Cheesefood
Well-Known Member
Who's produced better rock?
Chairman Cheyco said:The Zepp. Not Sammy Hagar. Black Sabbath. Not Aerosmith. The Who. Not Bon Jovi. Hendrix (he was embraced there first.)
Hands-down, England.
Copperhed said:![]()
Best golfer-black
Best rapper-white
Best guitarist-W&B Clapton/Jimi
As to the poll,
Best "rock"? Was born from R&B, right here in the US of A.
Thank you very much,
Copper
Copperhed said:Best guitarist-W&B Clapton/Jimi
Chairman Cheyco said:Not yet he aint:
Player Wins
Sam Snead - 82
Jack Nicklaus - 73
Ben Hogan - 64
Arnold Palmer - 62
Tiger Woods - 55
Byron Nelson - 52
Oh yeah, and Vanilla Ice Sucked, and so does Clapton since he put down his ES-335.
White: Stevie RayCheesefood said:White: Joe Satriani/Kyle Gass
Black: BB King. Jimi was good, but BB can play.
Fiery Sword said:White: Stevie Ray
Black: Jimi (I love BB, but it's a totally different animal. He's much more traditional, and he phrases his playing as if it were a vocal line. Low and slow. Make it talk. Jimi completely revolutionized the very concept of the electric guitar. BB, Clapton, Page, Richards, Townsend, et al say Jimi broke the electric guitar out of the box....it's hard to argue with them!)
Cheesefood said:Then how about Frampton?
Fiery Sword said:White: Stevie Ray
Black: Jimi (I love BB, but it's a totally different animal. He's much more traditional, and he phrases his playing as if it were a vocal line. Low and slow. Make it talk. Jimi completely revolutionized the very concept of the electric guitar. BB, Clapton, Page, Richards, Townsend, et al say Jimi broke the electric guitar out of the box....it's hard to argue with them!)
I never knew the Hendrix/Page thang. Doesn't surprise me that much tho. Page has a big head (I would to if I were him).Chairman Cheyco said:Gonna have to go with you on this one. I've heard most of those guys give Jimi the credit for changing the electric guitar. All except Page, that is. Hendrix and Page never talked about each other - even when prompted. I'd love some cites which prove otherwise.
It was the English who brought Jimi to America, so his music must be considered theirs. It's true.
Fiery Sword said:I agree 98% about Jimi. Plus, the Experience was British, no? But he is also a distinctly American cultural and musical icon. He preached the gospel of Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, etc - it's hard not to consider him American despite the was his career panned out.
Cheesefood said:American Punk kicks Brit Punk's arse
Fiery Sword said:Totally agreed, Chairman - and Cheese. The back-and-forth nature of music between England and America really is fascinating to me. No matter how you cut it, both countries would musically suffer w/o the other.
I honestly don't know what the rock music scene in Britan is like right now. Over the last 4-5 years bands like Wilco, BtS, Shins, Malkmus have begun to renew my faith in American rock music. What is the current British equivalent? Are any of these bands even semi=popular there? (I guess the question could be asked whether any of them are actually popular HERE, also......they certainly aren't mass-marketed in the fashoin one has to be to be a 'huge' act. Sad what the industry has done. DJ's don't even pick what they play most often. My cousin is a DJ at WFNX here in the Boston area and he friggin picks songs off a list on his computer. It's all bought and paid for. So much for a local buzz going inter/national.
/rant
Copperhed said:USA is the home of R&B.
The Brits spawned from our "melting pot"
Chairman Cheyco said:By that logic, the Americas are European colonies, therefore it all came from over there, etcetera ad nausea...
ChicketyChina the Chinese chickenCheesefood said:...and Barenaked Ladies.
Its neat to see the trends and how they influence artists as they cross the pond.Fiery Sword said:Totally agreed, Chairman - and Cheese. The back-and-forth nature of music between England and America really is fascinating to me. No matter how you cut it, both countries would musically suffer w/o the other.