
TelePaul
J to the R O C
ausrock said:the nearest thing to Donovan is probably Nick Drake.
Thats a travesty unto itself!
ausrock said:the nearest thing to Donovan is probably Nick Drake.
TelePaul said:Thats a travesty unto itself!
notCardio said:I think he just took a style and ran with it. He's no more of a clone than most of the guys who came within the next 2 decades after EVH. Was Howlin' Wolf a Leadbelly clone? Was Leadbelly a Robert Johnson clone? George Harrison could easily be called a Carl Perkins clone, Paul a Little Richard clone. Keith Richards is a Check Berry clone.
And even if he is, what do I care? I think he's great.
Some idiot in a magazine was calling Guns-n-Roses an Aerosmith clone when they first came out.TelePaul said:No argument here. And Aerosmith; Stones Clones to the extreme.
Rokket said:Some idiot in a magazine was calling Guns-n-Roses an Aerosmith clone when they first came out.
I couldn't then, and still don't, see that...
I don't think SRV sounded alot like Hendrix, when he did hendrix. He had a different flow, different chops, and a MUCH different tone.cephus said:DANGER---THIN ICE!!!
Robin Trower is not a xerox of hendrix and I like where he took it. But he sounds way more like hendrix than any of the other parallels you draw. When SRV does Hendrix, it is a total Hendrix rip-off and he sounds way more like jimi than Trower, though.
Geo Harrison a Carl Perkins clone? He wishes!!! (Wished) George was no hillbilly cat like CP.
notCardio said:I see the Donovan Nick Drake thing. The vocal style, the guitar, the production. Whether or not it was intentional is another matter that I'll never know the answer to, or care.
peopleperson said:SRV wasn't a clone of anyone. Sure, there's a fine line between heavy influence and outright copies, but in my opinion, SRV was not the latter. There's as much Hendrix in his style as there is Lonnie Mack, not to mention a lot of others. SRV had an amazing talent of distilling all that stuff down to his own thing.
It's all those homos after SRV that are the clones. Sheppard, Bonibozo...those guys can suck it. Totally generic.
notCardio said:Anybody who can't see Keith as a Chuck Berry clone has no business calling anyone else one. He was clearly what Keith modeled himself after.
The most blatant Hendrix clone of all time is Frank Marino.
And I didn't say George was as good as Carl Perkins, but that's who he was trying to be. He even said so in an interview.
I see the Donovan Nick Drake thing. The vocal style, the guitar, the production. Whether or not it was intentional is another matter that I'll never know the answer to, or care.
And Prince is much more of a derivative of Hendrix than Little Richard. The only real similarities with LR is physical. Everybody seems to forget how flamboyant (sp?) Hendrix was. Gee, was he derivative of Little Richard?
Little Richard also said that the Beatles owed their career to him. Buy that? Me neither.
If ZZ Top's very successful 'LaGrange' wasn't John Lee Hooker, then there's no clone of anything ever. They knew it, they embraced it. It was an homage, if you will.
My point was that everybody takes something from their heroes and tries to emulate it. Some more successfully than others. What Hendrix did was to create a new genre, that many dove into headfirst, Clapton among them.
The early Beatles were an amalgamation of Bill Haley, Carl Perkins, Elvis, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and a half a dozen other American rock and roll icons of the day that they listened to as teenagers. If you can't see those influences, I don't know what to tell you.
TravisinFlorida said:In my opinion, SRV sounded more like Albert King than Hendrix. He definately did his own thing though.
32-20-Blues said:I agree.
Donovan had 'Universal Soldier', 'Catch the Wind', sitting there in a railroacd cap, fingerpicking a guitar and blowing tunelessly into a harmonica within two months of Dylan making an impact on the British charts. When the money dried up, he altered his style to suit the burgeoning psychedelic scene. And was still derivative.
ausrock said:Would you care to qualify your comment?
Also, Donovan had made the switch from the rawer folk/blues style to his "psychedelic" style at least two years before Nick Drake even started recording his first album...............so who followed who?