Her sublime singing finds a perfect complement here in a sentimental-but-not-quite-sappy song, all the more meaningful in light of her ongoing battle with Parkinson’s Disease.
Like many of us in the rock community, I was shocked and dumbstruck to hear the news that INXS have split after 35 years in rock. INXS were still going?! For 35 years?!? Christ, someone’ll be telling me Chaucer’s only just hung up his dodo quill next, or that Pope Urban II has finally blessed his last crusade.
The Twitterati are of the opinion that INXS should really have called it a day in 1998, on the asphyxi-wank demise of their singer Michael Hutchence. But I’d go further. They should’ve thrown in the towel a good seven years earlier, bowing out at their peak – announcing their retirement at Wembley Stadium on the ‘X’ tour in 1991, touting ‘Suicide Blonde’ and ‘Bitter Tears’ as their grand swansongs. That way we’d have been spared the experimental sitar album (‘Welcome To Wherever You Are’), the agonising 90s decline and the desperate scramble for replacement singers culminating in a cheesy reality TV search that put them on a cultural level with Mary Poppins.
But which other acts should’ve called it a day yonks ago? And when, exactly?
Queen – 1991
Like INXS, Queen had made quite enough money by the time their singer carked it to spare us the last twenty-odd years of (primarily) May and Taylor dragging their legend through the dirt. Let’s face it, Freddie’s beyond-the-grave contributions to ‘Made In Heaven’ in 1995 only damaged his memory and the idea that Paul Rodgers, George Michael or – and this actually happened – Wyclef Jean might be able to step into Mercury’s frontless leotard was laughable in the extreme. Their theatrical legacy quickly found its rightful place in the West End; for dignity’s sake they should’ve quietly retired the band at Freddie’s wake.
Red Hot Chili Peppers – 2003
After much pub debate with some real-life RHCP fans who were adamant they lost it after ‘Mother’s Milk’ in 1989 and should’ve packed it in before dumping the “atrocious” ‘Give It Away’ on the world, I’ve decided RHCP deserve more grace than that. ‘Californication’ produced some notable singles and even the title track of 2002’s ‘By The Way’ was worth releasing. But how we wish they’d thrown in the towel before ‘Stadium Arcadium’ and jam-funking us into a coma at Reading 2007.
U2 – 1997
As soft a spot as I have for ‘Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of’, U2’s last decent contribution to rock culture was getting stuck in a massive lemon on the ‘Popmart’ tour in 1997. The dramatic image-shift of ‘Achtung Baby’ had long since lost its novelty and they were on the cusp of fifteen years of MOR albums with pictures of them looking bored in airports on the front, videos featuring Boyzone cameos and near toxic levels of global smugness. Sniiiiip!
Gomez – 1999
Are you lot still here? Despite nobody noticing or caring since the end of the Mercury Music Prize broadcast in 1998, Gomez have plodded relentlessly on making consistently ignored albums on iPhones and the like and facing up to their fundamental irrelevance by supporting Pearl Jam and The Dave Matthews Band on tour. We’ll give them their biggest album hit – Number 2 for 1999’s ‘Liquid Skin’ – but they really shoulda took the money and run.
Manic Street Preachers – 1997
Sure they’ve clawed back a hint of their sub-culture credibility with recent albums and have always managed to surprise us with firebrand classics like ‘Masses Against The Classes’ every now and then, but the Manics have never really recovered from whacking on the plain white trousers and going uber-mainstream on ‘This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours’ in 1998. How perfect and faultless a band they would have remained if they’d bowed out with the graceful orchestral elegies of ‘Everything Must Go’, or even sold 16 million copies of ‘Generation Terrorists’ and split in 1992.
The Levellers – 1998
And we’re being generous. Culturally, The Levellers – amazingly still fucking going – never topped their 1994 Glastonbury appearance when, thanks to a massive flyering campaign and an enormous invasion of fence-smashing grebos, they played to the biggest Pyramid Stage crowd in the festival’s history. But we can’t begrudge them the cash-in. While the sentient world was distracted by this little thing called Britpop, The Levellers spent the mid-90s enjoying a commercial heyday, releasing number one albums and greatest hits records and putting out the actually-quite-jolly ‘What A Beautiful Day’. But as of 1998 they’ve been a steaming arse-nugget floating in the lavvy bowl of popular music, and they should’ve been flushed with your foot there and then.
Metallica – 1991
Post-‘Black Album’, Metallica have been little more than a stodgy, overblown embarrassment of self-indulgent double albums, hideous Lou Reed collaborations and films that made them look like wankers. For the good of all rock, they should’ve been subjected to an enforced ‘group therapy’ session at Dignitas in 1991.
Madonna – 1998
The pop-friendly corners of the NME office are crying out in defense of later Madonna revivals – ‘Music’, ‘American Life’ and ‘Confessions On A Dance Floor’ – but to these ears the Madginator’s been phoning it in since ’98’s ‘Ray Of Light’. Surely she should have retired into the lucrative world of work-out vids by now?
Limp Bizkit – 1994
Having failed to contribute a single worthy note to the benefit of popular culture in their entire recorded history, Limp Bizkit should’ve split up just before their first rehearsal in 1994. And then killed themselves, and each other.
Our mission in this little exercise it to uncover the covers–to reveal songs commonly mistaken for originals which were actually older songs given a second life. Let’s listen:
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“Love Hurts”=Nazareth
As the above clip reveals, Nazareth’s 1976 top ten hit wasn’t new. In fact, the Boudleaux Bryant song had been recorded by Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris as well as Roy Orbison. But the first to record the tune were the Everly Brothers in 1960, although their version was not a hit. Quite a contrast in styles.
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“Tainted Love”-Soft Cell
Soft Cell’s only top 40 hit was a cover of a Gloria Jones song from 1964, although again the original version was not a pop hit. Certain lines (Once I ran to you, now I run from you) have a much more menacing feel when sung by a woman.
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“The Tide is High”-Blondie
We probably should have been suspicious of a Blondie song with a Jamaican rhythm–not exactly the band’s forte. The song was written by John Holt and originally recorded by his reggae group the Paragons in 1967.
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“Whatta Man”-Salt-N-Pepa w/En Vogue
This 1994 hit heavily samples–and is virtually a cover of–“What a Man”, a 1968 Linda Lyndell song that missed the pop charts.
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“Can’t Get Enough of You Baby”-Smash Mouth
Smash Mouth’s #27 hit was the follow-up single to the #1 “Walkin’ on the Sun”. The song originally followed up another #1 single in 1966, Question Mark & the Mysterians’ “96 Tears”, which shares almost identical organ riffs with this song.
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“Since You Been Gone”-Rainbow
The Ritchie Blackmore-led rock band’s hit was originally written and recorded by former Argent guitarist Russ Ballard and appeared on his 1976 Winning album.
Head East’s 1978 cover of the song actually charted higher (#46) than Rainbow’s 1979 version (#57) but Rainbow’s version is now widely considered definitive.
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“El Condor Pasa (If I Could)”-Simon & Garfunkel
Originally composed as “El Condor Pasa” (“The Condor goes by” or “flies past”) by Peruvian Daniel Alomia Robles in 1913, drawing from traditional Andean folk melodies. Paul Simon heard a recording by a group called Los Incas and composed new lyrics for the melody. Interestingly he used the Los Incas instrumental version (which you hear here) as the backing track for the Simon & Garfunkel song, and did so without permission. He also failed to credit Robles, later claiming to have been misinformed that the song was an old traditional melody by an anonymous composer.
Robles’ son filed suit against Simon & Garfunkel, but all ended amicably. Simon ended up touring with Los Incas (later renamed Urubamba) and producing an album for them.
As a side note, Paul Simon was accused, after the release of his Graceland album, of stealing music from the band Los Lobos, who were invited to play on the record. Quoting Wikipedia:
The group Los Lobos appear on the last track, “All Around the World or The Myth of Fingerprints”. According to Los Lobos’ saxophone player Steve Berlin, Simon stole the song from Los Lobos, giving them no songwriting credit:
“It was not a pleasant deal for us. I mean he (Simon) quite literally–and in no way do I exaggerate when I say–he stole the songs from us…We go into the studio, and he had quite literally nothing. I mean, he had no ideas, no concepts, and said, ‘Well, let’s just jam.’…Paul goes, ‘Hey, what’s that?’ We start playing what we have of it, and it is exactly what you hear on the record. So we’re like, ‘Oh, ok. We’ll share this song.’…A few months later, the record comes out and says ‘Words and Music by Paul Simon.’ We were like, ‘What the fuck is this?’ We tried calling him, and we can’t find him. Weeks go by and our managers can’t find him. We finally track him down and ask him about our song, and he goes, ‘Sue me. See what happens.”
Polish neo-prog band Satellite make a tidy, polished-sounding (if you will) brand of reflective rock–contemplation being something a lot of the better prog can induce in its listener.
The band’s first three albums could be seen as a loose trilogy dealing with day, evening and night. They were a little more challenging musically than 2009’s Nostalgia, which seems to aim at a more mainstream, commercial sound. It’s a move in a good direction in my opinion; it doesn’t matter what you have to say or how great the musicianship you display in saying it unless you make your listener want to press the “repeat” button.
“I Want You to Know” touches on the album’s overall theme of nostalgia, the seductive yearnings of “empty rooms left too soon” and things “gone with a tide”, then gives you a few minutes’ instrumental passage to dwell on it before summing up with the sentiment “just have to stop believing in yesterday”. This isn’t life-altering, groundbreaking, mind-blowing prog. Just the competent and very appealing kind.
Sweden’s Trombo Combo issued one album, Swedish Sound Deluxe, a breezy collection of covers with a 50’s-60’s lounge vibe and a smooth bossa nova/easy listening sound. Some of the songs (Bowie’s “Let’s Dance”, Britney’s “…Baby One More Time”, Europe’s “The Final Countdown”) were hits in America. Others, like “Min Mor Sa Till Mig” were covers of Swedish hits.
So, while to a Swedish audience this probably sounds like a cool (or cheesy) re-working in the mode of Max Raabe, to American ears it’s just a cool (or cheesy) easy listening bossa nova.
Matt Brooke split from Band of Horses in 2006 and formed Seattle band Grand Archives. “Orange Juice” is a short, sweet postscript from their first album.