• If you would like to get your account Verified, read this thread
  • The TMF is sponsored by Clips4sale - By supporting them, you're supporting us.
  • >>> If you cannot get into your account email me at [email protected] <<<
    Don't forget to include your username

Most Talented Singer Ever...

Stevie Wonder (pervert, stay off the crack)😛
Anita Baker
Luther Vandross
Barry White
Whitney Houston (before the drugs and beatings)
Sam Cooke
Smokey Robinson
Marvin Gaye
Yolanda Adams
Oleta Adams
Phyllis Hyman
Mariah Carey
Curtis Mayfield
Al Green
 
I agree that it's probably Elvis. I always liked the live version of "Suspicious Minds."
 
dreamboy said:
In terms of overall music ability, nobody has Paul MacCartney on their list?
😕 😕 😕

I'll echo Paul McCartney, and add John Lennon. I've gotta admire musicians who spent most of their careers composing and playing by ear, with no ability to read music.
 
And I'll throw in David Gilmour from Pink Floyd for good measure 🙂
 
Others I forgot to add...

Chaka Khan
Michael Jackson (before he was off the wall... geddit?)

JPie1 said:
wow gripped I was amazed no one mentioned Aretha Franklin before you...one hell of a talent!!

The way she sings Respect and Say A Little Prayer with such raw potentcy, she had to be there!
 
Elvis sucked

Elvis was an overrated country boy who stole everything he knew from black singers like James Brown, B.B. King, and Chuck Berry. Anyway, the singers I would put on this list are (in no particular order)....

Sarah McLachlan
Sarah Brightman
Loreena McKennitt
Maynard James Keenan
Bono (before he started smoking too much)
Jerry Cantrell
Chris Cornell
Lisa Gerrard (from Dead Can Dance)
Dido
Charlotte Church
 
I forgot some

Patti Labelle
Shirley Murdock
Stephanie Mills
Boyz II Men (these two groups are second to none in acappella singing)
Take 6
 
Interesting thread...........

.....but....you are all getting a little confused ....and so am I!

It all depends what you mean by the word "Talented".,...paul mcartney was a great song writer, no question, but great singer? I think not.

TK totally floored me by including Sarah Vaughn as one of his favourites! I totally agree. She was a great exponent of her instrument, very athletic, complete mastery of the voice. Paul Mcartney has never had that, and i am sure he would be the first to admitt it.

Another example no one has mentioned is Mel Torme....(once again it falls to a Brit to tell you yanks about your own wonderful jazz heritage!) Listen to his rendition of " That New York Feeling" bloody fanstastic, i cant think of many singers who could sing that song.

Ella Fitzgerald, Carmen Mcrae, Dianna Krall, Nat King Cole, Billy Echstine, ...all these people have paid their dues, stayed in at night and practised and became fantastic vocalists, but none of them are known for being great song writers. So we need to separate these two virtues as they quite often do NOT go together.

The opposite of this type of singer is Bob Dylan. An appalling singer,and hopeless guitarist, but does this mean he is not a great artist? another example (of which there are many in this catergorey) would be Curt Cobain, bloody dreadfull musician but he had something, not sure what it was myself, maybe someone can tell me!
 
It all depends what you mean by the word "Talented".,...paul mcartney was a great song writer, no question, but great singer? I think not.
TK totally floored me by including Sarah Vaughn as one of his favourites! I totally agree. She was a great exponent of her instrument, very athletic, complete mastery of the voice. Paul Mcartney has never had that, and i am sure he would be the first to admitt it.
The nice thing is how we're entitled to our own opinions. No one's list here is the definitive answer; in this thread, every member's style is accepted and appropriate. 🙂
 
I think Red has a point here. There are many ways to define "talented". We all have our favorites, and an arguement could be made for any one of the singers mentioned. Sometimes a singer doesn't have to have perfect pitch or even a wonderful voice to be considered a "classic" singer. A certain voice just works with a certain kind of material. Singers like Bob Dylan, Johhny Cash or Neil Young would probably never make it if thier careers started today. It's all about the music that the voice is incorporated into. That's where songwriting comes in, and is so important. Lennon and McCartney may not have been the most utterly talented singers in the world, but thier music was written to perfectly match thier ranges and strengths.

Something like "best singer" is such a relative question that it's hard to pick a few without reverting to your own personal favorite music. There are singers out there that I like simply because of thier ability to harmonize. I've been in bands where I wasn't the featured singer, and I can tell you that spending the whole night belting out high harmonies can be more grueling than singing lead.

Anyway, these may not be the "best singers", but they're the voices that I've always liked and respected...

Steve Perry, Journey - Not only a killer range, but packed with emotion. On tunes like "Anyway You Want It" and "Mother, Father", he sounded like he was having sex while recording the vocal tracks.

Geoff Tate, Queensryche - another "raw talent" vote. Six octave range and all without screaming.

Rik Emmett, Triumph - Just like the sound of his voice, especially on his solo stuff.

Peter Gabriel - Again, there's something about his inflections, tone and timbre that does it for me.

Kevin Cronin, REO Speedwagon - Probably a surprise choice, but he's got one of those elusively high ranges. He sings naturally in a range that many reach falsetto for. It doesn't sound like it's up there until you try singing a few in a row.

Jon Anderson, Yes - THE voice of progressive rock. All in a five-foot package.

Steve Hogarth, Marillion - It's rare that I like the replacement singer in a band after the original has left. Marillion has left behind the early-Genesis-sounding epics and moved into some really ethereal territory. Steve is powerful from down low and unreachable up high.

Chad Kroeger, Nickelback - Raw power that's hard to sustain for more than one tune. On our set list, I have to put "How You Remind Me", "Someday" and "Too Bad" in three separate sets.

Tori Amos - Not the best female lead, but her angelic voice fits perfectly with her writing style.

Stevie Nicks (pre-Jack Daniels-cocaine-insanity) - Her best work was on the Buckingham/Nicks album. If you're only familiar with Stevie from Fleetwood Mac and '80's solo stuff, get a copy of Buckingham/Nicks. And speaking of...

Lindsey Buckingham, Fleetwood Mac, solo - Not awesomely talented, but I really dig the sound of the man's voice.

To avoid any future argument, I know I've left out a million classic singers. I don't claim this list to be "right", just my personal favorites.
 
Having said that............

.....I have total respect for anyone who gets up there and has a go. I used to be very scornfull of any "singer" I might come across during my time as a jazz piano player. I did not consider them to be "proper" musicians like us instrumentalists who have served their time in the woodshed, but I have completely the opposite view now. I can not sing a note, and on the occasions that i have had to I have come to realise what a difficult instrument it is!

Its all very well sitting up on stage hiding behind a keyboard and taking a dim view of the vocalist who is taking all the limelight of you. If its so bloody easy why dont i try it myself?!.....and the answer of course is becuase its too bloody difficult and its very hard work.
 
best singer........
oh, that's easy:

milagros317 of course

little insider joke
 
Hey Dave!..........

.....have you heard "Take Six"? the American A Capella gospel group? they sound like the beach boys running on nitro! bloody great!
 
Red Indian:

I'm very familiar with Take Six. They've been around for many years and I've never heard any group that sang acappella and ended up in the correct key and pitch by the end of the song, except these men. And I have a pretty good idea since I sang acappella throughout junior and senior high school. Most groups that attempt it should just avoid it because poor pitch and flat off-key singing acappella just hurts my ears!

Not quite sure about the comparison of them to the Beach boys running on nitro. But we're entitled to our opinions......
 
Yes Kis 123.........

....I aggree with you, they are indeed the dogs bollocks! I have quite a few of their albums. I am not the least bit religous but if these guys were in my church every week i would be on the front row!

Sorry you dont like the beach boys analogy, how about "they sound like a MK XX Spitfire in the final days of WW2, out front, without any realistic competitor"......that any better?
 
crydun said:
Sandi Patti
Barbara Streisand
Emmylou Harris
Linda Ronstadt
Roy Orbison
Elvis Presley
The Judds(especially Wynonna)
Martina McBride
Judy Garland
Brian Wilson(The Beach Boys)
Clay Aiken
Etta James
Faith Hill
Karen Carpenter
Patsy Cline(my personal idol)
Patty Loveless

I forgot to add Sarah Brightman to my list. Awesome voice!!
 
Previously posted by red indian:

"Sorry you dont like the beach boys analogy, how about "they sound like a MK XX Spitfire in the final days of WW2, out front, without any realistic competitor"......that any better?"

I think you're onto something....... 😉
 
Admiral Trouser said:
Freddie Mercury, without a doubt. Huge range, powerful voice, could set a stadium alight with the perfromance.

Sorted 😉

AT

Yep, I'll go with that, with the slight addition that arguably his best vocal work was, sadly, on Made In Heaven. Considering the state of his health when those vocals were recorded you've got to wonder what could have been.

Two more that I don't think have been mentioned yet (and more along the 'talented in their field' lines than 'best singer ever'):

James Hetfield - not the widest range ever but THE voice of Metal for a generation, instantly recognisable (see South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut) and a great live performer who can do subtle and intimate when he wants to.

Trent Reznor - emotion, plain and simple. Every time I hear The Downward Spiral (or The Fragile for the that matter) all the way through in one hit it floors me every time.
 
crydun said:
I forgot to add Sarah Brightman to my list. Awesome voice!!

Do ya know Sarah Brightman's very first thing she ever did in 1979? Sarah Brightman And Hot Gossip with the very spacy eurodisco track "Starship Trooper".😀
 
Oh almost forgot to give my input...Freddie Mercury hands down is the best singer in rock of alltime! But for other forms of music its very hard to pick!
 
I absolutely bloody hate...........

.....Queen and Freddy Mercury, I detest that sort of over wrought over produced fussy, glossy, glib, trite, rock music. Its rock music for middle management stock brokers, safe, predictable and about as dangerous as Perry Como..........but.......he has got a great voice, and a very good range, not many rock singers do covers of his stuff, becuase its just to bloody difficult!
 
So many greats already listed. I'll just add a couple of my personal faves not yet mentioned by anyone:

Ian Anderson
Joni Mitchell
 
She's not a favorite of mine, but I'm gonna put Darlene Love (from the 60s) on this list. We saw her last weekend in the current stage version of "Nunsense" and she absolutley tore down the house with an incredible gospel song. A serious talented singer. All live!! Not like the current crop of fabricated pop cartoon characters that are on the charts today.


Drew
 
What's New
11/5/25
Visit Door 44 for a large selection of tickling clips.

Door 44
Live Camgirls!
Live Camgirls
Streaming Videos
Pic of the Week
Pic of the Week
Congratulations to
*** brad1701 ***
The winner of our weekly Trivia, held every Sunday night at 11PM EST in our Chat Room
Top