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Longest Creativity Peak
Some great lad from some other place has put forward the following suggestion: "let's discuss what musicians have maintained their creativity peaks for the longest." Wouldn't it be interesting to talk about this?
I'd single out Steve Morse, a somewhat underrated musician: "The Great Spectacular", by his D. Dregs, came out in 1975; and this above par creativity lasted until 1996, when his wondrous "Stressfest" appeared. |
Paul McCartney 1962-1984. Then he recorded Press To Play that sucks.
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GG ALLIN, his poop hands cradle our hearts for eternity.
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JUST A FEW musical geniuses that never had a creativity "peak" because their creativity never decreased during their careers (the years represent both the duration of their career and their so-called creativity "peak"):
Mikael Akerfeldt 1992-Present (Opeth, ex-Bloodbath) Jari Maenpaa 2001-Present (ex-Ensiferum, Wintersun) Devin Townsend 1993-Present (ex-Strapping Young Lad, Devin Townsend Project) David Gold 2002-2011 RIP (Woods of Ypres) John Haughm 1990-Present (Agalloch) Benjamin Burnley 1998-Present (Breaking Benjamin) |
Neil Young had 1966 till about 1979, maybe a little longer but that stuff wasn't as well received. Y'all no I'm his ride or die ho fo sho tho.
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What about Bob Dylan? From Freewheelin' to Desire?
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Tony Iommi, 1964 - Present.
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Totally agree with the Steve Morse, even while with Deep Purple he still shines. Saw this one live not too long ago, and he played it flawlessly:
Also, Joe Satriani has been solid for decades. |
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Let's hope Guthrie Govan will keep his "creativity peak" throughout his life! |
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I think David Bowie has shown amazing longevity in his career. It been 45 years and he's still recording music that's relevant. This year's The Next Day got quite a few critical raves. Bowie has had a few creative dry spells but he seems to always get back on track by bringing out good albums at regular intervals throughout his career.
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@Gavin I think his original peak was Space Oddity ('69) to Scary Monsters ('80), disregarding the, ahem, not quite critical darlings of the '80s.
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Frank Zappa.
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Captain Beefheart. 1964 - 1982.
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Elvis Costello creative streak began 1977 (My Aim Is True) and is still making critically well received albums today. He had a few clunkers in the 90s but he's always managed to redeem himself.
Costello 4 and 5 star albums by the decade (Based on AMC ratings) 1970s- 3 five star albums albums 1980s- 4 five star albums & 2 four star albums 1990s- 1 five star album & 1 four star album 2000s- 1 five star album & 4 four star albums 2010s- 1 five star album & 1 four star album |
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Unconditionally Guaranteed is ok. Same level as Bluejeans and Moonbeams. Didn't hold my interest. Edit: God, I hate spelling those albums. |
Wasn't the Captain more interested in his art by the Late 70's? That could have been part of why he went out of the music after a possible burn out from the industry. Still, Captain Beefhart had some standout albums, although if you include painting, he would be in the running!
The reason why I mentioned Zappa was that for all of his peaks and falls, as well as a troubling Early 80's period, he was always trying to create a world of his own plus creating a business for himself (Barking Pumpkin) and even debating the censorship hounds in a very intelligent manner. True, there was a lot of ego as well (of course there would, you have to have it!), but it fitted in with what he was doing through the years. |
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A nowadays band that's renewed my enthusiasm: The Aristocrats. 2 albums have come out and they're both out of this world. I'm hopeful that they'll keep on like this for a long time.
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mmmh probably John Lennon. He managed to put out 14 good albums in a row. 12 with The Beatles and his first two solo albums. That's hard to beat
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I will go with Walter Becker and Donald ***en of Steely Dan with this one.
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I agree. Miles Davis would be the one I'd pick out if this wasn't the rock & metal section of the forum :rolleyes:
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