The FINANCIAL — In 1964, four musicians from Liverpool appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show. Now, fifty years after that iconic performance, John, Paul, George and Ringo, otherwise known as The Beatles, are America’s favorite musician or band, moving up from a tie for third place in 2010. Their counterpart in that 2010 tie, Elvis Presley – who appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1956 – moves up to the number two spot this year, according to Harris Interactive Inc.
After dropping a “secret” album earlier this year and performing with her husband to sold-out crowds around the country, Beyoncé debuts on the favorite musician or band list at number three.
They debuted their first album 46 years ago and their song “Stairway to Heaven” consistently lands on classic rock top ten lists, and now Led Zepplin debuts in the number four spot. And after conducting his farewell tour, the “King of Country,” George Strait, moves up two spots to number five on this year’s list, according to Harris Interactive Inc.
New to the list, at number six, is the musician who drummed, shimmied, and sang through this past year’s Super Bowl Half-time show, Bruno Mars. Next, and rounding out the top ten, are four performers who all tie for the number seven spot. Three are new to the list – Neil Diamond, The Eagles, and Garth Brooks. The last is this list’s 2010 headliner, Celine Dion.
With six new additions to the list, that means six singers or bands – one crooner, one rock/pop, one pop, and three country – dropped from the top ten this year. The country acts are Tim McGraw (who was number five), Rascal Flatts (who were number eight), and Alan Jackson (who was tied for number nine). The rock/pop band is U2 (who were number two in 2010), and the pop singer is Lady Gaga (who was number six), while the crooner is Frank Sinatra (who was tied for number nine), according to Harris Interactive Inc.
Different Strokes for Different Folks, and so on and so on and Scooby dooby do…
As Sly and the Family Stone sang 45 years ago, there are definitely different strokes for different folks, especially when it comes to favorite musicians and bands. Between the sexes, men say the Beatles are their favorite, while women say Beyoncé is their favorite singer. Regionally, there are actually more similarities than differences as the East, South and West all say the Beatles are their favorites, while the Midwest differs, with Bruno Mars on top for them.
One of the generational arguments that will never end is the fight over music. Whether one grew up in the 1950s with the birth of rock and roll or the 1970s with disco or the 1990s with hip-hop, there will always be members of older generations who shake their head at something new. So, it makes sense that each generation has their own favorite musician or band. For Millennials it’s Beyoncé, while Gen Xers go in a very different direction and say Metallica is their favorite. Baby Boomers remember their youth and say the Beatles are their favorite band, while for Matures Willie Nelson is their number one, according to Harris Interactive Inc.
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