Posts Tagged ‘Covers’

Best albums of 2016 Various Artists - Day of the Dead

This five-plus hour, 59 track Grateful Dead tribute album is a monument of living history – an image of their golden road branching out endlessly…. Pretty much every sound the band touched on or suggested gets represented – from ambient music (several sound-sculptures by Bryce Dessner of the National and experimental composer Tim Hecker’s “Transitive Refraction Axis for John Oswald”) to Afropop (Orchestra Baobob turning “Franklin’s Tower” into a shining desert mirage) to psychedelia (Flaming Lips making throbbing lysergic mush out of “Dark Star”) to roots rock (Lucinda Williams locating the lust in a slow humid “Going Down the Road Feeling Bad”). But indie songwriters and guitar nerds get most of the action; Courtney Barnett hazily savors the conversational drift of the post-Altamont rap session “New Speedway Boogie,” and Stephen Malkmus does his hey-whatever guitar wizard thing on a ten minute “China Cat Sunflower → I Know You Rider,” just to pick two of the more wonderful examples among many.

Tribute albums can be a profit center for record companies during dark times. They have a built-in fan base and they make great real-life, gift-wrapped, non-Spotify gifts. Day of the Dead is woefully original because its classics deviate so much from the original.  Curated by The National, the erudite indie giants, the five-album set’s interpretations eschew the long jams that are Dead staples and inspired a million stoned dance moves at concerts. “Truckin’” in the hands of Marijuana Deathsquads is less a road anthem and more despairing cry. Lucius’s “Uncle John’s Band” isn’t Jerry Garcia’s amiable life lesson but something more solemn. Other versions hew closer to the original, like a Kurt Vile and the Violators “Box of Rain” and a live version of “I Know You Rider” by the Dead’s Bob Weir so rollicking that The National, who back him on the track, forget their trademark lugubriousness, and revel in this classic.

KatyGretaMisfits

You might know Katy Goodman as the former bassist of Vivian Girls or as one half of the husband-and-wife indie rock duo La Sera, who coincidentally just announced a big North American tour. But you might not know that Goodman is also a huge fan of ‘70s and ‘80s punk and new wave and in a recent interview she professed her undying love for The Smiths.

Goodman has teamed up with fellow punk aficionado Greta Morgan of Springtime Carnivore to release a full album of punk and new wave covers, appropriately titled Take It, It’s Yours after lyrics heard in the great Replacements song “Bastards of Young”. The cool thing is, they’re not just sticking to covers that seem easy to pull off. The album kicks off with “Over The Edge” by Portland punk legends the Wipers and then covers territory ranging from DC hardcore (Bad Brains’ “Pay to Cum”) to Detroit proto-punk (The Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog”).

989adb14 6bea 4fcb a58c d886f781c9951 Katy Goodman and Greta Morgan cover Misfits Where Eagles Dare    listen

But nothing on this album is likely to beat Goodman and Morgan’s cover of the Misfits“Where Eagles Dare”. Originally a bass-heavy burner punctuated by Danzig’s guttural howl, the song has become something else entirely under their direction. As Morgan explains, “This is the song that inspired Take It, It’s Yours in the first place. We were goofing around singing it in my backyard and there was something powerful and interesting about hearing our voices harmonize such a traditionally aggressive song.”

She continues: “The Misfits are one of the punk bands I think of as being most influenced by girl groups of the ‘50s and ‘60s (the other being The Ramones), so somehow our voices really suited these melodies and the simple chord progression.”

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Take It, It’s Yours drops August 26th on Polyvinyl Records. check out the album art and tracklist below.

 Tracklist:
01. Over The Edge (Wipers)
02. Pay to Cum (Bad Brains)
03. Bastards of Young (The Replacements)
04. Sex Beat (The Gun Club)
05. Ever Fallen in Love (Buzzcocks)
06. Where Eagles Dare (The Misfits)
07. I Wanna Be Your Dog (The Stooges)
08. In the City (The Jam)
09. Dreaming (Blondie)
10. Rebel Yell (Billy Idol)

Apparently, this is the 1993 version banned by MTV, but I wouldn’t know what other versions are out there. If any. This is a cover of The Who’s classic and was featured on the Ramones’ covers album Acid Eaters. The video is a tribute to b-movies.

“B-movies mania: The Ramones’ wacky new Radioactive video cover of the Who’s classic “Substitute” directed by Tom Rainone, features a veritable who’s who of B-movies stars.

The cast includes Karen Black, Linnea Quigley, Ken Force, William Smith, and Nicholas Worth, whose combined film credits include “Day of the Locust” , “Return of the Living Dead”, Dawn of the Dead”, “Grave of the Vampire”, and “Don’t Answer the Phone”.

Psycho rock fans will recognize the likes of Mötorhead’s Lemmy Kilmister, White Zombie’s Sean Yseult, and the Cramp’s Lux Interior among members of the vid cast. And bonus points go to the viewer who can spot famed comic book artist Robert Williams.”

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Bob Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde track “Just Like a Woman” is much disputed — for its mysterious but likely famous subject and for whether or not its lyrics are misogynist — but rarely does the beauty of its warm yet aching melody come into question.

And it’s hard to think of a singer’s voice that can better be described as warm and aching — across their body of work  than Jeff Buckley’s. (Incidentally, the link between Bob Dylan and Jeff Buckley in this very piece comes from the fact that  as with Kurt Cobain or Amy Winehouse  the singer’s public body of work continues to be exhumed, stretched, re-released, and remastered decades after his death). And so, Buckley’s just-shared cover of the Bob Dylan song (from the upcoming collection, You and I) is of course stunning — despite the fact that some might be skeptical of yet another album of early/rare recordings. (Buckley himself only ever released one studio album, 1994’s Grace.)

Buckley’s cover slows Dylan’s song down, and allows the singer to revel in the swelling and androgynous quality of his own voice, rendering the track somewhat more self-reflexive than the original, which was delivered more like a series of enamored insults, subtly underscored by heartache. (There’s certainly nothing subtle about the heartache in Buckley’s delivery.)

You and I will be released on March 16th, It also includes covers of Led Zeppelin, The Smiths, and Jevetta Steele.

The Smiths cover by jeff buckley

Out next week, SDE Editor Paul Sinclair takes a look at the 6LP vinyl edition of the new Susanna Hoffs & Matthew Sweet set Completely Under The Covers.Please note, contrary to what I said in the video, the bonus tracks ARE included in the vinyl box! The 4CD box and 6LP vinyl set are out on 23 October 2015.
6LP Coloured vinyl box

Susanna Hoffs, a founding member of The Bangles and co-conspirator Matthew Sweet released three full volumes of their Under The Covers series between 2006 and 2013, on which the two teamed up to pay homage to many of the singles (and album deep cuts) from the 60s, 70s, and 80s which informed and shaped their own musical destinies. The Beatles, Dylan, Fairport Convention, Neil Young, The Beach Boys, The Who, Grateful Dead, Fleetwood Mac, Carly Simon, The Ramones, The Clash, The Pretenders, The Smiths and Prince are amongst the 57 acts covered. With guest appearances from Lindsey Buckingham, Steve Howe, Van Dyke Parks and Dhani Harrison, this 60 song package contains all three albums and fifteen previously-hard-to-get bonus tracks plus a 48 page booklet with annotation by Sweet and Hoffs, all gathered together for the first time on 4 CDs in card wallets in a clamshell box.

• Demon Music Store Pre-order: Completely Under The Covers

Matthew Sweet and Susanne Hoffs: Completely Under The Covers

 

4CD box

Disc: 1
1. I See The Rain
2. And Your Bird Can Sing
3. It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
4. Who Knows Where The Time Goes?
5. Cinnamon Girl
6. Alone Again Or
7. The Warmth Of The Sun
8. Different Drum
9. The Kids Are Alright
10. Sunday Morning
11. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
12. Care Of Cell 44
13. Monday, Monday
14. She May Call You Up Tonight
15. Run To Me
16. Village Green Preservation Society
17. I Can See For Miles

Disc: 2
1. Sugar Magnolia
2. Go All The Way
3. Second Hand News
4. Bell Bottom Blues
5. All The Young Dudes
6. You’re So Vain
7. Here Comes My Girl
8. I’ve Seen All Good People: Your Move/All Good People
9. Hello It’s Me
10. Willin’
11. Back Of A Car
12. Couldn’t I Just Tell You
13. Gimme Some Truth
14. Maggie May
15. Everything I Own
16. Beware Of Darkness

Disc: 3
1. Dreaming
2. Marquee Moon
3. I Wanna Be Sedated
4. Baby Blue
5. You Say You Don’t Love Me
6. (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love and Understanding
7. You Can Close Your Eyes
8. Melissa
9. Killer Queen
10. A Song For You

Disc: 4
1. Sitting Still
2. Girls Talk
3. Big Brown Eyes
4. Kid
5. Free Fallin’
6. Save It For Later
7. They Don’t Know
8. The Bulrushes
9. Our Lips Are Sealed
10. How Soon Is Now
11. More Than This
12. Towers Of London
13. Killing Moon
14. Trouble
15. Train In Vain
16. You’re My Favorite Waste of Time
17. I Would Die 4 U

On Monday, Ryan Adams released a track-by-track cover of Taylor Swift’s smash hit album “1989” to mostly rave reviews.This cover is taken from the BBC4 sessions. summer of 2007.Ryan’s voice keeps getting stronger. As usual on these songs, love Jon Graboff’s haunting sound.
Neal with out Ryan on guitar keeps it strong. Chris and Brad’s back beat.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=233&v=masNmZy5d6Y

A picture/slide show tribute to a wonderful cover song recorded by two great musicians..Definitely a totally different take on the song, It’s not even recognizable as ‘Brown Sugar’. I like when musicians cover songs and turn them into something different. On Monday, Ryan Adams released a track-by-track cover of Taylor Swift’s smash hit album “1989” to mostly rave reviews.

So lets go back and compile a list of some of the North Carolina native’s best cover songs. Ryan Adams has a long history of covering other artists, dating back his earliest days with seminal alt-country outfit Whiskeytown in the early 1990s.

Ryan Adams; Taylor Swift

When Ryan Adams started dropping hints that he wanted to cover Taylor Swift’s entire new album—1989—song for song, at first it seemed like a joke. Then, though, things got real—and now the album is released, Ryan Adams’s 1989 in its entirety. There’s nothing offhand about the finished product, which is as fully produced as Adams recent own albums and could easily be mistaken, at least by the casual fan, for a new album of Ryan Adams originals.

1989 seems destined to become the biggest seller of Adams’s career thus far, benefiting as it is from breathless promotion by Taylor Swift herself. Her 64 million Twitter followers have seen her tweet or retweet about the album dozens of times since Thursday, when Swift  wrote, “Ryan’s music helped shape my songwriting. This is surreal and dreamlike.”

Surreal and dreamlike isn’t a bad description for Adams’s take on 1989, which separates the songs on Swift’s album from their eager-to-please pop production and wraps them in layers of sweet melancholy. The joke here, if there is one, is that Adams’s version actually sounds much more like something that would have been released in 1989 than Swift’s does. Though the Polaroid photo on Swift’s album cover is a stylistic nod to the H.W. Bush years, for the most part the music on her album has little to do with the R&B-infused sound that dominated the charts in her birth year.

Adams’s version, on the other hand, is firmly in the mode he explored with Ryan Adams: the sensitive-dude singer-songwriter rock that densely populated the Top 40 for much of the ’80s. His recent Bryan Adams covers aren’t coincidental, and from the first track on 1989, “Welcome to New York,” some of his Swift covers sound almost like they could have been made by Jackson Browne or Billy Joel in 1986—with their tasteful balance of lead and rhythm guitars, their echo-chamber vocals, and their well-calibrated crescendos, Adams’s uptempo Swift songs would please the most discerning yuppie.

I mean that as a compliment: that’s the music I grew up learning to love. The sound fits as comfortably as an old shoe, and in Adams’s renditions, with Swift’s songs (many co-written with pop pros like Max Martin) find room to breathe—divorced from the stainless pop production of Swift’s original recordings. Adams reinvents “Shake It Off” as a slow-burning mid tempo plea to himself, as though it were about Sunday morning coming down; and “This Love” becomes a delicate ballad, complete with Neil-Young-esque falsetto. If the lyrics don’t quite hold up to the closer scrutiny they invite in these intimate recordings, they certainly don’t collapse either.

In the end, Adams’s 1989 is a celebration of the timeless appeal of sturdy songs and heartfelt performances. There’s a lot of musical context that’s swept up here—from ’80s rock to ’90s alt-country to ’00s pop—but with these absolutely committed performances, Adams elevates these songs to a transcendent realm. That’s not a dis on the original album: Swift was going for something that would work on Top 40 radio now, and she certainly achieved that. Adams follows the material back to his own roots—which are also, to some extent, Swift’s—and in the process, finds something that’s at once both old and new.

For weeks everywhere there has been rumors of Ryan Adams covering Taylor Swift’s 1989 album in full , Ryan Adams himself has been teasing us with short clips of Taylor Swift’s 1989.  he announced that album’s release date as Monday 21st September and shared the first song . Zane Lowe debuted Adams’ version of Swift’s massively bratty summer smashBad Blood on Beats 1 Radio earlier this month, and he’s turned it into a wounded, searching acoustic song. Just like the original, though, it will lodge itself in your head all day. Thankfully, he does not attempt any of the Kendrick Lamar verses from the song’s video version. We’ve already heard a clip of Adams’ version of the song, but you can hear the whole thing below.

The digital version of Adams’ 1989 is out and Lowe will interview Adams on the radio that morning, and he’ll also field a phone call from “a very special guest.” Gee, I wonder who that could be!
This is actually happening, Ryan Adams is releasing a song-for-song cover of Taylor Swift’s album “1989.” Swift is enthusiastic about it, noting that “Ryan’s music helped shape my songwriting.”

like most people today, I’ve been listening to Ryan Adams’ take on 1989 (and talking about it a bunch). a few thoughts ,I think mainly this just appears what an incredibly good songwriter Taylor (and her posse) are. these are well constructed songs at their core. It also shows the greatness and depth Ryan teases out of ‘Out of the Woods’ is some kind of impressive. catchy pop song, moving sad bastard song.

It doesn’t really matter if you love/like all the interpretations ( I didn’t even know the originals), you have to love/like the fact he treated each song with respect and reverence- he didn’t treat this like some ‘dude in a dorm room with a guitar covering pop music’ thing.

“1989” isn’t the only release Ryan Adams has planned, either. He said his next two albums are already done and hopes to have them out in 2016. He recorded them earlier this year in New York City and describes the sound as existing somewhere between “Heartbreaker” and 2004’s “Love Is Hell.

an excerpt from Superfjord’s cover of The Byrds song – taken from Fruits de Mer Records’ 4LP monster of a box-set – what happens when a record label with more time than sense asked eight bands to produce sidelong covers of tracks from the 60s/70s – either epic songs in their own right, or songs that they could use as launchpads for something….BIG?
‘Side Effects’ 4LP box-set – orders have come in so fast, I’m now building up a waiting-list of UK orders as I have virtually sold out on pre-orders already – and the release-date is still two months away! I should get more sets – enough to meet waiting-list requests – but I don’t want to take more cash until I’m sure.
http://www.fruitsdemerrecords.com/sideeffects.html

International buyers can still pre-order from Shiny Beast Mail Order as they have a guaranteed supply from me and aren’t quite up to their limit (yet!).

The whole thing is called ‘SIDE EFFECTS’, and it contains four single albums:

SIDETRACKS
The Soft Bombs – Echoes (originally by Pink Floyd)
Arcade Messiah – Four Horsemen (Aphrodite’s Child)

SIDEWAYS
The Bevis Frond – China (Electric Sandwich)
Wreaths – Sundown (Gordon Lightfoot)

SIDESHOWS
Superfjord – CTA-102 (The Byrds)
The Luck Of Eden Hall – Starship Trooper (Yes)

SIDESTEPS
Julie’s Haircut – Shhh/Peaceful (Miles Davis)
Sendelica – I Feel Love (Donna Summer)

The set features…
– two of FdM’s most popular bands (Sendelica and The Luck Of Eden Hall)
– the legendary Bevis Frond
– two occasional visitors to FdM Towers in Superfjord and Julie’s Haircut (who have contributed stunning recordings to ‘Coltrane’ and ‘strangefish’ respectively)
-three new artists – The Soft Bombs and Wreaths from the USA, and Arcade Messiah (aka John Bassett) from the UK.

The music ranges from psychedelia to progressive rock and back again, taking in krautrock, jazz-rock and…..Donna Summer(I knew it was a mistake inviting Pete Bingham and co to get involved).
The Bevis Frond track appeared in a severely-edited form on the FdM ‘Head Music’ double LP a few years ago, but this will be the full, 23 minute+ version, while everything else is completely ‘new’.

details at http://www.fruitsdemerrecords.com/sid…