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Elements of Rock Era Music draft - Categories firming up, Sign Up here (1 Viewer)

7.06 - Rihanna - "Work (feat. Drake)" (Chorus)

IMO, a perfect chorus should be simple, catchy as hell and a super earworm.  I can't think of a better one from the past few years.  Play this song for anyone between the ages of about 16-36 and see what happens.   

(Video is borderline NSFW - you can see her nipples)

 
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Mr. Ected said:
I have been a Yes fan since 90125, so when I first saw the 'Falsetto' category my first thought was 'Jon Anderson;' simple. Then I looked at the definition of falsetto, and it's a person singing above their normal vocal range. So this knocks Jon Anderson out of the running, since he just sings in a high range. Therefore I had to dig a little. And I ended up with...

7.05 - Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough - Michael Jackson (Falsetto)

Mr. Jackson had a huge range, and for most of this one, he was singing way up there.
I'm interested to see how this category plays out given the definition applied to this draft. There are HOF singers whose only voice was falsetto that would appear to be excluded before they didn't have a "natural" lower range.

Agree with Ected that what Anderson sings in isn't falsetto

 
I'm interested to see how this category plays out given the definition applied to this draft. There are HOF singers whose only voice was falsetto that would appear to be excluded before they didn't have a "natural" lower range.
Falsetto is a vocal technique more than it is a description of range. I can't think of any singers whose only voice was falsetto -- that would mean they'd have a physiological defect that prevents the full lengths of their vocal cords from vibrating during speech or singing.

 
Eephus said:
6.02  Either World or Non-Traditional Instrument (marimba)  - The Psychedelic Furs - Love My Way

Binky the Doormat could tell you that Todd Rundgren is the guy playing the marimba.

It's been Mrs. Eephus' ringtone for years so I've heard the first four bars of the intro more than most people but it's still great.

I'm not sure what is expected by non-traditional instrument but I think a marimba would qualify for either category.
This was what I was leaning towards for this category.

 
Falsetto is a vocal technique more than it is a description of range. I can't think of any singers whose only voice was falsetto -- that would mean they'd have a physiological defect that prevents the full lengths of their vocal cords from vibrating during speech or singing.
I can think of a dozen right now (talking about singing, not speaking, voices) who only sang in one register that I always thought of as falsetto. But maybe's there's a different term for their voices as opposed to just the guys that want to sing like them?

 
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This was what I was leaning towards for this category.
which category?  :shrug:

What is a non-traditional instrument?
I put that on the chart as World. Obviously it can be changed. 

My thought of 'non-traditional' is using something that is normally not used as an instrument as an instrument. In the video I put in for world, you see the guys playing bunches of silverware hanging around their necks as percussion (small click/clacks) that's the sort of thing I think about. I decided to move it to 'World' because I couldn't find a reference to them in the music, and was wondering if they just had them as show for the video, so I went with the didgeridoo.

 
I put that on the chart as World. Obviously it can be changed. 

My thought of 'non-traditional' is using something that is normally not used as an instrument as an instrument. In the video I put in for world, you see the guys playing bunches of silverware hanging around their necks as percussion (small click/clacks) that's the sort of thing I think about. I decided to move it to 'World' because I couldn't find a reference to them in the music, and was wondering if they just had them as show for the video, so I went with the didgeridoo.
You could make a valid case that a didge is way more traditional than a Moog

 
You could make a valid case that a didge is way more traditional than a Moog
My boss is a big music guy who is willing to try but ultimately dislike most music that I recommend to him.  I usually tell him that the musical instrument that defines my generation is the Macbook, pisses him off to no end.

 
7.09 - Unique Song Structure -  Bob Dylan - Subterranean Homesick Blues

As the title indicates, it's based on the blues but there's just four verses with no chorus.  The overall impression is a bunch of (mostly) couplets with the "Look out kid, blah blah rhymes with kid" lines in each verse as the only common element.

 
I've been traveling this week and haven't been in the thread as much as I would have liked.

Is someone doing a playlist because I'm sure there have been a lot of great picks I wasn't able to click.

 
This isn't a technically proficient vocal. She doesn't display vocal range or any great technique. It's raw, fragile, bitter, angry and nostalgic. The song rocks hard. "My hair grew long so I ####### cut it!". 

7.x "Bird Balloons"- Lady Lamb The Beekeeper (2013) FEMALE VOCAL

 
The whole song is basically one big crescendo. It begins with light guitar strumming and a whisper, it ends in blazing hot rock that melts the music into a geyser of noise soaking your ears. 

8.x "Holy Moly"- Matthew E. White (2015) CRESCENDO

 
8.02  Non-traditional Instrument (Theremin) - Gomez - Shot Shot
 

Still the sound of the future almost one hundred years after its invention.

The Theremin is named for its inventor, Leon Theremin. Music professor and biographer Albert Glinsky says Theremin's story is as mysterious as the instrument that bears his name,

"Leon Theremin was a Russian scientist, [and] he was a spy," said Glinsky. "And inventor of what is probably the most unusual musical instrument ever invented. You're actually moving your two hands through two electromagnetic fields that are around two antennas."

In 1919, 23-year-old Leon Theremin invented his namesake by accident.  "He was working in a laboratory in Russia as a young scientist, he was actually working on a gas meter to measure the density of gases," Glinsky said. "So as he brought his hand closer to the gas meter, he heard kind of a higher squeal. And as he brought his hand back to his body and away from the machine, it was a slower squeal.  "And he started to play melodies on this thing. And lab assistants and his boss in the lab started to gather around and said, 'Well, this is amazing.'"

Theremin then devised a freestanding musical instrument based on his discovery, which he sensationally debuted in the United States in 1928.  He performed in major venues like Carnegie Hall and the Metropolitan Opera House.  "Critics really almost didn't know what to make of it," said Glinsky. "There was one who said that if Theremin had lived 500 years ago or something, he would've been burned at the stake as a sorcerer."

Critics also didn't know that Theremin was a KGB spy. His mission: industrial espionage -- which was a key reason why he turned to RCA (back then, a cutting-edge electronics manufacturer) to mass produce his instrument.

 
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@FUBAR, since it's been more than 2 hours, do you want to make your next pick?
Sure

I knew the drummer I wanted to take when we started, the question was what song.  I'll take his biggest hit even though he was, at the time, overshadowed. he rocks and I actually like the song more now than I did when it first came out. 

Smells like teen spirit

Actually I wanted to take This, but it's probably not on Spotify

 
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9.01 Solo Vocal Performance (Female): Bonnie Tyler "Total Eclipse Of The Heart"

The word epic gets thrown around too much, but Bonnie deserves the title in the absolute sense of the word. To crib from a review I read, "Bonnie sings the (bleep) out of this song."

It's unfortunate the video has become so entwined with the song, as its over-the-top, overwrought, over-everything overshadows the purity of Bonnie's vocals.  

Link is the seven minute album version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvLNRO41o64  

 
Was thinking about a Joe Jackson song for another category, but I heard this again and it's one of my favorites by him. It also is great to me because it is on my 9 y.o. daughter's main playlist on Spotify. It's fun when your kids get into music, my older pre-teen sons aren't into it yet, but my little girl who does lots of dance classes had fallen for it hard. It's very cool when your kids enjoy songs that you also like!

9.05 - Joe Jackson - Steppin' Out (Piano)

 
We seem to be missing a bunch!

Missing Picks
6.07 - Doug B
7.04 - Doug B
7.07 - Northern Voice
7.09 - Eephus
8.04 - Northern Voice
8.05 - Steve Tasker
8.07 - Doug B
8.08 - JML
9.03 - JML
9.04 - Doug B

I also think the spreadsheet is up to date.

 
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Was thinking about a Joe Jackson song for another category, but I heard this again and it's one of my favorites by him. It also is great to me because it is on my 9 y.o. daughter's main playlist on Spotify. It's fun when your kids get into music, my older pre-teen sons aren't into it yet, but my little girl who does lots of dance classes had fallen for it hard. It's very cool when your kids enjoy songs that you also like!

9.05 - Joe Jackson - Steppin' Out (Piano)
My sophomore year roommate was a huge fan of Joe. I don't know if I had ever heard him before that year but we listened to him a lot, along with Elvis Costello. 

 
Speaking of draft ideas, I was thinking about starting up the companion draft to the One word/alphabet draft draft I did - songs with long titles.  Thinking 6+ words in the title or something like that. 

 
Did we ever give any thought to one AM and one PM pick structure? 

Hectic weekend, I'll have to revisit my "list (which means try to remember which songs I was going to pick) and catch-up my 2 picks this morning.

 
8.05 - amiina - "Seoul" (Non-traditional instruments: musical saw, multiple glockenspiels, some sort of harp, call bells)

I'm pretty sure if I dig back into old drafts here, I've drafted this song at least once before, but I simply can't think of a song that I enjoy more that utilizes a bunch of non-traditional instruments.  It's not often I refer to a song as beautiful, but this, to me, is the most beautiful song I've ever heard.

Album is from 2007 so I'm still hitting my 10-year cutoff....

 
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9.06 - M83 - "Graveyard Girl" (Bridge)

I'm gonna jump the walls and run
I wonder if they'll miss me, I won't miss them

The cemetery is my home,
I want to be a part of it, invisible even to the night
Then I'll read poetry to the stones,
Maybe one day I could be one of them, wise and silent

Waiting for someone to love me
Waiting for someone to kiss me
I'm 15 years old and I feel it's already too late to live
Don't you?


 

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