The 50 best covers?

We pick the best covers of songs that shine a new light on the originals, from Jimi Hendrix to the Happy Mondays

16987j /  Jimi Hendrix at the Marquee Club

orig. Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, 1975

It was camp enough to begin with, but Jimi Somerville and Sarah Jane Morris’s triumphant falsetto-basso profundo duet on this cover of the 1975 disco classic takes the phrase “row of tents” and flings it in the air like a glittery handbag on an underlit dancefloor. One suspects that the singers swapped voices for a laugh.

Key moment: The final, monumental “Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah BABY!” just before the last chorus.

Going Back to My Roots – Richie Havens, 1980

orig. Lamont Dozier, 1977

Woodstock star Havens caused barely a ripple in 1980 with his impassioned rendition of a song first recorded by Lamont Dozier. But eight years on, it was rediscovered, becoming an arms-in-the air anthem to a million British ravers. As the battered Havens larynx pours out Dozier’s vision of the things that really count in life, the goosebumps take over.

Key moment: a truly storming piano intro.

The 13 best music biopics

Step On – Happy Mondays, 1991

orig. John Kongos, 1971

The Manchester baggy anthem, driven by a trademark acid house piano riff, is a hugely inventive remake of He’s Gonna Step on You Again by long-forgotten South African singer-songwriter Kongos. Shaun Ryder added his own inimitable lyrical touch, contributing a new saying to the British pop lexicon with his opening declaration: “You’re twisting my melons, man!”

Key Moment: When it all breaks down to reverb-drenched female backing vocals singing the spookily threatening chorus line.

Read the full article and list here.  What do you think?

 

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1 Comment

  1. This is a very engaging web site. It reminds me that although i may be 70 years old i kept all of the vinyl that i have been collecting for 55 years, i have loked after the sleeves never touched the playing surface and now that i have expensive hi fi they all still sound great. Friends laughed at me when they were buying cd’s and i was still searching for vinyl. not now

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