AtariDump,
NeoNachtwaechter,

Bullshit Logic. We also don’t have 1000 Da Vincis, 10.000 Jesuses and 100.000 Moseses.

JungleJim,

Now imagining a Pharaoh with an unstoppable army of Mosi.

Meuzzin,

Dwayne Rudolph Goettel (Skinny Puppy) Peter Christopherson (Psychic TV, Coil, Throbbing Gristle)

If we change this question to generational, instead of “modern times”, those two would fit into Gen X.

Richard Wright (Pink Floyd) Ray Manzarek (Doors) Elton John

For the “Boomers”.

Tori Amos Trent Reznor Atticus Ross

For the Millenials.

I’m sure there’s many more from those 3 generations. But they have my vote.

lemmie689,
@lemmie689@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I would say David Gilmour. Pink Floyd music comes to mind for having some pretty symphonic sounds.

No_Ones_Slick_Like_Gaston,

Freddy Mercury and David Bowie are up there in that podium.

BarrierWithAshes,
@BarrierWithAshes@kbin.social avatar

You ever seen that post about how classical music is closest to metal? Well Kerry King is our modern day Mozart.

pete_the_cat,

\M/

Dude can definitely shred and definitely plays some complex licks. Dimebag and Randy Rhodes are definitely up there too, but then again, so are many heavy metal guitarists.

I’m a shitty guitarist and whenever I just sit back and listen to the guitar tracks on most heavy metal albums I’m always amazed by the complexity, speed, precision and just overall sound of the tracks, especially when it comes to the solos.

farcaster, (edited )

Kerry is a great player, but I think the shredder who embodied the spirit and the form of Mozart was Alexi Laiho.

His solos were a such distinct take on the neoclassical sound

Grayox,
@Grayox@lemmy.ml avatar

Ramin Djawadi no contest.

Uranium3006,
@Uranium3006@kbin.social avatar

ZUN.

JungleJim,

I’m learning lots of good music here, but I was really hoping Surfan Stevens was a surf-rock cover artist of Sufjan Stevens and Cat Stevens.

Shalakushka,
@Shalakushka@kbin.social avatar

David Bowie, few have his range and talent.

Synthead,

Squarepusher cones to mind

QuikxSpec,

Jacob Collier

brygphilomena,

Jack Antonoff has some incredible talent. He’s written and produced a lot of iconic pop music.

Alter_Id,
@Alter_Id@kbin.social avatar

I'm going to go with Steven Wilson for this. Mostly because he and Mozart have an undeniable talent, many of their fans consider them to be some type of visionary savant, and despite the broad agreement toward that perspective I still find both of their outputs to be broadly incredibly dull.

MossyFeathers,

King Gizzard. They love weird-ass time signatures (look up the ridiculousness that is Crumbling Castle for an example), polyrhythms, unconventional tuning, and such. They hop from one genre to another, they probably have one of the highest album-to-year ratios in music (not including live and demo albums), sometimes they’re serious, sometimes they’re silly, sometimes they’re silly-serious. The biggest blow to them however, is that nothing they make is truly a “masterpiece”. It all ranges from “good” to “great” but nothing they’ve made is really a “masterpiece”. Maybe in time they’ll make a true masterpiece, but nothing yet quite qualifies imo.

The other nomination I’d make is Devin Townsend. Where King Gizzard is extremely prolific but doesn’t make masterpieces, Devin Townsend takes his time and makes masterpieces. Despite its silliness, Ziltoid the Omniscient is one of the best, if not the best, metal albums, period. It’s an album so good that even my parents, who don’t like metal, have songs they enjoy from the album. Empath is a stunning blend of metal, electronic, prog, praise & worship/gospel,^1 and god knows what else. The man just does things and they come out amazing.


^1 Afaik Devin Townsend’s not a Christian, sorry to any Christian peeps hoping for good Christian music. He just incorporated that sound into the album.

jopepa,

Love Sufjan. He has a Mozart mind in his own right.

If Mozart was raised with an accordion and looney tunes he might Weird Mo, if he had parents like Carrie and Lowell he might be giving LGBTQ+ and Christian Conservatives a Christmas album to agree on.

Trying to compare a Mozart of our times to the original is like comparing an apple to the tree it grew from. There are obvious similarities but fundamentally are just different things of different times.

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