MartcasterJunior wrote:I don't think you can just make generalisations bemoaning the lack of talent these days - why can't someone like Adele be compared to Shirley Bassey?
Because she can only sing one song (or at least, it always sounds like the same song) and has about as much talent in her body as Shirley has in a single fingernail?
MartcasterJunior wrote:David Walliams to Dick Emery?
I'm not sure that Dick Emery - as good as he was - was quite the calibre I was thinking of, but I don't decry David Walliams' talent. I thought he was excellent playing Frankie Howerd in that BBC drama a couple of years ago, and it is clear that he has got something. He might just be the best of the current crop, but that's really not much praise.
MartcasterJunior wrote:You might not like what they do but that doesn't mean they don't have talent. Talent's an overused word these days anyway - you only have to add the words "Britain's Got" in front of it to see that.
Talent is one thing. The ability to hold and entertain an audience with that talent (and not to have to rely upon being billed as "As seen on The X Factor") is another. Your point about variety being dead is a good one. It means that no-one is coming up through that tradition.
MartcasterJunior wrote:Those were the old days, things are different now.
They're certainly that.
MartcasterJunior wrote:It's the same argument you'd have had with people 1 or 2 generations older than you when they didn't understand or appreciate the entertainers you enjoyed.
But I enjoyed the seasoned pros I mentioned in the OP. I am no contemporary of any of them. They were big stars before I was born. My parents and other relatives didn't differ from my tastes there. I can even watch - and enjoy - film and recordings of acts from previous generations even older than my grandparents. Indeed, I
own many such archive items. I am actually very catholic in my cultural tastes and calling "Grumpy Old Man" does me a great and undeserved disservice.
MartcasterJunior wrote:You can either sit back and moan about how thing aren't like they used to be, or enjoy what's on offer for what it is.
I'll give Rod Stewart and Robbie Williams some credit for reminding the X Generation that there were people living satisfying lives and a whole civilisation in operation before 1980. But I'd also like to hear some artists who really mean it!