Moderator: Andrew
Ehwmatt wrote:How about David Pack? Great soul and great power to his voice, and not much of a mainstream name. I'd LOVE to hear him collaborate with Daryl Hall or Bill Champlin. Those are some white boys with soul!
Plus, he still sounds great today:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDPa49FNCF0
No downtuning. Some live warts here and there. But plenty of power and soul.
UncleKG wrote:They're not underrated in their home country (Australia), but two amazing vocalists (very different styles) that never got much recognition in America are Jon Farnham & Jimmy Barnes.
I also think Eric Martin is underrated.
UncleKG wrote:I may get ripped for this one, but I think Pat Monahan from Train is an underrated singer. Check out his CMT Crossroads episode with Martina McBride or any of the Zeppelin cover stuff on YouTube. His stage presence is a bit off-putting for some, but the guy has a great voice.
Ehwmatt wrote:UncleKG wrote:I may get ripped for this one, but I think Pat Monahan from Train is an underrated singer. Check out his CMT Crossroads episode with Martina McBride or any of the Zeppelin cover stuff on YouTube. His stage presence is a bit off-putting for some, but the guy has a great voice.
Perhaps in his early days, but his songs are too faggy and annoying for me to even come close to stomaching these days.
Train had a couple nice songs in the late 90s/early 00s (namely, Drops of Jupiter and Meet Virginia). Their new stuff is unrecognizable and completely faggy.
Jeremey wrote:Dave Mustaine: I think Dave has a very strong, controlled, and unique voice. He's written off by lots of people for his odd phrasing but he actually has a pretty great singing voice.
verslibre wrote:Mustaine > Hetfield, by far.
conversationpc wrote:verslibre wrote:Mustaine > Hetfield, by far.
I used to like Hetfield's voice, prior to the Black Album when he started trying to sound more like a trained singer or whatever you want to call it. He lost the edge.
verslibre wrote:conversationpc wrote:verslibre wrote:Mustaine > Hetfield, by far.
I used to like Hetfield's voice, prior to the Black Album when he started trying to sound more like a trained singer or whatever you want to call it. He lost the edge.
Metallica ain't worth dick past Master Of Puppets except for a few songs on ...And Justice For All.
OTOH, Megadeth's Endgame was a badass return to form.
conversationpc wrote:Jeremey wrote:Dave Mustaine: I think Dave has a very strong, controlled, and unique voice. He's written off by lots of people for his odd phrasing but he actually has a pretty great singing voice.
Really? Megadeth is one of my favorite bands but I wouldn't ever consider him to be underrated. Perfect for Megadeth? Absolutely.
Jeremey wrote:conversationpc wrote:Jeremey wrote:Dave Mustaine: I think Dave has a very strong, controlled, and unique voice. He's written off by lots of people for his odd phrasing but he actually has a pretty great singing voice.
Really? Megadeth is one of my favorite bands but I wouldn't ever consider him to be underrated. Perfect for Megadeth? Absolutely.
True, I guess I mean he's typically lumped in by the general public as a "thrash singer" which he is and he does well, but to me he's always had a better voice than what that generalization would imply, so underrated in that respect.
conversationpc wrote:And he's a friggin' monster rhythm guitarist and one of the best overall in the business, in my opinion. Those teeth-shattering riffs are what really makes that band.
verslibre wrote:conversationpc wrote:And he's a friggin' monster rhythm guitarist and one of the best overall in the business, in my opinion. Those teeth-shattering riffs are what really makes that band.
The Mustaine-Friedman-Ellefson-Menza line-up was the best in thrash at the time, too. The only other band in the same league was Anthrax (with Belladonna, not Bush).
Return to Snowmobiles For The Sahara
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests