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Best musician under 40 on the planet, no question

Kind of a bold statement ..but at 21 hrs old..he kinda covers it... Just so brilliant on so many levels.. Besides the brilliant arrangement and playing, there's some Kool synth stuff ..
Feast your ears on this...BEST ish you'll hear this week for sure..

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Comments

  • Not my cup of tea but there is a lot of talent in that band.

  • @Telstar5 said:
    Kind of a bold statement ..but at 21 hrs old..he kinda covers it... Just so brilliant on so many levels.. Besides the brilliant arrangement and playing, there's some Kool synth stuff ..
    Feast your ears on this...BEST ish you'll hear this week for sure..

    Yes, awesome, particularly love Jacobs vids with multitrack playing and vocals, stellar talent

  • I'm embarrassed to say that, from the title and pic of the vid, my first thought was - O right, I'm going to hate this!

    Really loved it though. Yes very talented. Maybe he might go a bit Zappa when he gets older?

  • He looks older than 21 hours!

  • @PhilW said:
    He looks older than 21 hours!

    I can indeed see still some amniotic fluid in his hair. Precocious little bugger.

  • @PhilW said:
    He looks older than 21 hours!

    Must be an android.

  • I remember that organ player from that cool Sub 37 Analog Architecture video.

  • @Nathan said:

    @Nu2moro said:
    Not my cup of tea but there is a lot of talent in that band.

    Nor mine. Sounds like the kitchen sink. I really wish there were more great up and coming younger bands, of a type that didn't sound like they were emulating what's gone before. Difficult, I know. But, a copy of a copy of a copy is never going to be great. Where is the next Bowie, Kate Bush or Sex Pistols?

    I think those fantastic artists were a product of their time. I struggle to see how the upcoming great artists out there can become visible for long in this fickle and throw away age.

    Sadly I see music to have been cheapened for the masses and only those that truly seek out good music will find it.

    The age of musical heroes is all but a distant memory :'(

    So sayeth this grumpy old man :p

  • I'm so glad Bob Dylan is still as great as he's ever been.

  • edited March 2016

    Just watched the video. I would send home 3/4 of the band, strip drummer's set to 3 pieces, take the harmoniser off the singers vocals...I would then find it more digestible but I do agree it sounds like a lot of shiny jazz I've heard before. Way too tight.

  • Estimable, effective, efficient, but not adorable.

  • The dangers of not taking acid.

  • Unless our robot overlords are already here (mebbe :)), I fully expect the next wave/revolution. I remember in 1975 feeling the world was in a musical rut that didn't account for me. By 1977 that had all changed and I was amazed I hadn't seen what was coming (when afterwards it was all so obvious). These are the Eisenhower years again, and maybe this generation of teenagers has to suffer through that, but a change is gonna come (we may not like it, but then that's how it's supposed to go as well.....)

  • edited March 2016

    I'm glad these guys are getting popular, it might help bring more sophisticated music back into the public spotlight and become an opportunity for other players.
    Their music is a little too clean for my tastes though. It's lacking the dirt and vibe that '70s fusion acts had. Good effort though ... and way above my technical capabilities. :/

  • @Nathan said:

    I really hope that there's someone out there, who may be influenced by what's gone before, as are we all, but still have a fresh twist, the necessary fire in the belly, plus that dollop of good luck. How great would it be to see the emergence of a new Bowie of Kate Bush, or a rock band that didn't sound like a copy of a copy, and frightened the establishment the way the Sex Pistols did.

    (I will put on my 'total dick hat' now)

    I think 'rock' at this point is by nature a copy of a copy of a copy and is now on the shelf like jazz. It is great stuff and I love it but hardly capable of frightening anyone anymore. It is folk music. The fact that that generation grew up to sit on the couch or be reduced to backyard bar-b-q-ers and just be pushed along by the culture machine to retire and eventually roll over and die is no surprise.

    The power of music in the old days was the power of the imagination and the mainstream media saw something like the Sex Pistols as a scary revolution that may twist your kids minds and morph the future (like hair metal or gangsta rap, or insane clowns) etc etc. They all just grow up to be normal tax paying law abiders for the most part who have a "scary" fashion phase in their youth.

    I mean really...

    ..that now looks less scary than the last Harry Potter movie.

    The gig is up on the 'power' of music. :trollface: :wink:

  • edited March 2016

    Jacob Collier on the EHX 45000 Multi-Track Looper

    https://youtube.com/watch?v=yLMJrg5ua-4

  • Hehe Harry Potter........ :p

  • Joey Alexander. Best musician under 12 on the planet, no question.

  • I'd say this little lassie has a fair stab at the title:

  • @Nathan said:

    @AudioGus said:
    The gig is up on the 'power' of music. :trollface: :wink:

    I couldn't disagree more, AudioGus. Music has lost none of its power. The loss, is the loss of will to wield that power effectively.

    Music, is the one true religion. It can teach us much of what we need to know, and from many perspectives, yet it asks of us just one thing; listen.

    VR is the future. Music is comic books, a part of it but not the driving force. Long live the Avengers.

  • Let us agree that there are, as ever, many very gifted musicians out there.

    The good thing is that nowadays we can actually appreciate them via the cyberian channels without necessarily being dependant on record companies to hijack the jukebox.

  • edited March 2016

    Alright, all kidding aside. I think one factor these days is that the young music fans of today have an oprotunity that most of us old fogies did not. That is instantaneous access to all recorded music. If anything I find the young enthusiasts I work with in the entertainment industry who have real passion for music mostly listen to stuff from before they were born or when they were just pups. As for the masses and pop culture consumers...who cares? Is something new going to come out that is awesome? Maybe, who cares... I am just catching up on the past hundred years of earth music and there is waaaay more awesome treasures to find in the past from around the globe than the next act on late night with jimmy. Ed sulivan is dead (err, I presume).

    The pop sensations power to sway culture beyond mere fashion is gone and good riddance!

    JESUS this is strong coffee!

  • To be honest, I never much liked Bob Dylan. Couple of songs, but he bores the hell out of me. Couple of songs that are great, mostly when done by other people.

    This is cool. Love the drummers, love people who can keep a groove going through something like that. Musically, it's all right for me, but it was somewhat over the top. Lot of people standing around not doing much. Not sure I actually heard a guitar note, for all the people standing around, holding one chord.

    There's tons of good music out there to be found. And the reason music was so powerful when we were young was because there was a huge cultural change happening that clove right between two generations, and music was part of that. But most kids liked music then for the reason they like it now - it speaks to them, provides background for the things they do, livens up their parties and lives. I always laugh at folks who say it's worse now, or not as strong, or there are fewer great bands. The music biz is way more fractured now, way more styles, so you don't hear as much of the things you like. And there was just as high a percentage of dreck when we were younger as there is now, we just want to forget it. Or have we forgotten "Muskrat Love" and "Tie a Yellow Ribbon."

  • edited March 2016

    Reminds me a bit of this

  • An annual event for me is spending a couple evenings on youtube after typing in 'Official Video' and feeling like an old man emerging from a coma.

    Amazing what gets a half billion views in under a year that I never heard of. Most of it is 'lets cram three or four genres together and whine a lot'.

  • Yes, lots of young talent out there. Here's a link to Eldar; who is still under 30 years of age.

    Hiromi, another talent, is now over 30.

  • edited March 2016

    @AudioGus said:
    The dangers of not taking acid.

    Ha ha ha ! The guy is good, but it's not his best performance OMHO...
    What do you think of this one ?

  • @supadom said:
    Let us agree that there are, as ever, many very gifted musicians out there.

    The good thing is that nowadays we can actually appreciate them via the cyberian channels without necessarily being dependant on record companies to hijack the jukebox.

    +1

  • Nice. So much talent and musicianship in that room. I like it for what it is - don’t care what it’s not.

  • edited March 2016

    @crony said:

    @AudioGus said:
    The dangers of not taking acid.

    Ha ha ha ! The guy is good, but it's not his best performance OMHO...
    What do you think of this one ?

    Seems good like Yanni but I am more into Miles Davis or Captain Beefheart or Aphex Twin at their peak. Even if some of that stuff may come across as messing with people for the sake of messing with people... well, I like it when people mess with me. Individual personalities with enigmatic idiosyncrasies expressing themselves in their music. I like it when these kinds of words can describe someones music.

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