The March 2022 issue of Classic Rock
Magazine has its cover story on … covers.
“Covers” are when one musician plays a song by another musician. Oddly, although Garage, Inc.
(Metallica’s double covers album) is mentioned, there’s really no discussion of
cover albums per se. And as I can show
you below, there are now plenty of them to talk about.
Morning and Evening. When bands are starting out, they have to
rely on covers until they hone the skills necessary to write acceptable quality
material of their own, obviously drawing upon the inspiration of those
covers. The Beatles had gone to 100%
originals by the third album, A Hard Day’s Night, but even Please
Please Me (#1) and With The Beatles (#2) were less than 50%
covers. The Stones didn’t make it to
100% originals until Aftermath, their fourth album, and the first album
had only one original.
Likewise, when the bands get older
and run out of gas, rather than put out an album of substandard originals, it’s
much easier just to do an album of covers.
Of course, it’s intriguing to hear how they put their mark on other
bands’ music. What I noticed, though,
was most of these covers predate the band’s own material and – as Saxon
explicitly acknowledge with the album title – were their inspirations. What I rarely hear are any of these bands
playing covers of their own peers and competitors. Thus no Beatles covers on Blue &
Lonesome, no Black Sabbath (and just a snippet of “Dazed and Confused” in a
medley) on Turning to Crime, no Megadeth, Slayer or Anthrax on Garage,
Inc.
Here they are, listing the songs and
the original artists.
Deep Purple, Turning To Crime. The most recent of these. Half are fairly obscure 50s tunes, the rest
are more famous 60s tunes.
7 and 7 Is (Love); Rockin’ Pneumonia and the
Boogie Woogie Flu (Huey “Piano” Smith); Oh Well (Fleetwood Mac); Jenny Take A
Ride (Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels); Watching The River Flow (Bob
Dylan); Let The Good Times Roll (Louis Jordan & the Tympany Five); Dixie
Chicken (Little Feat); Shapes of Things (Yardbirds); The Battle of New Orleans
(Johnny Horton); Lucifer (Bob Seger); White Room (Cream); Caught in the Act
(medley including “Dazed and Confused” (Led Zeppelin), “Hot ‘Lanta” (Allman
Brothers))
Ace Frehley, Origins Vols 1
& 2. The original lead guitarist
for KISS. These were released separately
in 2016 and 2020. He claims he’ll do a
Vol. 3, but the story quoting him saying so isn’t dated.
Vol #1. White
Room (Cream); Street Fighting Man (Rolling Stones); Spanish Castle Magic (Jimi
Hendrix); Fire And Water (Free); Emerald (Thin Lizzy); Bring It On Home (Led
Zeppelin); Wild Thing (Troggs); Parasite (KISS – really a cover?); Magic Carpet
Ride (Steppenwolf); Cold Gin (KISS); Till The End of the Day (Kinks); Rock and
Roll Hell (KISS)
Vol #2. Good
Times Bad Times (Led Zeppelin); Never In My Life (Mountain); Space Truckin’
(Deep Purple); I’m Down (Beatles); Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Rolling Stones);
Politician (Cream); Lola (Kinks); 30 Days In The Hole (Humble Pie); Manic
Depression (Jimi Hendrix); Kicks (Paul Revere & the Raiders); We’ve Gotta
Get Out of This Place (Animals); She (KISS)
Fu Manchu, The
Covers. I
have this on vinyl, and have never seen it on CD. It doesn’t show up on Amazon or eBay in
either format, nor does their Wikipedia discography even mention it. Apparently it was a limited release of 700
copies by the band itself. As stoner
rock bands go, FM have shorter, snappier, high tempo songs, often about
skateboarding, so the punk influence is definitely front center, as the cover choices
make clear.
Who Are You (Void); Nothing Done (SSD); D.O.A.
(Van Halen, not Bloodrock); When The Shit Hits The Fan (The Circle Jerks);
Moving in Stereo (The Cars); Beach Blanket Bongout (JFA); Freedom of Choice (Devo);
Godzilla (Blue Oyster Cult); Things Start Moving (Adolescents); Ride To Live
(Live To Ride) (Twisted Sister); Six Pack (Black Flag); Words To Live By
(Penance); Jailbreak (Thin Lizzy); Chevy Van (Sammy Johns).
Yngwie Malmsteen, Inspiration. A few years back before the Saxon album. YM plays large headstock Stratocasters with scalloped
fretboards and took classical music into overdrive, blending it with obvious
influences of Ritchie Blackmore, Uli Roth, and Jimi Hendrix, which makes their
inclusion on this covers album a no-brainer.
Although he’s obviously talented and practiced those oddball scales rigorously,
somehow he doesn’t seem to pull off more bluesier solos that well. My recollection is that I got the UK album
after hearing this one, the only track on the album I wasn’t already familiar with.
That’s a prog super group with Allan Holdsworth (guitar), John Wetton (bass
& vocals), Bill Bruford (drums), and Eddie Jobson (keyboards).
Carry On Wayward Son
(Kansas); Pictures of Home (Deep Purple); Gates of Babylon (Rainbow); Manic
Depression (Jimi Hendrix); In the Dead of Night (UK); Mistreated (Deep Purple);
The Sails of Charon (Scorpions); Demon’s Eye (Deep Purple); Anthem (Rush); Child
in Time (Deep Purple); Spanish Castle Magic (Jimi Hendrix)
Metallica, Garage, Inc. Before this, they had “broken in” Jason
Newsted with the $5.98 EP, Garage Days Re-Revisited (1987), before his
bass was ignored on …And Justice For All. Fast forward to 1998, when the band released Garage,
Inc., which included the EP on disc 2 along with other previously released
covers – including “Am I Evil” (Diamond Head) and “Blitzkrieg” (Blitzkrieg)
which had been the b-sides of “Creeping Death” and tacked on to the Elektra
version of their first album, Kill ‘Em All. Then they went into the studio and recorded a
whole CD worth of new covers, for a two disc set. I like that they pick more obscure tunes
instead of big hits.
Disc 1 (Freshly recorded):
Free Speech For the Deaf (Discharge); It’s Electric (Diamond Head);
Sabbra Cadabra (Black Sabbath); Turn The Page (Bob Seger); Die, Die My Darling
(Misfits); Loverman (Nick Cave); Mercyful Fate (Mercyful Fate); Astronomy (Blue
Oyster Cult); Whiskey In the Jar (traditional, played by Thin Lizzy); Tuesday’s
Gone (Lynyrd Skynyrd); The More I See (Discharge)
Disc 2 (previously released): Helpless (Diamond Head); The Small Hours
(Holocaust); The Wait (Killing Joke); Crash Course in Brain Surgery (Budgie);
Last Caress/Green Hell (Misfits); Am I Evil? (Diamond Head); Blitzkrieg
(Blitzkrieg); Breadfan (Budgie); The Prince (Diamond Head); Stone Cold Crazy
(Queen); So What (Anti-Nowhere League); Killing Time (Sweet Savage); Overkill
(Motorhead); Damage Case (Motorhead); Stone Dead Forever (Motorhead); Too Late
Too Late (Motorhead)
Monster Magnet, A
Better Dystopia. New Jersey's premiere stoner rock band. Dave Wyndorf gave
us this collection of mostly obscure tunes.
I would have preferred an entire album of Hawkwind covers – or least add
in their earlier covers of “Brainstorm” and “The Right Stuff” – but at least he
gives us the distinction of the only Hawkwind cover on any of these albums.
The Diamond Mine (spoken word intro); Born To
Go (Hawkwind); Epitaph For A Head (Blackfoot); Solid Gold Hell (Scientists); Be
Forwarned (Pentagram); Mr. Destroyer (Poobah); When The Wolf Sits (Jerusalem);
Death (Pretty Things); Situation (Josefus); It’s Trash (Cavemen); Motorcycle
(Straight To Hell) (Table Scraps); Learning To Die (Dust); Welcome To The Void
(Morgen)
Motorhead, Under Cover. Given that the man himself, Lemmy, already did “Motorhead”, “Lost
Johnny” and “The Watcher” on both On Parole and Motorhead, I
suppose Hawkwind songs weren’t going to show up here, though “Silver Machine”
would have been cool.
Breaking The Law (Judas Priest); God Save The
Queen (Sex Pistols); Heroes (Bowie & Fripp); Starstruck (Rainbow); Cat
Scratch Fever (Ted Nugent); Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Rolling Stones); Sympathy For
The Devil (Rolling Stones); Hellraiser (Ozzy Osbourne); Rockaway Beach
(Ramones); Shoot ‘Em Down (Twisted Sister); Whiplash (Metallica)
Ozzy Osbourne, Under
Cover. Yes, the same title as
Lemmy’s. Instead of Zakk Wylde, his
guitarist on this is Jerry Cantrell of Alice In Chains. Mike Bordin of Faith No More (who also played
drums with Ozzy’s solo band, and Black Sabbath on the 1997 Ozzfest tour) is
here on drums. Ozzy gives us lots of
hits from left field: a Beatles song, two John Lennon songs, King Crimson, and
the hit the Moody Blues had before Justin Hayward and John Lodge joined and
they became a prog band with Days of Future Passed, “Go Now”.
Rocky Mountain Way (Joe Walsh); In My Life
(Beatles); Mississippi Queen (Mountain); Go Now (The Moody Blues); Woman (John
Lennon); 21st Century Schizoid Man (King Crimson); All The Young
Dudes (Mott the Hoople); For What It’s Worth (Buffalo Springfield); Good Times
(The Animals); Sunshine of Your Love (Cream); Fire (Arthur Brown); Working
Class Hero (John Lennon); Sympathy For The Devil (Rolling Stones); Changes
(Black Sabbath – yes, like Ace, covering a song he was originally on)
The Rolling Stones, Blue
& Lonesome. Eleven years after
their last album of original material, A Bigger Bang (9/5/05), the Stones come
back with an album of exclusively blues covers.
Just Your Fool (Little Walter); Commit A Crime
(Howlin’ Wolf); Blue and Lonesome (Little Walter); All of Your Love (Magic
Sam); I Gotta Go (Little Walter); Everybody Knows About My Good Thing (Miles
Grayson & Lermon Horton); Ride ‘Em On Down (Eddie Taylor); Hate To See You
Go (Little Walter); Hoo Doo Blues (Otis Hicks & Jerry West); Little Rain
(Ewart G. Abner Jr & Jimmy Reed); Just Like It Treat You (Willie Dixon); I
Can’t Quit You Baby (Willie Dixon)
Rush, Feedback. Back in 2007, fairly short – just an EP. They did a tour for this album, which we saw,
and for which some of the concert t-shirts were tie-dyes, with the 2112 Naked
Man (who may or may not be the same naked guy from the Hemispheres cover) is now
afraid of a peace symbol instead of a red star.
Summertime Blues (Eddie Cochran, but homage to
The Who version, not the Blue Cheer version); Heart Full of Soul (Yardbirds);
For What It’s Worth (Buffalo Springfield); The Seeker (The Who); Mr Soul
(Buffalo Springfield); Seven and Seven Is (Love); Shapes of Things (Yardbirds);
Crossroads (Robert Johnson/Cream).
Saxon, Inspirations. Along with Iron Maiden and Def Leppard, among the trio of most successful New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) bands to emerge from the early 1980s and not merely survive but prosper, even if they aren't quite as famous or successful as the other two. Biff & his comrades came out with this
relatively recently.
Paint It Black (Rolling Stones); Immigrant
Song (Led Zeppelin); Paperback Writer (Beatles); Evil Woman (Crow); Stone Free
(Jimi Hendrix); Bomber (Motorhead); Speed King (Deep Purple); The Rocker (Thin
Lizzy); Hold The Line (Toto); Problem Child (AC/DC); See My Friends (Kinks)
Tesla, Real to Reel (Discs
1 & 2). Often lumped together with Motley Crue and Skid Row as a "hair metal" band, Tesla were less about image than about the music itself, with a sincerity that was sometimes borderline naive. Disc 1 was sold outright in
CD packaging allowing for two. The
second disc was given at the shows for that tour, which I saw at the Ram’s Head
Live in Baltimore. Frank Hannon himself
was at the merch booth and give me the disc – and signed the insert.
Reel 1. Space
Truckin’ (Deep Purple); Walk Away (James Gang); Hand Me Down World (Guess Who);
Bad Reputation (Thin Lizzy); Thank You (Led Zeppelin); I’ve Got A Feeling
(Beatles); Day of the Eagle (Robin Trower); Ball of Confusion (Temptations);
Rock Bottom (UFO); Stealin’ (Uriah Heep); Bell Bottom Blues (Derek & the
Dominos); Honky Tonk Woman (Rolling Stones); Dear Mr. Fantasy (Traffic)
Reel 2. All The
Young Dudes (Mott the Hoople); Make It Last (Montrose); Shooting Star (Bad
Company); Not Fragile (BTO); Street Fighting Man (Rolling Stones); It’s My Body
(Alice Cooper); I Want To Take You Higher (Sly and the Family Stone); Do You
Feel Like We Do (Peter Frampton); Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers (ZZTop);
Seasons of Wither (Aerosmith); Saturday Night Special (Lynyrd Skynrd); War Pigs
(Black Sabbath)
UFO, The Salentino Cuts. They started off with Mick Bolton on guitar for two space jam-type albums, then found Michael Schenker for five major seventies albums and a later trio of reunion albums; Vinnie Moore has been the guitarist for the last several albums. The only constant member has been vocalist Phil Mogg, and they give us a rare gem: a
LATER song, “River of Deceit” from Mad Season.
Heartful of Soul (Yardbirds); Break on Through
(The Doors); River of Deceit (Mad Season); The Pusher (Steppenwolf); Paper In
Fire (John Mellencamp); Rock Candy (Montrose); Mississippi Queen (Mountain);
Ain’t No Sunshine (Bill Withers); Honey-Bee (Tom Petty); Too Rolling Stoned
(Robin Trower); Just Got Paid (ZZTop); It’s My Life (Animals).
As these are all experienced professionals, I didn’t hear
any songs butchered, though I didn’t hear any where I felt they had improved on
the originals. In about 20% of the cases
I was unfamiliar with the source material to make any kind of comparison
anyway. As a Monster Magnet fan, though,
I was dissatisfied with Wyndorf’s choices; it seems he deliberately picked
extremely obscure tracks to continue cultivating his “aren’t I cool? I wear sunglasses at night” persona.
Tribute Albums. I suppose the opposite of a covers album,
where one band covers all sorts of different bands’ songs, is a tribute album,
in which all different bands cover one band’s songs. The most recent was Blacklist, where
Metallica’s 1991 self-titled, so-called Black Album, gets cover treatment
by a host of bands outside their own genre.
The sad apart about it is that almost all of them make the original versions
sound that much better. It’s almost as
if the band was thinking, “well, everyone seems to think we sold out on this
album, but here are versions of our songs which are far more commercial than
our own. See how you like those.”
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