Quote:
Originally Posted by Neapolitan
Fleet Floxes at 2 minutes sounds like America.
I don't think those examples are so fantastic - no offense. That one Goyte song is just plan annoying. I think the style singing Of Monsters and Men use is just plain horrible - I can't listen to it. It's just certain things in music get overdone till ad nauseam. That's not a "now versus then" thing.
What has happen to post-Whitney R&B, Blues, Bluegrass etc has quite often happen to indie folk, the singing sounds derivative and pretentious. It doesn't mean I don't like those genres, I'm just a very finicky listener. I would rather someone who others would not be considered to have a strong voice to sing in their own natural way than for them to try to sound like someone else, whether they are expected to because it's the new standard or told to sing that way have a hit.
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I think the Gotye song has been massively over-played on radio and stuff, however, that's the case with any song that's an actual hit. Lyrically, I think it's intelligent and memorable.
I suppose it's subjective as to whether you enjoy a particular style of singing - personally I think that it goes well with the style of the music, just as singing in a bluesy fashion would go well with singing a blues song.
I see what you mean about Whitney though - there are far too many pop/ rn'b singers who over-egg stuff [I call it doing a Mariah]. Whilst it may be very technically impressive to hit 10 notes in 4 different octaves in one line, in terms of song structure, I think it's actually detrimental to a piece of music, as adding constant flourishes/ embellishment rather saps the expression from a song. Roughly, I think that a song should follow an arc a bit like a novel - set up scene with the start, gradually build to a climax about 3/4 the way through, then let the consumer back down gently. If you do absolutely everything of which you're capable throughout the entire thing, then where do you go? You've nothing to build up to, because you're already at the top of the mountain. And if you remain at the same altitude for the whole climb, that's not a climb at all... it's just a walk.
Ok, might have overextended my metaphor there slightly lol but you see what I mean.