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4. Ole Børud, lead guitarist of progressive death metal pioneering band Extol, has a yacht rock solo career...and he sings like Stevie Wonder too!
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I've been a fan of Ole for a long time, especially since albums like 1998's
Burial and the Extol s/t from last year are heavy and awesome regardless of whether you like/hate "Christian" oriented metal or not. Still, going from this with your band-
To this as a solo artist-
-is definitely the sign of someone who has a ridiculous level of uncanny talent. Now THAT, amigos, is true blue eclecticism.
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3. Frank Zappa's bassist from the second half of the 70's, Patrick O'Hearn, is one of the most successful ambient / New Age artists on the planet.
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Everyone who got their career started with Zappa always seem to go off to places you don't expect afterwards, but O'Hearn is a completely different beast alltogether. He was Frank's #1 bass guy on the road and in studio for the latter part of the 70's, playing on albums such as 1976's double live album
Zappa In New York and 1979's
Sleep Dirt. During this period, Frank taught O'Hearn everything he knew about production, studio management, etc. and encouraged O'Hearn's interest in early electronic music and ambient (such as
Kraftwerk,
Brian Eno, etc.). This mentorship eventually led from him doing stuff like this with Zappa-
-to a career resulting in millions of album sales in the "New Age' oriented ambient world from the late 80's all the way to the present day. Brilliant stuff in its own right, but you wouldn't think this is the same guy would ya?
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2. Daryl Hall (of Hall & Oates) almost became King Crimson's lead singer in the 80's.
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To those of you unfamiliar with
Sacred Songs, Daryl Hall's first solo album from the late 70's that he recorded with his best bud
Robert Fripp (of
King Crimson)...the results were good enough to where the two considered joining forces for a "new" band. However, because it took THREE years to get the album released, Daryl ended up staying with Oates and Fripp ended up recruiting other people....which, of course, became the iteration of KC fronted by Adrian Belew.
But again, listen to this and tell me that a Daryl Hall-fronted King Crimson might not have been pretty cool eh?
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1. Derek Shulman, lead vocalist of Gentle Giant, is responsible for signing many of your favorite and most hated bands.
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This one is less of a "look how this artist did/is doing something unexpcted outside of their main musical career" and more of a "holy s
hit really?" sort of story.
Derek Shulman was the frontman and eldest of the three Shulman brothers who formed underdog progressive rock band
Gentle Giant back in 1969-70. Most of you are probably vaguely familiar with albums like
Octopus,
The Power And The Glory, etc. even if you don't like progressive rock much, as the music was, indeed, genuinely progressive, interesting and even catchy in some ways. Twelve albums over 10 years is nothing to sneeze at, but GG never had the same level of exposure or success as Yes, Genesis or ELP did during the decade. By 1980 the band was completely out of juice, and broke up quietly after
Civilian tanked commercially.
In a bizarre stroke of irony however, Derek ended up becoming rich in the music industry after all...just not as the frontman for a groundbreaking band. He ended up becoming the main A&R rep for PolyGram Records...and eventually CEO of both Atco Records AND Roadrunner Records down the line. The list of bands he has ended up signing and turning into multi-platinum successes, including everyone from
Pantera to
Dream Theater to
Slipknot and even friggin'
Nickelback (blergh), is absolutely mindboggling.
It just goes to show you kids: even if you get booed off the stage at a 1972
Black Sabbath concert as the opening act, you can be rest assured that someday you'll sign
Bon Jovi and laugh your ass all the way to the bank.