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Don't care how many times they televise it, I still love...
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Adele at the Royall Albert Hall (filmed last year I think). Someone Like You always makes me weep buckets. Someone I loved very much died last year and this song reminds me of him and our circumstances.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Me too lardhelmet!
There are singers who have technique and no soul - Whtiney Houston was a prime example, and there are singers who know of what they sing, and Adele is a perfect example of that.
You don;t need to sing twenty-seven syllables and have your lips quiver enough to render you likely to make you take off in a high wind, you just need to understand the truth of what you sing, and make sure the audience understand it as well. This song, and Adele's delivery of it, encapsulates that concept to perfection.
There are singers who have technique and no soul - Whtiney Houston was a prime example, and there are singers who know of what they sing, and Adele is a perfect example of that.
You don;t need to sing twenty-seven syllables and have your lips quiver enough to render you likely to make you take off in a high wind, you just need to understand the truth of what you sing, and make sure the audience understand it as well. This song, and Adele's delivery of it, encapsulates that concept to perfection.
She is amazing. I have watched that concert twice now on TV. There are very few female singers that I like (and I hate all the warbling and shouting they do nowadays) Adele uses her wonderful voice perfectly. And I love her straight forward attitude and can forgive her swearing.
Dusty Springfield is probably the only other female singer that made me feel emotional (well actually I lie, so can Dolly Parton funnily enough)
Dusty Springfield is probably the only other female singer that made me feel emotional (well actually I lie, so can Dolly Parton funnily enough)
lardhelmet - the vast majority of people who listen to popular music and like what they like, without knowing if it is any good or not.
That's fine, that's exactly the way it's supposed to be, i would not have it any other way.
But, as a music writer, I have a passion for music that surpasses anything in my life, afmily excluded of course, and I know exactly what is good or not, as opposed to what is simply popular.
Whitney Houston had a magnificent voice. Unfortunately, she was a triumph of technique over emotion - and the 'soul' she was famous for was graded according to volume, gear changes, lip quivering, and amount of warbling sliding notes - which with a song like 'i Will Always Love You' which ticked every box half-a-dozen times, made her a superstar under entirely false pretences.
The song was written by Dolly Parton for the man who was the great love of her life apart from her husband Carl - Porter Waggoner who was her mentor in her early days, until they fell out professionally. her understated version, or better still the Linda Ronstadt version which bleeds into your ears with a bottomless sense of pain and loss, are what the song is actually about. For Ms. Houston, its a vocal exercise in histrionics, nothing more.
Adele has exactly that way of encapsulating the pain of relationships and she reaches into the souls of millions of people, mor by what she leaves out of her singing than what she puts in - that is what she is such a massive star - that's star as opposed to diva, or celebrity.
OK - enough for now.
Next week, tune in to read Andy ranting about Alexandra Burke crushing the delicate flower that is 'Hallelujah' under a juggernaught of foghorning and glitter, and the week after, assuming he has not succombed to a fatal stroke -'Westlife - the Difficult Years'.
That's fine, that's exactly the way it's supposed to be, i would not have it any other way.
But, as a music writer, I have a passion for music that surpasses anything in my life, afmily excluded of course, and I know exactly what is good or not, as opposed to what is simply popular.
Whitney Houston had a magnificent voice. Unfortunately, she was a triumph of technique over emotion - and the 'soul' she was famous for was graded according to volume, gear changes, lip quivering, and amount of warbling sliding notes - which with a song like 'i Will Always Love You' which ticked every box half-a-dozen times, made her a superstar under entirely false pretences.
The song was written by Dolly Parton for the man who was the great love of her life apart from her husband Carl - Porter Waggoner who was her mentor in her early days, until they fell out professionally. her understated version, or better still the Linda Ronstadt version which bleeds into your ears with a bottomless sense of pain and loss, are what the song is actually about. For Ms. Houston, its a vocal exercise in histrionics, nothing more.
Adele has exactly that way of encapsulating the pain of relationships and she reaches into the souls of millions of people, mor by what she leaves out of her singing than what she puts in - that is what she is such a massive star - that's star as opposed to diva, or celebrity.
OK - enough for now.
Next week, tune in to read Andy ranting about Alexandra Burke crushing the delicate flower that is 'Hallelujah' under a juggernaught of foghorning and glitter, and the week after, assuming he has not succombed to a fatal stroke -'Westlife - the Difficult Years'.
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