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On covers pt. 2 -or- Wax Trax pt. 7 -or- something

October 25th, 2009

hawks and doves coverIn today’s installment of our feature on vinyl-only releases, we touch once again on a cover song.

Hawks and Doves is the latest project from Gared O’Donnell, a guy who spent a lot of years as the creative force behind Planes Mistake For Stars. That band serves as a master class in all things heavy, running the gamut from soaring post-hardcore to guttural-vocal’d hardcore to near-metal riffing. The decade the band was in existence saw the release of five more-or-less full-length albums and as many singles and EPs. The highlights were many; I personally have purchased three copies of the flawless Knife In The Marathon EP, two of the Fuck With Fire LP, and at least one of all the rest, including the extremely hard to find CD version of the Fucking Fight EP. So yeah, they’re a great band.

But they broke up a few years ago after the varied and heart-stoppingly good Mercy. Sad, but Gared isn’t the kind to sit still. He’s actually been working on his new project for several years, his backing band constantly changing based apparently on whoever is in the room at the time. Essentially a solo project, it consists mostly of him and an acoustic guitar playing what No Idea calls, “blue-eyed soul played through a belt sander.” Trust me, its not as generic or bland as that makes it sound.

The vinyl release in question is the single for the song “Hush Money.” The title-track on the a-side is something of a transitional piece for fans of his previous work, opening with start/stop dynamics and some electric guitar vaguely reminiscent of PMFS’ harder rock. But the tone is far more muted and clean than anything found on those records, the rock guitar serving only to beef up the acoustic leads. The song ebbs and flows in O’Donnell’s characteristic style, building through the song’s final third only to come to an abrupt stop. The vocal is surprisingly clean, with only a few traces of his long-standing harshness bubbling to the surface. During the coda, when O’Donnell pleads “What would you have me do?” his voice melds with the other elements to form a hypnotic tapestry. Its a great introduction.

But the b-side just might make you forget all about what you’ve just heard.

Originally written by Bruce Springsteen for the grossly popular 1984 album Born In The USA, “I’m On Fire” was one of 10 singles released to promote the album. As I’ve previously stated, I fucking hate Springsteen’s cheesy 80’s because of some of the dated instrumentation and production techniques that were in vogue at the time. But that doesn’t mean he wasn’t still writing decent songs.

“I’m On Fire” succeeds in O’Donnell’s hands partly because he stays true to the original. He does exactly what I would have done by keeping the building blocks of the song in place and stripping away the waste, namely the unnecessary synths. He embraces simplicity, letting his acoustic guitar and some choice reverb create an incredibly appropriate atmosphere; that tone and his delivery of the titular lyric sound more like a lonely man in an empty room languishing in his desire than one pleading with a lover to ease his troubles. Some subtle shifts to the song’s structure also help flesh out the arrangement, pushing the climax further towards the end and extending the outro to add some tension.

The mix pushes O’Donnell’s vocal to the forefront despite its feigned fragility, much like the Springsteen original did. But its here that you witness the full range of his vocal capabilities, the raspy hush he delivers most of the song betrayed by his subtle inflections and the ascending notes of the coda. When his voice nearly breaks during the ghostly falsetto that signals the beginning of the song’s outro, the song truly becomes his own. Its a hypnotic and affecting performance.

Of course, because it hews quite closely to the original in many ways there are those that might fail to see some of those subtle differences. But I’ve always maintained that a well-written songs doesn’t necessarily translate into a good cover. As evidence I include as well the absolute horror-show of a cover done by Johnny Cash for the Nebraska tribute that came out in 2000. I know its anathema to speak ill of Johnny Cash in the 00’s but nobody bats a thousand, not even the man in black. Gatsby’s American Dream (a band I love) proved that a well-written song doesn’t translate into an engaging cover when they butchered one of the greatest songs of all time. Just hear how horrible that went.

Way off topic. The point, I suppose, is that this 7″ is remarkable and Gared O’Donnell is an incredibly capable manipulator and creator of (semi-) popular song. I eagerly anticipate a full-length release from Hawks and Doves and its already been too long coming.

 
icon for podpress  Hawks and Doves - I'm On Fire: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Bruce Springsteen - I'm On Fire [2:42m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Johnny Cash - I'm On Fire [3:02m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Gatsby's American Dream - Don't Think Twice, I'm Alright: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Planes Mistaken For Stars - Little Death [3:22m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Check out the No Idea Records website and buy the hell out of this record. Do it for love.

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I’ll only let you down.

June 14th, 2008

I’ll admit to ignorance on this one: I didn’t know Bob Dylan wrote, “It Ain’t Me, Babe.”

I probably should have. All the signs are there. It’s virtually the fraternal twin of my all-time favourite song of all-time, “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright.” Three verse/chorus structure, the detached, snarky tone, self-loathing, directional lyric…it’s practically the same song. Hell, even the use of the word “babe” betrays the knowledge, as it’s frankly quite rare to hear anyone else use that word seriously in melodramatic popular song (at least until Sonny and Cher co-opted it).

Perhaps that’s what makes the song so good, the fact that it sounds so natural in the hands of Johnny Cash and June Carter. When Dylan wants to write accessible he puts a piece of clay in other artist’s hands that is packed with dynamite. Cash/Carter, the Turtles, Joan Baez, Nancy Sinatra, New Found Glory, and even more less well-known pop/rock acts have done it. It’s a versatile bed. Interchangeable, perhaps.

Intriguing.

 
icon for podpress  Bob Dylan - It Ain't Me, Babe [3:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Johnny Cash & June Carter Cash - It Ain't Me, Babe: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Johnny Cash/Bob Dylan - Girl From North Country [3:42m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

DylanTunes: They’ve got lots of Dylan. I have it on good authority that you’ll never find a better deal on anything anywhere than you will here: the entire recorded works of Bob Dylan. Literally everything, right down to the official bootlegs. Seriously. Even collections are completely intact, duplicate songs and all.
CashTunes: Lots of Cash, for a little ca$h.
And of course you realize that you can waltz in to literally any physical music retailer anywhere in the world and get some of their material. You don’t need to order it online.

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