Who are your three favorite female singers?


I have favorites, but would like to hear from others.  Thanks
whatjd
In no particular order.Linda RonstadtAmy Winehouse
LP (Laura Pergolizzi)Natalie MerchantPatsy ClineSadeBy the way. Picking only three is impossible.
Rhiannon Giddens
Sarah Jarosz
Bonnie Raitt
Beth Hart
Cassandra Wilson
Allison Krauss
OMG - please cite the albums we are referencing!

Nora Jones - Day Breaks 

Dianna  Krall - Love Scenes

Joni Mitchell - Blue

after you stream the music I have referenced - call me!

Happy Listening!

tom 8999



Hi Music lovers. How can you forget the GOAT’s?
Sarah Vaughn
Ella Fitzgerald 
Maria Callas
Alexis P Suter. I’m sure that you don’t know this last one, my suggestion? Google her, you will be amazed. 

These women gave the world goosebumps with their voices. I don’t care for Pop or Broadway singers but Streisand and Dion have Honorable Mention
Fiona Apple
St. Vincent
Billie Eilish 

So many more, but those are the ones I'm actually playing the most often. 
In no particular order, these are just some of my faves

  • Anita Baker
  • Basia
  • Gloria Estefan
  • Pauline Wilson
  • Annie Lennox
  • Mariah Carey
  • Whitney Houston
  • Donna Summer
  • Sade
  • Pebbles
Well many of my older favorites have already been mentioned (Annie Haslam - but no Jane Relf?? - Jennifer Warnes, Natalie Merchant, Sarah McLaughlin, Mary Black, Loreena McKennit, Sandy Denney etc.) but some big ones are missing:
  • Bonnie Raitt - I mean "Angel from Montgomery", seriously
  • Maddy Prior from Steeleye Span
  • Karla Bonoff
  • Grace Slick
  • Joan Baez
But, with the exceptions of Anneke Van Giersbergen, and Amy Lee, all the great symphonic metal singers were ignored like, in no particular order:
  • Simone Simons
  • Tarja Turunen
  • Dianne Van Giersbergen
  • Sharon den Adel
  • Floor Jansen
Really, how can anyone pick just three?


Hard for me to believe that no one has mentioned Beth Hart. My top 3 would have to be 
Beth Hart
Chrissie Hynde
Linda Ronstadt 
Also have to mention Aimee Mann and Stevie Nicks. There are too many other great ones to list and all or most have been mentioned. If you haven’t heard Beth Hart definitely check her out. Her styles album to album or even within an album can range a bit so listen to more than one song before deciding. 
@richopp,
Funny you should mention singers imitating others. That reminded me of Sheryl Crow and how she sometimes used to sing for others who couldn't.

All the best,
Nonoise
Indie Alternative - Elizabeth Fraser- Tori Amos- Bjork

Soul R&B- Sade - Phyllis Hyman - Anita Baker

Folk Rock - Natalie Merchant - Join Mitchell - Sarah McLachlan

Celtic - Lorena McKennitt - Enya - Moya Brennan

Classical - Leontyne Price - Jessye Norman - Maria Callas

Broadway - Sarah Brightman - Idina Menzel - Megan Hilty


Surprised Diana Krawl didn't make the list.

Girl from Haelos and from London Grammar are great.
Top 3 overall:
Karen Carpenter
Linda Ronstadt
Rosemary Clooney

Others I like:
For pure bombast - Dame Shirley Bassey
Someone really unknown today - Mindy Carson
Local girl - Mandy Barnett
70’s soul - Gladys Knight




My top 10.
1. Eva Cassidy
2. Patricia Barber
3. Tracy Chapman
4. Diana Krall
5. Karen Carpenter
6. Mary Black
7. Stevie Nicks
8. Rickie Lee Jones
9. Hollie Cole
10. Janis Ian

I copied down all of the names. Lots of future listening exploration ... n = 131.
I look forward to finding anew talent. Thanks, OP for the posting!

77Jovian, so glad you mentioned Lydia Pence.  Man, when she sang "I Just Want to Make Love to You" I damn well believed her. If you mentioned Lydia you will probably love Genya Ravan/Goldie Zelkowitz. Two very different performers but Cold Blood and Ten Wheel Drive are not that dissimilar.  Everybody and most of their's dogs have covered Bird on a Wire including many of the names here but except for the man himself I don't think anyone else conveys the true emotional totality of this track any better than Genya Ravan.

Conveying emotion is what my favorite female vocalists do for me. Pure voices (Judy Collins) are nice, great technique is a prerequisite but the emotional content, for me, is what separates great female singers from women with great voices.

To that end, three were asked for so I owe two more.  I guess I could pick two at random from any of the EXTENSIVE lists here but I could just throw darts at Billboard too.

I will probably play an LP later today and change my mind but for now;

Koko Taylor and Etta James.  Many creative types 'suffer' for their art.  These women just suffered and their artistry rose from that.  Black, bruised, drunk and addicted while being screwed over by everyone supposedly on your side is not a recipe for a happy life but, for music that bypasses your ears and brain and drives straight to your soul the power of this combination is overwhelming.

Before anyone goes off thinking I am advocating for a life of pain for the music it might produce, not a chance.  On the other hand it would be a double tragedy to ignore the music that tragedy produces.
I would defer to Linda Ronstadt's book where she says that she can tell in about 30 seconds who a singer is imitating as all singers imitate someone else until they find "their own" voice, so to speak.  (I would say Buddy,  Chuck, Jerry, and Elvis did not, but what do I know? They all learned by listening to Black singers sing the blues, except Buddy:

"During his early childhood, Holley was influenced by the music of Hank Williams, Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Snow, Bob Wills, and the Carter Family. At Roscoe Wilson Elementary, he became friends with Bob Montgomery, and the two played together, practicing with songs by the Louvin Brothers and Johnnie & Jack." )

I listened to some of these singers I had not heard before, and sure enough, one sounds EXACTLY like Ronstadt (same time period) and some sound like versions of her and some, obviously, have their own unique sounds.

People like Diana Ross and early blues and jazz singers have certainly carved out their own styles that most of the modern ladies copy somewhat.  I would say the SONG and the arrangement add a lot to the quality of the voice--keep it in the vocalist's range, style, etc.

Funny, Ronstadt, a technically excellent vocalist, likes Bonnie Raitt, who is not listed at all.  I don't necessarily agree with her, but Raitt isn't chopped liver, either.  check this out:

https://www.npr.org/2019/09/13/760502128/linda-ronstadt-on-making-music-i-knew-how-to-sing-my-whole-...

And most importantly, play the music!

Cheers!
how could I have forgotten Melody Gardot
not only voice but such a unique approach

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MI49t7t0ZAI

If you like Melody, you will also love Sophie Milman. she is mix of russia/israel/canadian, superbly unique voice

her take on these 2 songs show you how inventive she is

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yeCpx5O8tJk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2YO1DnRQBg

Cassandra, Melody, Sophie, they get both superior musicians and engineering, as do others
Joni Mitchell, along with many others above,
plus two I don't see mentioned yet:
Suzanne Vega
Grace Slick
In no particular order:-
Dame Janet Baker
Lorraine Hunt Lieberson
Eva Cassidy/Alison Krauss
Lots of fantastic ones, many mentioned here, but the first three that popped into my head are:
Joni Mitchell
Billie Holiday
Janis Joplin
The longer I think about it the harder it is to decide on just top 3.

Sarah Vaughn
Dinah Washington
Aretha Franklin 
Chaka Chan
Wanda Hutchinson (of The Emotions)
Tammy Terrell (with Marvin Gaye)
Phyllis Hyman
Joni Mitchell
Patti Labelle   
@mikelavigne 
Thanks for posting that. It was Flower Song by those two that got me into opera. Once I dialed in my system, it all made sense. I simply melt every time I play it.

I forgot to mention Jacintha,
Shirley Horn, 
Melody Gardot


All the best,
Nonoise