SouthCoastOwl
New member
So who influences the influencers?
Answer - Peter Hammill
Answer - Peter Hammill
So who influences the influencers?
Answer - Peter Hammill
always about the guitar oriented music... what about the how gamut of House and its progeny?
Frankie Knuckles, Marshall Jefferson, Deerick May, Richie Hawtin, Gerald Simpson, Dr Alex Patterson, The Black Dog, Goldie, Richard James, Orbital: when will these and many others be recognised?
Over 60 replies and no one has mentioned
Iggy and the Stooges
The single greatest influence on modern music as they inspired the punk/new wave music and attitude (albeit in some case, filtered via the Ramones, who were in turn directly inspired by Iggy and fully admitted it), and consequently most of what followed. Probably edge Velvet Underground and New York Dolls on that score, largely because VU were too arty for some, and NYD looked like girls.
Bowie & Kraftwerk certainly influential, yes.
Gang of Four are an acknowledged influence by dozens of bands.
You can't under-estimate the influence Sonic Youth had on most american bands from the late 80s on.
I'd even put a case for Hawkwind's 'get into the groove' drug rhythm jams being a direct influence on the electro/rave scene.
No Iggy & The Velvets, No punk. No punk and we're still stoned listening to 30 minute flute solos.
I'd take you Gang of Four and raise you a Wire. Undoubtedly GoF did a couple of great albums but Wire were the first punk band to move outside the genre's stylistic confines. Chairs Missing and 154 definitely went on to inspire shoegaze, alt-rock & post-hardcore. Whilst Pink Flag was the template for American hardcore. I love Wire.
The bloke who sung at Wimbledon that time when it rained.
He was decent.
I've got the latest album but shamefully haven't listened to it yet. You like?
No Iggy & The Velvets, No punk. No punk and we're still stoned listening to 30 minute flute solos.
I'd take you Gang of Four and raise you a Wire. Undoubtedly GoF did a couple of great albums but Wire were the first punk band to move outside the genre's stylistic confines. Chairs Missing and 154 definitely went on to inspire shoegaze, alt-rock & post-hardcore. Whilst Pink Flag was the template for American hardcore. I love Wire.
I'm struggling to think of someone LESS groundbreaking than Paul Weller.
Good call - surprised no one's come up with Syd BarrettRamones, New York Dolls and Mott the Hoople all inspired the key players in 76/77. Which, in turn, inspired a generation & beyond.
I'll grant you that Wire defined genres, but Go4 had more of a direct influence on other bands. Red Hot Chilli Peppers say publicly that listening to Entertainment was what inspired them to form a band. Michael Stipe has said similar.
Yes - sorry I missed him out.
Go4 also inspired anything with an angular haircut in mid 00's Britain - Bloc Party, Rakes, Maximo Park etc.... I remember the first time I heard Entertainment (probably around 2005) and it was one of those records that joined the dots so to speak. Did you see them in the flesh (pre-reformation?)