Five Favorite Bands of All Time: Take the Challenge - Comments Page 2

Ever try to come up with your five favorite bands of all time? Mine are The Doors, R.E.M., Pixies, Nirvana, Beck.

Ever try to come up with your five favorite bands of all time? I was challenged to do this in 1996, and now I'm doing it again ten years later.…
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  • 26 - Angulimala

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:26 pm

    Hmm...top 5 bands/musicians.

    In no order:

    1. Ryan Adams
    2. Opeth
    3. Elliott Smith
    4. Smashing Pumpkins
    5. George Harrison

    Honorable Mentions: Nine Inch Nails, Morphine, Red House Painters, Judas Priest, VAST, Chopin, Prince, Mercenary, Tool, Bob Dylan, White Stripes

    There. Age/Lifestyle revealed.

    =Angulimala=

  • 27 - BillSaysThis

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:30 pm

    I'd have put Zep at #6, mostly for Physical Graffiti (the album) and LZ3. Saw them once at Madison Square Garden around 1977, they were 90 minutes late starting because "Plant forgot his favorite pair of jeans at the hotel." Yeah, right ;)

    Stones are oool but fall in my overrated bin. Definitely were never the world's greatest rock and roll band.

  • 28 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:31 pm

    I love all of these choices, y'all. I think it's very cool to "show the cards" and see where other people are at.

    The hardest part about this exercise for me was to be flat-out honest.

  • 29 - Vern Halen

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:34 pm

    Eric - I'd be allright with 3 out of your 5 at any given time of day.

    Gonzo - I'm suprised! Old school for the most part, 2 outta 5 are up there in the top for me too. I guess I was expecting soomrthing more esoteric. just don't start quoting Aqualung on that other thread.

    Duane - great list(s) - fogeys rule, I guess!


    My list, subject to any amount of change, of course:

    Springsteen/E Street
    Velvet Underground
    Beatles
    Tull
    Zep

    I would've thought there would be more alternative stuff, but if I'm being honest, I'm pretty mainstream, I guess. 6 through 20 would be a wider slice of taste, good or bad (Grand Funk would be there, fer shure!).

    And my Halen kin? Nope - not at all.

  • 30 - Vern Halen

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:43 pm

    And Bill - Men w/o Women and Hearts of Stone are the two most underrated albums of all time!

  • 31 - Gordon Hauptfleisch

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:43 pm

    Great article, but I'm worried because I'm a Nirvanian with FionaAppLeo rising and my Marquee Moon in Roxy Musicapricorn --will my head explode or will I go tone-deaf or something?

    Anyway, I'm going to stick to the letter of the law here because you specifically said "bands," not solo artist--so that lets out DYLAN, TOM WAITS, FIONA APPLE, AIMEE MANN, SPRINGSTEEN -- and while I hate to even contemplate this, I guess it even lets out ELVIS COSTELLO, though "and the Attractions" begs for inclusion. But here goes:
    BEATLES
    KINKS
    REPLACEMENTS
    BEACH BOYS
    NIRVANA

    Honorable mentions:
    PIXIES
    TELEVISION
    ROXY MUSIC
    WILCO
    CLASH

  • 32 - Mark Saleski

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:44 pm

    hey billsaysthis:

    ok now, lemme try an honest shot at this, though i'm gonna break it into rock vs. jazz because...well, just five across all genres is just not fair!

    Bruce Springsteen
    Southside Johnny
    Joe Jackson
    Tom Waits
    Rush

    jazz:
    Pat Metheny
    Bill Frisell
    Antony Brazton
    Miles Davis
    Ornette Coleman

    gawd, this is brutal!

  • 33 - Guppusmaximus

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:50 pm

    Well...Zingzing, my friend, yee hath no idea what turns the gears inside this mind. I see alot of other people mentioning what makes them tick...so here is another of my lists:
    (ofcourse the five already mentioned)
    Elvis Presley(Gospel)
    Atheist
    Cynic
    Aghora
    Necrophagist
    Deliverance
    D.R.I.
    IronChrist
    The Carpenters
    Brandi Carlile
    The Living End
    Tiger Army
    Ken Bonfield (www.kenbonfield.com)
    Will Ackerman
    Christopher Parkening
    Opeth
    The Dolphins
    Yngwie Malmsteen
    Iron Maiden
    Queen
    The Police
    Devastation
    Defiance
    The Showcase Showdown (Boston Punk)
    VooDoo Glow Skulls
    U.S. Bombs
    Neuraxis
    Watchtower
    Victor Wooten
    Men at Work
    King Diamond
    Ratt
    Fates Warning
    Tommy Emmanuel
    Between The Buried and Me
    Control Denied
    Iced Earth
    Demons & Wizards
    Ron Jarzombek
    Michael Hedges

    *Phew* there is quite a bit more but I won't take up space!!

  • 34 - Vern Halen

    Jul 21, 2006 at 2:51 pm

    Yeah, 5 is ridiculous.

    Next time try 3!

  • 35 - Mark Saleski

    Jul 21, 2006 at 3:08 pm

    what, no Cannibal Corpse?!! ;-)

  • 36 - BillSaysThis

    Jul 21, 2006 at 4:22 pm

    Vern Halen: Agreed!

    Five is pretty tough number but this is usually a fun discussion to have as long as no one gets bent too far out of shape.

    Jazz, not that I really have a great knowledge:
    Buddy Rich Band: I saw these guys about seven times in the decade before he dies and even though he was using cheap recent North Texas grads for most of the seats his drumming was so awesome he's still my favorite non-rock musician.
    Miles Davis Group with Shorter and Corea in the mid '60s
    Benny Goodman's big band, the one he used on his radio show in the late '30s
    Pat Methany Group, the lineup from his first few records from the late '70s
    Weather Report

  • 37 - Guppusmaximus

    Jul 21, 2006 at 5:02 pm

    Naw.. I stopped listening to them after "Hammer Smash Face". Same with Cryptopsy & Deicide. Glorifying Satan & Bloody Deaths gets a little boring after a while {:>(0)

  • 38 - Tim Hall

    Jul 21, 2006 at 5:22 pm

    Pink Floyd - First album I ever bought was "The Wall". Their performance at Live8 a year ago reminded us all just how great they are.

    Blue Oyster Cult - They're labelled as 'thinking man's metal', but I think they were always more than a metal band. They can rock out with the best of them, but they've also excelled at sublime pop with a sinister edge. I'm seeing them live tomorrow night.

    Marillion - They defied the critics by playing full-blown prog rock when it was most unfashionable, and have continued to change and evolve with the times.

    Rush - I keep forgetting just how great their 70s and early 80s material is. Then I dig out their albums, and remember.

    Ritchie Blackmore - This is a cheat to include two great bands, Deep Purple and Rainbow. Forget Jimmy Page, Blackmore was my 70s guitar hero. It didn't hurt that he worked with three world-class singers (Gillan, Coverdale and Dio)

    Honourable mentions - Yes, Frank Zappa, Black Sabbath (both with Ozzy and with Dio), Genesis when Steve Hackett was in the band, King Crimson.

    Possible candidates for ten years time - Mostly Autumn, Porcupine Tree, Opeth, The Mars Volta

  • 39 - Douglas Mays

    Jul 21, 2006 at 5:41 pm

    Oh god, I forgot to mention Joy Division....

  • 40 - Nik

    Jul 21, 2006 at 5:58 pm

    David Bowie, Elvis Costello & Attraction, Beatles, Guided By Voices, Bob Dylan

  • 41 - Rebecca

    Jul 21, 2006 at 6:14 pm

    As a major music collector five is tough. But in no particular order: The Beatles, Led Zepplin, Queen, The Rolling Stones, David Bowie and so many more!

    The Beach Boys deserve an honorable mention. I just recently bought most of their catalog and Brian Wilson did some amazing stuff! If you haven't heard 2004's SMILE, check it out.

  • 42 - zingzing

    Jul 21, 2006 at 6:43 pm

    oh fuck. bowie. the beach boys. i would have to put bowie in my top 5... no contest. out goes disco inferno...
    new order, the fall, david bowie, beatles... that's as far as i can really say right now.
    and i second smile. brilliant, brilliant album, but i must say that i like the o.g. 66-67 bootleg recordings better than the 2004 version... the album loses a bit of impact in the new version i suppose. still great.

  • 43 - AJPrenderville

    Jul 21, 2006 at 9:39 pm

    What No one bows to the God of Stevie Ray Vaughn? or Eric Clapton? If only five are the criteria, then with two down--I say Allman Brothers (Old and New fashioned) The Dead, and surprise, B.B. King. Oops, is my age showing?

  • 44 - Triniman

    Jul 21, 2006 at 10:14 pm

    It's pretty much impossible for me to list five artists from the multitudes spanning several generes that I listen to, but here's five off of the top of my head.

    Wilco
    XTC
    Roxy Music
    Delerium
    Bill Laswell

    For jazz, at the moment:
    Miles Davis
    Clifford Brown
    McCoy Tyner
    Keith Jarett
    Dave Holland

    metal:
    Metallica - early stuff
    Yngwie Malmsteen
    Judas Priest -1st half of the catalogue
    Scorpions -1st decade of the catalogue
    Iron Maiden -1st half of the catalogue

  • 45 - J. P. Spencer

    Jul 21, 2006 at 10:36 pm

    Van Morrison
    Tim Buckley
    Richard Thompson
    The Who
    The Replacements

    Honorable Mention: The Kinks, because they were the best live band I ever saw

  • 46 - Mary K. Williams

    Jul 21, 2006 at 11:56 pm

    Hm, I don't know if it's a cure or a curse, to come in after 40 or so comments.

    If I had been number one, I'd probably list five bands or artists - and then I'd see what others wrote and think...fuck me! Why did I forget this one! Or that one!

    but just some that have endured for me over time:


    U2
    Pink Floyd
    Aerosmith
    AC/DC
    Red Hot Chili Peppers
    Cheap Trick
    Grateful Dead
    B52s

    Jeez Eric - Five is hard to do!

    but nice article nonetheless : )

  • 47 - Douglas Mays

    Jul 22, 2006 at 2:23 am

    Oh damn, the Who and The Kinks. I forgot to mention those two. Social observation is crucial in rocknroll. Two of the best at it....

  • 48 - Julenka

    Jul 22, 2006 at 4:02 am

    I have two very distinctly different tastes - in bands, and in singer-songwriters. They both show my age. Heh.

    Skunk Anansie.
    Foo Fighters.
    Counting Crows.
    U2.
    Pink Martini.

    David Gray.
    Ben Harper.
    Damien Rice.
    Ray LaMontagne.
    Tom McRae.

  • 49 - Boxclocke

    Jul 22, 2006 at 6:14 am

    These two lists (or indeed, even the fact that there are two separate lists) are subject to change at a moments notice. This is just what I compiled when I first thought about it.

    "Rock"
    The Beatles
    U2
    The Polyphonic Spree
    The Flaming Lips
    David Bowie

    "Dance/Electronic/Ambeint/Etc."
    Air
    Boards of Canada
    Daft Punk
    Moby
    Gary Numan

  • 50 - BRICKLAYER

    Jul 22, 2006 at 6:46 am

    Replacements
    Ramones
    Screeching Weasel
    Johnny Cash
    Black Flag

  • 51 - chantal

    Jul 22, 2006 at 9:51 am

    for the fun of it...here goes---

    Classic all times favs:
    U2
    REM
    New Order
    Morrissey/the Smiths
    Depeche Mode
    Alanis Morrissette
    (couldn't have just 5)

    Favorites I'm listening to now quite a bit:
    Ryan Adams
    Damien Rice
    Ben Harper
    David Gray
    Howie Day
    what can I say, I'm a sucker for a cute, sensitive guy with a guitar

    guilty pleasures:
    Madonna
    Christina Aguilera

  • 52 - Mark Sahm

    Jul 22, 2006 at 12:39 pm

    I guess the minister's daughter is in love with the snake, Berlin.

    Radiohead
    Morphine
    Wilco
    Nine Inch Nails
    Rage Against The Machine

  • 53 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 22, 2006 at 3:21 pm

    Indeed, Mark, and great choices! All outstanding bands. Radiohead and Rage are certainly in my top 10-15, and Morphone and Wilco are certainly great spins anytime.

    Great responses overall! Very interesting that there was such a heavy classic rock focus in the comments for a while there, nice to see some diversity as it goes on.

    And very very cool that people are splicing out their own "vertical" categories (rock, jazz, ambient, etc.!).

  • 54 - gonzo marx

    Jul 22, 2006 at 4:51 pm

    oh..yas want jazz too?

    k...

    Bird (and Diz)
    Miles
    Thelonius
    Jaco Pastorius
    Buddy Rich

    nuff said...

    Excelsior?

  • 55 - amanda

    Jul 22, 2006 at 5:12 pm

    Ooh - fun! I love this game.

    In no particular order:

    Smashing Pumpkins
    Radiohead
    Ani DiFranco
    Tori Amos
    Bright Eyes

    I don't know if I'm genre-izing myself, but I'm definitely making it clear when I grew up (I think.)

    It's interesting seeing everyone else's, and especially which bands *keep* showing up in different lists - I had no idea Pink Floyd was that beloved.

  • 56 - Ray Ellis

    Jul 22, 2006 at 5:24 pm

    I'll just list this article in my top five favorites I've read by you, Eric. Of course, I've only been on board for a couple of months.

    I thought it would be easy to name my all-time favorite five bands, but every band I think of brings to mind another band. That being said, here are my five favorite bands, in no particular order, and subject to change in my next breath:

    The Velvet Underground. When I was fourteen, I read about this band that Andy Warhol was promoting (I think it was in Village Voice)and I knew I had to check them out. This wasn't easy, since I lived in East Texas (Tyler) but I was on a mission and eventually found a mail order source. I realize now that my obsessive compulsive tendencies were blossoming then, but I also discovered rock and roll that I had never heard before. That album "the Velvet Underground Featuring Nico" influenced me in ways that are still with me to this day.

    The Clash. I got my punk cred in 1978 when I saw the Sex Pistols in 1978 (I haven't worn bell bottoms since)and I'd already written a few punk reviews for a magazine called Upbeat when "London Calling" was released stateside in 1980 (I'd bought the import a few months before.) I raved it up, of course, and my local peers decried me as a sellout, just as they decried the Clash. Fuck 'em. It's still the single most important of the 1980's.

    David Bowie and whatever band is backing him at the moment. I first got turned on to Bowie with "The Man Who Sold the World" album, mainly because of the images it made swirl in my head--and that was without blotter. I've followed his career for what is it now?--over thirty five years now (jeez!) Throughout it all, his constant transformations have intrigued me.

    Stevie Ray Vaughnn and Double Trouble. Before he became a household name, I used to see him in a little Dallas dive called St. Christophers. The bar has long since fallen to victim to urban development, but those raw live performances still live in my memory.

    The Beatles. Obvious choice, I know, but anybody who grew up in the late sixties and says they never cared for the Beatles is, to quote Robert Crumb (out of context) "a liar, a cheat and not to be trusted."

    Anyway, thanks for a great article, Eric.

  • 57 - Franklin Chase

    Jul 22, 2006 at 5:26 pm

    Early Allman Bros
    Early Marshall Tucker....

    Early Missing Persons

    Zappa instrumentals
    Holdsworth (a variety of ensembles)

    Nowadays... I really don't have a favourite group/electric team

    but... I do enjoy

    Pat Metheny ensembles
    Ginger Bakers ensembles
    Chick Corea Electric band
    Jazzy Andy Sommers
    Jazzy Tony Levin

    and a variety of top shelf drummers...

    Favorite Guitarists
    Holdsworth
    Buzzy Feiten
    Jeff Beck
    Frissell

    Bassists (living)
    Tom Kennedy
    Pettittucci
    Wooten
    Bailey
    Tom Harrell
    Tony Levin

    Drummers
    Weckle
    Bassinett
    A few others

    Keyboards

    Too many to list but... Corea and Methany's top the list.

    Horns (living). Marselles for sure.

    Saxes... don't know

    whew... to much thinking here... I give///uncle// let me go... or I'm telling mom!

  • 58 - Glen Boyd

    Jul 23, 2006 at 1:36 am

    Okay I'm in. Here goes:

    1. Beatles: Seeing them on the Ed Sulllivan show at the age of seven opened my eyes to the big, beautiful world of music and basically changed my life. There has never been, nor will there ever be, another band like them.

    2. Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band: Bruce's performance on December 20, 1978 at the Seattle Center Arena changed my life all over again. It was my third time seeing him live (I've gone on to see him 30 something times over the years) and remains the greatest rock and roll show I've ever seen to this day.

    3. Genesis (Gabriel/Hackett era): Some of the most marvelously textured and layered, challenging, and beautiful music I've ever heard. Phil Collins ruined this band when he took the helm and basically turned them into a crappy white version of his vision of Motown. But I still have my Selling England and Lamb Lies Down CDs (the live Lamb from the box set puts the studio version to shame) to remind me how great they once were.

    4. Radiohead: The only band I've heard in the past ten years (and yes that includes Nirvana) to continually challenge commercial convention and make great music simply for the sake of their art. There was a time that seems like forever ago when most of the bands out there gave a shit (or at least pretended to) about the idea of their music as "art". Thank God, there's still at least one band that still does.

    5. Pink Floyd: When they are playing at the top of their game, there is nothing that matches the grand sweep of Pink Floyd. The cinematic scope of albums like Dark Side and The Wall are one of the few occasions in rock history where a band actually lives up to it's artistic ambition and then some. Listening to Echoes on headphones with a nice glass of wine aint a half bad way to spend twenty or so minutes either.

    Honorable mention: Dylan; Neil Young; The Who; Phil Spector; Brian Wilson; sixties era Jefferson Airplane; Prince; Hendrix; Marvin Gaye; CSNY; Beastie Boys; Public Enemy; Wilco; David Bowie; The Who; U2; Echo and The Bunnymen; The Chameleons; Patti Smith; Jimi Hendrix; Janis Joplin; The Doors; John Fogerty; The Ramones; The Clash; Alice Cooper; Mott The Hoople

  • 59 - godoggogodoggo

    Jul 23, 2006 at 1:59 am

    I'm mainly into jazz, which is not primarily band-oriented, with due respect to Franklin Chase. Anyways, my 1st 4 favorite rock bands are easy: Minutemen, X, Replacements, Beatles. Slot #5 is tough, but at the moment I'll type Doors.Othe possibilities would be MCR, Dolls, or Hendrix Experience, whom some people don't like to consider a band, for some reason. Come to think of it, make HE my #5.

  • 60 - godoggo

    Jul 23, 2006 at 2:00 am

    MCR should be MC5.

  • 61 - Swagger

    Jul 23, 2006 at 2:41 am

    1. Foreigner
    2. Journey
    3. Loverboy
    4. Reo Speedwagon
    5. Captain Beefheart

  • 62 - godoggo

    Jul 23, 2006 at 2:47 am

    BTW thanks whoever that was for making me aware of the live Lambs from Genesis Archive 1967-1975. I've long been curious about how a live version might sound (the studio version is sort of cheesy sounding),and the samples on CD Universe sound great. Kind of a shame about me being broke, yet again.

  • 63 - Brady

    Jul 23, 2006 at 2:52 am

    In no particular order Rock Bands or Artists:

    The Police
    Elvis Costello (alone and with The Attractions)
    Richard Thompson (alone and with Linda and Fairport Convention)
    Belle and Sebastian
    Graham Parker (alone and with The Rumour)

    In no particular order Non Rock bands or Artists:

    Wes Montgomery
    Miles Davis
    John Coltrane
    Thelonious Monk
    Hank Williams

  • 64 - Duke De Mondo

    Jul 23, 2006 at 9:39 am

    Excellent article, Sir Berlin, i adored every syllable. i'm not so much adoring the thought of the task at hand...

    All right, i'm gonna go with what i believe to be the case here and now, whilst also taking into account the years o' favourite bands done picked up here and there.

    The Pogues
    Bright Eyes
    The Libertines
    Bjork
    Whiskeytown
    Billy Bragg

    i had to do it quick, otherwise i'd be screaming about "what, no Proclaimers / Green Day/ Wildhearts / Miles Davis /Johnny Cash /Adam Green / Babyshambles (i know i have the libertines, but i adore Babyshambles in a terribly different way) / Rilo Kiley..."

    argh! no, leave them there...

    again, brilliant writing, Sir Berlin

  • 65 - Duke De Mondo

    Jul 23, 2006 at 9:42 am

    aw i can't BELIEVE i forgot Bob Dylan and Cursive and The Dead Kennedy's and GG Allin and...

  • 66 - Mat Brewster

    Jul 23, 2006 at 12:20 pm

    Screw it. Too much thinking is doing nothing but destroying my mind cells.

    Grateful Dead
    Wilco
    Beatles
    Bob Dylan
    Lyle Lovett

  • 67 - Anna Creech

    Jul 25, 2006 at 7:20 pm

    Wishing Chair - I like the music a lot, and they're also two of the best friends a gal could have

    Indigo Girls - listening to them in college shifted my musical world view from Amy Grant to pretty much everything I listen to now

    Moxy Früvous - sadly, no longer performing as a group, but it would have been cool to see them in their heyday

    ...I can't think of any other folks in my favorites list that I would rank significantly higher than the others, and my flavor of the week changes regularly.

  • 68 - Dave

    Jul 26, 2006 at 12:52 am

    Frank Zappa
    Oregon
    King Crimson
    Soft Machine
    Miles Davis (60-75)

  • 69 - Stephen V Funk

    Jul 26, 2006 at 5:41 pm

    um...

    Spiritualized
    Led Zeppelin
    Pink Floyd
    Joni Mitchell (is she a "band?")
    Stereolab

    I think...

  • 70 - NRT

    Jul 28, 2006 at 9:06 am

    In no order:

    Porcupine Tree
    Pink Floyd
    Bass Communion
    Jethro Tull
    Marillion

    That looks awfully 'proggy', but these are the bands to which I consistently return, rather than the far wider range of my normal listening habits.

  • 71 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 28, 2006 at 12:39 pm

    Interesting to see so many mentions of Floyd and Tull.

    Thanks for the kind words Duke. Yes, very amazed that you left off Dylan. I dig the hell out of his music, by the way .

  • 72 - Lonnie Wilson

    Jul 29, 2006 at 3:10 pm

    Thanks everybody. I was ready to discover some new stuff. A quick cut & paste into Bearshare search & I've got 5 or 6 CD's full.

    Maybe this thread has died, but here's my 2 cents.

    Top 5:

    1. Beatles (I know it's redundant in this thread, but just being truthful. I still listen to at least 1 beatle song every week, and have for many many years. Mostly John & George's tunes. Happiness is a Warm Gun is a masterpiece...)

    2. Bob Wills & his Texas Playboys. Although the technology was pretty limited in the 30's & 40's and their catalog is decidedly Lo-Fi, there is some great stuff in there.

    3. Antonio Carlos Jobim - Mostly with Gil Gilberto but I like it all whether it's Stan Getz, Charlie Byrd, or any good jazz band.

    4. Led Zeppelin - Although I get most of my Zep fixes these days via Dread Zeppelin. I almost listed Dread as number 4, I love that band. But they wouldn't be possible without the 3 Kings.

    5. Zappa

    Those are the top 5 that I never tire of. I can think back to different periods of my life (I'm over 50) when I had other favorites - Ventures, Hendrix, Credence, Santana, Tower of Power, Harry Nilsson, 10 Years After, Dylan, Kinks, Hayseed Dixie, Gillian Welch, Bach, Lyle Lovett, Chick Corea, Django (with Grappelli), Nat Cole Trio (with Oscar Moore), Boswell Sisters, Lalo Shiffrin, Miles, Weather Report, Firesign Theater, Elvin Bishop, Yes, Boz Scaggs, Pheobe Snow, Johnny Winter, Julie London, Steely Dan...

    Thanks again

  • 73 - SFC SKI

    Jul 29, 2006 at 5:35 pm

    I have been avoiding this thread for a while because it was hard for me to pick five.

    Fortunately, I have had many opportunites recently to have to pick a limited number of CD's/MP3's to bring on feploytments. Maybe I'll get an iPod and drag al my music with me but having kicked myself for not having some music readily at hand, I thiunk I can finally asnswer.

    1. Webb Wilder. No mater what he calls his backing band, it has been almost all the same guys for over 20 years, and theri repertoire runs from all styles of rock to country to swing, you name it, they probably have a song, and none of their songs suck. In a just world, Webb Wilder would be famous.

    2. THe Pretenders. (original edition)Great song writing, great musicianship, and a fantastic female singer. This band fills my niche for pop, semi new wave, and female vocalists.

    3. Stevie Ray Vaughn. Picking a guitar hero was challeging, but as much as I love Jimi and Jeff Beck and so many others. Stevie is who I consistenly turn to for a guitar fix.

    4. Grandmaster Flash/ Furios Five. Between the rap and the samples, I have a lot of R & B and funk in there, and why not gop to the guys who pretty much laid the foundation for all that came after.

    5 Rammstein. For those moments when I need to get the aggression out, and I learn more German everytime I listen to them.

    I hope that I never put in the position of having only five bands to listen to, but I could probably survive with this limited, yet eclectic playlist.

  • 74 - JACK BARRY

    Oct 24, 2006 at 3:37 pm

    1.JEFFERSON AIRPLANE
    2.BEATLES
    3.SPIRIT
    4.YARDBIRDS
    5.JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE

  • 75 - Donnie Marler

    Oct 24, 2006 at 4:00 pm

    In no particular order, and sorely lacking in social significance. They just make me feel good.

    1. Lynyrd Skynyrd (shuddup)
    2. Marshall Tucker Band
    3. REO Speedwagon
    4. Nazareth
    5. Guns N' Roses

    I know, I know. Pitiful, aren't I? lol

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