Psychoniff
Proud Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2015
- Messages
- 933
- Points
- 0
Is MJ the most revolutionary singer the popular music history?
The gulps, grunts, gasps, cries, exclamations; frequently scats or twists and contorts words until they are barely discernible contrasting grit with high melotic notes. Mimicking nearly any and every musical instrument, stacking and backing vocal harmonies, trapping both fast and slow notes, the EVS (Emotive Vocal Singularity), vocal trickery, the beatboxing and singing the most pain-filled ballad on the same album as the dirtiest raw hard rock track. His idiosyncratic percussive-rhythmic-staccato like sound that still no other artist can compete with. He could go warm or cold when ever he saw fit.
Boasting a wide vocal range and an enigmatic vocal style.
Did MJ push the envelope on what it means to be a vocalist in postmodern music the way the Beatles push studio production?
The gulps, grunts, gasps, cries, exclamations; frequently scats or twists and contorts words until they are barely discernible contrasting grit with high melotic notes. Mimicking nearly any and every musical instrument, stacking and backing vocal harmonies, trapping both fast and slow notes, the EVS (Emotive Vocal Singularity), vocal trickery, the beatboxing and singing the most pain-filled ballad on the same album as the dirtiest raw hard rock track. His idiosyncratic percussive-rhythmic-staccato like sound that still no other artist can compete with. He could go warm or cold when ever he saw fit.
Boasting a wide vocal range and an enigmatic vocal style.
Did MJ push the envelope on what it means to be a vocalist in postmodern music the way the Beatles push studio production?
Last edited: