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Wednesday 26 November 2014

The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014

(according to me)


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 10. Steel Panther - All You Can Eat

10. Steel Panther - All You Can Eat

Designed by Trevor Niemann (who has worked with Blondie, Korn, Danny Elfman, My Chemical Romance, Mötley Crüe, etc etc etc) and shot by David Jackson (explore his great commercial work and even watch behind the scene footage from this very project here), I'll admit that this masterpiece isn't everyone's cup of Jesus Juice. Truth be told, I have even seen the above artwork on some "worst of" 2014 lists already, but allow me to explain why everyone is wrong and I am right, using three simple words: Girls. And. Blasphemy. It suits the band so well! My naughty bone quivers! The devil in me laughs! Hahaha!


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 09. Benighted - Carnivore Sublime

09. Benighted - Carnivore Sublime

Designed by Aborted vocalist Sven de Caluwé, this image has two versions of itself in circulation: the more gory diseased twin (which you can see here), and the more nurturing feminine rendition above, which I honestly consider to be the far darker of the duo. What are you gonna do with that baby there, ma’am? You may have also noticed OMG A NIPPLE, which is a thing I like, but also a thing Facebook does not like, point proven when they promptly suspended the band’s account immediately after said artwork was revealed online. Ah well, no publicity is bad publicity, right?


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 08. J Mascis - Tied to a Star

08. J Mascis - Tied to a Star

Dinosaur Jr. singer J Mascis has grown quite attached to artist Marq Spusta over the years, enlisting the man to illustrate much of his band’s work as well as his own solo efforts on top of that (pay careful attention to 2011’s Several Shades of Why as it looks like a scene just only over the hill from here). And there are plenty of reasons as to why: Marq's instantly recognisable character design casually toys with the line between innocence and insanity; his portfolio is forever growing at a dangerous pace; and he even produced an organic beer label once upon a time. The alcoholic living in my stomach loves that fact.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 07. Paloma Faith - A Perfect Contradiction

07. Paloma Faith - A Perfect Contradiction

I’ve read some people stating how much they hate this album cover, labelling it too “over the top” and “egocentric”, which is fair. However, I have this weird reoccurring dream where I'm surrounded by a whole bunch of Paloma Faiths and we're partaking in some questionable activities, so this image does kinda fulfil a pervy gap in me somewhere, intentional or not. I also quite like the whole Entombment of Christ reference, it's nice. Furthermore, it may be worth mentioning that this shot was styled by Karl Willet who has done work for Geri Halliwell, Jessie J, and Sugababes in his time. Actually wait, that wasn't worth mentioning at all, sorry, ignore that.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 06. Wrestlerish - Greater Goods and Lesser Evils

06. Wrestlerish - Greater Goods and Lesser Evils

Represent! From my home country of South Africa, these pop rock dudes (and lady) did very well with this record, everybody loved it. And the artwork itself is a big part of that, in the “kinda creeps me out but I still want to own it” type of way—which is exactly what I look for in a woman, let alone an album. They also kept the spirit of the project local, as this shot was provided by fellow South African Hanro Havenga, which makes me prouder still of my motherland, despite the fact that I ran away from my mother six years ago. However, I do have one complaint, which is that Wrestlerish broke up shortly after this release, and I don’t agree with that decision whatsoever. Anyways, hey Werner.
(On a side note, did anyone else notice how similar this artwork is to Wye Oak’s Shriek album, also from this year? Except Wrestlerish’s attempt was actually good?)


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 05. Anubis Gate - Horizons

05. Anubis Gate - Horizons

Nikos Markogiannakis is a Greek artist whose work has blessed some big names in its time, such as Counting Crows, Ellie Goulding, and Killswitch Engage, for which I’m sure he got paid nicely to do so. However, when he created the above piece, he did it as a personal project, money never the objective, this image already completed long before Anubis Gate’s vocalist Kim Olesen accidentally surfed upon it and fell in love. “Once I saw it, I craved it,” Kim explained. “It was so dead on with my visual image of the album, it was almost eerie. I had goosebumps. And once it was chosen it started to influence the last stages of the creation of the album.” So there you go, one of the few examples where the artwork inspired the music, and not the other way around.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 04. Weezer - Everything Will Be Alright in the End

04. Weezer - Everything Will Be Alright in the End

Our story begins with artist Chris McMahon who one day got the bright idea to buy some cheap landscape paintings at a thrift store, and then deface/enhance them with awkward looking monsters, blending them in with the original scenery so well that they appeared like they had always been chilling there. Understandably, McMahon was quite stoked with the result, and posted his creations to Reddit in hopes of earning a few upvotes and back pats. So did it work? Uhm, yeah it did. For not only did Reddit praise his art so immensely that they hit the front page of the internet, but such a public admiration caught the eye of Weezer vocalist Rivers Cuomo, who eventually interrupted Chris whilst he was getting his hair done to ask permission to use the above piece for their new album. "I left with half a haircut because I was so excited at that point," Chris explains, and when you compare the cover to some of Weezer’s previous work (remember Hurley??), as well noting that this album is easily the band’s best record for over a decade ... well, I get excited too.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 03. Liars  - Mess

03. Liars - Mess

A rare case wherein the band makes their own artwork and it doesn’t suck, this colourful wreck was designed by Liars drummer Julian Gross who is also known for working closely with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and their art jobbies. The concept itself was inspired by contemporary artist Urs Fischer and conceptual artist John Baldessari, intended to express the band’s “uneasiness towards life in a fucked up, but most importantly, vibrant way,” which is fairly standard if you ask me. Even better, was that the limited edition copies of the vinyl came with their own flashy strings vacuum sealed within, which you could use as shoelaces or to decorate your head with, whatever you liked.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 02. SBTRKT - Wonder Where We Land

02. SBTRKT - Wonder Where We Land

SBTRKT’s trademark is that you never see the man behind the mask, but do you know about the man behind the man behind the mask? No, you don’t, no one does, because designer A Hidden Place is also an anonymous artist (check his barely updated tumblr here), but together with SBTRKT, they create the faces which this musician is famous for. However, with Wonder Where We Land, they took it one step further by creating a SBTRKT monkeydogthing sitting in the palm of a hand, which has some deeper meaning I’m sure, but I honestly chose it for one reason: those colours are fucking perfect. And hey, you know what else is cool? That time they gave everyone in the crowd their own SBTRKT mask at Bestival recently. Yay! Album was a touch disappointing though.


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 01. Pharmakon - Bestial Burden

01. Pharmakon - Bestial Burden

To fully comprehend the intensity of this image, one must (a) listen to the equally traumatic music within; and then (b) learn the story behind the concept. It was about a year ago when Margaret Chardiet (aka Pharmakon) almost died from an internal cyst so large that her insides began to terminate, eventually resulting in the removal of one of her undisclosed organs. The healing process was lengthy and painful, but inspired Bestial Burden as a “desire to show the body as a lump of flesh and cells that mutate and fail you and betray you—this very banal, unimportant, grotesque aspect of ourselves.” And there we have it, a grim scene where the insides are outside and butchered bits of animal innards are displayed on her torso with talons glued to her fingertips—very accurately portraying the nightmare of her ordeal as well as the musical terror itself. Disturbing, yes, but there is some love in the image too, as it was shot by her sister Jane Chardiet (from ambient-noise band Appetite), which at least proves that fucked-upness runs in the family somewhat. D’aaaw <3


Other Brilliants
Die Antwoord - Donker Mag
Arch Enemy - War Eternal
Septicflesh - Titan
Paws - Youth Culture Forever
The Roots - ...And Then You Shoot Your Cousin
White Suns - Totem
Carla Bozulich - Boy
September Girls - Cursing The Sea


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014
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Wednesday 19 November 2014

The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014

(according to me)


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 10. Diplo - Random White Dude Be Everywhere

10. Diplo - Random White Dude Be Everywhere

Even if this album’s title is humorously interesting, and even if this release is essentially a compilation of really satisfying tracks, and even if this artwork is pretty funny when you think about it ... the dude used a screenshot of his Twitter profile as his record cover. That’s pretty dumb, c’mon. What’s more, he edited his account details to read over 7 billion followers, which is everyone in the world, and that’s impossible. Not only because a large percentage of the population doesn't have access to the internet, but because I personally will NEVER follow you, Diplo. You hear me? I WILL NEVER FOLLOW YOU.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 09. Prince - Art Official Age

09. Prince - Art Official Age

Ah, wait I get it! It’s like, Prince’s third eye, right? In order to indicate he has some kind of a spiritual insight on his forehead, correct? But then if this man has indeed recently developed a mystical perception of sorts, then why was this album’s reception so lacklustre and average? Is he perhaps slipping in his old age? Why would he choose an artist as amateur as Maya Washington to take on such a high prolific a job? Was sex involved? Ugh, whatever, he’s Prince, he can do what he wants.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 08. Motorpsycho - Behind the Sun

08. Motorpsycho - Behind the Sun

Norway's Kim Hiorthøy has made a lot of artwork in his time, many for this very psychedelic rock band, as well as some for a couple of other respectable rock bands too, maintaining a generally decent standard throughout (see both of Fire! Orchestra’s releases for excellent examples of what this guy can do). Kim also paints, makes films, takes photos, writes, and composes his own electronic music, proving the boy has talent beyond most of us pathetic humans with 9-5 desk jobs (not bitter). So what exactly happened this round? Well, I have a theory, which goes like this: he made it using a free iPhone app whilst smoking weed.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 07. Bohren & der Club of Gore - Piano Nights

07. Bohren & der Club of Gore - Piano Nights

I have no idea who created this "artwork" or even who that dude on the cover is, but it freaks me out, man. If it came with the newspaper headline of “here is Bohren, notorious child molester and serial killer, enjoying his second favourite hobby, playing the piano”, I would be like "oh, that makes sense" and I'd turn the page. What’s worse is that the image represents the music flawlessly: a dark jazz album which is as horroresque as it is sad, trying to be sexual but only managing to be creepy in that dull, achingly slow, uneventful kind of way. Except to say, that it's a really good record at the end of the night.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 06. Suzanne Vega - Tales From the Realm of the Queen of Pentacles

06. Suzanne Vega - Tales From the Realm of the Queen of Pentacles

Jeri Heiden (part of the Smog Design team) is the artist who we must point fingers and laugh at right now, hahaha, do it! But then, look at her credentials: promo artwork for Madonna, P!nk, Beck, Garbage, Selena Gomez, Cher, Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears, Jarvis Cocker, and Regina Spektor, to name seriously very few. I thought long and hard as to why such a prestigious expert would risk her reputation with the photoshop nightmare you see above, and I concluded that it must be because someone told her the album’s title before the task, and she immediately gave up. Hey, at least they are both as pretentious as each other, puke.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 05. Joey Essex - Essex Anthems

05. Joey Essex - Essex Anthems

I don’t even know how to descibe my issues when it comes to pretty much everything about this album. First of all, it is a three CD compilation, curated by Joey Essex, who rose to fame from the tacky reality-ish TV soap The Only Way Is Essex (imagine: Jersey Shore, in Britain). Ok, so that's hard enough to swallow but maybe I could stomach it, if it weren't for the fact that this douche got a record deal with Warner just to release it, which is why my keyboard is currently covered in vomit as I type with my fingers knuckle deep in my own sick. Granted, he doesn’t sing on the thing (which is a big plus), but even when considering that point or ignoring how predictable the chosen club bangerz were, this cover is inexcusable. Said to be “signifying quality and prestige” all I hear is “chavvy chav chav” and I don’t need to watch the show (I haven’t) to want to punch Joey in the face.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 04. How to Dress Well - What Is This Heart?

04. How to Dress Well - "What Is This Heart?"

So I guess there is some merit to this artwork, as the designated Oval-X art duo went above and beyond the call of duty when they put together this package, especially the way it comes apart in a holographic manner, a feat I encourage you to drool over by clicking here. They continued to explain that they wanted to achieve what Phil Collins did with Face Value, an image which looks “directly into your soul”, despite the fact that How To Dress Well’s Tom Krell isn’t looking into the camera whatsoever. But regardless of clever historical inspiration and fancy 3D effects, nothing can save this artwork from appearing as though the singer is taking a shit, and having a difficult time with the process too.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 03. Kasabian - 48:13

03. Kasabian - 48:13

The music is good, the band are assholes, the title is stupid, and the artwork is even worse—so take this all as a warning, kids: here is what drugs will do to you. Kasabian themselves revealed to Graham Norton that they “weren’t trying to clever” (success!) and that they “came up with the title before we finished the record” which meant they had to spend many months editing songs just to ensure they hit that perfect time—self admittedly “the most ridiculous idea ever”. Of course, it wouldn’t be complete without the song times (but not the song names) leading down into this magical number, slapped upon one painful pink background because “pink is the ultimate way of saying 'I don't care what you think'—there's a very punk element to it.” Well, at least that’s true.


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 02. Leonard Cohen - Popular Problems

02. Leonard Cohen - Popular Problems

Long time collaborator Michael Petit designed this cover for yet another one of old man Cohen’s latter day gems, and in the artist’s defence, his general standard of past work has been fairly digestible. But this one is ... an MSPaint job, I think? I’m not even sure what that shit is supposed to be at the bottom left, an inkblot test? Hmmm, maybe. I kinda see a saxophone player? Or perhaps a tortoise creature clinging onto the chest of a man with a tiny head, and they are eating each other’s faces? I don’t know, is this a popular problem?


The 10 Worst Album Cover Artworks of 2014: 01. The Shrine - Bless Off

01. The Shrine - Bless Off

Is this hard rock band so unknown because they are proudly underground? Or because they are shit? Either way, their popularity status renders any details difficult to come by, except to say that this ... thing ... was created by their friend Kris Kirk, who apparently told the band “you know what The Shrine needs? A wolf screaming on acid!” They agreed, and here we are, one of the worst artworks (and albums) I’ve come across in a long while. But maybe you like it, and if so, you should buy these socks. Rock 'n' Roll!


Other Terribles
Imelda May - Tribal
The Gaslight Anthem - Get Hurt
King Buzzo - This Machine Kills Artists
The Black Keys - Turn Blue
Manchester Orchestra - Cope
I Am The Avalanche - Wolverines
Howler - World of Joy
East India Youth - Total Strife Forever


The 10 Best Album Cover Artworks of 2014
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Sunday 16 November 2014

The Rise And Fall Of Modern Day Feminism


The Rise And Fall Of Modern Day Feminism
I was raised with two sisters, one younger and one older than me. My whole life I have been fascinated with them as human beings, for they are arguably the most headstrong and ambitious people I’ve had the pleasure of knowing. Nothing ever seemed like it could stand in their way, and without complaining about circumstance or doubting their own abilities, I have watched as they separately set out goals and pursued them until they have both achieved success in almost all areas of life—or at least more than I have, anyway. And while I am sure they would have a lot to say about the content in this article themselves, from my outside perspective, I never once heard any accusations of life treating them in any unfair manner or witnessed them wallowing in the pool of self-pity. These two girls are among my top female icons.

I tell you this, because they were perhaps the catalyst for my current attitude towards women as a whole. Growing up (and even as I type this), I always considered females to be the stronger of the genders. Boys appeared to have less control, too quick to act in a macho way, pretending to be something they’re not, finding solutions in insults and fists. Girls, on the other hand, were the more nurturing, compassionate version of the human being, much more willing to listen and faster to admit weakness, which is in reality a sign of strength. I honestly was convinced for a long time that there was a secret within society, one where girls controlled the world and knew it, achieving said ownership by allowing the boys to think the boys were in control, whilst quietly instructing us what to do (and by looking at a lot of relationships, this is often the case).

However, this idea came crashing down very recently, directly connected to the uprising of modern-day-first-world-third-wave feminism. You may have noticed it yourself during the last few years, where this mass influx of interest over said movement, slowly dominated our social feeds and sprouted all over our news sources, and while most of my friends managed to escape it, this shit really messed with my insides. You mean to tell me that girls are not part of some organisation which completely controls the planet? You are saying that they, in actual fact, consider themselves victims of our society? I was disappointed, but even more so, was overwhelmed by guilt. As a male, I was shocked at what they were saying about me and my gender, the wrong things we were doing and saying and thinking, and especially the suggestion that none of these girls felt safe because of us. This would not do. I needed to help.

It consumed me. It swallowed me up and boiled me in its womb. I became obsessed. I studied everything I could on the history of the subject, I read a new article every single day (and still do), I joined forums and I followed relevant twitter accounts, making a load of feminist friends (male and female) along the way. I estimate that I know more about the subject than at least 70% of the community, and I'm open to be challenged. And, how exciting, it appeared I had joined the army at just the right time. New reports were pouring in every minute, my facebook was flooded, people were making some noise! It was madness! We were shouting! We were spreading awareness! We were making a difference.

But then one day, I made a mistake. I asked questions.

I'd done well at grasping the fundamental basics of feminism: the equality of all people. I knew the topics we were fighting against: the pay gap, the sexualised body image, the lack of sexual freedom, the catcalling, the security of women, etc. However, there were some details I was unsure of, factors which seemed either irrelevant, overly-sensitive, or at times, a little excessively man-hating. And so I started querying things, to the likes of:

Do you ever feel feminism is trying to make boys and girls the same rather than celebrating our differences?
Isn’t catcalling a bit of a first world problem in comparison to what’s going on in other countries, gender wise?
I get what we’re trying to do here, but are we proposing problems or solutions? And while we’re on the topic, what are the solutions?
Are we also giving enough time to the gender role problems men face too, like rights over children or statutory rape charges when both parties were equally drunk and consensual?
Is the word FEMinism really all inclusive? Shouldn’t we consider changing it?


And then BAM, just like that, the crew I had devoted so many hours of my energy supporting, turned to face me with claws and teeth and spit and growls. I was told to check my privilege. I was labeled a sexist just for asking. I was condescendingly informed I was a white male, and so I would never understand. In fact, I am willing to bet money that some of you reading this right now, judge me on the same basis. How dare a boy write about feminism when he cannot comprehend what it’s like to be a victim? Just because he takes an interest in equality and wants girls to feel free from harm, does not give him a right to ask questions, correct? He is not a girl, and therefore will never know what it means. Be honest with yourself, is that what you were thinking? Don’t worry if it was, I’m used to it. But you have to at least recognise why, at this point, I started to wonder if feminism was a healthy movement after all. Once the curtain dropped and I had been attacked for asking things, I notice a new side to the story, which only provoked me to ask further questions and make louder jokes. Naturally that didn't help the situation whatsoever.

It's a difficult thing to explain without digging a hole, so I must firstly say #NotAllFeminists, and thank the various people who have taken the time to approach my concerns with intelligence and a solution-based mentality. Those are the girls (and boys) who give feminism a good name and helped the growth of my interest, and I appreciate them wholeheartedly. Unfortunately, such examples were few and far between. More often than not, I saw the word being driven by anger, by insecurity, by a bombardment of keywords, and a disregard to any opposing opinions. It was no wonder I had been feeling so negative lately! I had surrounded myself with hate! This was not a journey of positive change! This was a journey of barking and stress! And so regrettably, while still actively playing my part in the equality of genders by defending women's rights and going out of my way to make the girls in my own life feel safe and comfortable, I had to reluctantly turn my back on the word “feminism”.

And here's the thing. I am not alone.

As with anything in our world, the bigger they are, the harder they fall. The feminist culture has grown so massive and in-your-face, that the inevitable counterculture rose up in protest. And even though I find it mostly comedic, the Women Against Feminism facebook group was a real eye opener to me. It not only showed that feminists weren’t talking on behalf of females (they are talking on behalf of feminists, fyi), but also further revealed the ugly side of the movement. We have women fighting for the equality of women, but if other women didn’t agree with their methods, then they were the enemy along with everyone else—and of course, the enemy was always stupid. I don't know, something about that mentality didn’t sit right with me, perhaps because I figured equality was about freedom of opinions?

But now we had an active “pro-feminism/anti-feminism” debate going on, and as a result, it only exploded further. So much so, that in a recent poll conducted by Time Magazine, the word “feminism” was rated as one of the most annoying terms of 2014, up there with “bae”, “said no one ever” and “om nom nom nom” (note: they did retract this entry later, but the damage was done). Whichever side of the feminism fence you are on, this is a severe blow to the development, one which indicates a general public apathy towards the perpetual vomit of the topic forced upon us on a daily basis. People are getting sick of it, and that’s the most dangerous threat any idea can face.

It continues: not so long ago Amanda Palmer (a feminist icon to many) posted this link to her facebook, which explicitedly warns feminists against overdoing it. It’s worth the read in full, but here is an excerpt:

“...if feminism becomes like the boy who cried wolf—if girls, and women, cry sexism too readily and often—America will stop listening. The minute feminism becomes hypercritical and humorless, it becomes too easy for the mainstream to dismiss our more valid complaints.”

And these type of articles are not the anomaly, they are becoming the norm, especially in regards to how males are often ignored on the subject of equality. Men are no longer afraid to express concerns over the word's exclusivity. Videos have surfaced attempting to highlight the double standards of gender domestic abuse and catcalling. Statistics are only now coming out that one in every nine rape victims are men. And while online harassment has recently grown into a hot topic for the feminist world, studies have shown that this too is not necessarily a girl issue.

Just quickly while we're talking cyberbullying, we cannot ignore that at times, it is the feminists themselves who are carrying out the attack. Just a few days ago, Dr Matt Taylor was involved in the incredible feat of landing a probe on a comet—which should have been the greatest day of his life. Instead, it turned out to be the worst, as he went viral as a mysogonist for his misjudged choice of shirt, one displaying provocative images of anime characters, and the femternet tore him a new one, calling him every variation of a sexist under the stars until he cried. Perhaps his choice of attire may have been a little on the bad taste side (if nothing else, even in a fashion sense type of way), but it once again exposed the over-sensitivety and brutality of this community. It's just a fucking shirt, yet it shall stick to his reputation for the rest of his life.

All these things are damaging women's liberation too, as it starts to become a parody of itself and reflects badly on those who remember what the real fight was meant to be. How about the conspiracy that drug companies are using feminism against you? Or that adverts are exploiting little kids by paying them to swear about feminism just to sell shirts? These are only some of the examples about how the once beautiful intention of bringing genders closer together, has slowly turned into a war between who thinks what about feminism as a concept itself, rather than what it's trying to accomplish. In fact, on any given day, just check Google news, and you are sure to find an almost even amount of reports supporting or questioning feminism (usually about feminism rather than what feminism is about), and none of them will make you feel any better.

But what about the celebrity support? The world cheered for Emma Watson's UN speech, and that was a huge win for the pro-feminist arena, right? Right! But let's not forget a big part of that was her careful inclusion of the social injustices towards men too, something so rare for a public figure to acknowledge that almost every headline focused on it. But even when considering this, there are countless celebrities who have distanced themselves from the word, including: Selma Hayek, Katy Perry, Lana Del Rey, Miley Cyrus, Taylor Swift, Kelly Clarkson, Bjork, Madonna, Susan Sarandon, and Demi Moore, to name a few. Does this make feminism look alive and well to you? Hell, even those who do believe in the movement are fighting. It's a mess.

To conclude, the problem here is that a lot of people get confused and consider “anti-feminism” to be synonymous with “anti-women and equal rights,” but this is not the case. It is against the culture, the moral superiority, the repetitiveness, and the rivalry, which is not a bad thing to be against. But even with that being said, I still see no need to be anti-feminist myself. I will forever pay attention to what is being spoken about, support what I believe in, skim over what I don’t, admire the past successes, and respect anyone who has this level of passion for anything. But based on how the community all too often neglects my gender and has embarked on a quest to find prejudice within any corner of conversation (at times, making it up if it's not there), I can no longer associate that label with myself. Then again, maybe this all serves me right. Maybe I deserve the animosity. I am a male after all.

But finally, the real tragedy here is how close to change we nearly were. For almost a whole year, feminists had the mic, and the entire world was listening. The complication arose when no two feminists could seem to agree on what the priority was, and instead we, the listeners, were hit with a list of a hundred points, some of which contradicted each other and others of which were even rejected by their own comrades—which is just so typical female (lol, joke! That was a joke! Please don't judge this article by that line!). If we had only decided to tackle one issue at a time (say perhaps, the pay gap or catcalling), and focused all that energy and vocal power on destroying a specific factor of discrimination piece by piece, we probably would have solved at least two or three major issues by now instead of alienating and confusing the masses until they were bored with the conversation. And I'm worried that at this advanced stage, it may be too late. We may have already blown it.

Wednesday 24 September 2014

Worst To Best: Kevin Smith


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith

I consider Kevin Smith to be somewhat of a brotherly figure. Perhaps he isn’t the most talented director in the world, but no matter how many times he misses the bar, you love him all the same with a definite soft spot for every piece of work he produces. You remember the good times, those moments he delivered his style impeccably, even if these days it seems more and more likely he only got lucky on occasion (albeit very lucky, reasonably often).

But no matter your opinion, one thing we have to respect Kevin for (at times, higher than some of the greatest directors on our planet), is his persistent willingness to push himself. He is forever trying something different, unafraid to dive into genres he knows absolutely nothing about, the only common denominator between his efforts standing as the daunting list of actors who recur throughout his work. And even if this approach has sometimes worked to his detriment (his later movies have been whipped as such duds that I worry as to how predictable this list may turn out, as well as how much of his career he has left), we cannot deny that he has continued to find fresh ways to get his thoughts onto our screens and into our hearts, which I find respectable. Respectable enough to write this blog, anyway.

And so while the UK waits impatiently for the release of Tusk (and while his filmography stands at the nice round number of 10 entries), I figured it was a decent point to analyse his projects and place them in some sort of an order, which is what I have done, and I am so glad you've read this far already. Please continue:


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 10. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back

10. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001)

Do not be fooled by this decidedly worst position, for let it be known, I adore Jay and Silent Bob with every stoner residue left within my bones from a misguided youth of bad decisions. They are the living interpretation of Beavis and Butthead meets Laurel and Hardy, appealing to the teenager in all of us, while we enjoy the last bits of our intelligence evaporating as each minute passes. And this flick is the epitome of their humour: shamelessly stupid without giving a fuck, the laughs so tasteless and pointless that you feel dirty for chuckling at them like some cheaper version of yourself. It come across more like a fun comic rather than a film, as we watch our vulgar heroes set out to destroy a movie within a movie in order to collect their royalties and prove the whole internet wrong. But even when considering the extensive film nods and thorough list of cameos, one can’t escape the feeling that this is one long lazy in-joke, driven by self indulgence and self references, repeatedly more miss than hit and boringly predictable, a cheesy side-project rather than a movie, falling cringely flat at whatever it was trying to do. Ultimately, it’s a Smith film for fans only, and even then, maybe not.

Key Scene: The closest thing we’ve got to a Good Will Hunting sequel.
Recurring actors: Joey Lauren Adams; Ben Affleck; Jeff Anderson; Jason Biggs; George Carlin; Matt Damon; Shannen Doherty; Dan Etheridge; Dwight Ewell; Walter Flanagan; Bryan Johnson; Jason Lee; Jason Mewes; Tracy Morgan; Scott Mosier; Ernest O'Donnell; Brian O'Halloran; Vincent Pereira; Chris Rock; Stephen Root; Seann William Scott; Harley Quinn Smith; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith; Kevin Smith; Ethan Suplee; John Willyung


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 09. Cop Out

09. Cop Out (2010)

Cop Out is an easy target, often considered Smith’s worst to date, even if I don’t find it quite as bad as everyone makes it out to be (and yet, still pretty bad). However, once you realise Smith didn’t actually write the film (only directed it, the sole example on my list), we can’t exclusively blame the guy for this typical homage to the buddy cop genre. At its core, it’s an adventure where two partners grow as a team whilst dealing with their own personal lives, featuring Tracy Morgan (performing as well as always) fearing his wife’s infidelity, and Bruce Willis (who reportedly hated working with Smith due to his excessive pot smoking) trying to find enough money to pay for his daughter's wedding. If that clumsy textbook synopsis didn’t already bore you to murder, then the overly eager film will, which tries so desperately to get you to laugh that you forget how, instead leaving you annoyed without any memory as to what actually happened. Perhaps it’s not the disaster every critic has labeled it, but in its incomplete, formulaic agony, it’s a movie which has been done a thousand times before and almost always better.

Key Scene: Morgan quoting Die Hard is just the kind of naughty self reference only Smith has the balls to do.
Recurring actors: Jason Lee; Tracy Morgan; Jim Norton; Ernest O'Donnell; Kevin Pollak; Seann William Scott; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith; Kevin Smith


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 08. Clerks II

08. Clerks II (2006)

Set 10 years after the original, Clerks II is pretty much the same old shit: a commentary on growing up and maintaining friendships whilst trying to survive the minimum wage rat race, except now as immature 30-something slackers as opposed to the more forgivable 20-something versions from before. Of course, the cult fan following served the reception well, many blindly praising the continuation of Smith’s everyday dialogue as well as the loveable casting (Dawson alone carries a lot of the movie herself), but personally I found this subpar development to be a substanceless pile of pointless disappointment, where we, the viewers, have grown up much faster than these protagonists, who act far too childish for their age group and that makes me feel old in just saying. It came across as more fun to make than watch, whilst trying too hard to be crude and emotionally touching at the same time, yet ultimately failing at both, exposing what is wrong with most of Kevin’s efforts: forcing tackiness straight into the oblivion of obviousness. I mean, the whole donkey ordeal? C’mon, that was way over the vulgar-cringe line even for Smith, but then again, maybe you’re into that sorta stuff.

Key Scene: All criticism aside, that Silence of the Lambs moment was one my favourite Smith moments in his filmography.
Recurring actors: Ben Affleck; Jeff Anderson; Walter Flanagan; Jason Lee; Jason Mewes; Scott Mosier; Brian O'Halloran; Harley Quinn Smith; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith; Kevin Smith; Ethan Suplee


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 07. Red State

07. Red State (2011)

Despite this low position, there’s a lot to love about Red State. Essentially a cult-like horror, it covers every base, from sex to religion (the whole plot presented as one preachy anti-church seminar) to violence (lots of violence, people die), and in that way, could easily appeal to Smith fans and non-Smith fans alike, as one very different offering from the director. Furthermore, the performances are memorable (Michael Parks is worth the watch alone) and it is visually brilliant, probably the best looking Smith film on this list as far as style goes. But by the time it had reached its conclusion, I couldn’t escape the question of “was that it?” The idea was there and it was a good one, but the execution was so thin, messy, and directionless that I couldn’t imagine the script to be any more than a few pages long. Simply put, it felt unfinished, as if it “almost worked”, which is why this is yet another one of Smith’s later efforts which received mixed reviews at best, perhaps rather swallowed as an example of where the man tried to make a movie just slightly beyond his capabilities. Which still does deserve some appreciation, granted.

Key Scene: It’s difficult because there doesn’t really feel like there are that many distinctive scenes here, but I guess the whole action-packed mid-section was quite exciting?
Recurring actors: Betty Aberlin; Ralph Garman; Michael Parks; Kevin Pollak; Stephen Root; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 06. Jersey Girl

06. Jersey Girl (2004)

Smith took an admirable risk with Jersey Girl, turning focus away from his trademark vulgar humour, opting rather to tell a heartfelt family story, dealing with the tragedy of loss and the struggles of single parenthood. Unfortunately, it was a gaggy flop, critics quick to tear the casting apart without focusing on the actual movie itself, which I consider unfair. Although, it has to be said, the casting was atrocious. Affleck performs well but is hard to take seriously, Castro comes across unauthentic, Carlin is uncharacteristically forgettable, and ... J.Lo?? Ughhhh! In fact, only Tyler feels like the right choice for her role, but even the unavoidable Liv charm could not save this film from crawling along like some formulaic, bland, safe effort from a director who has built a reputation from doing the exact opposite. BUT ... somehow I cannot bring myself to dislike this film, as its sweet nature and feel-good cuteness is still a cry-worthy journey, and if nothing else, is a fresh glimpse into Smith’s rare mature side, fundamentally a respectable effort in regards to trying something different and not completely failing at it.

Key Scene: The whole Will Smith running gag is great.
Recurring actors: Betty Aberlin; Ben Affleck; Jason Biggs; George Carlin; Matt Damon; Dan Etheridge; Jason Lee; Ernest O'Donnell; Vincent Pereira; Stephen Root; Harley Quinn Smith; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith; John Willyung


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 05. Zack and Miri Make a Porno

05. Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

It’s difficult to think of a title which sums up a film as accurately as this one. For, yes, Zack and Miri make a porno to solve their cash flow issues, and of course, fall in love in the process, simples. It’s Smith’s silly little rom com with a smutty centre, filthy but friendly, an unorthodox cuteness which, unfortunately, critics didn’t approve of. The usually "bankable" Rogen experienced his "worst box-office opening ever", the reception reportedly sending Smith into a deep depression following, and it doesn’t take a film connoisseur to work out why. The flick tries too hard to be crude just for the sake of it, and as a result, is another predictable piece of writing from the director, “a new low”, as some have called it. But in that same breath, I consider it underrated, as it only backfires in its desperate raunchiness due to the mushy heart dominating the execution, all corny and awkward and even ... touching (for a porn theme). It hits more than it misses, it’s not as disgusting as it wishes it was, and I honestly consider it one of Smith’s “better” works. Well, sort of.

Key Scene: Full frontal Jason! No homo.
Recurring actors: Betty Aberlin; Jeff Anderson; Justin Long; Jason Mewes; Jim Norton; Ernest O'Donnell; Jennifer Schwalbach Smith


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 04. Clerks

04. Clerks (1994)

And from here, it’s only the big boys, and there isn't much bigger than Smith’s debut, a film which proves that you don’t need a large budget, a real plot, or even colour to create an accidental classic so financially successful that it’s often considered one of the greatest independent comedies of all time. Exposing a day in the life of two half hearted slacker employees dealing with customers, running on the fuel of dialogue alone, there is no message here. Nobody is trying to save the world. Our characters just want to get through their shift, and in that way, it feels authentic as a slice of life we can all relate to whilst dying in hysterics from the excessive, politically incorrect toilet humour. But while Clerks would top many a Smith junkie’s list, personally I consider it slightly overrated for its cult status, and with all the sequels and animated versions which followed, it has grown a little weary in my eyes, sorry. Still, no one can deny this is Smith at his very best, with nothing to prove and ultimately the flick which made him the superstar he is today.

Key Scene: Difficult to think of one “key scene” when the movie is essentially quotable quote after quote, but I’ll go with when Silent Bob speaks his wisdom, simply because it’s a cool thing for Smith to have done and the first of that running theme.
Recurring actors: Jeff Anderson; Walter Flanagan; Jason Mewes; Scott Mosier; Ernest O'Donnell; Brian O'Halloran; Vincent Pereira; Kevin Smith; John Willyung


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 03. Mallrats

03. Mallrats (1995)

As Smith’s sophomore, as well as the prequel to Clerks (set the day before), obvious human nature is to compare this offering to his debut, and generally, quite unfavourably. People called it flawed and people called it juvenile, but I call that bullshit, this underrated reception leaving me completely dumbfounded. For starters, it’s not all that different from his first effort, yet another semi-plotless slacker stoner movie, complete with many of Smith’s playful trademarks such as awkward situations, vulgar dialogue, comic book obsessions, and a silly childlike charm, except set in a mall rather than a store this time. But beyond that, what really sets Mallrats superior in my mind, is its deeper understanding of the hardships of break-ups. As the impressionable youth I was when I first watched it, this movie granted me some unlikely tools to deal with heartbreak in a humourous manner, which still serves me to this very day. Perhaps that was never its intention, but regardless, is why I personally hold this film dear to me as almost life changing as well as one of Kevin’s greatest works—better than your precious Clerks, anyway. Oh, and Jason Lee owns it.

Key Scene: Most people would probably flock towards the Stan Lee thing, but honestly, it was the spooning arm metaphor which always stuck with me.
Recurring actors: Joey Lauren Adams; Ben Affleck; Shannen Doherty; Walter Flanagan; Bryan Johnson; Jason Lee; Jason Mewes; Scott Mosier; Brian O'Halloran; Kevin Smith; Ethan Suplee


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 02. Dogma

02. Dogma (1999)

As this list should effortlessly illustrate, there are generally two types of Smith films: the safe, immature, more successful “stick to what he knows” type; and the different, less successful “out of his depth” type. But Dogma is the exception. Telling the age-old tale of good vs. evil, two fallen angels have found a loophole in the Christian system to get back into heaven, and the fate of the world lies in the hands of an abortion clinic worker, obvs. And while such a pushy religious theme was a risky move on Smith’s part (even some death threats followed), the bold jump paid off, a rare glimpse into the director’s intellectual side, maintaining the humour whilst even toying with something ... profound? Wait, Kevin Smith? Profound?? Did he actually write this movie?? Evidently so, as only someone as stoned as him could think up a concept as ludicrous as Buddy Christ. Sure, some critics called it bloated, pretentious, and unnecessarily long, but for me this well casted effort is almost as close to a masterpiece as he can get, and I eagerly rock in my seat every time the mention of a potential sequel comes up. And it often does.

Key Scene: Avoiding spoilers hard here, but for those who are in the know, I’ll say one word: God.
Recurring actors: Betty Aberlin; Ben Affleck; Jeff Anderson; George Carlin; Matt Damon; Dan Etheridge; Dwight Ewell; Walter Flanagan; Bryan Johnson; Jason Lee; Jason Mewes; Scott Mosier; Ernest O'Donnell; Brian O'Halloran; Vincent Pereira; Chris Rock; Kevin Smith; Ethan Suplee


Worst To Best: Kevin Smith: 01. Chasing Amy

01. Chasing Amy (1997)

As an oblivious heterosexual male, it’s hard for me to comment on the lesbian controversy which backhanded this film’s release. Perhaps it’s my own ignorance, but I felt this was Smith’s genuine attempt at accurately commenting on the gender roles within a relationship, as well as the difficulty of stomaching the sexual history of one’s partner. I view it as almost an untraditional chick flick, “a chick flick for guys” I’ve heard it been called, with touching performances all around (I fell in love with Adams multiple times within its duration), provoking tears without breaking the vulgarity or comic book references we have come to rely on. And above all else, it analyses love, friendship, and homosexuality in a fair, romantic manner, as funny as always, but with more heart and sincerity, which, personally, has only helped me become more tolerant towards dykes and my own bitches. Because of these reasons, I stand up and proclaim this as Smith’s most mature offering—as Smith’s best offering—and the only “real” movie he has ever made.

Key Scene: The sex-injury Jaws parody.
Recurring actors: Joey Lauren Adams; Ben Affleck; Matt Damon; Dwight Ewell; Walter Flanagan; Bryan Johnson; Jason Lee; Jason Mewes; Scott Mosier; Ernest O'Donnell; Brian O'Halloran; Vincent Pereira; Kevin Smith; Ethan Suplee; John Willyung


The Disdance


The Disdance
You know when you’re walking down the street, and someone is coming towards you, right, so you kinda aim yourself to out of their direction, but they do the same thing? So now you are heading straight towards each other once again, and so you compensate by turning the other way, but this person does the exact same movement? So now you’re like doing this weird little pavement salsa where you’re both turning at a frantic rate in order to avoid crashing into each other, yet find yourself continuously getting closer and closer to colliding into one another?

I propose we start calling this “the disdance”. Because that’s a really clever play on words, not only on the stupid dancing action you accidentally find yourself partaking in, but the fact that such an event is experienced from a distance. I find it places some humour on this otherwise cringeworthy ordeal, even though I’m sure you smile and apologise politely in your oh-so British manner.

That’s all I have to say on the topic. Here’s the news:


JUICE NOTHING

There have been two fre$h articles since I last wrote one of these news bits. They were:

The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time
As essentially an upgrade on My Top 30 Rock Gawds blog I wrote 7 years ago, it felt good to finally get this one off my chest, as it revolves around a conversation I find myself having a lot lately: “who will our musical era be remembered for?” I have all the answers, of course, and so now I can just post this link without ever experiencing that fucking conversation again. I hope you read it, mainly because hardly anyone did for some reason :(

Worst to Best: Kevin Smith
I just gone and made this one! Ever since the Ghibli success, I have been consumed with the idea of Worst to Best blogs, and threw together this follow up from a potential million other candidates. I mean, I'll never claim to be the biggest Smith fan, but I do dig the guy and it was a fun simple little piece to write which didn't bleak me as much as usual. Hopefully I don't get shouted at by Reddit this time.

And with those out the way, I will be playing my regular Get Out Of Jail Free card right now, which means no article will be released during October. This grants me the well needed breathing room to prepare for the chaotic end-of-year regulars, so that should be fun. Wish me luck!


THE GOAT’S NEST

After spending the whole year researching for my next short story, I am pleased to say that work on the sequel to The Triangular Theory of Love has begun. The advantage of spending so much time planning for it, is that it’s just pouring out of me, already nearly 50% of the first rough draft done. It’s very different to anything else I’ve attempted, dangerously more “character based” to the point that I feel their personalities all up inside of me. It’s fucked up.
That said, it’s a bit premature to talk about now anyway, as this story won’t be released until well into 2015, mainly because there is a writing waiting list in place to protect me and everything must wait its turn. However, this does mean that when its time comes, it should be in really decent shape, I hope. I’m looking forward to it wholeheartedly myself.


THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON DRUGS

Still battling to get anywhere with this. Nine of the 20 drawings are done, so something is happening, but as it stands, I am now looking at a February 2015 release or so. I’m sorry, but life got in the way. Naughty naughty life.


CODE NAME: FOX TAIL

Word of advice, kids. Do not collaborate with other people, because other people have personalities, and personalities come with emotions, and sometimes emotions get in the way of professionalism. I no longer see a future for this project, like so many before.


COMING DOWN HAPPY

Probably the biggest news this round comes from my musical adventures. I am beyond gay that my new EP, Fear of Telephones, was released recently, even if nobody gave a fuck. Because I am superstoked with it, as it's the only real genuine thing in Coming Down Happy’s arsenal to date, and the first step at truly letting you know that CDH will never be anything you think it will be.
On that note, I also launched a Studio Blog for the next EP I am working on, titled Sex is Disgusting (for now?). Here, I will be letting everything out, not holding any details away from you, because I’ve never done things this way before and I like to scare myself. It’s going to be pure hip hop this round, and it's already fairly far along the way...


THE FUNPOWDER PLOT

Nothing to report. I wanted to make a video for one of the aforementioned Fear of Telephones tracks, but none of them songs really scream “single”, do they? Seriously, if you’re one of the 40 people who’ve listened to it coinciding with one of the 10 people reading these words, and you have an opinion about which song would work with a video, please do tell me. I’ll pretty much make it just because you said so.


Anyways, on a more personal note, it’s been a tough month(s) for me. I’m moving house and my 30th is coming up and I'm also dealing with a bunch of other stupid shit, so I wrote this news piece with the sole intention of just finishing it, which is why it's really shit. But as a trained optimist, I have a good feeling that things are on the rise for me, I just need to convince the other people inside of my head first.

Go wash your dishes.
Jared


Wednesday 27 August 2014

The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time
"Music isn’t like it used to be" is something only old people say, and so if you say stuff like that, you are an old person and should listen to more music, grandpa. However, it does seem as if more and more people (at times, even legitimate respectable music lovers) have been initiating the same old debate with me: who will be our heroes? It's easy to look back throughout musical past and pinpoint the exact legends from before our time, but who will our era be remembered for? To which I usually reply: how the fuck should I know? What do I look like, some sort of a psychic? God, I hope so. However, I can speculate, which is why I have taken it upon myself to put together the following predictions, some of which will be obvious to you, others of which you may not even be aware of, but all of which I have faith in, almost certain that their influence shall prove themselves timeless in the greater scheme of the history books. But first (as always) there were some rules put into place for your own safety, and they are as follows:

The Rules
Rule #1: The initial source of an artist's fame (i.e: generally their main band's debut) had to commence no earlier than 1980, because I was born in the 80s, so fuck you. This excludes people like Alice Cooper, Bob Dylan, Brian Eno, Brian Wilson, Bruce Springsteen, Cat Stevens, David Bowie, David Byrne, Debbie Harry, Elton John, Eric Clapton, Iggy Pop, Joe Strummer, Johnny Rotten, Jimmy Page, Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, Lemmy, Lou Reed, Ozzy Osbourne, Patti Smith, Paul McCartney, Paul Simon, Prince, Robert Smith, Steve Tyler, Stevie Wonder, Tom Waits, all of them types.

Rule #2: The artist must still be alive. This excludes people like Amy Winehouse, Elliot Smith, Jeff Buckley, Kurt Cobain, Michael Jackson, The Notorious B.I.G., Richey Edwards, Tupac, all of them types.

Rule #3: Artists must be a standalone name (i.e: not reliant on a band to be recognised). This excludes groups like Animal Collective, Arcade Fire, At the Drive-In, Beastie Boys, Brian Jonestown Massacre, Converge, CunninLynguists, Death Grips, Depeche Mode, Flaming Lips, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Insane Clown Posse, The Knife, La Dispute, Massive Attack, Mastodon, Meshuggah, Metallica, My Bloody Valentine, The National, Neutral Milk Hotel, Oasis, Pavement, Prodigy, Public Enemy, Queens of the Stone Age, Radiohead, R.E.M, The Roots, Sigur Rós, Slayer, Slint, Spice Girls, Stone Roses, The Strokes, U2, Vampire Weekend, Violent Femmes, Wu-Tang Clan, all of them types.

Rule #4: There is also the "too soon" card, which rejects some seriously high contenders who haven't quite proven themselves yet and still leave too much room to fuck it up. This rule excludes people like Adele, Ed Sheeran, Frank Ocean, James Blake, Janelle Monae, St. Vincent, Bon Iver, all of them types.

With that in mind, here comes the list, are you ready? Ordered purely by legendary potential with a bit of personal taste spun in the mix, it begins now, just for you:


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 30. Nikki Sixx

30. Nikki Sixx

"Sometimes when people can't speak English, they hum the melody instead of singing along. Having 20,000 people humming your song is incredible."

Figured I better start with a bang, but let it be known I was THIS CLOSE to using Tommy Lee instead, purely because that sex tape pushed me into premature puberty. But as the primary songwriter of Mötley Crüe (a band who have sold more than 100 million records and heavily influenced other names you may know of, such as Slipknot, Marilyn Manson, System of a Down, Guns N’ Roses etc), Nikki was the more logical choice. However, please note that it’s not their music which appeals to me whatsoever (it doesn't), but rather, their lifestyle which was so rockstar it physically hurt me. The Crüe’s unhygienic sex, intravenous drugs, and glammed-up rock ‘n’ roll was second to fucking none, and thankfully, all documented in their gloriously debaucherous autobiography The Dirt, as well as in Sixx’s own book The Heroin Diaries, which is all about, uhm, heroin. But unlike his band mates, Nikki has seemed to have kept his cool, quitting drugs, hosting his own radio show, becoming a photographer, producing other people’s records (like Alice Cooper and Meat Loaf) as well as somehow turning into quite a decent role model, in the most twisted fucked up way possible. God bless, onward.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 29. Mark Kozelek

29. Mark Kozelek

"When I get compared to artists like José González or Bon Iver, I can't help but think, 'I've been doing this since they were in third grade.'"

This one could be neglected as "personal taste", but I prefer to call it "a blind prediction", as I regrettably feel like Kozelek will only find his due respect in death, because I'm morbidly romantic like that. For you see, Mark is not nearly as famous as everyone else on this list, and yet his records are massively adored by those who have heard them (Sun Kil Moon's debut and most recent beauty, Benji, reaching 84% and 85% on Metacritic respectively), which is why Slant Magazine once begged the question "How many other artists can boast as many near-masterpieces?" which is fair. So, naturally, you'd think he'd be front-page NME gold by now or something, but noooo, Kozelek's deserved glory has ducked under the covers and been largely overlooked by everyone except those of us who are permanently haunted by his baritone vocals sharing their melancholic stories. We could never forget him even if we tried, and it’s because of that exact same reason: Mark is a storyteller, above all else. Deep narratives are intricately braided to reveal intimate memories from his life without trying to be poetic or smart, and despite the immense body of work he has been involved in since he opened his mouth, he has never run out of tales to tell, kinda like your dad. Yeah, kinda like my dad. Wow, that makes me want to cry.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 28. Michael Gira

28. Michael Gira

“It was a kind of sado-masochism. I would take the things that were painful to me and elevate them and, through the mantra of music, make them into a release.”

Standing as the only permanent member of experimental rock band Swans, what fascinates me most about Gira is not the amount of time he has dedicated to making repetitive (borderline torturous) music (their first of thirteen albums released in 1983), but rather how much better he seems to have got at it over time. Point proven when considering his last three albums are actual living breathing monsters, unlike anything I have (or anyone has) ever heard, each going on to score over 80 on Metacritic, this years To Be Kind reaching the nauseating rating of 89 despite having absolutely no commercial appeal whatsoever. But even this isn’t the end of it, as Michael has tried his hand as an author too, his collection of short stories (titled The Consumer) covering such topics as "incest, identity loss, murder, self-hatred, rape, and both mental and physical decay". So read that, listen to his music, and then agree with me that Gira isn’t well and there probably is a demon living inside of him. I’m more worried it’s contagious, myself.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 27. Enya

27. Enya

"The success of Watermark surprised me. I never thought of music as something commercial; it was something very personal to me."

With a vibe as spiritual and serene as Enya’s, it’s easy to understand why even your parents like her so much. Her calm fashion is so original and unique to her, that if anyone else tried to do anything similar, they would rightfully be discarded as a subpar copy and I would personally ask them to leave my house. Because I see a higher power when I listen to Enya’s music, it lifts me to a level completely different to anything else I’ve ever heard, and I reckon I’m not alone, as her 75 million worldwide album sales would indicate. She has won four Grammys, she was nominated for an Oscar, she is Ireland’s best-solo selling artist, and an asteroid was once named after her, so she’s done alright for herself. Better than you, anyway.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 26. Burial

26. Burial

"Only five people know I make tunes."

When Burial first came onto the scene, rumours went flying that this was yet another Aphex Twin project. I mean, it wasn’t, but in my opinion there is no greater compliment in the electronic community. That said, even if his 2006 debut album was on almost every Best Of list for the year (including The Observer at #18; Mixmag at #5; and The Wire at #1), and even if his second album met much the same fate (the second-highest rated album of 2007, according to Metacritic), and even if he was once up for a Mercury Music Prize ... the dude is still criminally under-recognised and deserves much higher props, which I will give him right now, take note! Because (in my opinion), Burial is the dubstep pioneer, but not that Skrillex type of dubstep you are thinking of. I’m talking about the original type of dubstep. The good type of dubstep. And if his recent EPs are anything to go by, he only seems to be getting better with age.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 25. Alanis Morissette

25. Alanis Morissette

"It's a joke to think that anyone is one thing. We're all such complex creatures. But if I'm going to be a poster child for anything, anger's a gorgeous emotion. It gets a bad rap, but it can make great changes happen."

I have an issue with Alanis, which developed within the pages of this very blog, because I have written about her so many millions of times that I am actually sick of her face. But regardless, nobody can deny her modern day impact, especially when considering 1995’s Jagged Little Pill which is often regarded as the commercial classic of the 90s, selling more than 33 million copies whilst topping every chart and essential critical list worldwide to this very day, placing the Queen of Alt-Rock Angst crown on top her pouting head. Of course, as we know, it all went downhill for Morissette after that (even though Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie is the far superior record, in my opinion), but I know you haven't forgotten the time you first heard this release. You felt mad for no reason and you liked it, didn't you?


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 24. Fat Mike

24. Fat Mike

"I have a daughter, so [I'm] being a dad, and golfing, and gambling, and drug-taking, and I just made a fetish film with my girlfriend. I did the soundtrack to that, too. All kinds of shit."

Fuck Green Day, fuck Blink-182, fuck all your modern day rock heroes who don’t seem to grasp the basic fundamentals of what punk is supposed to mean. Just compare them with Fat Mike: the type of motherfucker who rejects MTV’s requests; who has never signed to a major label (placing NOFX as one of the most successful independent bands in history); who hardly ever does interviews; and who has achieved his victories whilst maintaining a fast lifestyle of drugs and partying without losing his sense of humour. He started his own label (Fat Wreck Chords) who have released material for acts such as Rise Against, Less Than Jake, and Anti-Flag, to name a few. He is a member of the cover supergroup Me First and the Gimme Gimmes (featuring members from Lagwagon and Foo Fighters). He sings about important topics such as politics, homophobia and hookers, in styles ranging from skate punk, melodic hardcore and ska, sometimes getting his message across in 32 seconds (I Gotta Pee), and sometimes taking 18 minutes 22 seconds to do so (The Decline). But most of all, he reminds us of what real punk is. It’s about DIY. And not giving a fuck.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 23. Laurie Anderson

23. Laurie Anderson

"I've never really had a hobby, unless you count art, which the IRS once told me I had to declare as a hobby since I hadn't made money with it."

I can think of many words to describe Anderson (weird? smart? experimental?) but the one which hooks me the deepest is: inventive. How inventive, you ask? Well, to the point that the girl actually invented her own instruments. Like that one time she created this tape-bow violin thing which uses recorded magnetic tape rather than horsehair. Or that other time she once developed a talking stick, basically a MIDI controller baton which replicates sounds. Furthermore, she was known to use the vocoder before it was cool, adapting it to deliver her spoken-word performances, telling humorous apocalyptic stories which never fail to scare the shit out of me. However, if you are still not convinced, eat this cherry: she married one of the most undeniably influential figures in music history, Lou Reed, and was next to him as he took his last breath. That’s got to count for something.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 22. Sia Furler

22. Sia Furler

"I'm sort of a gay man trapped in a woman's body when it comes to music sometimes - it's crowded in here!"

I stand by my belief that Sia is perhaps the greatest pop writer of our generation. Even if you don’t recognise her name, you will recognise her work, as she has provided commercial gold for such heavy-weight names to the likes of Christina Aguilera, Eminem, Beyoncé, Kylie Minogue, Katy Perry, Britney Spears, Celine Dion, and Maroon 5—to name a few. And yet like any genius writer, she has somehow managed to preserve her best compositions for herself, her brilliant solo albums winning many awards (most notably in her home country of Australia, because, well, patriotism) and her recent single Chandelier standing as one of the best songs I’ve heard (and best videos I’ve seen) this decade, easily. Mark my words: as time goes on, her influence will become more and more apparent to you, and then you’ll say "oh, Jared was right, again".


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 21. Courtney Love

21. Courtney Love

"I used to do drugs, but don't tell anyone or it will ruin my image."

Controversial! But here’s the thing, Courtney has already gone down in musical history for an array of reasons whether you like it or not, and I’m here to talk to you about them. She paved the way for many female rockstars (being cited as a major influence to Brody Dalle, Shirley Manson, and Lana Del Rey) for leading "the most commercially and critically successful female-fronted rock band in history", Hole. She felt no fear to scream her blood out whilst sticking her middle finger up to the world and sticking a needle into her arm. She is a fashion icon, massively popularising the Kinderwhore movement. She was once in Faith No More. She can act (lest we forget her Golden Globe nominated performance in The People vs. Larry Flynt). She has written books. And finally (and perhaps most importantly), without her inspiration, Nirvana’s songs would have sounded very different, and she may have even killed Kurt Cobain, so there's that.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 20. Beck

20. Beck

"Especially in music, you wonder, okay, should I still be doing this? Like, are you overstaying your welcome at the party? But I don't know."

I could go on about the 16 million records Beck has sold, the six MTV Video Music Awards he has won, or even the three Grammy Awards he has been granted on top of that. I could mention how he recently proved his artistic originality by releasing an entire album in sheet music form alone, or that his dedication to Scientology doesn’t even put me off. But what I really want to give the dude props for, is that he managed to find that very delicate line between being distinct and quirky without losing his commercial appeal. He is outlandishly versatile, casually creating fun surrealistic numbers in the same stride of seriously melancholic ones, tugging at heart strings and tickling ribs with the same hand he strums his guitar with. No album sounds alike, no album sounds bad, and he does almost everything all by himself, which is why I tip my cowboy hat and say something profound.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 19. PJ Harvey

19. PJ Harvey

"I firmly disbelieve that one has to be a tortured soul to write good music."

Every artist makes mistakes, but no, they don’t, because PJ Harvey hasn’t. Each of her albums are not only consistent in regards to quality, but also inconsistent in terms of delivery, never playing it safe, never repeating herself, always changing her sound (and fashion sense) per release, and doing all of this without any regard to anyone else. She is yet another fine example of a genius who can write an infectious, commercially viable tune, yet shoves it so far sideways from the ordinary that it’s confusing as to how she doesn’t end up alienating weaker listeners. Even more impressive, is that I consider 2011’s Let England Shake as arguably her finest hour despite being so far down her career path, which is a testament to her talent as well as breeding mass anticipation for what is still to come. It’s no wonder, then, that she is the only artist to win the Mercury Prize twice, in the whole history of the Universe.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 18. Kanye West

18. Kanye West

"I don't even listen to rap. My apartment is too nice to listen to rap in."

Love him or hate him, you still talk about him and you have an opinion. Maybe it's an opinion about his production, providing not only the beats for his own material, but also for other mass superstars like Jay-Z, Alicia Keys, and Janet Jackson. Maybe it’s an opinion about his own albums, five of which hit #1, all of which went platinum (and then some), and already earning him 21 Grammy Awards (more than anyone his age). Maybe it’s an opinion on his influence, leading a "new wave of artists", an admitted influence on Kid Cudi, Lupe Fiasco, Drake, and even Adele. Maybe it’s an opinion on his personality and controversy, like interrupting Taylor Swift, calling Bush a racist or just generally being a narcissistic asshole. But regardless of your opinions, you cannot deny that it takes a lot to call yourself a God but still deliver the goods. Think: if any other artist threw tantrums like Yeezy, would their career survive? No, it would crumble, and yet his sales continue to flourish in direct proportion to his ego inflating (arguably the biggest ego in music history, I might add), and this should not be possible.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 17. Trent Reznor

17. Trent Reznor

"To me, rock music was never meant to be safe. I think there needs to be an element of intrigue, mystery, subversiveness. Your parents should hate it."

We all want money and we all want recognition, but Trent seems like he is on a different branch all by himself. From the very beginning, Nine Inch Nails was his baby and his baby alone, and from the day of its birth, he has been openly at war with the industry, publicly feuding with his labels and criticising the Grammys whilst refusing to compromise his ideals or water down his product. He once made his own record label, which just so happened to be the first to sign Marilyn Manson. He also once released 36 tracks online for free. All the while, he continued to gain a cult following, maintained radio play, and even won an Oscar. These are just some of the reasons as to why no one could doubt this dude as a visionary, ahead of the curve and up-to-date with technology, in it for the right reasons, and with an instinctive grasp on what the fans want. Hell, he even started the band How to Destroy Angels just so his wife could have a turn, which is an admirable move in my opinion. I guess that’s why Spin magazine described him as "the most vital artist in music," because maybe he is.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 16. Pharrell Williams

16. Pharrell Williams

“I am overly ambitious, because I realise it can be done.”

Pharrell shits hits. He shits hits for himself, and he shits hits for other people. He’s already shit hits for Kelis, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Prince, Jay-Z, Garbage, No Doubt, Gwen Stefani, Snoop, Justin Timberlake, Madonna, and Britney, bitch. Yet despite achieving so much in the last two decades, in the last two years alone, he shat three of the biggest hits you heard (Get Lucky? Blurred Lines? Happy? You know of those songs?) which shows he is still shitting hits, no problem. It’s like there’s a diarrhea hit factory up his ass or something. He is also known to have shat his own footwear, jewelry, sunglasses, and even a record label this one time, scooping up a bunch of awards along the way. Add all of this up with the fact that he can reportedly "see music" and doesn’t age whatsoever, and we must all come to terms with the fact that Pharrell Williams isn’t real. He is a made up person.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 15. Kim Gordon

15. Kim Gordon

"When I came to New York, I’d go and see bands downtown playing no-wave music. It was expressionistic and it was also nihilistic. Punk rock was tongue-in-cheek, saying, 'Yeah, we’re destroying rock.' No-wave music is more like, 'No, we’re really destroying rock.' It was very dissonant. I just felt like, wow, this is really free. I could do that."

I struggled with this entry, because all I could manage to write for hours was "there’s just this thing about Kim, you know? I dunno, an indescribable thing, like ... a thiiiiing, you know what I mean?" over and over. I think I just love her too much, and for so many reasons. It’s like, I consider her the godmother of present-day noise punk, my modern feminist icon of the entertainment industry, somehow staying feminine in the midst of some really raw chaos, redefining contemporary rock with Sonic Youth, obliterating critics and selling records despite living as a very painful blade to swallow. It’s like ... she was right there with Nirvana, playing shows together when they were both still underground, eventually running with scissors at the forefront of the 90’s punk scene, man. It’s ... she just inspires me, you know? She is, like, just soooo fucking cool, there’s this ... thing, you know? I dunno.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 14. Damon Albarn

14. Damon Albarn

"I can't be bothered anymore about giving songs titles."

It would be enough for some people to stand as the co-founder and frontman of arguably the pioneering britpop band of all time (winning 10 NMEs, five BRITs, six Qs, as well as earning two Mercury Prize nominations and a Grammy nomination as he did so), but oh no, not Damon Albarn. Instead he went on to create Gorillaz, cited by the Guinness Book of World Records as the "Most Successful Virtual Band Ever" (earning nine BRIT nominations, winning three MTV Awards, and finally earning Albarn that elusive Grammy) even though he was the sole permanent musical member anyway. Add this with his recent solo album which smashed critics’ faces to pieces, and it’s obvious as to why he is here. It’s because he is still at the top of his game, dishing out the innovative hits and maintaining mass relevance, whilst never surrendering to any trends yet leading so, so many.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 13. Jay-Z

13. Jay-Z

"Hip-hop has done so much for racial relations, and I don't think it's given the proper credit. It has changed America immensely. I'm going to make a very bold statement: Hip-hop has done more than any leader, politician, or anyone to improve race relations."

Jay-Z’s legendary status can be summed up in four stages: (1) He was born into poverty, surrounded by gunfights and selling crack just to survive. (2) He started rapping and quickly rose to the top, always cited as one of the most influential and landmark emcees of all time, eventually selling more than 75 million records worldwide, winning 19 of his 59 Grammy nominations (to mention just one award ceremony ffs), and pretty much evolving into the most successful hip hop star ever. (3) He has somehow stayed at the top, not only on musical terms, but also as an entrepreneur, owning a club and clothing lines, as well as once standing as the president of Def Jam, co-founding Roc-A-Fella, and founding Roc Nation; all of which places him as one of the most financially stable artists in America, estimated at a $500 million net worth. (4) Motherfucker married Beyoncé! He married Beyoncé, you guys!!


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 12. Axl Rose

12. Axl Rose

"Thanks, but I'm not God. If I were God, three quarters of you would be girls, and the rest would be pizza and beer."

Axl has earned himself an interesting reputation, from some praising his contribution to reviving rock into the mainstream (standing as the sole original member of Guns N’ Roses, who still hold the best selling debut album of all time, have globally sold 35 million records, won numerous awards, and have been called "the most dangerous band in the world"), to others fairly pointing out his annoying diva-like personality (from making fans wait hours and hours for their shows, getting into fist fights with audience members, and publicly feuding with his band mates). But whether the accolades or the temper tantrums, he will undoubtedly go down in history as one of the most memorable frontmen in recent times, with a recognisable style and the immense vocal range to back it up. Who cares if Chinese Democracy took 15 years to release and wasn’t exactly up to standard? Who cares if he is a renowned a-class asshole? The dude’s a business genius for taking full control of such a prestigious band name, and in conjunction with all the pouting and foot-stamping, he is a rockstar in the purest, most childish form.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 11. Madonna

11. Madonna

"I am my own experiment. I am my own work of art."

I don’t really view Madonna as a musician or even an artist, but rather as an entrepreneur; a business woman; the smartest performer alive. By cleverly utilising her genitals as a weapon, she lined up important peoples’ heads and then stepped on top of them one-by-one like a staircase, modeling her shape like clay to the trends as she did so, until the crown swiftly landed upon her head and she became the Queen of Pop. I mean, it would be impossible for me to detail the 270 awards she’s won, the generations of musicians she has influenced, or the 300 million records she’s sold to date (the best selling-female artist and/or solo artist ever, is probably worth noting), but what I will say is that she pushed the boundaries as to what’s acceptable. She used controversy as her pedestal. Her impressive ventures have extended into acting, writing, fashion designing, and producing. Fuck, she even co-founded Maverick Records, which means she made money every time Alanis Morissette, Deftones, or Prodigy sold a record. I mean, the girl is beyond famous, and there can be no arguments against her inclusion, or off with your head (is something a queen might say).


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 10. Marilyn Manson

10. Marilyn Manson

"In any story, the villain is the catalyst. The hero's not a person who will bend the rules or show the cracks in his armor. He's one-dimensional intentionally, but the villain is the person who owns up to what he is and stands by it."

You know his name. The whole world knows his name. Your granny knows his name, and there is a good reason for that. He is the embodiment of celebrity entertainment and fame culture, standing as the sole permanent member of his band, firing colleagues as fast as he snorts lines. He is the god of shock rock controversy; spitting on religion, advocating drugs, and holding up a mirror to society via complex album concepts, fiercely intelligent one-liners, and highly publicised lawsuits. In his heyday he was a monster, and to be every parent’s nightmare/misguided child’s prophet can’t go unnoticed (the scapegoat for teenage suicide, Satanism, and high school massacres), which is why he has sold over 50 million records, has two #1 albums, received four Grammy nominations, and features on almost any shameless metal list you can locate. But even beyond this, he is a true artist, highly praised as a painter, a filmmaker, an actor, an author, a fashion icon, and almost any other creative venture you can think of. His life is the show, and even if his recent work leaves a lot to be desired, his position in history is already as good as permanent.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 09. Aphex Twin

09. Aphex Twin

"It sounds really arrogant, but my music's my favourite music ever. I prefer it to anyone else's."

As the above quote illustrates, here is a guy so innovative and weird that he can’t help but be a fan of himself and himself alone, essentially disregarding every other musician on the planet. It's almost as if he lives in his own pretend world, one where he's the only artist in existence, working as his greatest admirer whilst playing under so many countless pseudonyms that there isn’t really enough space for anyone else anyway (FYI, Aphex Twin is: Blue Calx, Bradley Strider, Brian Tregaskin, Caustic Window, The, Smojphace, GAK, Karen Tregaskin, Patrick Tregaskin, Martin Tressider, PBoD, Polygon Window, Power-Pill, Q-Chastic, Dice Man, The Tuss, and Soit-P.P). And yet while he is alone in this world, there are plenty watching, being praised by all genres and mediums (from examples like Radiohead, David Firth, John Frusciante and Wes Borland), ultimately dubbed "the most inventive and influential figure in contemporary electronic music" by the Guardian. His reputation is fueled by rumours (like he doesn’t sleep, or he only composes in his sleep), his videos fuck me up, but above all else, it was his smile that visited my nightmares recently, threatening my safety if I didn’t include him on this list. Is this ok, Richard? Please don’t hurt me again.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 08. John Frusciante

08. John Frusciante

"Rock music is electronic music, dependent entirely on electronic circuitry and amplification."

When you’ve quit the biggest band in the world twice, it’s pretty obvious that you’re not in the game for money or fame, but rather because (as a severe drug addict) it is the only thing keeping you alive. And Frusciante is all that, an artist to the most productive degree, not only as the ex-guitarist for the Red Hot Chili Peppers during their best work (having won six Grammys, six MTV Awards, a Billboard, a Brit, as well as being inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame), but also for his extensive work with various other VIPs you may have heard of (such as Mars Volta, Wu-Tang, Ziggy Marley, and Johnny Cash, to mention a few). Furthermore, we should also talk about his prolific solo career, which boasts 11 LPs and four EPs (releasing three albums and two EPs in 2004 alone), none of which settle on any genre yet all of which feature his falsetto vocal technique which is technically more proficient than Kiedis’. He is one of the most inventive guitarists of our time in my opinion, as well as in the opinions of Rolling Stone Magazine, Gibson Guitars and the BBC, but mine more.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 07. Björk

07. Björk

"Singing is like a celebration of oxygen."

If you had to line each of Björk’s albums up in a row, you’d be faced with what looks like a family, all featuring the unique and recognisable genetics of their quirky mother, yet each distinct with their own personalities and ambitions, individually pumped full of ideas (more than most artists’ achieve in their lifetime, I reckon), desperately separating themselves from each other, whilst begging for your attention and the love of their mommy. They are bonded by blood, all of them timeless within the eccentric side of the pop coin, working strong independently but even stronger as a unit, collectively selling 20 million copies worldwide, forcing 30 singles into the top 40, and earning countless nominations in the process (including BRITs, MOJOs, MTVs, Grammys, a Golden Globe, an Oscar, pretty much everything). Consistently acclaimed, visually groundbreaking, fashionably pioneering, and simply fucking strange, Björk is a creature in her own league, and when her last excellent release Biophilia was claimed as the world's "first app album", we can rest easy that she still has a few more cards up her swan dress.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 06. Mike Patton

06. Mike Patton

"Revenge is good. I think revenge is healthy too, and if you can use music in that way, a sort of therapeutic way for yourself, it can't do any harm (...) like the guy who goes into a building, shoots a bunch of holes in the wall and then leaves. He didn't kill anybody."

Do you know Mike Patton? If so, then you’ll know he is not massively recognised, by choice. His band Faith No More flirted with commercial fame, but he rejected it, preferring to spread his diverse musical ability over too many other projects to count (including Mr Bungle, Tomahawk, Fantômas, and Peeping Tom, which hardly scratches the surface). As a result, his influence is everywhere if you know how to look, hailed as the alternative metal godfather, cited as a main influence on Nirvana, Metallica, Guns N’ Roses, Slipknot, Korn, System of a Down and Incubus (to which Patton poetically stated "I feel no responsibility for that. It's their mothers' fault, not mine"). He doesn’t sleep with groupies, his drug of choice is caffeine, and by starting his own record label (Ipecac), he answers to no one as he releases his own massive yearly productions (as well as music from The Locust, Melvins, Isis, and more), proving his dedication to his passion and not much else. But now, what if you don’t know Mike Patton? If not, all you need to know is this: he is officially the greatest singer of all time, according to a study done by Consequence of Sound.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 05. Jack White

05. Jack White

"We have a secret project at Third Man where we want to have the first vinyl record played in outer space. We want to launch a balloon that carries a vinyl record player."

If your preconceived idea of "legend" falls in favour of examples such as Led Zeppelin or Bob Dylan, then Jack White is probably the filling you’ve been waiting for. Armed with nothing but a distorted guitar and a minimalist attitude, he has gone on to front some of the most memorable bands in recent times, most importantly The White Stripes, whose last three albums each won the Best Alternative Grammy Award and are often credited as the main contender for the noughties garage rock revival scene. Beyond that, he is a primary force in The Raconteurs (who also scored a Grammy once) and The Dead Weather (a supergroup with members from The Kills and Queens of the Stone Age), but it’s his solo work which really earned him this slot on my precious list. In three short years, the two Jack White albums have proven to be some of his best efforts, both debuting at #1 without breaking a sweat, solidifying his simplistic genius as a commercial/critical landmine, suggesting he is somehow only at his pinnacle now. Oh, and don’t even get me started on his analogue worship, his contribution to vinyl ethics already gluing him to history all on their own.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 04. Eminem

04. Eminem

"Sometimes I feel like rap music is almost the key to stopping racism."

How does one even begin when it comes to a name as ridiculously famous as Eminem? Because you’ve heard it all before. He rapped about killing his mom and his ex-wife (with an unhealthy dose of drugs, homophobia, and sexism in between) and then he rose to the top faster than even he could flow. His achievements speak for themselves: 115 million records sold worldwide; the best selling rap artist of all time; winning 13 Grammys; the first artist to win the Best Rap Album Grammy for three consecutive LPs; the first rap artist to win an Academy Award (with Lose Yourself, the longest running #1 hip hop single ever); the most Spotify streamed artist of all time; responsible for two of the top five highest selling albums of the 2000s; creating the fastest-selling solo album in United States history; standing as almost embarrassingly the go-to choice for the Greatest Rapper Alive, AND ON AND ON IT GOES. Love him or hate him, you have a feeling, and you cannot deny his mass influence, his classic albums which stand as milestones of the genre, and that he’s really, really fucking funny.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 03. Dave Grohl

03. Dave Grohl

"In this day and age, when you can use a machine or computer to simulate or emulate what people can do together, it still can't replace the magic of four people in a room playing."

Where to start? Oh, I know, how about NIRVANA, only the most influential band of (and since) the 90s, releasing the most important alternative album ever, maybe, possibly, whatever, nevermind. But when Nirvana splattered apart like Cobain’s headshot, statistically one would assume the remaining members would never work in this town again. But oh wait, what’s this? Dave Grohl rising from the ashes! The drummer of all people! He’s throwing his sticks aside, he’s picking up the guitar, and BAM: FOO FIGHTERS. And, like, Foo Fighters are fucking massive, so independent of Nirvana that later generations probably have no idea of the connection, going on to ("funny" enough) win more awards than Nirvana ever did. And you know he’s doing it for the love of music, point proven with all his endless collaborations (too many to mention, do your homework) as well as once making a fucking documentary about a fucking mixing console (it's called Sound City—and it’s really good!). All these are the reasons why I try to hate Dave Grohl every day, yet I cannot, because he is known as the nicest guy in rock, and I end up hating myself even more.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 02. Nick Cave

02. Nick Cave

"The rock star is dying. And it's a small tragedy. Rock stars have blogs now. I have no use for that kind of rock star."

Is it just me, or does Nick Cave not really seem human? He has this presence which towers above everyone else, not in the performer or the hero sense, but more like a God? His confrontational emotions are like concentrated pieces of prophecy, preaching about religion and death and love and violence, and this is not just via his music. He is a poet, an actor, an author, and a screenwriter, the latter of which has earned him tons of worship, his film The Proposition currently holding an 87% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes (which is something no other contender on this list can boast). But, of course, we must always go back to his unmatched ability of perpetually dishing out the musical hits, which have won many awards amongst the debris left in his destructive path, yet still manages to remain somewhat "underground", never fully earning the recognition he deserves whilst dominating the rest of us like a cult leader (which is probably just the way he likes it). Simply put, he is Australia’s greatest export, and is yet to make a single bad move.
Please note: There was a bit of a qualification issue when it came to Cave. His first band, (The Birthday Party’s) debut album was released in 1980 (just scraping the deadline), but their original incarnation (The Boys Next Door’s) had an album before, released in 1979, which was too early. But then I thought, hey, no one knows of The Boy’s Next Door anyway. Hell, hardly anyone even knows of The Birthday Party, so I let him in, and I feel no regrets.


The 30 Greatest Music Legends Of Our Time: 01. Morrissey

01. Morrissey

"I had meetings with about nine labels - and they all say to me 'Will your new songs fit in with what is popular and what is in the chart?' And I say 'Good God, I hope not!'"

To sum up a legend the size of Morrissey in a word would go a little something like this: unconventional. From his lyrics, to his vocal delivery, to having zero interest in drugs, to his undetermined sexuality; not a single part of the man’s presentation is ordinary. Rising as the frontman of The Smiths (arguably the most influential indie band ever, a perfect four album career, never to be seen again), he has continued to grow out of their shadow with a highly productive solo career consisting of ten well received charting studio albums, as well as forty-six singles (ten of which have hit the top ten themselves). In which lies a problem: why are you people relating to this pessimistic, miserable man so much? Sure, his academically sharp one-liners read like the greatest tweets you’ve ever heard (wittily spitting on the government, tearing into the monarchy, and provoking guilt within anyone who’s ever had meat in their mouth), but this appeal reveals a great sadness in modern society. Why is everyone so gloomy all the time? Why don’t you just go outside and make a new friend or something? Just kidding, I gave up on life years ago.


Near Misses
Anthony Kiedis
Beyoncé
Billie Joe Armstrong
Billy Corgan
Burzum
Chino Moreno
Chris Cornell
Danger Mouse
Dave Navarro
Devin Townsend
DJ Shadow
Dr. Dre
Fiona Apple
Frank Black
Gwen Stefani
James Murphy
Jonathan Davis
Kylie Minogue
Mariah Carey
Maynard James Keenan
MF Doom
M.I.A.
Mike Skinner
Nas
Sinéad O'Connor
Steven Wilson
Tom Morello


Conclusion
As my luck would have it, I want you all to know that I am very aware NME recently published an article similar to this piece, titled 100 Most Influential Artists, beating my list by mere weeks. I couldn't sleep at night if I didn't assure you that not a single one of their entries influenced my effort, except for Pharrell Williams who I almost forgot somehow?? So, I guess I owe them that. But in all seriousness, I have been working on this blog for almost a year now (and I can prove it too, see this December 2013 news item? "Extension to Top 30 Rock Gawds"? Ya.), which once again goes to show that NME should just hurry up and fucking hire me already. C'mon people, I'll design your magazine covers, maintain your website, and write your content, what you say?