the_q,

John Williams.

Mr_Blott,

Controversial, but Muse is up there in the great composers list.

Also Shaka Ponk, whole other story

Wodge,
@Wodge@lemmy.world avatar

I wouldn’t say that controversial. Muse are pretty varied in their output, The Exogenesis Symphony is fantastic, and then they also have stuff like Plug In Baby, which is amazing. Matthew Bellamy is very talented.

captainlezbian,

Yeah the entirety of revolution manages to traverse several sounds and styles while maintaining a cohesive mood and feel. It and the second law were just amazing albums

Raffster,

Technical Death Metal would be up there for me. But that is so idividual it seems, for each their own Mozart nowadays it seems.

TropicalDingdong,

No planet on which Sufjan Stevens is a Mozart.

Uncontroversial:

Radiohead

David Bowie

Daft punk

Controversial:

Kanye

Terrible person, but then again that wasn’t the question.

VubDapple,

Stevens is more like Bach than like Mozart. Lots of repetition in his themes but layered and created in counterpoint like no other contemporary artist. Love that guy.

Varyk,

I don’t know anything about surfan Stevens, why him?

jopepa,

He has a huge discography, is a talented multi instrumentalist, and is very experimental with genre and song writing in general while still effectively connecting with a growing audience. I used to know only a handful of his songs and thought, good but meh. Out of curiosity about his broad appeal between people I wouldn’t expect much over lap from, I dove into his discography and it’s something really special.

Varyk,

Okay, very cool. Thanks, he sounds worth looking into

jopepa,

No problem, I had a lot of fun listening from his least popular album to most, just to see when it would click.

NewNewAccount,

Where did it click for you? What’s considered his most popular?

jopepa,

I think it might’ve been this one but it was a while back so I’ll keep looking and edit if I find something that looks more familiar. Greetings from Michigan got it’s antlers in me, after that I burned through the rest of the list pretty quickly and then it became a blur of shuffle for a few weeks.

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.

Synthead,

Squarepusher cones to mind

eighthourlunch,
@eighthourlunch@kbin.social avatar

Ben Folds. He's got classical, jazz and rock chops, with a full helping of the wit and mischief in his lyrics.

Peppycito,

Those that like him, like him a lot. The rest of us will walk over fields of lava to hit the skip button.

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.

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.

sirico,
@sirico@feddit.uk avatar

Louis Cole has a great understanding of music structure and plays around with it very well

No_Ones_Slick_Like_Gaston,

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

Grayox,
@Grayox@lemmy.ml avatar

Ramin Djawadi no contest.

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