Michael Myers wrote: > sooooo... on the other hand, who do you think is among the best and brightest lyricists? > > Surely Andy Partridge is right up there (if you can excuse Melt the Guns lol).... his wit and wisdom are best on display on almost any album from Drums and Wires forward.... > Good question. Inane is easier, though. For so long we've been told that rock lyrics are "poetry," when in fact they're very different forms and there aren't more than a couple lyricists I'd bestow that title on. Great lyrics are just about as hard, in their own way, though, and there are a few people I really respect. One is Mark Knopfler, and I first noted his ability to convey depth on that first record. "In the Gallery" comes to mind. Another great one (hardly Power Pop, though) is Fish, once of Marillion. He's helped along by the sometimes stretched out, languid structures of prog songs, which let him do things with words that are tough to pull off in a tighter form. There's Bono, of course. Michael Stipe may be brilliant, although it's hard to know for certain.... -- _______________________ *Sam Smith* * » RazzberrySync Mobile, Inc. * *: Principal* * » Black Dog Strategic * *: President* * » Lullaby Pit * *: Editor* * » Scholars & Rogues * *: Editor* *voice:* *303.229.0619 /m* *skype**:** * docsammy22 *usps**:* 5132 Grey Wolf Pl. Broomfield CO 80023 *aim:* lullabypit *e-mail:* sam@estreet.com /"...it's a lonesome thing to be passing small towns with the lights shining sideways when the night is down, or going in strange places with a dog nosing before you and a dog nosing behind, or drawn to the cities where you'd hear a voice kissing and talking deep love in every shadow of the ditch, and you passing on with an empty, hungry stomach failing from your heart." - John Millington Synge /