Tastyfrzz · 61-69, M
David Byrne from Talking Heads. Take me to the River was their one hit wonder.
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AdiosAmigo · M
@tenente Biggest piece of bullshit ive ever seen on here sad thing is he believes it
Punxi · F
Every member of any mass produced boy band.
Ever.
.
Ever.
.
FreeSpirit1 · 51-55, F
Bruce Springsteen
WasEP · 51-55, M
Bob Dylan
Waveney · 41-45, M
Agreed, but you can't deny she looks astounding for a 90+ year old
Waveney · 41-45, M
@Thinkerbell Well, there's no proof either way.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
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ArishMell · 70-79, M
You are only going to elicit samples of people's tastes but as sheer bad singers by mine, I'd rate in no special order,
Elvis Costello - oddly, as he is a very good, clear and coherent speaker in interviews. He sounded drunk, the way he slurred the songs.
Frank Sinatra - all the right notes, etc, but speaking the words rather than singing them.
Elton John - nothing wrong with his songs, just his singing ( a bit like Costello's).
Bob Dylan - I've heard worse but don't think he was a particularly good singer.
Me - if I'd tried being a recording "artiste".
For a long time I'd have included the actor Lee Marvin until I realised his one-hit wonder murdering of Wanderin' Star far more true to the character in the film, than an art-song style would have been. Indeed, I thought it ruined by the full orchestra and "angelic choir" who come in about halfway through the hit single version. (I don't know if that arrangement's all-Hollywoood pseudo-sentimentality was also in the film.)
As for Dick van Dyke... Hollywood actors do not sound like Cockney chimney-sweeps, I'm sure!
Recently I heard a snippet of Ringo Starr trying a Country & Western number. It seems he's quite a fan of the genre. He tried, for no good reason, affecting an American rural accent. Come off it, Richard Starkey, you are a Liverpudlian and you have not lost that proud N.W. English city's distinctive accent.
The strangest I've heard was an American soprano - sorry, I forget her name - with Sandy Denny's beautiful Where The Time Goes. She was not trying to affect Alexandra's English accent, nor the 'American Rusticana' that made so much C&W stuff so faux. Properly-trained in very advanced singing techniques, unlike most pop and rock singers, but I think she was trying to sing in a natural voice rather than inflated operatic style. It did sound peculiar.
Elvis Costello - oddly, as he is a very good, clear and coherent speaker in interviews. He sounded drunk, the way he slurred the songs.
Frank Sinatra - all the right notes, etc, but speaking the words rather than singing them.
Elton John - nothing wrong with his songs, just his singing ( a bit like Costello's).
Bob Dylan - I've heard worse but don't think he was a particularly good singer.
Me - if I'd tried being a recording "artiste".
For a long time I'd have included the actor Lee Marvin until I realised his one-hit wonder murdering of Wanderin' Star far more true to the character in the film, than an art-song style would have been. Indeed, I thought it ruined by the full orchestra and "angelic choir" who come in about halfway through the hit single version. (I don't know if that arrangement's all-Hollywoood pseudo-sentimentality was also in the film.)
As for Dick van Dyke... Hollywood actors do not sound like Cockney chimney-sweeps, I'm sure!
Recently I heard a snippet of Ringo Starr trying a Country & Western number. It seems he's quite a fan of the genre. He tried, for no good reason, affecting an American rural accent. Come off it, Richard Starkey, you are a Liverpudlian and you have not lost that proud N.W. English city's distinctive accent.
The strangest I've heard was an American soprano - sorry, I forget her name - with Sandy Denny's beautiful Where The Time Goes. She was not trying to affect Alexandra's English accent, nor the 'American Rusticana' that made so much C&W stuff so faux. Properly-trained in very advanced singing techniques, unlike most pop and rock singers, but I think she was trying to sing in a natural voice rather than inflated operatic style. It did sound peculiar.
AbbeyRhode · F
Bruce Springsteen comes to mind. At his best, he sounded like a constipated old man on the toilet.
MasterLee · 56-60, M
@4thdimensiondream try to stay on topic
Thrust · 61-69, M
@4thdimensiondream
A lot of his early songs were well written. That’s when he was plausibly in touch with the working man. But for many decades he’s been doing a working man minstrel show
A lot of his early songs were well written. That’s when he was plausibly in touch with the working man. But for many decades he’s been doing a working man minstrel show
4thdimensiondream · 70-79, M
@Thrust I can accept this. Hard for him to truly be in touch with the working man. At least he gave the fans their $ worth in long concerts.
Gomaine · 22-25, FNew
In our current tines Taylor Swift
MasterLee · 56-60, M
Cher
Springsteen
Springsteen
Thevy29 · 41-45, M
Ozzy Osbourne
GoFish ·
elvis .. jk
SleepingWithGhosts · 46-50, M
Steven Tyler.
Waveney · 41-45, M
I'm going for unpopularity and saying Jimi Hendrix
HumanEarth · F
I agree with you, that song drives me nuts. But yet I end up singing to it 40 years later 🤣🤣🤣
[media=https://youtu.be/rm_IV6eRqyk]
[media=https://youtu.be/rm_IV6eRqyk]
4meAndyou · F
Frank Sinatra. A passable tenor, but a whiny entitled and CONNECTED drunken sponge, who USED his connection to the mafia to launch his Vegas career. His VOICE was NOT that fabulous...for all the movies and hype that the Mafia bought for him.
AdiosAmigo · M
Whats a sing ?
Pretzel · 70-79, M
Is she even rated?
IM5688 · 70-79, M
You classify Yoko Ono as a singer?
When she attempts to sing, she sounds more like fingernails on a chalkboard.
When she attempts to sing, she sounds more like fingernails on a chalkboard.
tenente · 36-40, M
Billie Eilish

Katy Perry

James Blunt


Katy Perry

James Blunt

Ontheroad · M
No arguments from me... there may have been one worse (Tiny Tim?), but she sucked.






























