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who is the most musically creative person in the industry


andycam

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Like em or loathe them you have to at least consider lennon/mccartney (as a partnership, not individually)


I can't say there's a whole lot in the prince / 0|-x-> canon that's great. Reinvention can't be everything else we'd have love Madonna too, who did one class (eponymous)album, and masses of dross. *ducks for cover too*

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Can of worms this one ;-)


To say consistently creative we need to be talking about people with a body of work stretching back some time - say the 70s early 80s? as the latest they started producing albums but they can have started as early as they were born. So... Leonard Cohen yes, Boyzone no


Later periods for most of these artists usually polarise opinion - Dylan/Prince/Bowie/Young fans etc might care to disagree but be aware of the notion. And people who aren't even fans of a given artist's peak work are unlikely to give due consideration to the "lesser" albums


As a massive Prince fan I would say he has excelled live over the decade but his recorded output knows no such quality control


I'm going to plump for Bowie - an awful awful awful 10 years from 83-93 (with a few noteable exceptions) turned things around, not with Black Tie White Noise but The Buddah of Suburbia album. Up there with any of the "Berlin" albums for me


Thereafter we get 1.Outside and the Earthling albums - seriously deranged and energetic in equal measure. A blip with "hours" in 99 but then Heathen in 2002 is in my top 5



I expect everyone to disagree with me but I can easily talk at some length about this so be warned

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For a more modern day candidate, I have been very impressed with Damon Albarn. I was never the biggest Blur fan, but there were several quality songs and Parklife is a great album. What he has done recently with Gorillaz shows his musical diversity, and therefore in my opinion, I think he is one of the most creative artists at the moment.
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Bowie's been my favourite artist since I was about fourteen, though personally, I hate everything after 1983 (with the slight exception of the song Absolute Beginners). Still, he made about a dozen of my favourite albums, and no other artist can come close to that - my top ten:


Diamond Dogs

Hunky Dory

Station to Station

Low

Heroes

Lodger

Young Americans

Ziggy Stardust

David Bowie

Man Who Sold The World

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I agree with you Gerrard, I'm actually a big fan of Albarn as an artist too. He's certainly grown. I had to film his GBQ (The good, The Bad, The Queen) gig in the Tower of London last year and I thought it was fantastic. He's also composed a chinese opera recently, Monkey and even scored a movie (Ravenous) with Michael Nyman. Doing well that lad.
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For consistency and longevity I'd be remiss not to mention Yo La Tengo, it'd be sinful not to, but they don't do reinvention much.

Albums each have a consistent sound, and they can do quiet, touching, mournful, RAWK, happy, noisy, chilled, but their overall sounds haven't budged much over 25 odd years.


snippets


Tom Courtenay

Blue Line Swinger (live)

The Summer

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Blinder


The phenomonen you mention re: Bowie (nothing good after 83) is one that is so prevelant I despair sometimes. That 10 year trough (good word Jah) was, by his standards, awful but even then gems such as Absolute Beginners and even Loving the Alien were knocking around


If you haven't heard Buddah of Suburbia the I will have to fix that.


If you have heard Heathen and can't see it compares with most of his 70s work than I'm convinced the 80s just hacked you off too much you have switched off - but it is a fantastic album.


Earthling from 97 probably tried too hard but I listend to it again the other day and it fair BRISTLES with energy



Trev


Has Stevie done a similar arc, and moved on from Ebony & Ivory and I Just Called...?

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Sean - no, probably hard to defend much after 1980 (Hotter Than July), apart from 2005's A Time To Love which was pretty well received. But hey, who knows - maybe his arc is just beginning its belated upward curve?


Even if it isn't, a high percentage of his output from the mid '60s up until 1980 should make him a serious contender for '(previously) most musically creative person (still working) in the industry'.

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David Byrne? Been at it for years and keeps producing quality, if not exactly mainstream.


Phil Collins, great drummer and even did some pretty good stuff with Genesis (and some rubbish). But really, come on, solo?

McDonalds is commercially successful, but that doesn't make it good does it?


Ooh, Peter Gabriel was good for about 20 years (again, including genesis).

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