:: thatsound :: music bits delivered … with a twist

9Mar/103

10 Genre Defying Cover Songs

Covers have been a part of the music industry ever since the 1950's. More than just replays of one's songs, some covers take very different approaches towards the same lyrics and / or themes; be it the instruments that play the tune, the emphasis on parts of the lyrics ... Some covers even use different parts of the song as chorus, branding the song itself as a completely different thing. Here are some of them.

Cyndi Lauper / Russian Red - Girls Just Wanna Have Fun

Original song here.

The deeply emotional tune whispered by Lourdes Hernández sets a completely different mood around the original song, almost as if a plea, instead of a party shout.



ABBA / Steven Wilson - The Day Before You Came

Original song here.

Steven Wilson's version of this song was actually the reason why this article came to life. A most incredible lyric through the mind of a musical genius: it's hard to revamp a song so hard and still get it spot-on right like he did here.



Michael Jackson / Chris Cornell - Billie Jean

Original song here.

The widely popular MJ hit is struck with power in this overwhelming version from his never-released-but-broadly-downloaded Unplugged in Sweden 2006 bootleg.



50 Cent / Milow - Ayo Technology

Original song here.

Both very popular in the mainstream industry, but nevertheless it's quite interesting how the same song / lyrics can be made in two completely different themes.



Queen / Dream Theater - Tenement Funster / Flick of the Wrist / Lily of the Valley

Original song here.

A masterpiece medley, reinvented by Dream Theater with a progressive touch added. Both are mind-blowing.



Elton John / David Fonseca - Rocket Man

Original song here.

Portuguese showman David Fonseca switched the ballad to a full-blown energetic song about life abroad. Also, the video is very beautiful.



Radiohead / Stream Of Passion - Street Spirit

Original song here.

Another example of musical genre morphing - the classic eerie ballad turns into a symphonic metal anthem!



Gnarls Barkley / Nelly Furtado feat. Timbaland - Crazy

Original song here.

The song responsible for sky-rocketing Gnarls' career in a beautiful live acoustic version by Nelly and Timbaland.



Leonard Cohen / Jeff Buckley - Hallellujah

Original song here.

Jeff Buckley's rendition of this classic became so well-known that many people never realized it was a cover song!



Failure / A Perfect Circle - The Nurse Who Loved Me

Original song here.

A very emotional song, supposedly about Failure's lead singer drug addiction issues. It also suffers of the cover-knowledge syndrome: not many fans of the cover song know that it actually is a cover song. Despite that, it's an amazingly fresh cover.

11Feb/101

Labeling Music Is Wrong

It's not easy to avoid putting music in separate shelves. It's human nature - we all have different sensibility patterns and proneness to emotion clicks, and one may place medieval music in the enjoyable shelve and absolutely hate the likes of Dimmu Borgir, while the next person may find traditional chinese music boring and like math rock.

Labeling music into separate genres hinders your knowledge and eventually shrinks the part of your brain responsible for your likable playlist - to a point where you automatically set this or that band as bad in your mind, without even having actually listened to any of their repertoire. Inside you, progressive metal is too technical, the songs are too long and have endless solos, so if a new Dream Theater album comes out, you automatically tag it as I won't like this.

It's just wrong. And here's proof.

Most of you remember Hanson, that nineties teen pop band, famous for their hit single MMMBop. Don't pretend you don't, I bet you're singing it while reading right now. Teen idols are a very misunderstood kind amongst music lovers - pretty faces and hysterical female audiences don't usually meet the eclectic musician ear (well, there's always The Beatles, but let's put it aside for now). But things aren't always as lame as they may seem. Eclectic folks, here's a Radiohead cover by 1997 pre-adulthood stars, Hanson.