Synthead,

Squarepusher cones to mind

Shalakushka,
@Shalakushka@kbin.social avatar

David Bowie, few have his range and talent.

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.

Uranium3006,
@Uranium3006@kbin.social avatar

ZUN.

Grayox,
@Grayox@lemmy.ml avatar

Ramin Djawadi no contest.

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

No_Ones_Slick_Like_Gaston,

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

lemmie689,
@lemmie689@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

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

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.

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.

edgemaster72,
@edgemaster72@lemmy.world avatar

This is the kind of question that makes me hate my mortality, because culture is so scattered and vast and changing so rapidly these days that it seems difficult to imagine anything “modern” lasting for hundreds more years, and we’ll never actually be able to know the answer.

pete_the_cat,

Alpine Universe is pretty damn good, I thought it was a band until I looked them up on Instagram and found out it was one dude that multi-tracks his voice and plays multiple instruments. I watched a few of his production videos and was amazed.

PP_BOY_,
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

Well, Mozart was a composer, so I don’t know what parallels you’re drawing from to compare hin to Weird Al or Surfan [sic] Stevens. If we’re talking strictly in terms of best living musicians, Joanna Newsom is probably the best songwriter of the past fifty years, and in my opinion, the second place isn’t even close.

the_q,

John Williams.

BackOnMyBS,
@BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world avatar

ITT: people who have severely underestimated Mozart’s musical capacities and contributions.

Mozart is a musician that is studied by nearly any professional musician. There are historians, musical scholars, and museums dedicated to him. He’s a household name across the world. He established a period of music. As a teenager, he deciphered a 12 min choral piece with multiple groups and solos after hearing it once and by memory wrote it down later that night (he heard it a 2nd time a few days later for minor corrections). When he presented the score to the clergy, they said he got one note wrong. After investigation, Mozart heard it right. The musician’s score was off by a note. Could any popular musician mentioned here decipher just a 6 min song of 4 instrument band after hearing it once with pen and paper ready? Imagine telling any music legend now, “Hey, you’re off by a half a step on the 3rd note of bar 28 of your own song.”

Comparing an awesome popular singer, guitarist, or band to him is like comparing your friend that got a job at NASA to Einstein. There is no modern Mozart. There have been greats since Mozart, but there haven’t been any Mozarts since Mozart. I say this as a Beethoven fan. Mozart was the only Mozart. He was so good, that his name became a title for great musician: Mozart. No one listed in this thread is anywhere near being a Mozart.

CthuluVoIP,

Likely the closest I could picture in a modern sense is Jacob Collier, who can indeed perform these types of musical feats. But the crux of the issue is that while Collier is much loved, he isn’t a dominant force of popular music like Mozart was.

jbk,

What if some or most of those details were made up to sound nicer / more impressive?

myfavouritename,

Yeah, that’s exactly my first thought while reading this. If I rewrote the list of achievements above to sound like I was claiming they all happened to me, and then posted it to twitter, it would be indistinguishable from most other “🙄 that happened” posts.

People will be saying similar stuff about Taylor Swift in 100 years; by definition being legendary means being unreal.

niktemadur, (edited )

When you put it that way, the list of candidates thins out and the one figure I see still standing is John Coltrane, who in his day was running circles around fellow jazz musicians, they couldn’t wrap their heads around how Coltrane’s chord progressions and jumping between keys from note to note made any sense… yet it did, and beautifully.

EDIT: typo

PrinceWith999Enemies,

I agree, and this is easily my favorite post of the month.

Chrobin,

Honestly, I could see Jacob Collier doing just that.

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