GuitarMikeB wrote: - U2 is #22
thanks for helping me. I knew they had to be in there but somehow missed that..
I could make a case for them being much earlier though. Seems like most of the "modernized worship" churches are
still playing that style.
Well, it's always interesting to hear what people define as "great". I supposed it was the historic scope of an artist that I thought defined their "all-time" status?
As a matter of history, there may not have been
any of them if not for Elvis being the one who pushed the button that changed society through music.
Seems like he should be recognized as the guy who actually made rock-n-roll music very popular and mainstream in the historical record of America in the
first place....so these other names could have careers. Even the black music legends benefitted greatly from Elvis bridging the race gap, and introducing white audiences to their music.
Music and sports bring people together and I don't think Elvis' contribution to society as a whole, and to boosting rock-n-roll's popularity with middle-class America can be overstated.
For so many reasons, I don't think he gets enough credit in this list. I'm not dissing on Dylan to say that.
If it were for Country, I'd say Hank Williams & George Jones are top 2
If it were for Blues, I'd say Freddy & BB
If it were for Disco I'd say the BeeGees or Vinny Violin lol
But for ROCK???? He's the guy who started it all and STILL #2 in all time sales, before you start counting his movies grossing 62 million?
I'd like to see any of
you try that!
Yea, if we're speaking about historical significance in rock-n-roll, then I think they can keep the Top 3 thusly until someone
new comes along who can knock them off the perch
1. The Beatles
2. Elvis
3. Led Zepplin