:

Its not that i'm afraid that vocalists were exploring new territory. Its that singing went from needing to create resonance from your body to just getting up to a mic and shouting.
...
 
Fair enough ... you could say that for almost 3/4's of all rock band singers ... it became about the fame and whatever else, and in some cases it works, because the band helps it sound better.
 
Quote
...
The voice is an instrument, and just because someone can talk and shout does not mean that ANYONE can sing, it certainly doesn't mean everyone should be considered a singer. The voice is an instrument that you learn with practice, just like any other instrument. Learning to sing requires an attunement and connection to your mind and body.
...
 
Carefull here when you say this ... because you are saying that just because the voice is an instrument, it is now "limited" and can not do different things ... like screaming, or other sound effects .... which instruments can do, if people want to have fun with them and try different things ... or you can spend 30 minutes watching "Fellini's Orchestra Rehearsal" ... which is more fun, anyway! ...
 
When you say learning to sing, all you are saying is ... using the 12 notes, and adjust to the chords and notes that he/she is supposed to sing ... and "sounds" can not be used .. has to be words, let's say ... and all of a sudden, this limitation hurts.
 
The other part is ... that we place these invisible limitations on these things. Go listen to many Eastern singers and what they do with their voices and how they meld it to the music (only word for it! ... we sing too much and don't meld or grok very well either!) ... and this is not something that we teach in western cultures ... and the ability to be better and more expressive, is sometimes more difficult.
 
There is a place in time, for everything ... and I don't know ... listen to Jim Morrison do some of his screams, and they are in tune and strong ... but again, we decided that we don't like that attitude, but we like other attitudes ... and then it becomes a serious discussion as to what is and isn't.
 
And then ... guess what rock music has been about for the past 50 years ... I don't have to tell you ... it has been about breaking the process and the definitions ... so different things in front of the microphone will be considered ... wether you or I like it or not ... and I think in the end, this is a very good thing ... we need more emotion in music, so we stop the very "classical" stupidity that states these kinds of passages in music mean this and that and this and that ... and rock music kinda told that off at first (progressive music) and then started using lyrics to help you make believe that A Star is Born is still true!
 
You must see the insanity in it all ... and how singing has been busted up ... and a new standard will be set in 50 years ... but to think that Peter Hammill is not a singer because he screams, or Roy Harper ... is really sad, because some of these people are at the forefront of that school of theater, film and the arts that were magnificent in their use of the "voice" in defining and coming across with their work ... which no one is denying its power, strength and beauty all wrapped up into one idea!
 
Times change ... but "western" singers are severely limited in their abilities and I like the idea and freedom that screaming or anything else ... can be done right and has a place in music ... opera and the "conventional" music simply was never able to find a place for true emotion ... it was always an "idea of that emotion" .... and most rock music, for me anyways ... was about telling those conventions and ideas to go to hell ... including singing ... so Roger Chapman is awesome for me, Peter is great, Roy is fabulous, Renate is insane and out of this world, Mani is the ultimate sound effect, no lyrics guru ... and even the early Greg Lake ... was pure poetry in motion and the music colored the words! ... instead of some lame lyrics telling me what I am supposed to be thinking! ... see the difference between the voice being an instrument and just another singer?
 
As an instrument yeah ... scream.
 
As a singer ... nahh ... go back tot he choir you came from ... ciao baby!


Voice should not be the easiest instrument to play, guitar players in rock band cant just get up on stage without knowing the least bit about guitar method. So why is it okay for singers to get up on stage without knowing the least bit about vocal method? Thats my point, its completely burning the classical singing in its name. Should we just get rid of all classical music? Get rid of all classical/jazz gutiar methods and pick up guitar again from scratch and invent new scales and fingering, and form scales out of notes that don't sound pleasant together?


Posted By: peart_lee_lifeson
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 00:04
Daniel Gildenlow is the vocalist of vocalists if you ask me.  The emotion and variety he sings with is incredible.  Plus he has a monstrous range.

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PROG ON!!!


Posted By: kole
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 04:36
Peter Hammill. Over 60, and he is still as fresh as ever. I cried when I heard him in Vicenza last friday.


Posted By: Icarium
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 05:09
Mike Patton

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 16:25
Originally posted by kole kole wrote:

Peter Hammill. Over 60, and he is still as fresh as ever. I cried when I heard him in Vicenza last friday.
 
Thank you!
 
It's nice to see this ... outstanding!
 
Now, you're making me go out and get that new album!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: SaltyJon
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 16:38
Demetrio Stratos definitely deserves to be mentioned here, and another from the Italian scene (this time modern) is Claudio Milano. 


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http://www.last.fm/user/Salty_Jon" rel="nofollow">


Posted By: tszirmay
Date Posted: April 14 2011 at 21:51
Since we are in Italy, Mauro Ghilardini of Minstrel. WOW!

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I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.


Posted By: timothy leary
Date Posted: April 15 2011 at 09:36
Tim Buckley


Posted By: TheLionOfPrague
Date Posted: April 15 2011 at 14:25
Steve Walsh, Greg Lake and Petr Gabriel and Peter Hammil. 

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I shook my head and smiled a whisper knowing all about the place


Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: April 15 2011 at 15:22
The best male singer on the planet is Céline Dion. You can't beat his version of that great AC DC song with Anastasia You Shook Me All Night Long. Can these two guys sing or what!

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Posted By: prog61
Date Posted: July 08 2011 at 08:57

1)      Peter  Gabriel

2)      Peter  Hammill

3)      Freddie  Mercury

4)      Russell  Allen

5)      Jim  Morrison

6)      John Wetton

7)      Francesco Di Giacomo

8)      Mike Patton





Posted By: avantgrind
Date Posted: July 10 2011 at 21:02
Kelly Schaefer of Atheist is up there




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Posted By: avantgrind
Date Posted: July 10 2011 at 21:05
Originally posted by aginor aginor wrote:

Mike Patton


AMEN


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Posted By: hobocamp
Date Posted: July 10 2011 at 22:08
Originally posted by Vibrationbaby Vibrationbaby wrote:

The best male singer on the planet is Céline Dion. You can't beat his version of that great AC DC song with Anastasia You Shook Me All Night Long. Can these two guys sing or what!
best thread ever



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