My TEN Favourite MALE SINGERS

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024
  • Become a Patreon! / andyedwards
    Andy is a drummer, producer and educator. He has toured the world with rock legend Robert Plant and played on classic prog albums by Frost and IQ.
    As a drum clinician he has played with Terry Bozzio, Kenny Aronoff, Thomas Lang, Marco Minneman and Mike Portnoy.
    He also teaches drums privately and at Kidderminster College

КОМЕНТАРІ • 142

  • @curtdilger6235
    @curtdilger6235 Рік тому +4

    Great stuff as usual, Andy. Unique, surprising, and deep. Much appreciated. The great filmmaker Fellini said, "When I encounter a problem I can't solve, I incorporate it." Seems like a great way to approach the genius of improvisation within us. Cheers.

  • @TheEleatic
    @TheEleatic Рік тому +3

    Smokey Robinson, Otis Redding, Marvin Gaye, Ian Gillian, Greg Lake, John Wetton…….Van Morrison….Bono

  • @ambientideas1
    @ambientideas1 Рік тому +11

    I like singers that don’t sound like anyone else and immediately resonate with me emotionally. Jón Þór "Jónsi" Birgisson from Sigur Ros had this effect on me. First time I heard, I was certain it was a female. Such a striking countertenor voice like no other; really gets under my skin in a good, hypnotic way.

  • @adnilrummut105
    @adnilrummut105 Рік тому +4

    otis redding, al green, o.v. wright, bobby blue bland, curtis mayfield, solomon burke,... johnny hartman, chet baker,... ian gillan and ronnie james dio, rob halford, captain beefheart-don van vliet, david thomas, townes van zandt and willie nelson

    • @kenneththompson8933
      @kenneththompson8933 Рік тому

      Captain Beefheart: No 1. True Genius & Visionary.

    • @ursula3438
      @ursula3438 Рік тому

      Willie Nelson has the most amazing phrasing skills, he can stay in a super narrow range of both pitch and dynamics, but as a listener you'll hang on every word/note he sings totally transfixed.

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +3

    Those are all great singers. I would have squeezed Sinatra in there but your list unassailable.

  • @ernietarling5829
    @ernietarling5829 Рік тому +2

    You're fresh air, Andy. Very uplifting!

  • @palacerevolution2000
    @palacerevolution2000 Рік тому +1

    Just wanted to add 2 things: one more influence in Plant's arsenal would be the old British Folk/Celtic influence. Something that he seemed to translate, or fuse with Mideastern scales eventually. One could say that 'Friends' to 'Four Sticks' lead inevitably to 'Kashmir'.
    The other thing is a question to you, Andy: what exactly is 'Modal'?

  • @paulcowham2095
    @paulcowham2095 Рік тому +2

    Thanks again for another fascinating video Andy. Of course this is all subjective, and I'm not going to argue with your choices, I just want to give a shout for my favourite blues singer, Howlin' Wolf.

  • @petertrotman7708
    @petertrotman7708 Рік тому +1

    I'm proud to be 1 of the 200 who saw the Armstrong video. You should've hoodwinked your viewers with a thumbnail of McLaughlin.
    A new generation are growing up with Jacob Collier whom I love but lest we forget that Bobby McFerrin was doing audience participation 10/15 yrs before. His "Vocabularies" album is incredibly underrated and years ahead of JC's vocal gymnastics. Great choice.
    Thanks Andy.

  • @jongreen7858
    @jongreen7858 Рік тому +2

    I watched your video on Louis Armstrong! I was very happy see your tribute to Satchmo as a lot of the channels I follow on music do not mention him all that much. He was a phenomenal singer and musician. My top ten singers are Armstrong, Ray Charles, Buddy Holly, Paul McCartney, Robert Plant, Tony Bennette, Marvin Gaye, Lou Rawls, Chris Cornell and Freddie Mercury.

  • @alan.english.teacher9686
    @alan.english.teacher9686 8 місяців тому +1

    With such an elegant definition of what singing really is, and having identified the English Aesthetic, how can you not give an honourable mention to John Martyn on this list. A Scottish singer from the English folk scene who sang like a blues saxophone. He left us too soon.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @theshrubberer
    @theshrubberer Рік тому +1

    thank you Andy, for that entire video i was in fact happy and not worrying.. cheers

  • @johnpace5774
    @johnpace5774 Рік тому +6

    Trouser work. 🤣 If I had met, let alone played with, Robert Plant I would never stop talking about it. Chris Cornell’s Ticket To Ride is an incredible howl into the darkness moment. For me, he’s the greatest. Difficult to talk about him and Jeff Buckley without tearing up for what might have been. Another excellent, thought provoking list. Thank you.

    • @johnpace5774
      @johnpace5774 Рік тому +2

      I would also have Peter Gabriel in my top ten! Though my top tens always have more than ten in them…….

    • @johnpace5774
      @johnpace5774 Рік тому +2

      …..and I think most of us worry watching your favourites list. We worry that our favourite won’t be on the list!😊

    • @theshrubberer
      @theshrubberer Рік тому

      that killed me

  • @sicko_the_ew
    @sicko_the_ew Рік тому +4

    The loss of singing is a terrible thing. I mean singing as a part of living, the way the milk maid in that Wordsworth poem was singing, the way our grandparents would gather round the piano and sing, the way the kids grandparents would sing "all the old songs", while travelling the world, to the extent that it was possible to travel the world on things like mail ships, long ago.
    I've worked in rural African areas, and that's something that might still be alive there, even today. People would walk down the road singing - everyone in their own voice, not "putting on a performance"; just singing because a song came out. You'd hear drum thump, and then something like voices, and then harmonies around a single "hand drum" becoming a little moving choir, and there would go some pickup truck with a canopy, with members of the Zion Christian Church visible as patches of white robe through the windows, singing together for the sake of singing, singing in harmony for the sake of being together, and weaving their souls together for a little while, and then down the road, to be replaced with ordinary hiss and rumble again. Maybe a radio playing too loud, sometimes.
    There's nothing especially African about this. This is something that happened all over the Earth before we outsourced music to professionals, and got all self conscious (and worse, we "punish" singers with hard stares). Once upon a time there was often a milk maid singing for the sake of singing down some lane in some Lake District - often enough for the occasional poet to chance upon it.
    I wonder how much of it there is left in the world, this unselfconscious "singing to breathe". I suppose there is a bit. It's nice that people have given themselves permission to publicly sing the old songs at concerts, for instance. There's less of it on the small scale of the forgotten worlds, but it must be a fairly strong drive to have survived to the extent it has.
    And then there's the love-heart-magic of lovely-brilliant Bobby Mc Ferrin. My favourite is his (duet is too formal a word, and it's of too small a scope, too, but I'd better just call it a duet; that'll do) with Aziza Mustafa Zadeh (maybe she's one of your favourite pianists?) ua-cam.com/video/pphopoCD4_A/v-deo.html

  • @shemademegay
    @shemademegay Рік тому +2

    Great list!!! Is Mike Patton numbers 11 through to 20? At least ten of his 78 voices are pretty decent!

  • @PhilBaird1
    @PhilBaird1 Рік тому +1

    An impossible task but a great ranking Andy that really opened up the discussion. Really like your picks. Looking forward to a future video on Industrialism, Music and Madness in the West Midlands.

  • @rossbliss6644
    @rossbliss6644 3 місяці тому

    Improvisation - explained and demonstrated superbly.

  • @ursula3438
    @ursula3438 Рік тому +2

    Too many great singers, just by genre my favs would be: (Blues) John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, BB King, Peter Green, (Rock/Pop) Alex Turner, McCartney, Elvis, Bowie, Paolo Nutini, Lennon, (Americana) 1966 Dylan, Willie Nelson, Jason Isbell, (Soul) Al Green, Marvin Gaye, Luther Vandross, (Crooner) Sinatra, Tony Bennett, NKC, Dick Haymes, (other Jazz singers) Satchmo, Joao Gilberto, Chet Baker.

  • @rembeadgc
    @rembeadgc Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing all that you shared and thank you for "connecting the dots", as you see them, to outline a great and wonderful image that, if honest, we can all relate to.

  • @deanjonasson6776
    @deanjonasson6776 Рік тому +1

    Epic list and a very entertaining and informative talk, Andy. Who would I substitute, if any? Maybe Sinatra, for control and nuance (though I love Nat even more). For me, Howlin' Wolf is a voice that shoots through directly into my spine. While not a technically 'great' singer, I've come to appreciate all the things Dylan has been able to do with his voice McCartney for his suppleness and sonic creativity while Lennon for channeling raw emotion.
    Hmm... I know once I submit this comment, I'll think of a few more (Jack Bruce, Harry Nilsson, ...).
    Thanks, Andy!

  • @garanceadrosehn9691
    @garanceadrosehn9691 Рік тому +4

    Here's another great singer, IMO, although I'm not going to say he needs to be in the top-10. He's probably in the top-10 of male singers in my own music collection though, and that's Roy Orbison. Amazing vocal abilities. Lovely voice. Long career.

    • @jimmycampbell78
      @jimmycampbell78 Рік тому +2

      Yes, his music isn’t my usual preferred genre choice but he has such an amazing unique voice.

  • @paulmartinson875
    @paulmartinson875 Рік тому +1

    You're really feelin it today, good stuff!

  • @justinludeman8424
    @justinludeman8424 3 місяці тому

    You are a very good teacher Andrew.

  • @stuartfishman1044
    @stuartfishman1044 Рік тому +2

    Ten of my favorites ( A Quick List):
    Otis Redding
    Al Green
    Robert Plant
    John Lydon
    Bob Dylan
    Marvin Gaye
    Little Richard
    Jackie Wilson
    Prince
    James Brown

  • @colsmusic
    @colsmusic Рік тому +2

    Another totally honest selection of great singers and as always some History from your knowledge base, Keep em coming, P.S you may have some future singers close at hand judging by the lungs on those children of yours. Great video to start the weekend.

  • @dibdab101
    @dibdab101 День тому

    on a completely different register, Tom Waits. what a voice!

  • @tommonk7651
    @tommonk7651 Рік тому +1

    Astounding list - Little Richard from Macon, GA, Ray Charles from Albany, GA, James Brown from Augusta, GA - my homies.... Not to mention Louis Armstrong from New Orleans, LA, Skip James from Mississippi, Robert Johnson from Mississippi, Nat King Cole from Montgomery, Alabama. I would have put Sam Cooke on my list from Mississippi. Elvis from Mississippi, as well.... The influence of black southern American music is just unbelievable.... By the way, the word is "steeped", not "stooped". 😆 I may not always agree with you, Andy, but I enjoy your rambles.

  • @oolongoolong789
    @oolongoolong789 Рік тому +1

    1. Peter Hammill
    2. Bryan Ferry
    3. David Bowie
    4. Morrissey
    5. Ian Curtis
    6. Robert Wyatt
    7. Roger Chapman
    8. Hugh Cornwell
    9. David Coverdale
    10. Mark E. Smith

  • @palacerevolution2000
    @palacerevolution2000 Рік тому +4

    'Trouser work' haha... excellent. I agree re R Plant. IMO he has only gotten better. Very few guys (Nick Cave, Jeff Beck e.g) just went on and got better.
    Don't ever edit your clips. One of the best parts about your videos is the realness.
    I don't quite agree with several choices. But that's half the fun about these lists. In music, and esp. in vocals, so much comes down to how it touches you on a deeper, personal level. E.g Greg Allman to me is one of the greatest singers ever. Then there are those voices that always sound double tracked (even though they aren't), and slightly chorused, like Lennon, Ian Hunter.
    I guess a lot also comes down to the material done by a vocalist. You hear Jeff Buckley sing "Lover you should've come over" and it's like the heavens opened up. Then take Tim Buckley, every bit the singer his son was, and it will never transcend like Jeff, because of inferior material.
    Great video.

  • @scottmcgregor4829
    @scottmcgregor4829 Рік тому +4

    Great video Andy, cheers. I doubt that you will read this but I have a suggestion challenge for you for 2023. Search the globe for new ( to you) bands and artists from all over the planet so that at the end of 2023 , you will have a list of your top 10 discoveries in music for 2023. Just a suggestion.

  • @AlexanderStenerud1975
    @AlexanderStenerud1975 9 місяців тому +1

    Bob Dylan is the most underrated singer of them all. His sense of timing is up there with Sinatra. There's such musicallity to his vocals. Great channel, by the way. You can think. Most people are not very good at thinking.

  • @johannhauffman323
    @johannhauffman323 Рік тому +2

    Top shelf Andy
    Only, left me with a very serious question.
    If Little Richard had
    a favorite biscuit, which one would it be?

  • @narosgmbh5916
    @narosgmbh5916 Рік тому +2

    Well-done chronicle with well-reasoned personal choices.
    Just so they don't go unmentioned in the comment column:
    Al Jarreau
    Roy Orbison (one of the most magical voices for me)

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 Рік тому +1

    Jackie Wilson, Marvin Gaye, Roy Orbison, Howlin' Wolf, Robert Johnson, Elvis...

  • @rogersongster3967
    @rogersongster3967 Рік тому +1

    Skip James' early work is terrific, but his later recordings after his rediscovery in 1964 are absolutely amazing. Today!, recorded in 1966 and released on Vanguard Records the same year, is probably my favorite blues album of all time. His vocals are stunningly beautiful.

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Рік тому

      Yes the 60s stuff is stunning

    • @hansvandermeulen5515
      @hansvandermeulen5515 Рік тому

      What's even more amazing is that he had to relearn to play after nit having played for nearly 30 years. Same with Son House (who had one of the guys of Canned Heat teach him his old songs).

  • @RobertVeasquez
    @RobertVeasquez Рік тому +1

    This was the highlight of my day. All great singers……

  • @Frip36
    @Frip36 Рік тому

    1. Frank Sinatra
    2. Black Guys
    3. Rod Stewart (Italian Girls, Lady Day, Scarred and Scared)
    4. Robert Plant (Whole Lotta Love - Frankfurt 1980. Carouselambra. Slow Dancer)
    5. Rob Halford (Pain & Pleasure, Rapid Fire, Heading Out to the Highway)
    6. Ronnie James Dio (Lonely is the Word, Catch the Rainbow - On Stage LP)
    7. David Bowie (Wild is the Wind)
    8. Phil Lynott - Chatting Today, Brought Down, Wild One, Spirit Slips Away
    9. Robin Gibb
    10. Bono (Unforgettable Fire album)

  • @kzustang
    @kzustang Рік тому +1

    Can't believe it! I'm sitting here and thinking...are you going to say Skip James or not? I can't believe you just said that. I'm stunned, man. You nailed it. Skip James is my most favorite of all early blues singers. I even have a really amazing performance of his singing Hard Times Kiiling Floor Blues.

  • @alternativepreacher4516
    @alternativepreacher4516 Рік тому +3

    Mike Patton, Peter Gabriel and Bowie are probably my favorites, but there is so many great ones.

    • @deansusec8745
      @deansusec8745 Рік тому

      Bowie Has great compositions but he wasn't a singer, cmon

    • @jimmycampbell78
      @jimmycampbell78 Рік тому +2

      I really like the range and variety of Bowie’s voice. Have a listen to Quicksand, Life on Mars, Sweet Thing/Candidate and Wild is the Wind. Just those four tracks one after the other. I promise you will change your mind Dean, unless you are comparing him to Pavarotti or something. Great singer with a distinctive and flexible voice.

  • @markphillips3186
    @markphillips3186 Рік тому +1

    As always a great selection. To be honest I thought you were going to end with Jónsi Birgisson from Sigur Ros. I’m surprised you didn’t include Jon Anderson. They would be both in my top 10. But again, who do you drop out? And then, Smokey Robison, Aaron Neville, John Farnham, Jimmy Barnes would be on my honourably mentions list.

  • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
    @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 Рік тому +1

    Fun tidbit: Before they were TV Famous -James Brown did several dates performing as LITTLE RICHARD when LR couldn't make the dates. Man, would LOVE to have seen THAT!

  • @megfellowes
    @megfellowes Рік тому +1

    Play with the echos in the mountains; pick up two sticks in the wood and invite the trees to dance to a rhythm; sing your sorrow and grief to the river. Who cares if no one is listening!
    And, Yes, Bobby McFerrin is awesome, as is Louis Armstrong.

  • @MattCarter67
    @MattCarter67 Рік тому +1

    Top choice with Skip James. Hard Time Killing Floor is just beautiful.

  • @domielakrabi3276
    @domielakrabi3276 Рік тому +1

    Great video! Interesting picks. I agree on most of them, but I miss Freddie Mercury. He would be in the top three on my list.

  • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
    @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 Рік тому +1

    Great choices! My List and the reason why
    Nat King Cole, Andy's take was sport - on. Fun bit-loved him in the movie "Cat Ballou" as part of the "Greek Chorus"
    Sam Cooke: Steve Perry's (and others) style totally stolen from SC, ALSO "Change is gonna Come" One of the most important and poignant protest songs to make the charts.
    Marvin Gaye: Expanded the vocabulary of the R&B singer. "What's Going On; and "Mercy Mercy Me" are again among the most poignant and socially important songs to hit the charts
    Stevie Wonder: Seemingly limitless range and expressiveness to this day.
    Steve Marriott: The most forceful robust voice ever in rock. Saw him on TV walk from one mike to the next and you could still hear him halfway 'tween!
    Roger Daltrey:Freak of Nature - seemed to IMPROVE over time in spite of his BRUTAL vocal approach. Greatest power screams on record.
    Paul Rogers, The man has it all, Range, Feel, Grit, Tenderness, Power and consistency in excellence to this day. . How many people on Earth can sing "Good Loving Gone Bad"?
    Al Jarreau: His generation's male equivalent to Ella Fitzgerald. Pioneered modern vocal "instrumentation" no Bobby McFerran without AJ's solo vocal version of "Take 5"
    Maynard James Keenan. Not the proto-virtuoso like Chris Cornell, but brings clarity, depth of tone, power, range, and emotion to modern heavy music like no one else.

  • @kzustang
    @kzustang Рік тому +1

    I would definitely include Elvis and Johnny Cash as well as Freddie in my top 10. But a really great list. And there is a sound on all the videos. It sounds like a fan in your camera or something from a computer fan. Loved you getting weird towards the end. I can see you doing this surreal great weirdness on Patreon. It was a great one there. Very surreal and really really fantastic.

  • @1eflat
    @1eflat Рік тому +1

    Howlin Wolf - Rob Halford - Ronnie James Dio - The Duo of Lennon and McCartney - Ian Gillan and The Great David Ruffin

  • @PaulBergen
    @PaulBergen Рік тому +3

    no Roy Orbison?

  • @armandom28
    @armandom28 Рік тому +4

    You may not like Dylan but he sang on pitch and in his earlier years had an excellent range…agree that Mc Ferrin is the most skilled of them all

  • @scottiverson7829
    @scottiverson7829 Рік тому

    Fun fun fun! Nice One!😊

  • @Hydrocorax
    @Hydrocorax Рік тому +1

    Your Louis Armstrong video is my favorite too.

  • @garyfontanini9646
    @garyfontanini9646 3 місяці тому

    Again a great video Andy, I must say i think Paul Rogers would've been on my list, with Tom Waits, we would all probably have someone we would have liked on this list that what i think makes us music individuals, hearing different things in different voices. Probably talking crap there but there it is.

  • @Frip36
    @Frip36 Рік тому +2

    I just noticed that the Audioslave/Chris Cornell song Like a Stone has a billion views on UA-cam. That's billion with a WTF!!!!

  • @littlegrant
    @littlegrant Рік тому +1

    Big fan, but I think you dropped the ball on this one.
    No inclusion of Frank Sinatra and why he matters as well as no Al Jarreau is criminal. Lol
    Frank Sinatra was the master of the use of the microphone. Although, Bing Crosby did bring nuance and subtlety to vocal techniques , Frank took it to a whole other level. Prior to these 2, there was a kind of one dynamic.
    Frank used the microphone as an instrument.
    Frank also brought the influence of horns, such as trombone to strongly influence his approach.
    He would sing a single phrase or vocal line with one breath. Legato. Think Allan Holdsworth.
    He also not only brought in the great songs of the 20s and 30s by George Gershwin and Cole Porter , when they had fallen slightly out of favor.
    This was the era of novelty tunes.
    He also included and carefully picked the best of the songs of 40s , 50s, and 60s that were to become classics.
    So, Frank was responsible to some degree for creating the pop standard concept.
    Not only did vocalists reap this benefit, but all instrumentalists use this great repertoire, particularly jazz players.
    Huge contribution,!
    I appreciate Bobby Mc Ferrin, but Al Jarreau was the there before, innovating, and setting the stage for Bobby.
    Incidentally. the first time I saw Al perform, his group included Steve Gadd, Icarus Johnson, Nathan East, Neil Larsen.
    The stretched out in pure improv, Take Five and ....
    And mention should be made of Jimmy Scott and Jack Bruce.

  • @HenrikHanssonMusic
    @HenrikHanssonMusic Рік тому +2

    Great video, Andy! Sums up my feelings about great music and great singers. I would probably have Donny Hathaway, Otis Redding (or Sam Cooke? or Wilson Pickett? aaaah damnit), and Paul Rodgers on my list. Oh, btw, I also have a very special connection to Little Richard's appearance in that Hendrix-documentary. Me and my friend used to meet at his place before going to our gig (funk band) and just watch those clips. "Made my toe shoot up in my boot" "WOOOOOH!!!". Amazing. I laughed out loud when you described it as "surreal bonkerness", that is just perfect. :D

  • @michelzinger
    @michelzinger Рік тому +2

    You should make a video of music of movies and prog rock. Interesting

  • @richardthomson3757
    @richardthomson3757 Рік тому +3

    Check out Oscar Peterson singing. He and Nat King Cole supposedly made an agreement that Nat would stick to singing and Oscar would stick to piano

  • @lupcokotevski2907
    @lupcokotevski2907 Рік тому +5

    My parents emigrated from the villages of the former Yugoslavia to Australia in 1963. They have no clue who Bob Dylan is, but they have always known Louis Armstrong. Over the decades of having to endure my record playing my mother has made only one negative comment: "that guy can't sing" (Dylan). That pure objectivity still makes me laugh.

    • @narosgmbh5916
      @narosgmbh5916 Рік тому +1

      In 1963 I went on holiday to Yugoslavia for the first time. Tito opened the borders to tourists. If your mother is still alive, tell her I heard Ivo Robic singing in Opatjia. He could sing.

    • @lupcokotevski2907
      @lupcokotevski2907 Рік тому

      @@narosgmbh5916 Thanks I will. They are still both alive and doing well. Cheers.

  • @LordHasenpfeffer
    @LordHasenpfeffer 2 місяці тому

    About his big toe shootin' up out of his boot... That has to be the most unforgettable thing Little Richard ever said. It's funny to hear someone else reference that quote for a change.

  • @geoffccrow2333
    @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому +1

    That ticking whirring noise i was hearing. Are you using an old film camera?:)

  • @SpookyLuvCookie
    @SpookyLuvCookie Рік тому +1

    Manna for the heart and mind. Andy, you're a ledge.

  • @mainzergirl9610
    @mainzergirl9610 Рік тому +1

    The 1st 10 seconds of the Immigrant Song earned Robert his ranking. Genius!

  • @jackdolphy8965
    @jackdolphy8965 Рік тому +1

    John Bonham channeling Little Richard - brilliant!

  • @dennisburns-rd5xg
    @dennisburns-rd5xg Рік тому

    Brilliant !

  • @MauriceHotblack
    @MauriceHotblack Рік тому +1

    Again, great list Andy. I love Joe Cocker's voice, it's just a pity that he was controlled by the labels and was let down by poor songs for much of his career. He was never an innovator either but what a voice.
    And I think the word you were looking for was steeped not stooped.

  • @mariobarrela
    @mariobarrela Рік тому +2

    Nice list as usual, but now you have to do a video about Otis Redding…

  • @ml-ei3nz
    @ml-ei3nz Рік тому +1

    Im stunned that even in the comments I almost don’t see suggestions of Al Jarreau, although there would be no Bobby Mcferrin without Al Jarreau.
    Also almost no comments had in his list Stevie Wonder. One of the most influential singers in R&B ever.
    Also a lesser known master Little Willie John is not mentioned among comments, and what strikes me the most is that nobody mentions the pop giant Michael Jackson.
    Also Studio guys like Michael McDonald could have their place too.

  • @theshrubberer
    @theshrubberer Рік тому +1

    Blind Willie Johnson is such a powerful singer i can only take him in small doses, but he preaches as well as anyone

  • @tobiasinnit
    @tobiasinnit Рік тому +1

    Steeped. You're welcome

  • @markmyra-cn7rd
    @markmyra-cn7rd Місяць тому

    #1 choice is the man!
    Billy Eckstine is a high on the
    Iconoclastic Bastards List.
    Just because he sounds good.

  • @JureJere1975
    @JureJere1975 7 місяців тому

    Tom Waits? Van Morrison?

  • @jessem470
    @jessem470 Рік тому

    Absolutely loved the video
    Surprised no Elvis but I understand your train of thought
    So glad you put Jeff Buckley on list
    Another great singer deserving of a mention is Scott Walker

  • @stephenbellotti2036
    @stephenbellotti2036 Рік тому +3

    I thought the list of female singers was very very good. The male singers also a very good list. Here, I think I disagree that Bob Dylan is not a good singer in a technical way. I think some of his phrasing and the emotion packed into it is simply amazing. It’s different, but I think it’s wrong to say it’s not technically good. Others on my list would be Sam Cooke, Oscar Brown Jr., Chet Baker, and Paul McCartney. I also really like Van Morrison, Roy Orbison and Jimmy Scott b/c I find their singing mesmerizing- but am not sure if they belong a list of the best 10 of all time edging out your guys or Billy Eckstein or whatever.

    • @ursula3438
      @ursula3438 Рік тому +1

      Jimmy Scott's version of "Nothing Compares 2 U" is incredible.

    • @stephenbellotti2036
      @stephenbellotti2036 Рік тому

      @@ursula3438 The first jimmy scott I ever heard was his "comeback" album Dream from 1992. It was on a disk a friend gave me with a bunch of mp3s back when ipods first came out in the early 2000s. It was such a great surprise and is still my favorite Jimmy Scott. Glad to find another fan!

  • @davethiboutot
    @davethiboutot Рік тому +1

    Female singers,Linda ronstate, Eva Cassidy,the best folk and blues singer that ever lived

  • @utvf68
    @utvf68 Рік тому +1

    Nat King Cole
    Ray Charles
    Elvis Presley
    Marvin Gaye
    Stevie Wonder
    Sam Cooke
    Al Green
    Otis Redding
    Bill Withers
    Freddie Mercury

  • @bassmonk2920
    @bassmonk2920 Рік тому +1

    Kurt Elling.....

  • @daicullinane7746
    @daicullinane7746 Рік тому +1

    Don't worry Andy, I was happy with your choices.

  • @thewestfaceofdhaulagiri6697
    @thewestfaceofdhaulagiri6697 Рік тому +3

    I've never really been into vocals much. But having said that I did like Ronnie James who was my favorite vocalist of all time.

  • @lockedonlaw
    @lockedonlaw 4 місяці тому

    It's really about what you like. We're the same age. I like every artist you named but my list would be different. If you like Mike Patton, he could be on your list. If you like Layne Staley, he could be on your list. If you like Geoff Tate, he could be on your list. And that's just three singers from a time when rock was pretty much dead.

  • @Andrew-q8k
    @Andrew-q8k 4 місяці тому

    Personal favourites, not necessarily the best, though some may lay claim, Tony Bennett, Paul Rodgers, Jim Morrison, Frankie Valli, Bobby Womack, Andrea Bocelli, Steve Perry, Aaron Neville, Justin Hayward and obviously Elvis

  • @Fontsman
    @Fontsman Рік тому +3

    Plants style was very heavily influenced by Janis Joplin and locally Steve Marriot.

  • @rossbliss6644
    @rossbliss6644 3 місяці тому

    You gotta check out Blind Blake and Blind Willie Johnson!

  • @saintgeorge6706
    @saintgeorge6706 Рік тому +1

    Wot no Levi Stubbs or Scott Walker.

  • @TheBlynch
    @TheBlynch 5 місяців тому

    Disagree on your assessment of Buckley as most important post-grunge 90s figure. It was Elliot Smith. And he's the one the kids today are listening to.

  • @davethiboutot
    @davethiboutot Рік тому +1

    No Elvis but. Mcferene come on ,Stevie wonder,Steve perry ,bruce

  • @SwampEye1
    @SwampEye1 Рік тому +3

    I didn*t know you were once such a good lookin' bloke ... you could have joined any boy group in those days ... 😁 and please keep going on about Robert Plant ...

    • @AndyEdwardsDrummer
      @AndyEdwardsDrummer  Рік тому

      'were'.........................................?

    • @SwampEye1
      @SwampEye1 Рік тому

      @@AndyEdwardsDrummer Oh, I get it .. that's not you at 26:00 min .... 😄

  • @anthonykishko1711
    @anthonykishko1711 Рік тому +1

    Jeff Buckley, the greatest song writer of last 30 years. Bridging old school with crystallizing innovation. Dream brother. Where are you? ☯️

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 Рік тому +1

    Everytime I think I can sing I listen to this - ua-cam.com/video/WIE6U6Lrtrc/v-deo.html - and I say, to meself, bloody 'ell! Imma singer, like Louis! Pops. Satchmo and many other bizarre nicknames.

  • @PrinceofPain-wv1lo
    @PrinceofPain-wv1lo 4 місяці тому

    Sam Cooke is the King of Soul

  • @geoffccrow2333
    @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому

    TOM JONES

  • @geoffccrow2333
    @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому

    TINY TIM

  • @geoffccrow2333
    @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому

    FARNSEY AND BARNSEY..

    • @geoffccrow2333
      @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому

      Do you know who farnsey and barnsey are??

    • @geoffccrow2333
      @geoffccrow2333 Рік тому

      Jimmy barnes. John farnham. Two amazing singers hehe

  • @dapinelli
    @dapinelli 22 дні тому +1

    What? No Elvis? Without him, rock music would have been much different. People as vastly different as Kiri Te Kanawa and Mick Fleetwood both said he was number 1. The problem with Elvis is that he was shortchanged by Tom Parker!

  • @davethiboutot
    @davethiboutot Рік тому +1

    Oh yeah,the best. Marvin gaye

  • @parshakamarsh
    @parshakamarsh 2 місяці тому

    Those rock n roll singers are steeped in jazz and blues, not stooped 😂

  • @tomthorsett1433
    @tomthorsett1433 Рік тому +1

    Steeped lol

  • @justinludeman8424
    @justinludeman8424 3 місяці тому

    Wot... no Ivan Rebroff? Just kidding...

  • @majorpayne8373
    @majorpayne8373 7 місяців тому

    Elvis is King. Period.

  • @deansusec8745
    @deansusec8745 Рік тому +2

    dio, Coverdale, Gillan

  • @PrinceofPain-wv1lo
    @PrinceofPain-wv1lo 4 місяці тому

    Lou was considered a uncle tom. Generally speaking,