Ailin wrote:How about Ann Wilson of Heart? A lot of her singing in Heart's songs would qualify.
Ailin
Heart makes ME want to scream (in agony because of hearing the stuff on the radio for the 1,000,000,000th time)
Heart were great in the Dreamboat Annie era. Crazy on You and Magic Man were fine tracks, but later on in the 80s and all... euch!
And whether the blood be highland, lowland or no.
And whether the skin be black or white as the snow.
Of kith and of kin we are one, be it right, be it wrong.
As long as our hearts beat true to the lilt of a song.
Bruce Springstein..Boooorrn in the USA!!! a born shouter. Jimmy Barnes´s(Cold chisel)blood curdling shouts are legendary and once trigured a riot at the Star hotel which he later shouted as a song.The mere mention of his name invites a shout of " Baaarrnnsie! "in Newcastle , Australia. Mike
buddhu wrote:
Slayer! Hah! 'Bring Da Noise' with PE! Wonderful...
That was Anthrax, not Slayer.
I've grown up listening to and playing metal so a large proportion of my favourite music involves shouting/screaming as well as singing.
Sick Of It All
Killswitch Engage
Refused
Pantera
Deftones
the aforementioned Rage Against The Machine
all of those have some great shouting
If you're interested in a hearing just what the human voice is capable of try and find a copy of Adult Themes For Voice by Mike Patton (Faith No More, Fantomas, Tomahawk). A whole album recorded with nothing more than a four track and a microphone.
dubhlinn wrote:
No disrepect chris, but a copy of La Traviata might be more illuminating.
Slan,
D.
I'm not familiar with that but wikipedia (not the most accurate reference I know) says it's an opera. Which would I would take to mean it's quite traditional and not really related to shouting or screaming. But then I know next to nothing about opera (apart from buying my mum the odd cd at christmas).
I just thought I'd suggest something a litle different from the norm. The patton album is his attempt at making music solely with his voice as an intrument. It's incredibly bizarre in places and amazing in others.
chrisoff wrote:I just thought I'd suggest something a litle different from the norm. The patton album is his attempt at making music solely with his voice as an intrument. It's incredibly bizarre in places and amazing in others.
Bjork's "Medúlla" similarly experiments with using the human voice
as sole instrumentation. And nothing she ever did could be
considered weird.