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@JohnnyGoodyear - Hey Johnny, nice to hear that! Yes I also love her very much, she is really a great artist! Great you saw her live!
David Gilmour, Edgar Froese, Bert Jansch.
Pink Floyd
Die Fantastischen Vier
John Mayall
Rick Wakeman, John Wetton, Neal Morse.
Interesting that I really relate to some people's lists, and others mention artists that I personally can't stand! (No I'm not saying who...)
I liked those Red Molotov bold sans-serif T-shirts that were all the rage in trendy parts of London a few years ago, which simply had band member surnames listed, like:
Hutter &
Schneider &
Bartos &
Flur.
Kirk &
Mallinder &
Watson.
Godley &
Creme &
Stewart &
Gouldman.
Horn &
Dudley &
Jeczalik &
Langan &
Morley.
Dave Dee &
Dozy &
Beaky &
Mick &
Tich.
Jackson &
Jackson &
Jackson &
Jackson &
Jackson.
I almost wish I’d bought one when they were trendier, to replace my decades old not-very-well surviving quite torn and thin New Order / Touched By The Hand Of God designed by Peter Saville using Letraset t-shirt from the late ’80s that I still keep. Except that I couldn’t find a The Residents one.
I grew up in Chicago, we used to hang out at Wax Trax all the time when I was younger. My friends and I would see those guys all the time around the store or studio, pretty cool way to get inspired to make music
I like John Wetton, love his vocals and bass playing in King Crimson. Saw him play live with UK once too.
Peter Gabriel, Todd Rundgren, Frank Zappa.
Cybertron( Juan Atkins)- all that early electro stuff from the 80s certainly invoked a deep love of synth based music. Of course that morphed into Detroit techno
Public Enemy, mostly for the bomb squads cutting edge noisy funk production
Future Sound of London- because lifeforms was so deep, so abstract and still sounds fresh to this day
Keith Richards, John Lennon, and Joe Strummer.
Muchos memories in Philly for me as well. All good.
Even the bad things were fun in a "great story to tell" type way.
No doubt. Very Cool.
Hell yeah Joe Strummer.
Was not expecting to see this band on the list.
He produced the Rabies album and played a lot of guitar on it. Hence why that album sounds like a bad Ministry record (except for Warlock, that's a pretty classic SP track).
@touchconspiracy it's Cybotron
Ministry live was great, Mike Scaccia (RIP) was an underrated guitarist.
Lol, sorry for typo, it's been like 30 years since I had that vynil..
Huh.
Makes sense.
Ministry live was intense. Especially all the video screens that had abortions and various other interesting things.
Mike AND PAUL also dead.
First time I saw Ministry live, they did a 15 minute version of "Stigmata" to close, and yeah the visuals were crazy (lots of stream-of-consciousness imagery that would come back to a static close-up shot of an eyeball).
Still probably not the level of Throbbing Gristle having negative ion generators on stage to trigger a shock at the crowd when certain frequencies were hit. That must have been intense.
@Syngularity said: Mike Oldfield
I was just having a cup of tea in a cafe at the bottom of Hergest Ridge and got talking to a woman there - she told me she lent MO a horse for a photo shoot they did on the ridge. Apparently he didn't say thank you and was 'chemically influenced'.
Stigmata - my favorite
Funny how Stigmata and it's E to A slide sound is such forerunner to modern electro and the "bend" sound.
ie: Frederich Franchi and that genre
(Elvis,)Presley,Costello,John,Paul,George,Dylan.
Steven Wilson, John Paul George, Peter Gabriel.
Chillout/Trip Hop hasn't been covered. They are very important to me! :-)
Nightmares on Wax - Zero 7 - Air - Massive Attack
@Audiojunkie you are not the only one!
Life has got in the way of the obsession I had when I was younger. Just bought Cubasis for iPad so hoping to relight the fire! Lol :-)
In process of dragging pc out of storage to get some old stuff redone.
Me too - The Venue in London, around 1980, it must have been one of their last gigs. I've seen him solo and with Asia a fair few times since, great song writer as well as performer (as are the others!)
Blimey Phil, I think that was the same gig as I went to - actually my first proper gig. I think it was the Danger Money tour, and they had Terry Bozzio and Eddie Jobson (who had a wall of analogue keyboards). Small World!
The big three (beyond the Beatles) -- Keith Emerson, Herb Alpert, and my maternal grandmother (keyboards).
@Audiojunkie Funny you should mention Garry Newman/Tubeway because I just started listing to them. There are some great Garry Newman playlists on Apple Music that spans his whole career.
I've never tried this before but they have a "copy link" for playlists:
Listen to Intro to Gary Numan by Apple Music Alternative on @AppleMusic.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/playlist/intro-to-gary-numan/idpl.7511221594bc4053bb6aee173ec883cb
Amon Tobin, Skalpel, Forss, Jazzanova, Kruder & Dorfmeister,Massive Attack,Tricky,Cinematic Orchestra,Quantic Soul Orchestra,Four Tet,Hexstatic,Dj Food,Cut Chemist,Avalanches,Guru,Rob Swift,Grand Master Flash,De la soul,James Brown,Duke Pearson,Jeremy Steig,Budy Rich,Cannonball Aderley,Curtis Mayfield,Gill scot heron and many more. I just cant choose only 3 but mostly i listen to 90s trip hop/chillout music.
Was about to comment on the shortage of women on this list. Grandma for the win!
Not a fan of 'best actress' category shit but I'll use it as a lame excuse to add three more to my personal musical impact list: Kim Gordon, Rebecca Gates (Spinanes) and Kathleen Hannah (Bikini Kill/Le Tigre). Close runners up: Bjork, Kristen Hersh (Throwing Muses), and Missy Elliot (beats more than rhymes). And I mean all of them individually as musicians vs bands that influenced me which had female singers.
Rebecca Gates' post-spinanes solo record Ruby Series is a record I wish I had made every single time I hear it. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=rebecca+gates+ruby