Technically, Weird Al songs aren't covers--they're parodies. However, I'd argue that what he does is way more admirable--whereas a cover is a redo, a parody is a rework. He comes up with completely new lyrics, and they're usually far more intelligent and clever than what the original artist recorded. He's a brilliant musician, skilled writer, and a fan-frigging-tastic performer--seriously, if you've never seen his live act, you're missing out on a truly great show (I've seen him five times myself). Plus, he's an (unconventionally) attractive dude.
His videos are masterful, too--Exhibit A, White and Nerdy:
He's loaded the vid with so much stuff, you almost don't notice the dude who's hangin' with him.
This is the video and song that really got the world to notice him:
The squeak noises you hear at the intro are what inspired me to teach myself to make hand farts--an invaluable life skill.
Another masterpiece: his sendup of Smells Like Teen Spirit:
I read that Kurt Cobain loved this video--most artists understood that the Weird Al treatment was a tribute and honor (unlike Prince, who consistently snubbed Al's requests for cover permission).
His second dip into Michael Jackson's catalogue is probably my favorite Al video:
Ding Dong, yo--Ding Dong.
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Covering: Guns 'n Roses
I still remember buying the Guns 'n Roses Appetite for Destruction cassette from Coconuts when I was a high schooler, then playing that shiitake over and over again. Oh, man, O loved every tune, especially the opening Welcome to the Jungle and Mr. Brownstone. I refuse to acknowledge the crapfest that is Chinese Democracy and, instead, pretend that everything GNR ever did was this masterful.
First up is Fergie. This only half counts as a cover, because Slash is playing geetar at his own birthday party:
Ow ow ow ow.
Now, Richard Cheese and the Cheese Puffs with Welcome to the Jungle:
Did someone say ukulele? Here's some bald dude doing November Rain:
Dang. I wish I could play the uke that well. Maybe if I actually practiced...
First up is Fergie. This only half counts as a cover, because Slash is playing geetar at his own birthday party:
Ow ow ow ow.
Now, Richard Cheese and the Cheese Puffs with Welcome to the Jungle:
Did someone say ukulele? Here's some bald dude doing November Rain:
Dang. I wish I could play the uke that well. Maybe if I actually practiced...
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Covering: The Cure
I used to idolize Robert Smith when I was a high schooler. I mean, I drew pictures of him in my notebooks, I listened to "Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me" over and over, I dreamed of being Mrs. Robert Smith when I grew up--crazy for them. Fast forward two decades--I have no idea where those notebooks went, I'm not even sure where my KM3 tape went, and I'm gay. Still, I digs me some Cure. So do these people.
Here's a surprisingly faithful rendition of Just Like Heaven from overly-eyelinered AFI:
Did you see who's in the audience? How f*cking rock star--and weird--to perform a tune for the dude that made it famous.
Tori Amos just kicks holy ass with her covers--here's her doing Lovesong:
The sound quality isn't 100%, but the hilarious anime and stock-art couples this clipflipper used to make this video are worth sharing with y'all.
And some bitch named Cassie Davis doing Boys Don't Cry:
Look everyone--the lovechild of Avril Lavigne and Gwen Stefani! Yowch. Let's cleanse our aural palates, shall we?
I dare you to dispute the kickassedness of Ben F*cking Folds doing In Between Days:
I stood with my hands on the state at HORDE, a big concert fest, about 15 years ago, when it was still Ben Folds Five and before he was big. He sweated on me. It was awesome.
Here's a surprisingly faithful rendition of Just Like Heaven from overly-eyelinered AFI:
Did you see who's in the audience? How f*cking rock star--and weird--to perform a tune for the dude that made it famous.
Tori Amos just kicks holy ass with her covers--here's her doing Lovesong:
The sound quality isn't 100%, but the hilarious anime and stock-art couples this clipflipper used to make this video are worth sharing with y'all.
And some bitch named Cassie Davis doing Boys Don't Cry:
Look everyone--the lovechild of Avril Lavigne and Gwen Stefani! Yowch. Let's cleanse our aural palates, shall we?
I dare you to dispute the kickassedness of Ben F*cking Folds doing In Between Days:
I stood with my hands on the state at HORDE, a big concert fest, about 15 years ago, when it was still Ben Folds Five and before he was big. He sweated on me. It was awesome.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Covering: Lesser-known originals
There's a lot of songs for which the best-known version isn't the first-released version. I originally became aware of this when R.E.M. released Superman--I heard it on the radio and instantly recognized it as a song from one of my mom's old 45s that I'd played repeatedly on my Raggedy Ann turntable as a child:
The band is The Clique, and the accompanying video is a homemade clip. No, I don't know why the person chose to use Hitler and cats that look like him. Weird.
You might know Kris Kristofferson better as an actor from old stuff like the A Star is Born remake with Barbra Streisand or newer flicks like Blade. However, he's also a prolific songwriter, and he penned this gem most closely associated with Janis Joplin:
It's hard not to consider the Janis version as better, since it's such a well-loved classic, but his sweetly sung, occasionally off-key version is pretty durned good, too.
Joe Cocker is arguably better known for his covers than his original tunes. He managed to steal a tune from the Beatles, for crying out loud. When I hear Feelin' Alright in my head, it's his version, not this original from Traffic:
Fun story: I saw Traffic lead singer Stevie Winwood about five years ago, sitting at the back table in Potbelly when Tegan and Sara were performing for a short WXRT show. He looked sad that no one recognized him. I did--the dude looked unbelievably fabulous--but I tend to make an ass out of myself when I try to approach famous people. Maybe I should have bought him a sandwich.
I originally heard this next song when Anne Previn (daughter of director Andre Previn) came on the Howard Stern show to perform her song Torn, which Natalie Imbruglia covered:
While soap star/model-turned-singer Imbruglia offers up a peppy, poppy rendition, the original performance is the only one that makes sense. How can you sing "I'm all out of faith, this is how I feel, I'm cold and I am shamed, lying naked on the floor" and make it danceable? Nope, I infinitely prefer Previn's original, with its laid-bare vocals, slowed tempo, and appropriately raw guitar accompaniment. Even better: If you can find her acoustic performance from the Stern show, download that. It's one of my all-time favorite songs. Natalie Imbruglia can go F herself.
The band is The Clique, and the accompanying video is a homemade clip. No, I don't know why the person chose to use Hitler and cats that look like him. Weird.
You might know Kris Kristofferson better as an actor from old stuff like the A Star is Born remake with Barbra Streisand or newer flicks like Blade. However, he's also a prolific songwriter, and he penned this gem most closely associated with Janis Joplin:
It's hard not to consider the Janis version as better, since it's such a well-loved classic, but his sweetly sung, occasionally off-key version is pretty durned good, too.
Joe Cocker is arguably better known for his covers than his original tunes. He managed to steal a tune from the Beatles, for crying out loud. When I hear Feelin' Alright in my head, it's his version, not this original from Traffic:
Fun story: I saw Traffic lead singer Stevie Winwood about five years ago, sitting at the back table in Potbelly when Tegan and Sara were performing for a short WXRT show. He looked sad that no one recognized him. I did--the dude looked unbelievably fabulous--but I tend to make an ass out of myself when I try to approach famous people. Maybe I should have bought him a sandwich.
I originally heard this next song when Anne Previn (daughter of director Andre Previn) came on the Howard Stern show to perform her song Torn, which Natalie Imbruglia covered:
While soap star/model-turned-singer Imbruglia offers up a peppy, poppy rendition, the original performance is the only one that makes sense. How can you sing "I'm all out of faith, this is how I feel, I'm cold and I am shamed, lying naked on the floor" and make it danceable? Nope, I infinitely prefer Previn's original, with its laid-bare vocals, slowed tempo, and appropriately raw guitar accompaniment. Even better: If you can find her acoustic performance from the Stern show, download that. It's one of my all-time favorite songs. Natalie Imbruglia can go F herself.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Covering: Bringing on the Heartbreak
Some songs are covered repeatedly because they're brilliant enough that they...well, bear repeating. Others are covered over and over because they're bad enough that goofing on them is way fun. I'm thinking of the dichotomy between the two songs mentioned in yesterday's post: Radiohead's Creep definitely falls into the first category--I'd argue it's among the top 50 rock songs ever, and probably very near No. 1. Britney Spears' Womanizer, catchy though it may be, falls firmly into the crapalicious category.
Then, there's songs that don't fall into either--songs that, when covered, leave me scratching my huge head. Def Leppard's Bringin' on the Heartbreak falls into this category. It's sucky, but painfully so. It's not campy fun, it's not catchy--it's just best left in the dustbin. Yet, Mariah Carey decides to have a go at it:
The person that posted this on YouTube refers to the clip as "the American megastar's beautifully melancholic and understated cover of this classic song" which is even funnier than Mariah's melodramatic trudge through the tune.
This enthusiastic cover comes from REDaCHE (there's an umlaut over the lowercase A, but I don't know how to do that on Blogger--sorry), a Brazilian band with more hair than talent (although the lead singer doesn't suck):
I'm seriously distracted by the hairtossing guitarist and the stick-twirling drummer. Seriously, maybe you should learn the tricks AFTER you acquire musical skills, amigos.
Now a band called Tannerfozz, who seem to be playing in a high school gymnasium:
Notable: all the people in the folding chairs visible in the bottom of the screen walk out very early in the performance, save for the one guy in the right-hand corner of your screen. He must have lost a bet.
Best in this group is two Chilean kids, Boro and Pink Spider:
Just a dude and his cute little girlfriend, jamming in the living room. Simple and pretty, their no-bullshit performance and her rich, clear voice elevate a shitacular song from something you can actually listen to. Go figure.
Then, there's songs that don't fall into either--songs that, when covered, leave me scratching my huge head. Def Leppard's Bringin' on the Heartbreak falls into this category. It's sucky, but painfully so. It's not campy fun, it's not catchy--it's just best left in the dustbin. Yet, Mariah Carey decides to have a go at it:
The person that posted this on YouTube refers to the clip as "the American megastar's beautifully melancholic and understated cover of this classic song" which is even funnier than Mariah's melodramatic trudge through the tune.
This enthusiastic cover comes from REDaCHE (there's an umlaut over the lowercase A, but I don't know how to do that on Blogger--sorry), a Brazilian band with more hair than talent (although the lead singer doesn't suck):
I'm seriously distracted by the hairtossing guitarist and the stick-twirling drummer. Seriously, maybe you should learn the tricks AFTER you acquire musical skills, amigos.
Now a band called Tannerfozz, who seem to be playing in a high school gymnasium:
Notable: all the people in the folding chairs visible in the bottom of the screen walk out very early in the performance, save for the one guy in the right-hand corner of your screen. He must have lost a bet.
Best in this group is two Chilean kids, Boro and Pink Spider:
Just a dude and his cute little girlfriend, jamming in the living room. Simple and pretty, their no-bullshit performance and her rich, clear voice elevate a shitacular song from something you can actually listen to. Go figure.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Covering: EW's dumbass question
The headline on EW's music blog yesterday: Britney Spears' Womanizer: The new Creep? Seems a crapload of people from Lilly Allen to Franz Ferdinand are covering Brit's sh!t hit, just like scads of artists did with Radiohead's song.
There, however, the similarities between the two end. Abruptly.
Creep is a brilliantly crafted, heartbreaking, masterpiece of a song, Womanizer is audio junk food--delicious, yes, but as high quality as a Chicken McNugget. People are covering Womanizer ironically, like they would Macarthur Park or Hangin' Tough. While we're still remembering, playing, and enduring painful karaoke renditions of Creep more than a dozen years after its initial release, Womanizer will be forgotten as soon as the next piece of pop poop comes along.
There, however, the similarities between the two end. Abruptly.
Creep is a brilliantly crafted, heartbreaking, masterpiece of a song, Womanizer is audio junk food--delicious, yes, but as high quality as a Chicken McNugget. People are covering Womanizer ironically, like they would Macarthur Park or Hangin' Tough. While we're still remembering, playing, and enduring painful karaoke renditions of Creep more than a dozen years after its initial release, Womanizer will be forgotten as soon as the next piece of pop poop comes along.
Covering: Surfin' Bird
I'd like to apologize in advance for this post, because it's pretty much a given that after reading and listening to the links you'll have it stuck in your head for the rest of the day, minimum.
Among the hits of the 1960s, The Trashmen's Surfin' Bird has got to be among the weirdest. It reached #4 on Billboard's Hot 100, despite the fact that its lyrics are easy enough for a Republican monkey to learn. Covering it, it'd be hard to add to the weirdness--or so you'd think.
First off, Peter Griffin gives it the Family Guy treatment.
Nice--although my favorite FG musical bit is still the Patriots Shpoopie performance.
Now, Gus and Fin rockin' the ukes:
I'm more smitten with their awesome mic than anything.
And Pee Wee Herman:
Is that Sammy Hagar on guitar? Doubt it.
Finally, a spectacle from a Japanese band called Chad Cried:
I was more than a minute into this clip when I realized this clip wasn't mislabeled--they actually ARE singing Surfin Bird. In their own unique way. Ow.
Among the hits of the 1960s, The Trashmen's Surfin' Bird has got to be among the weirdest. It reached #4 on Billboard's Hot 100, despite the fact that its lyrics are easy enough for a Republican monkey to learn. Covering it, it'd be hard to add to the weirdness--or so you'd think.
First off, Peter Griffin gives it the Family Guy treatment.
Nice--although my favorite FG musical bit is still the Patriots Shpoopie performance.
Now, Gus and Fin rockin' the ukes:
I'm more smitten with their awesome mic than anything.
And Pee Wee Herman:
Is that Sammy Hagar on guitar? Doubt it.
Finally, a spectacle from a Japanese band called Chad Cried:
I was more than a minute into this clip when I realized this clip wasn't mislabeled--they actually ARE singing Surfin Bird. In their own unique way. Ow.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)