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Posted By: Versatile Dog The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/22/22 11:49 PM
This topic was started by Clem back 2018. I PMed him last night about it because I wanted to revive it w/a cover that absolutely blew me away. He gave me the correct title name and some search advice. I did find the thread, but it said something like 404, File Not Found. I probably am doing something wrong. I apologize for that. Anyway, I just wanted to clear up that this is a continuation of Clem's thread and not my own idea. He deserves the credit for the thread topic.

The song I am about to share is one of my favorites of all-time. It's been recorded many times and recorded by some of the very best like Ella and Louie. It reminds me somewhat of To Kill a Mockingbird in how it captures the essence of a time period and southern culture. It's hypnotizing and riveting. This rendition is by a relatively unknown artist. It popped up on one of my Pandora stations one day and I was freaking amazed. Her voice isn't the greatest, but it's amazingly unique. The band is really good in making this a sultry, deep, reflective piece. Love the tempo. Please give it a listen. If you like it, look for a live version. There is one w/a piano player who is quite dramatic and it's a cool listen. Here is the recording from the album, though.

Posted By: archbolddawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 12:00 AM
Well, everyone has their own taste in music. I listened. Not for me.
Posted By: GratefulDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 02:03 AM
DMB kick lately...





Posted By: OldColdDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 02:21 AM
Some of the best current cover artists

Home Free





Postmodern Jukebox





Pentatonix





Also listed in order of my favorites from each group, with exception to the second PMJ song, that was to show versatility.
Posted By: GratefulDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 02:34 AM
Not Cover , just miss him.



Otis Redding tune.
Posted By: PortlandDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 03:02 AM


She’s 12.
Posted By: YTownBrownsFan Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 03:03 AM
2 of my favorite covers .... which I am sure have been mentioned at one time or another .....




Posted By: GratefulDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 04:02 AM
Posted By: GratefulDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 04:04 AM
Originally Posted by PortlandDawg


She’s 12.

Whoa...
Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 10:42 AM
The phrasing reminds me of Billie Holiday.

interesting
Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 10:48 AM
That is crazy. I heard this girl about a month ago. She blew me away.

I saw her in a video she was so young. I listened to a bunch of her. Told my daughter.

She has a great feel for songs. She is a real talent.
Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 10:53 AM
Joe had a way to make a song his. Really good band



Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 11:08 AM
Over time I came to appreciate Joe. He was a really nice man. He was a friend to my family.

When he passed his brother-in-law sent me some of his stash. His wife sent my grandkids "thomas the train" toys for Christmas.

This video is a tribute to his life.

Posted By: AZBrown Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 03:49 PM
One of the last songs David Bowie wrote (very good tune) -
This band does a solid cover of "No Plan":

Posted By: jfanent Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 03:58 PM
To lighten things up a bit, nice to see kids like this playing their hearts out and having fun. The cowbell guy is really into it.

Posted By: Frenchy Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 04:51 PM
[video:youtube]
[/video]

One of the best covers out there imo. They play it at all there concerts too.
Posted By: PitDAWG Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 05:06 PM
For us old MTB fans......





Tom Petty

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 05:13 PM
My sons wife Jade.

Posted By: PitDAWG Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 05:20 PM
She is a very talented lady!
Posted By: Dave Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 05:59 PM
Sorry if I already posted this on the earlier thread. Its from the final scene of Bosch Season 6, titled "Some Measure of Justice".

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 06:32 PM
Jade does a lot of classic covers with this band Stringspace.

"At Last", "My Funny Valentine", "Misty", "Dock of the Bay", "Georgia on My Mind",

I love those songs.

Her mother is a singer as well. She sang behind Van Morrison and Sting.
Her father is an amazing keyboard player. He played with Buddy Rich. Jade has been playing since she was five.

She can sing any style. Her own albums are her original music. She has written some beautiful songs.

Great gal wonderful person.
Posted By: PitDAWG Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 06:47 PM
Thanks for a bit of the back story.
Posted By: Versatile Dog Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/23/22 09:06 PM
Jade is a talented and beautiful woman. Glad to see her branching out.
Posted By: Clemdawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/24/22 01:31 AM
j/c

Covers. I know I posted these on the original thread, but they bear a second hearing.


Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush did the original. John Legend and Pink did this cover (with the incomparable Herbie Hancock on keys/arr) After listening to John & Pink the first time, go back and isolate Herb's playing. So subtle, lush and tasteful. Timing, touch... just exquisite. And like Miles Davis always said: "A great player knows when to not say something-"



...and this Dude is just on another plane. His arrangement. Done in his bedroom. As a teenager.

His knowledge of chords and voicings is on the level of sophistication of a Gil Evans, or a Duke Ellington. His sense of pitch is impeccable, his technique is stunning, and Be under no illusions, folks- this is some top-level arranging and performing. He continually leaves me shaking my head



(It's obvious that he listened to a loooooooooooooot of Take 6 LOL!)


....and then, there's this piece of awesome. (put on a seat belt, and tie a string around your head- it will keep your jaw from hitting the desk).

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/24/22 11:06 AM
Must be Herbie. I think of all he has done and who he has played with.

Great performance by all on a beautiful song. Moving really.
Posted By: GratefulDawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/24/22 03:15 PM




These guys have come out to Chautauqua Institution many times, Always put on a good show.

Posted By: 3rd_and_20 Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/24/22 06:36 PM
Posted By: archbolddawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/24/22 08:43 PM
GNT. Go watch ANY of their covers.
Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/25/22 11:46 AM
Same song completley different interpretation.

Posted By: mgh888 Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/27/22 06:58 PM
Stumbled across this thread earlier today ... so enjoyable. Still running through these but sharing a couple of covers that I love:

I missed the chance to see the 2 Cellos act a couple years ago much to my chagrin ... and the Fleetwood Mac cover of an old Blue song has been one of my favorites 'forever' !



Posted By: PitDAWG Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/27/22 07:01 PM
For us old timers....



Chickenfoot Highway Star

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/27/22 08:19 PM
don't want to crowd this thread.

But I love this song and it is one of my favorites that Joe does.

Posted By: Clemdawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/28/22 06:05 AM
Improvisation: the art of taking an idea, exploring it to the nth degree by varying it, while never losing the original thread.
Improvisation: the art of free-associating within a strict structure.

The best tell a story/take you on a journey. Without ever losing that thread back to Home. All the best live solos meet this standard. Doesn't matter what the instrument is. The best take you on an Homeric epic, while leaving you firmly lashed to the mast on storm-tossed seas. Hang on and enjoy the ride, son-

Jazz lovers are people who listen deep. They hear the interplay; they understand the role each performer plays in creating the whole. And when they congregate to share The Live Experience, they get to put their hard-earned listening chops to the test. The luckiest ones are those who get to experience a master working his craft off.

(Wait for it- I'm enjoying the making of this post...)

This man not only improvised throughout the tune, he also employed improv in his set-up on the mic. The seamless transition to Paul Desmond's Jazz classic 'Take Five' was rehearsed, but the mic bit is different every time. I know this, because his performance was totally different than the setup we heard at rehearsal, just hours before- and both setups were totally different than what you're about to hear. *FULL DISCLOSURE: when he did this tune in our house, it was with his touring combo only. We played almost no role in this tune, and that was just fine by me. They did 2 other tunes without us on that date, and both were treats, as well. I sat 10-20 ft. away from these folks, and watched them work a craft that only a few ever get to see up close.

Some days at work actually don't suck, you know? wink

Some day, I might tell of when I got to spend 30 minutes alone with this incredible artist- talking music, talking life, talking fam, talking church, talking s#... (it might be the only positive thing that ever came from my nicotine addiction-). My deepest fear is that something like Alzheimer's/dementia might eventually steal this memory (among so many other) from me.

But I digress.

_______________


If you're gonna do a cover of an over-covered cover, and you do it live- every night... you'd best bring game every time. He did. In this rendition, he built that solo from a germ, and took y'azz 'round the world! And all the time, you never lost the beat: "1,2,3,4,5...) When they came to the 419, Take Five was their very last tune. He did the very same thing right in front of us. We 'stage prop role-playaz' got to enjoy the jam, and only came in at the end, for 'Da Big Boffo Finish.' Two curtain calls. Two encores. Crowd lost their collective mind that night. Al owned us all, that night. If I'm gonna be on the clock, I can find worse ways to make a paycheck, yo.

Al Jarreau, doing Paul Desmond's tune, made famous by Dave Brubeck- "Take Five."

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/28/22 12:53 PM
Had to put on my Bose headsets on for that tune.

Clem, you touched on some of my PM questions about "Jamming" and the creative process. thx

Desmond had that great tone like Stan Getz, and Lester Young.

Cool version of "Take Five."
Posted By: AZBrown Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 04/28/22 06:44 PM
Brubeck's "Jazz at Oberlin" was the one of the first albums I remember my Dad playing in his den when I was a little kid in the early '70s. He always used to remind me he'd been in attendance at the Chapel for its recording some twenty years before.

In the '90's, I saw the California Guitar Trio open up for King Crimson in Phoenix. Talented guys. This is their cover of Brubeck's Blue Rondo a la Turk:

https://
Posted By: Versatile Dog Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/22/22 02:33 AM
Johnny Cash is not everyone's cup of tea, but watch this...........It is very powerful.

Posted By: Clemdawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/22/22 02:40 AM
Our string quartet does a cover of BR ala T. Such a great tune. It's not easy to roll a jam in 7/8 time, and keep it bumpin.' And dropping that swing 4/4 breaks and jam section in the middle without losing pace is a real challenge. Nice rendition by Your Boys.

So... there is a chord sequence (changes) and construction form that's ubiquitous in Jazz standards. It's called "Rhythm Changes." HUNDREDS of tunes have been written on it. It's the structure that was used to write "I Got Rhythm," by George Gershwin (hence, the name: 'rhythm changes'). The structure is simple: First phrase is 8 bars of melody and chords. Second phrase is another 8 bars, directly repeated. A contrasting section of new chords and melody makes up the third phrase, followed by a reiteration of the opening 8 bars. The form is charted as : AABA. 32 bars- nice and neat. Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and countless other Bop phenoms wore this form out when writing their tunes.

One of the most widely-heard and easily recognizable version of rhythm changes is the Flintstones theme. Straight-up rhythm changes. Listen to this UK phenom Jacob Collier do his own version. I've been in The Game for decades, and I've rarely heard anything as impressive. He not only nails the spirit of the tune, but he also arranged the hell outta this tune... key modulations, form extensions, an extended keyboard solo, and pitch-perfect sung harmonies. Hint: before listening to this, you should probably wrap a belt around your head to keep your jaw from hitting the floor.


Oh... and he also did it all in his bedroom while he waiting to graduate High School. Too ill for words.

Posted By: YTownBrownsFan Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/22/22 02:52 AM
Originally Posted by Versatile Dog
Johnny Cash is not everyone's cup of tea, but watch this...........It is very powerful.


I am definitely not a country fan ..... but Cash just killed it on that cover. When I first heard that he was going to release a cover of "Hurt", I laughed. However, after hearing it, the cover is one of the best I have ever heard. The raw emotion is just amazing.
Posted By: Clemdawg Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/22/22 05:38 AM
Thanks for posting this, YTown.

I posted Mr. Cash's cover, along with Mr. Reznor's original in 'The Art of the Cover 1.0.'
IIRC, I talked about how Trent's guitar chords were more sophisticated and tortured than Johnny's... and how Johnny's voice was more tortured than Trent's.


Trent needed those grinding chords to add weight to the delivery. Otherwise, he'd have sounded like any anonymous emo suburban teen strumming chords and (not seriously) contemplating suicide.
Johnny just needed to play the basic notes, and let His Life tell the story in that voice we hear.


The Man In Black took ownership of that song.


backstory here
Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/22/22 07:19 PM
It took some time for me to appreciate Johnny.

This is another cover by him. And for some reason every time I watch it I get emotioanl.

Posted By: AZBrown Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/26/22 06:09 PM
j/c:

Originally a Paul Westerberg song, Glen Campbell did a great cover on his final album. "Ghost on the Canvas":

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 05/27/22 11:49 AM
This song was written by Boudleaux Bryant and originally recorded by the Everly Brothers.

However, when it was recorded by Gram Parsons and Emmy Lou Harris it became a true classic.

Harmony defines this song.

Posted By: bonefish Re: The Art of the Cover: Part 2 - 06/25/22 09:47 PM
The link provided is the studio filming recording of the album Organic by Joe Cocker.

The muscians are some of the finest players in music. Each record is done in Joe's style and arrangements. They are covers.

However, they are done so uniquely. I found this film to be very entertaining and the music of the very highest quality.

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