Who's singing in Queen?
Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
The Queen mentions on the previous page were from the 1985 Live Aid ... I don't think they performned at Live 8 yesterday.
Ahh. That's what I get for skimming.
The guy I was watching it with remembered watching Live Aid with friends in New York City, and being amazed at how much the audience loved Queen; they all thought Queen was washed up.
Queen were washed up - Live Aid resurrected them in a massive way.
Moo.
I'm listening to Nouvelle Vague - bossa nova covers of 80s post punk (and punk) classics.
As curious cover projects go, I'd rate this about a 7 out of 10, the scale being:
10 - Revelatory (Mark Kozelek covering AC/DC)
8 - Fascinating (Seu Jorge covering Bowie in Portugese)
7 - Excellent, but probably not essential. (Nouvelle Vague - Too Drunk To Fuck as Bossa Nova? Actually it improves the song. Lots of Gotha Nova: "Love Will Tear Us Apart," "A Forest," "Marian")
6 - Technically impressive and honest (Petra Haden sings The Who Sell Out)
5 - Goofy (Xavier Cugat styled latin conga versions of Kraftwerk)
4 - One Note Joke (Moog lounge versions of Grunge hits)
Where does the new Paul Anka album fit in there?
Where does the new Paul Anka album fit in there?
Haven't heard it yet. Is it more towards Pat Boone's heavy metal record (cheesy but some good big band arrangements) or Steve & Eydie's cover of "Black Hole Sun" (sublime)?
I haven't heard the whole thing yet, just samples from the website. It seems like it goes in between those extremes, although, oddly, there is also a version of Blackhole Sun.
although, oddly, there is also a version of Blackhole Sun.
I bet Eydie pulled him aside and told him it had a lucious melody.