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The Ten Cheesiest Singers Of All-Time

Posted Wed Apr 23, 2008 3:33pm PDT by Rob O'Connor in List Of The Day

Using the word "cheesy" to describe someone's singing isn't often looked upon as a compliment. However, this is show-biz and a certain amount of Velveeta is often necessary if you're going to be an entertainer. People come to your shows to see something larger than life. If they wanted to watch a bunch of average joes in everyday threads shyly singing into their armpits, they could attend a Yo La Tengo concert.

But some singers take cheese beyond one of the basic food groups and turn it into a way of life. Donny Osmond and his entire oversmiling family have made "corny wholesomeness" an accepted media trend. Donny (not even "Don") makes John Denver seem nutritious by comparison.

Over the years, there have been plenty of obvious ham and cheese puffs. Anyone who performs a showtune is embedded with cheese. So when devising this list of the cheesiest singers, it was important to choose singers who didn't have to resort to such over-the-top drama, singers who could've just sang the damn song and been done with it. But no--they insisted on a little Feta, a little Provolone to go along with the act.

10) Billy Joel: Billy Joel could've been a convincing rock 'n' roll guy, but he had too much of the "drunk uncle at the wedding" in him to tone it down. He's a natural born ham likely to give himself a heart-attack-yack-yack-yack with all his extra showbiz flourishes. It hasn't done him any good with critics, but his fans love the extra schmaltz.

9) David Lee Roth: David Lee Roth is perhaps the only hard rock singer who actually gets it. There are plenty of other hard rock singers, including his eventual replacement in Van Halen, Sammy Hagar, who are cheesy without wit, without self-knowledge. But DLR knew what he was doing and he reveled in his role as not only the lead singer of a hard rock band, but as the carnival barker eager to sell you whatever you might be interested in purchasing. Not just a gigolo, but the gigolo.

8) Barry Manilow: You can't sing "Mandy" or "Looks Like We Made It" or "Daybreak" or just about anything in this man's catalog without feeling a little foolish, without breaking into a laugh with friends. Yet we suspend out belief and pretend it isn't silly, as if somehow beyond the hallmark sentiments rests a universal human truth that at heart we are all made of blood, water, skin, bone and perpetual corniness.

7) Morrissey: Whether solo or with the Smiths, Morrissey turned every hangnail into a life or death situation. He over-dramatized getting a job. As if somehow applying for employment steals one's soul, rendering them useless to the rest of humanity and to their true self. He blames the failures of his love life on what? Getting caught wearing a Wal-Mart smock?

6) David Clayton-Thomas (Blood Sweat And Tears): Yes, he's made us so very happy, he's so GLAD he's come into our lives. Aside from inspiring an entire generation of future grunge rockers (Eddie Vedder, call the main office), DCT with Blood, Sweat and Tears helped redefine the schmaltz of ‘70s AM radio. While they never ventured into the icky love sentiments of Bread (responsible for "Make It With You" and "Baby I'm A Want You"), DCT with just that vibrato-laden voice of his made everything from "Spinning Wheel" to "And When I Die" sound like it was coming from another planet of emotionally distraught aliens.

5) Tom Jones: Everything Tom Jones touches turns to kitsch. Whether it's Rod Stewart ("Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"), Prince ("Kiss") or one from the Bacharach-David songbook ("What's New, Pussycat?"), Jones delivers it all with the shameless come-on of a guy with an over-obvious one-track mind. There's no studied aloofness here, no "cool guy" routine. He's letting you know why he's in the room. The men don't know, but the little girls--and the older ones with the blue hair--understand.

4) Meatloaf: From the sound effects of the motorcycles revving to the play-by-play announcements from Phil Rizzuto, Meat Loaf albums are jammed with overwrought details and emotion that suggest he's likely to suffer a coronary before he finds true love. He makes Bruce Springsteen sound restrained. I'm still not sure what he won't do for love, but I do know that he'll tell us with every last melodramatic trill he has left in his still-beating heart.

3) Cher: You always know it's Cher. She's incapable of singing anything without sounding overexcited and like she's being beamed in from another era. She vamps, she tramps, she sings like her gaudy, risqué stage outfits coming to life. When they added the vocoder to her voice for "Believe," coming from her it was as if it was completely natural.

2) Neil Diamond: He's a living legend and he deserves to be in the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame as much as the Dave Clark Five, the Lovin' Spoonful, the Eagles and Billy Joel. But for some reason, Neil's considered too showbiz. Yeah, a band that sang about "Me and You and Rain on the Roof" isn't too cutesy, but the guy who gave us "Solitary Man" and "Cracklin' Rosie" is taking things too far. Of course, he is. He's a cornball! If you don't act like a complete idiot singing along to "I Am, I Said," then you simply aren't singing it right!

1) Michael Buble: I've bestowed this honor on Michael because he's the most recent addition to our canon of shameless audience pandering performers--those who give the people what they want whether they really should or not. Frank Sinatra he's not. Dean Martin? Not even close. His pick of tunes makes Kenny G look like a music connoisseur. But everything he sings, he sings as if the past five decades never happened. And that is an accomplishment all its own. Cheeze-whiz for everyone!

1944 Comments

101. squeak619 -
Rob O'Connor, just by looking at your picture, you're one of the people contributing to the downfall of music today. I guess you like all these new aged no talent a** clowns out there the can only put out 1 or 2 good songs in their entire career. Singing is a talent. Screaming into a microphone doesn't take talent. I think what ever music class you took in high school or college you better go back for a refresher course. The way you are going, I'm waiting for you to tell everyone that Luther Vandross was a cheesy sing too. I think you better get you facts right before you start trying to talk bad about MUSIC ICONS. Remember this. The artists of the past have and will always have more hit records than those of today. What I mean by this is where the entire record or the majority of the record had great songs. Not the one hit wonders we have today. I can't sing a note. But with todays recording studios, and a great hook, I can have a 1 hit wonder too. In closing, please, please, please learn real singers and performers before you put up another one of your cheesy top 10 lists.

A person that loves real music.

102. gordon h -
why dont you ever list any brown skinned people (your black). they sing crappy.are you so afraid of being called racist that you wont list any?

103. Patty -
Yes they may be a bit cheesy, but they are talented and rich and people like them. I always dismiss what critics say because they are so full of themselves and always the minority.

104. Yahoo! Music User -
Don't care... still LOVE Cher, Billy Joel and Buble!

105. Yahoo! Music User -
OMG! i am sooo mad this list is ALL wrong!
whoever wrote this is Stupendously Retarded and should be committed into a mental hospital and be forced to listen to Cher for the rest of your life if you hate it soooooo much. UGH!! you ppl make me SICK

106. Lynda R -
Have you not heard? Cheese is the new cool!!!
Mr. O'Connor has bestowed upon the artists on this list some very high praise indeed! Long Live the Cheese!!!

107. Emily -
Michale Buble is nowhere near the cheesiest singer! I love him! I think you were far off on your judging!

108. Shazzy -
Michael Buble should not be number one. He is an amazing singer and not the least bit cheesy.

109. The Hoffs -
I think that you forgot the king of cheese...Mr. Wanye Newton. That guy has been hamming it up for decades.

110. Carol -
This is clearly coming from someone who is TOTALLY CLUELESS!!! Have you noticed that most of these artists, who were huge in their time, STILL exist and their music is STILL beloved! Cheesy is all relative...if music takes me away and makes me smile, all the better...

111. Yahoo! Music User -
Billy Joel! I will admit that he definitely turned a little cheesy in the late 80's, but how do you call songs like "Captain Jack," "The Stranger," "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" cheesy. Even "Piano Man" was great (despite the fact that is has now become cliche).

112. reneyhun -
I wonder who's list Rob O'Connor is on?

If Anyone's.

This guy should work for
The Star... He puts the low in Class.

113. JC -
Cheese or not most of those artists are laughing all the way to the bank!

114. CandiceC -
I so totally agree!

115. andya -
I have seen all of the mentioned acts and MR. O'Connor is cheezier than his list.I have seen 100's of solo artists and bands, Eraser or whatever I saw in the early 90's was trash.Eric Clapton was the best.JZ is top ten entertainment.Michael Buble has a great voice and presence.

116. Bubbatheman -
I have to agree with some of the selections (Manilow, Tom Jones, David Lee Roth, Billy Joel, Cher). However, I'd be hard pressed not to have Rod Stewart, George Michael, Boy George, Michael Bolton, Phil Collins, Celine Dion, Barbara Streisand and the ENTIRE Osmond family on the list. Lighten up folks, it's just a list, not an attack on your livelihood.

117. Nathaniel Z -
Get over it, folks. It's just a humorous list. Your anger over his choices is more entertaining than the list itself. Those who are getting angry are just as guilty as he is at thinking your opinion matters more...except for him it's his JOB.

That photo of David Lee Roth is priceless...

118. Christie -
The lead singer of rush (geddy lee) is awesome not cheesy, he is according to Yahoo Music User down there

119. terrellm -
sad but true, i do fill like an idot when sanging these tunes, and they are all bestsellers, so the world is chessy as well.

120. Peanut -
I gotta tell you, being a "child of the 60's" these guys (except Buble of course) may be cheezy and they be melodramatic but their songs are timeless and at least you can understand the words. And they can honestly be called music. They have talent and that is something that is sorely lacking in today's generation of (and I use the term very loosely) singers.
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