MovieChat Forums > General Discussion > Which Rock Band Had The Best Musicianshi...

Which Rock Band Had The Best Musicianship?



For certain, there are good and famous bands with a charismatic star, like The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, and Mountain. What rock n’ roll band do you think had the most solid COMBINATION of musicians (including singers)?

My first choice is Cream, and it’s gonna be hard to top, or even equal, that one. Eric Clapton is one of a handful of rock guitarists who are very arguably the best ever. I don’t know of a better bass player than Jack Bruce. In the realm of rock, I don’t know of anyone his equal. Ginger Baker, as I write this, is the best drummer on earth, period. He has moved on to jazz. Cream was the first supergroup, and the first power trio.

My next candidate is Traffic. Founded by Steve Winwood (vocals, and almost every instrument known to man, including saxophone and mandolin), Dave Mason (guitar), Jim Capaldi (drums) and Chris Wood (saxophone and flute), Traffic started out as a psychedelic band then branched our into jazz. They broke up and regrouped several times, because you couldn’t fit all of those egos into one room.

The Who. They had the only drummer you could name in the same sentence with Ginger Baker—Keith Moon. Moon’s drumming talent, great as it was, lacked Baker’s invention; but no musician in rock history has so epitomized the spirit of rock n’ roll as wildman Keith Moon. Speaking of spirit: who were the first punks to smash their gear onstage? The Who. Roger Daltry is one of the very few who can be argued as the best male rock singer ever, the others being Robert Plant, David Bowie and Freddy Mercury. (I love Mick Jagger in his prime, for his phrasing, but he does not have the pipes of these other guys.) John Entwhisle was a perfectly professional and serviceable bass player, but not a star. Pete Townsend was a very, very good lead guitarist, but he DID develop an unmistakable signature sound and was an excellent songwriter. On balance, I include The Who in my nominations.

Lastly, Queen. I stipulate that I can’t be objective, because I love their music. I think Freddy Mercury is the best male rock singer based on his vocal range, phrasing, purity of sound and passion. Roger Meadows-Taylor on drums and John Deacon on bass are not even close to being all time greats in those roles. Brian May has never played a wrong note on his guitar, has developed his own signature sound (right from their first eponymous album: “no synthesizers”) and has over and over again come sailing in with a bravura solo bridge that elevates the song to a new level; but he is not a Hendrix, Paige, Clapton, nor even BB King, and there’s no shame in that. Having said all that, I nominate Queen as possibly the rock band with the best musicianship because of their stellar music. Many consider William Shakespeare the best writer in the English language. British poet and novelist Robert Graves once said of Shakespeare, “He does nothing outstandingly, but so MANY things WELL.”
That also describes Queen.

Your nominations, please?

reply

Pink Floyd
The Doors
Supertramp
Led Zeppelin
The Who

reply

In addition to the above I will add

Grateful Dead - Jerry Garcia was great, Phil Lesh was great, the drumming combo of Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart was great, Bob Weir was just ok but fit perfectly, and he sang well. Not just as individuals, but the way they jammed together was truly great.

The Allman Brothers - Duane Allman was one of the greats. Dickey Betts was very good. Berry Oakley was just a great bassist. The drumming combo of Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny Johanson was great. And Gregg Allman on keyboards and vocals. Again, like the Dead, not just individually but the way they all jammed together.

reply

Rolling Stones

reply

I still never saw them... I was either out of the continent, out of cash, or thought "I'll see em next year", and now I don't go to concerts anymore. But, there is YouTube - not the same, but a little better than only audio.

reply

i'm not a musician, so i'm the last person who can judge such things, but judging by reputation, every member of rush is an absolute master of their instruments. i'm not a fan of the band in general or that style of music, but you have to give credit to talent, & i don't think any of those guys lack that.

reply

Led Zeppelin
Deep Purple
Rush
Yes
The Police

reply

Kinda cheating, but... Traveling Wilburys.

George Harrison
Jeff Lynne
Tom Petty
Bob Dylan
Roy Orbison

reply

The topic is bands, not individual musicians. Thank you for your contribution.

reply

Good grief, R_Kane!
I hope you realize that when SoCrates listed those so-called "individual musicians," that he was actually listing the members of The Travelling Wilburys.
Handle With Care - https://youtu.be/1o4s1KVJaVA
End of the Line - https://youtu.be/UMVjToTOjbM (note: while Roy Orbison was alive when they recorded this song, he had died by the time they made the video)

Be that as it may, my answer to your question has to be Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, specifically with the line-up during the Born To Run, Darkness On the Edge of Town and The River tours (1975 - 1981).

Yes, Bruce was indeed a "charismatic star," but he was also a great guitar player and powerful singer who was backed by a "solid combination of musicians (including singers)."
Roy Bittan - piano
Steve Van Zandt - guitar and backing vocals
Danny Federici - organ
Max Weinberg - drums
Garry Tallent - bass
and of course, the Big Man, Clarence Clemons on the saxophone

Here's a live version of Prove It All Night (1978) - https://youtu.be/DWos8TS9yaE
I have seen Bruce and the band in concert over 200 times since I first saw them in 1974 and all their shows were great, but the 1978 Darkness On the Edge of Town tour may very well have been their best ever.

reply

The Grease Band featuring Joe Cocker on vocals

reply

The Allmans are one of my favorites, because this Yankee boy loves Southern rock n’ roll. The inspiration of TWO drummers . . . ?! Magnificent! Yes! Great music! No doubt.

I left someone out of my original list: The Doors. In terms of composing, I will take Morrison over Zimmerman (Dylan, and name that Bobby Zimmerman appropriated from Welsh poet Dylan Thomas) any day. Morrison was the poet of his generation, not Bob Zimmerson. Then there’s the fact that The Doors COULD PLAY. Ray Manzarek on keyboards, John Densmore on drums and Robbie Kreiger on lead guitar . . . ?! I come from a musical family, and one thing that I learned is that if a band knows it’s playing with a GREAT lead, it makes the band want to rise up and play better. These three guys had the chops to rise up and deliver. I mean: The End? When The Music’s Over? L.A. Woman? The Doors did multimedia poetry, lyrics and musicianship melded into art like few other rock bands have achieved.

Is Jim Morrison really dead? Did Morrison inspire the movie Eddie and The Cruisers? It doesn’t matter. All that matters is the first 3 bars of Manzarek playing When the Music’s Over, which is eternal, and which gave birth to the long-play rock radio format.

Not for nothing: Honorable mention to Jethro Tull.

reply

My fave is Break on Through (To the Other Side)

reply