It’s it just me or there are others.


I was wondering if it is just me that I don’t like the later year works of most singers with amazing voices.

I find that I do not enjoy most of the singing of Aretha, Adele, Sara Vaughan, Whitney Houston…etc. that comes after their initial few album and get them established.

Many female vocalists with great chaps falls prey to their vocal ability and don’t try hard enough? or purchase the rights to good songs.

Feel the same about  great instrumentalists. I think many times when they do their solos they are just self satisfying or just lazy. If it is in the context of the rest of the song, “amazing”, greatly enjoy it but a lots of time they go off in a tangent that has nothing to do with rest of the song.

Just trying to see anybody else feels the same way or should I try to make a greater efforts to appreciate the works of this artists.

skc

 

128x128skchun

I say this because I enjoy a greater catalogue from singers with less vocal chaps.

skc

@roxy54 

i agree with you on your reply - op's assertion is a gross generalization, and as such hardly accurate

as for 'chaps' vs 'chops' i suspect this is a english-is-second-language issue... so be nice ... 🤣😀

 

@jjss49 

I wasn't trying to be funny, I was actually curious because I thought that it was a typo the first time, and then thought that it was a term that was not familiar to me, so I googled it and found nothing, hence the question. I'll be nice...

It’s really weird, these very recent threads regarding, “I don’t like something…does that make me…wrong?”  
Are these actual people or A.I.?  

I guess we can’t really tell anymore.  

It’s scary how increasingly fearful we’re becoming of individuals.  
We’re terrified and insecure if we have an opinion that differs from the masses.  
We seek validation, as though there’s “something wrong with us.”

Individuals have individual ideas.  

Seriously, if someone has shrines to Aretha, Adele, Sara Vaughan & Whitney, or if someone else finds them unlistenable…who cares?

@skchun 

Contrary to what others are saying, I think there is something to what you're saying, but I don't think it is something specific to female singers.

Many artists have their greatest creative periods earlier, rather than later in their careers. Whether this is related to no longer having the time required, a loss of the drive to create or just that life becomes much easier, well you would have to ask them. All I do know is that stress and pain are great sources of inspiration and there is a lot less of both, when fame and fortune are achieved.

 

 

 

I suspect a bot. There's so much here that, from my perspective, simply doesn't add up. 

@tony1954 

I agree with what you've described re: stress/pain leading to inspiration.

I just played some REM from the 80s; Green, Fables of the Reconstruction, and Reckoning. I bought Monster, and Out of Time and then I left the building and stopped rushing out to get the next REM record. The edge they had in those earlier records, not just the 3 I mentioned, had gone by Out of Time. That's just my personal view; I know millions of people bought and thoroughly enjoy the later work. It's just not for me.

I suppose it's a similar story with U2: October, Boy, War, and then Unforgettable Fire was the pivotal record. We then had Joshua Tree which was "ok" but again, I stopped after this for the same reasons as with REM.

There are probably dozens of similar examples

 

I agree about instrumentalists; I used to enjoy guitar solos, drum solos (well, not drum solos that much), and such back in the 70's, but since then, if a solo doesn't serve the song it's in, they don't have to show off their chops to me - not interested. But I know lots of other people still enjoy them. 

@tylermunns

Are these actual people or A.I.?

I guess we can’t really tell anymore.

It’s scary how increasingly fearful we’re becoming of individuals.
We’re terrified and insecure if we have an opinion that differs from the masses.
We seek validation, as though there’s “something wrong with us.”

Perhaps this is a reflection of the times. Thanks to disinformation, "truth" has become increasingly presented/regarded as relative. With facts so often disputed, what and who can be trusted/relied upon becomes increasingly unclear, a scenario that arouses high anxiety. One response is for individuals to seek refuge by subsuming themselves in movements that claim to possess some exclusive validity ("we alone are right and all others are wrong").

@larsman

...if a solo doesn't serve the song it's in, they don't have to show off their chops to me - not interested. But I know lots of other people still enjoy them. 

Yes, indeed. There are apparently legions of fans of players who are extremely "athletic" -- whose appeal seems to be based almost entirely upon flashy technique. I perceive very little musical content. They are babbling at light speed but, so far as I can discern, actually saying very little. This is very apparent on youtube where the "music-as-sport" paradigm is regrettably prevalent. Fans have an enormous (and enormously unconscious) ego investment regarding who is "the best guitarist" and if you suggest that music is not a competition, it simply doesn’t register with them.