What unknown musical artist would you like to share with your fellow audiophiles?


When it comes to music, about half of my friends are "collectors" and the other half are true audiophiles. It seems the collectors are so obsessed with the size of their collections, that they leave no room in their budget for quality audio equipment. I think the audiophiles, with their focus on quality over quantity, are the ones with their priorities straight. So, unless you are on an unlimited budget, I'm guessing that audiophiles are more selective in their musical purchases. That being the case, I'm curious about what "buried treasures" have you been able to find? Thanks for responding and I look forward to discovering some good music, based on your suggestions.

I'll lead off with the band Crack The Sky, most notably their first two albums: "Crack The Sky" (1975) and "Animal Notes" (1976). I would describe them as a cross between Be Bop Deluxe and Frank Zappa. Their music is unique and totally unmistakable with anyone else. Choice cuts from the debut album are: "Ice;" She's a Dancer;" "Mind Baby" & "Sleep." Choice cuts from Animal Notes are: "Animal Skins;" "Wet Teenager;" Virgin....No" & "Maybe I Can Fool Everybody."
mitchagain
Anat Cohen - The Israeli-born clarinetist is truly one of the greatest of all time!  Have you ever regretted not seeing Jimi Hendrix or John Coltrane and now it's too late?  Seeing her in concert should be on every music-lover's list of things to do in 2019!
Thorbjorn Risager - Quality Blues/R&B from across the pond.  Don't be put off by his name, the man gets DOWN!;)
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Lots of good suggestions here, I've probably heard of or have about fifty percent of musicians listed. I've been a music lover and audiophile for over forty years so I'm aware of the older stuff. Most of my listening is now via computer based audio, Tidal, and soon Qobuz, makes everything so much more accessible. Tidal has brought countless new excellent performers to my attention, some have been mentioned. I will add a few.
Olivia Cheney, wonderful British folk.Morcheeba, kind of like Massive AttackHooverphonic, european modern pop/rock
Lee ann Womack, Laura Cantrell, real countrySparks, very different rock, 70'sJonathan Richman & Modern LoversBlack Mountain, Rival Sons, hard rock in Led Zeppelin vein
Mats/Morgan Band - Swedish duo of Mats Oberg on keys and Morgan Agren on drums.  Heavily influenced by Zappa.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCe8aLYy1wiHJT1gsjwoN35g
Senri Kawaguchi - 20 year old drummer who has been a YouTube star for more than 10 years.  Her third album "Cider ~ Hard & Sweet came out earlier this year featuring the trio in this video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvEBp2qGHYUShe also has 4 albums as half of the duo Kiyo-Sen with Kiyomi Otaka on keys.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCC1cU8NGGQ-EGaN-Ln2qTSw
Alex Skolnick Trio - Alex is lead guitarist for the thrash metal band Testament but he has this jazz trio on the side.  Latest album is "Conundrum"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBzMahGjjnR3LOIYzqDTKdQ
FAT(Fabulous Austrian Trio) - Featuring Alex Machacek on guitarhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCV5POOIET3Ei73QT9DqxhHg
Forgas Band Phenomena - French band led by drummer Patrick Forgas.  I have 6 albums by them and they have a brand new one just out.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOt7x6zm7QsenrxIcaNx0kg
Mark Wingfield - American/Britsh guitarist that has his own sound and style.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvDzlzKQMIqYJVGLtBCG24A
For some interesting music check out these labels:http://moonjune.com/catalogue.htmlhttp://cuneiformrecords.com/
David Hykes and The Harmonic Choir. Album, "Hearing Solar Winds" (1 of the cuts is played in link below).

If you can imagine Tuvan throat-singing adapted to droning chant in highly reverberant spaces...well, you just have to hear it.

If you like trance or ambient anything, this music will knock you flat.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4pVASwvvMk
Vuyo Sotashe.  Saw him in concert with the Jazz at the Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis last week.  Incredible vocalist.  http://www.vuyosotashe.com
Touché  three_easy_payments.  Nice comeback.  One thing though - my statements about not recognizing Monty Python was in two parts.  The first was my own lamenting that as we (I) get older, it’s a bit sad to keep experiencing more and more people who, understandably as time passes, have no clue about things that may have been popular in my generation.  That hits me regularly  at work when I’ll say something while a song is playing like “Oh, that’s the Average White Band” - to which a more and more common reply will be: “Who?”

The second reference was more specific. One would think that my  two Monty Python quotes, if not taken in context, would also have been deleted as offensive.  So that made me wonder if the moderator Googled them or not. N80’s deleted response was a quote by John Cleese from  Monty Python.  So I was addressing what I saw as a possible inconsistency.

Yeah, those repressive Audiogon life  incidents are a  b#@tch aren’t they? 

Enjoy the music!
Stan Rogers even if his Between the Breaks Live Album was recommended in Stereophile many years ago. Arguably the greatest folk singer ever and most Canadians have never heard of him.
Also give his brother Garnet Rogers a listen has possibly the most emotional song ever written "Frankie and Johnny"
Well I'm now offended that anyone could fail to recognize iconic Monty Python quotes but I'm not sure deleting any posts will repair  this offensive act.  I will have to listen to music and try to repress yet another tragic life incident.
@fmpnd In the moderator's defense, I did not put it in quotes _and_ the post was flagged by another member who found it offensive. So it was probably a member who did not realize it was Monty Python. I am flattered that some member thought that I had thought up that insult!

Anyway, back to the music.
Fela Kuti is famous all over the world but I had never heard of him. I discovered him on some "best music of all-time list". The song they had on the list, Zombie, was listed as from a video game. I was surprised and had to investigate. It was like finding a pot of gold when I heard the catalog of Fela Kuti albums. The Bob Marley of Africa. I ended up buying about 6 or 7 albums from him. Just a giant in terms of talent.

Another guy whose back catalog I discovered yesterday was Todd Rundgren. Growing up I knew the 2 or 3 songs played on rock radio. But with TIDAL I was able to see this dude is supremely talented. The albums from 1970 - 1973 are awesome.
Mariza
Portuguese Fado was, in many ways, revived as an art by this stunning woman.
@n80:  it is simply amazing to me that the moderator would delete that clear reference to a John Cleese/Monty Python quote yet leave both of mine.  

Don’t even get me started on what the social media cupcakes think is offensive these days - the same people who then post the most vile hateful responses/posts to any article.  So much hypocrisy and double standards abound today.

I agree, so much of the classic and innovative comedy of the 60s and 70s is being lost in this uptight world we live in.
Clarence Spady .. an incredible talent whose career, unfortunately, was hampered by drug use in his early days. "Nature of the Beast" (his 1st album) is my favorite. IIRC you can find him on Spotify.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarence_Spady

I’ve seen him live several times .. brilliant.
@fmpnd : Did you see that one of the mods removed my John Cleese quote? Someone flagged it as an insult and the moderator removed it. I think that's hysterical.

Monty Python literacy is at an all time low. Who will be lost of and forgotten next, Moe, Larry and Curly?
Didn’t our boy Albert Collins play a strat?  Saw him live in the King Street train station in Seattle many years ago.  Wasn’t a club, it was the train station next to Safeco Field, old brick building, tile floors and bathrooms.  Amazing show. Beer garden, dancin’ in the streets, ah! The good old days! 
+1 for Redd Volkaert.  As far as I know he just does covers (I've heard him many times, so I presume that's the case) but he manhandles a telecaster like nobody else.  And it's rarely mentioned but he has a great baritone voice.  I'm hoping to see him paired with Bill Kirchen (original Lost Planet Airman with Commander Cody) sometime.  Redd and Bill do appearances out of town so it seems logical they'd play together in Austin as well...
Eva Cassidy 

RIP

not obscure but long gone and still amazing 

tearful, joyful, like a bell in the fog 
Blodwyn Pig, "Ahead Rings Out"Apropos of the current time, the eponymous "Fraternity of Man" first album.
soundermn,
+1 for the Widespread Panic's wood box set. You may also like some of moe.'s live albums as well. Warts & all, volumes 3 & 4 are great.

mhart, You reminded me of Mickey Harts albums. If anybody is into percussion music, I would highly recommend "Planet Drum, His album with Bill Kreutzmann "Rhyming Devils", & his Diga Rhythm band release from 1976.

A couple other great percussion bands are "High Places" & "Six Drumsets", & if you're feeling really adventurous... check out the band "Drums & Tuba".
William Fitzsimons
Trent Dabbs 
Blind Pilot 
Joshua Radian 
Cary Brothers 
Billy Locket 
 
Another great band to check out... New Orleans Suspects.  Bluesy with a zydeco groove.  Kaleidoscoped is available on vinyl.
I found Tedeschi Trucks earlier this year and really love their first album. Their second album gets stelar reviews but leaves me cold. The same thing happened, for me, with Alabama Shakes. I don't dislike either of these band's second albums but they just don't do it for me.

Gary Clark, Jr.'s second album is not the tour de force his first album was but it is still great.

I have high hopes for third albums from all these bands.

The Struts, that I mentioned earlier (glam pop), just released their second album and it is every bit as fun as their first. It will be a long while before a third comes out.
Great topic!  I wish some posters would avoid every possible opportunity to argue, but I guess that is the state of AGon today.  Let's keep it focused on the topic - good music.

So, I just placed orders for Crack the Sky and moe.  Both, thanks to the recommendations here.  

I'll contribute two of my recent favorite current bands
- Tedeschi Trucks.  Kind of a mix between Allman Bros, with a Bonnie Raitt lead vocalist.  Really good rock/blues
- Widespread Panic.  Great jam band, and their recordings are excellent.  Check out the Wood box set.

@mitchagain, great stuff! The 1st and 2nd Graham Parker albums feature the playing of a couple members of Brinsley Schwartz (the band), including Brinsley himself. Speaking of that band, Nick Lowe, himself a member, said they were trying to sound as much like The Band as they were capable of. Another member was Ian Gomm, who is also a relatively-unknown real good artist.

Dwight Twilley (the group) is a particular favorite of mine, especially when drummer/singer Phil Seymour was a member (the first two albums). Their Sincerely debut album is in my all-time Top 10 list. It's really, really good.

John Hiatt is very well known, and his Bring The Family breakthrough album is unbelievably great. Not just great songs and singing, but also the playing of Ry Cooder, Nick Lowe, and Jim Keltner. I saw that line-up live, and it was a high point of my musical life.

Loudon Wainwright III is known, but not as well as he deserves. A great, great songwriter, his Last Man On Earth album is particularly good. By the way, early in his career he wrote a song memorializing the birth of his son Rufus, "Rufus Is A T*t Man" ;-) .

I hope everyone knows all about Marshall Crenshaw, who has made a lot of great albums. He plays almost all the instruments on his #447 album, which is packed with great songs.

Another relatively unknown working in the singer/songwriter style is Michael Kelsh, whose Bill Halverson (Clapton, Hendrix, Albert King, Neil Young, Beach Boys, Cream, C, S & N, hundreds of others) produced Well Of Mercy is fantastic. The album was executive-produced by Rodney Crowell, who I hope everyone knows of.

First, thanks to three_easy_payments for re-kindling my affection for Crack The Sky. The Youtube videos are off the hook! Just ordered 2 copies of For Catherine.
If you are from the Chicago area, Mr. Blotto is no stranger to you. They usually headline every street festival in town, and play at least 3 nights a week at different venues around the area. If you get a chance, go see them. This is one of my favorite videos by them https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiTXQlQRS70 .  

Almost 20 years old, and it is a daily listen/watch for me...just makes me smile.For a live blues album, you can't go wrong with "Seth JamesBand @Gruene Hall" Texas blues at its best.....if you can find a copy.
@maxnewid,thanks for the tips on The Guadalcanal Diary live album and The Eyelids. I like The Eyelids name in general and now I like it even more because I think it's a sly reference to REM. I enjoyed most of the bands that came out of that 80's - 90's Athens scene, such as: Dreams So Real, Love Tractor, Pylon and the Vigilantes of Love. I've known about The Connells from the get go, because a guy I used to work with was a frat brother of his.

I know about Big Big Train, because a good friend told me about their Youtube videos. So far, I've only picked up one of their live CD's ("A Stones Throw From The Sun"). The Steve Wynn CD of Dylan covers sounds intriguing. I always liked the duets that he did with Jonette Napolitano of Concrete Blonde.  
Please! This is supposed to be a happy occasion. Let's not bicker and argue over who killed who.
mitchagain....i couldnt agree more. the best band to never make it big. i love the first 6 albums. ive seen them well over 100x. 
Crack the Sky (Rolling Stone declared debut album of the year)
Animal Notes
Safety in Numbers
White Music
Photoflamingo
World in Motion1

beyond that i have 2 favs...

Tony C & the Truth. DEMONOPHONIC BLUES
delicious album...start to finish

Karl Werne
one of the greatest guitarists ive ever heard. 
lives and plays in Virginia Beach, VA. 
That old Marti Jones album, "Used Guitars" is great, but the recording, at least on the vinyl issued at the time of release, is a tad bright.
Good to see the less mainstream stuff all of you are into--once I learned that old heavy rock had been recategorized into 'metal' I found a lot of stuff that wasn't just cookie monster vocals and shredding. Some good bands out there. Orne- "Tree of Life" --'doom prog' an offshoot of the doom metal band Reverend Bizarre. The Scandinavians (well, Finns are not Scandinavian, but) seem to revel in this stuff. All sludgy, heavy, like Sabbath's first album, the slow grind with the flatted 5th. 
I'm a big Marti/Don fan too!
Although they are not unknown, Ojos de Brujo deserve much wider attention in this country.  Great musicians, song writers and amazing performers.  Here's a link to a video of a concert from 2007.
Lots of interesting suggestions here. Particularly pleased to see some fellow Hip fans. I will throw out a few:
James- U.K. band that has been releasing solid albums for 20 years.
The Horrors- U.K. band that sounds like early Simple Minds or even the Psychedelic Furs. Their last 4 albums are fantastic. The name of the band doesn't do justice to their sound.
Big Big Train- British prog band that sounds like early Genesis to me. Their last album "Grimspound" is terrific. Large band with a horn section and violin player that will make your system sing.

Since people have mentioned the DB's, Bongos, etc, three of my favorites from that era are Guadalcanal Diary, The Connells, and the Dream Syndicate. I got Steve Wynn's "Steve plays Bob" yesterday. It is a collection of Dylan tunes covered by the Dream Syndicate and Steve Wynn playing with people like Alejandro Escovedo. Guadalcanal Diary just rereleased a live album that captures their spirit from a show in 1999. And the Connells released a best of compilation last year that is a good start if you are not familiar with them.


Finally, for really new bands, The Eyelids out of Portland are a great jangle band reminiscent of REM. Their last album "Or" was produced by Peter Buck and they have a new one on the way. 

Cheers.


Jazz fans should check out Oded Tzur!  Some very interesting music with an Indian component - take a listen on youtube.

https://www.odedtzur.com/
+ 1 for Don Dixon & Marti Jones. They are both still making records together as "solo" artists, with Don always playing and producing. Although those releases are sporadic these days.

In a way, Marti remains me of a modern day Linda Ronstadt because both of them have amazing voices, as well as impeccable taste when it comes to the songs they cover. Those artists range from:

David Bowie, Elvis Costello, Marshall Crenshaw, John Hiatt and Graham Parker, as well as lesser known artists like Richard Barone (The Bongos), Clive Gregson, Peter Holsapple (The DB's), Dwight Twilley and Loudon Wainwright. Of the latter five, I'd highly recommend checking out the Bongo's, DB's & Dwight Twilley if you are a fan of the "power pop" genre."
@wassaicwill: Thanks for mentioning that your choices "can usually be found for peanuts on Amazon" I think that is important info to know. Many of the artist mentioned in these threads that I have looked up ends up being rare or out of print;  thus they are priced accordingly. So, it's nice to know up front that I can take a leap of faith on something unknown without a large investment. 
A new find definitely worth checking out is a Australian Band called The Teskey Brothers. I heard them this last month and immediately went looking for their new CD release and purchased, you won't be disappointed! Enjoy
I would nominate Darrell Scott, the singer songwriter from Nashville who writes passionate and personal songs and is an amazing singer...oh yes, he is also one of the greatest acoustic guitarists on the planet.  He does not fit a genre so is undervalued in my mind. 

2017's Live From the Station Inn is a great place to start.  So is his 2000 collaboration with Tim O'Brien (another candidate for recommendation too) Real Time which I would say is the quintessential album of American music I have ever heard...folk, gospel, rock, country--it's all there. . 


Binger the Voyager, Sweet Taste of Nothing

Dreamy Euro progressive space-pop, Depeche Mode fans would probably love it. Can usually be found for peanuts on Amazon.
@mitchagain
1) I’ve been very disappointed with the current music of the 21st century. ... So, I was interested in how many responses mentioned current music versus music from the 20th century.
I know what you mean. But there are some recent gems out there. Depends what your tastes are. For this crowd, some that may be accessible are:

Guitar-oriented:
  • Nick Johnston - Remarkably Human (may be the best electric guitar album in 30 years)
  • Buckethead - Electric Sea (almost everything by Buckethead is exceptional, but this is a mellow powerhouse)
  • Estas Tonne - Live at Odeon (2011) (classical with Gypsy influences)
  • Schzoid - ABCh (Schzoid is a metal band, but the guitarist put out a classical guitar album, and for some reason kept the Schzoid name)

Electronic:
  • Cualli - The Monk of Chunk (as an audiophile, if you want to show off your system this is it ... especially the song Tiger Prowl)

Doom metal:
  • Trees of Eternity - Hour of the Nightingale (a stunning masterpiece that’s accessible even for non-metal-heads; as a metal-head it’s my album of the millennium)

Black metal (but not really):
  • Xanthrochroid - Of Erthe and Axen Part I (they're listed as black metal because their previous album is, but this one is really a cinematic, symphonic something-or-other. But it isn’t black metal because I hate black metal and I wouldn’t list it unless I thought it was accessible for some here; extremely varied songs, so don’t play the first song and think that’s what the whole album sounds like)
???:
  • Eternity Forever - Fantasy (this is the happiest sounding album I’ve heard, but I don’t have a clue what genre ... a little pop, a little jazz, a little R&B)
  • David Maxim Micic - ECO (mostly progressive rock, avant-garde)
bdp24, Don Dixon's influence on "modern" music is solid, no doubt. I think you would really enjoy that album. As you would expect, great lyrics as well. 
Seeing the Angel Iris Dement receive the recognition she SO deserves gladdens my heart. Another well-kept secret is a singer of a very different sort---Lou Ann Barton. She has a few albums spread out over many years, but Old Enough, produced by Glenn Frey and Jerry Wexler, is just wonderful.
100% agree with the Struts. Super hard working glam band (think Slade and Sweet, not Ratt or Motley Crue) that writes every song like they’re going to be played to 80,000 stadiums. Don Dixon is a good choice as well. 

My suggestions:
Locksley--Locksley
Noisettes--Wild Young Hearts
VV Brown--Traveling Like The Light
Diego Garcia--Laura 2
The Red Button--She’s About to Cross My Mind
The Jessica Fletchers--What Happened to The and Less Sophistication

Van Dyke Parks, who wrote lyrics to some of the best Beach Boys songs - Surf's Up and Heroes and Villains.  He has several solo albums and is a brilliant arranger.  
Larry Raspberry and the High Steppers.  From the mid '70s.  Fun song "Older Women"