cheesemonger wrote:
Gah, I don't know how to argue this one: you're right that Bowie is better on that song, but if I were to compare two of their own songs, Mercury would come out top most of the time: Radio Gaga, These Are the Days of Our Lives, Somebody to Love, We are the Champions, Bohemian Rhapsody, etc vs. Heroes, Life on Mars, Starman, Space Oddity, etc is not contest for me. I would say that the fact that Mercury dominates so many Queen songs rather than the guitar as in most groups demonstrates the sheer strength of presence of his voice.
Flagmyidol, I don't know that we can't meet a middle ground, because this is the debate thread; I love Dylan, The Beatles, and a number of other bands you've expressed love for. We're just not talking about them. We're talking about Bowie. :D
I'm glad that you agree that Bowie is better on that song. Now, let me put this out there; I think David Bowie songs are better than Queen songs, on average. For example, Life on Mars? trumps everything any artist has ever done, in my books. (Except maybe Weezer's El Scorcho. :/) But we aren't doing an artist evaluation, we're comparing singers. It's odd that we'd be comparing these two, since one is none for an extremely high range and falsetto, whereas Bowie is known for his low range (although he can certainly go high when he needs to, vice-versa for Mercury.)
Why I think Bowie is superior? Bowie is a pop chameleon. Not only did he evolve each decade with popular music, he also determined largely what popular music would be at any given time. Sure, Queen dabbled in a variety of genres. We can hear songs that have influence we would not expect, but ultimately, for every song where Queen does Dance music, Bowie has a full album. Same with a plethora of genres.
Second of all, Queen without Freddie Mercury would be practically nothing. Although May is an amazing guitarist (sonically if not technically), Freddie Mercury certainly shouldered that band. However, Freddie Mercury didn't even write the majority of Queen songs. The majority of Queen songs he wasn't even INVOLVED in the writing of. David Bowie wrote every last one of his songs, and went through many backing bands while maintaining critical and commercial popularity. So I give creativity to Bowie again.
And we can't sit here and argue sheer preference; although it would be interesting to know who has a more varied range, if that information were professionally available.