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Saw a YouTube cover of that by Blackie and the Rodeo Kings that was great. Not sure where the covers thread was... this belongs.Bruce Cockburn, “If I had a Rocket Launcher”.
Saw a YouTube cover of that by Blackie and the Rodeo Kings that was great. Not sure where the covers thread was... this belongs.Bruce Cockburn, “If I had a Rocket Launcher”.
We just hosted a niece and her family, including their two- and a four-year-olds, for a couple of days. What a hoot! It gives me faith in the future. This afternoon this song was going through my head. My father, a huge Billie Holliday fan, loved this version from the time he heard it.
Somebody had to say it
There is room for all of it. Beauty is in the eye, or in this case, ear of the beholder. As Tony Williams sang , and before him Bill Kenny sang,"To Each His Own".I'll still take Billie's.
I'll still take Billie's.
I really liked the first B,S, and T released in 1968. Al Kooper led a very eclectic ensemble on Child Is Father to The Man, but he left and Katz and Colomby held the gang together, picked up David Clayton Thomas to do lead vocals, and went on to record some wonderful stuff. I was a freshman in college in 1969 when B, S, and T was released, and "And When I Die" was one of the brightest of many hits they produced. I especially appreciated Eric Satie's Variations on a Theme. You Made Me So Very Happy certainly did just that for many fans. So Billie is impeccable, but B,S and T paid homage very well. as for Summertime, Billie Ella, Louie, Janis were all great, but I love Billy Preston's unique take on that wonderful Gershwin tune. As for you being 8 years old when B,S and T was released, earth years and Lectron years must not align!I heard BST's first, so have a slight preference for it. (I think the album came out when I was about 8, and when my older sister went to college, I bought my own copy and have owned it ever since.) I do think it's cool that my father, having listened to Lady Day's version for 30 years, still liked BST's (not as much, but he still liked it). He also loved Janis Joplin's version of Summertime. Both of those modern renditions are either really creative or take many liberties with the songs, depending on your point of view.

Well if we're gonna do Sound of Silence, better do this version.I think most of Simon & Garfunkel's songs fit here. Several already, here's another.