Wow, that's high!

scotchandcigar

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Among the essential characteristics that make-up a rock band, aside from guitars, drums, and bass, is a lead singer that sings at the top of his range. And the higher the range, the better. It just sounds more like rock; it's high-energy. Bands like The National and Crash Test Dummies are also rock artists (I guess), but it's not the same.

I was listening to some of rock's best vocalists, and thought I'd make a list that we can add to. I'll start with the quintessential rock sound - a gravelly voice that can go really high. And one of the qualifiers for my list is that the artist can (at least at one time) sing it live, in the same key. So this is Bob Seger singing what I believe to be his highest-keyed song:

Bob Seger – Feel Like a Number (live)



Paul Rodgers is known as one of rock's best front-men, and highest singers:

Bad Company – Good Lovin’ Gone Bad (live)



This is actually the song that inspired this thread. I call it the "balls in a vice" effect. At 2 minutes in, it's unreal, almost uncomfortable:

AC/DC – Thunderstruck (live)



And what's a thread like this without the scrodeling elf himself - Geddy Lee? He's probably the most effortless at singing this high:

Rush – Fly by Night (live)



And of course, I've got to include Lou Gramm.

Foreigner – Juke Box Hero (live)



I tried to include Chris Cornell (Soundgarden) and Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin), but neither of them sing the same live. I also want to acknowledge that there's a whole class of hard rock/metal that's based on screeching vocals, but just like singers who do falsetto, I don't feel they qualify.
 

Jon

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I look to hard rock for these types:

Layne Staley - Alice in Chains



Ronnie James Dio



Bruce Dickinson - Iron Maiden



And though the band gets a bit of crap in certain circles, I think Joe Elliott of Def Leppard fits in this category.

 

scotchandcigar

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Kansas was one of my favorite 70s bands: progressive rock with a southern flair. On their early albums, lead singer Steve Walsh had an effortless, soaring voice, but left in the early 80s. Here's a very rare (as you can tell by the video quality) live performance from 1980.

Kansas – Icarus (Borne on Wings of Steel) (live 1980)
 

Channel98

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Queensrÿche lead singer Geoff Tate hits an E5 in Take Hold Of The Flame (1984). For a female soprano, an E5 is easy. For a man, it is very difficult.

 

MonoStereo

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I don't know anything about The Darkness, but they just played this odd song on Life with John Mayer


Loooooooooooove The Darkness - great old school rock band. How much people like them tends to depend on how much they like the falsetto vocals.

Cliff Notes : They were huge in the UK with their debut album back in 2003, but it fell apart soon after album #2. They reunited a few years later & have been around since then. I've seen 'em live a few times, & they're fantastic.
 

scotchandcigar

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That's why I love the Life with John Mayer channel. They play a lot of great music I know, plus great stuff you hardly ever hear on the radio. And the format of the channel is not stuck in one genre; sometimes it's got 70s singer-songwriters, sometimes it's heavy on guitar rock, or recent indie artists, or good pop songs, or classic rock deep-cuts.