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Rewind: The 80’s Cover Project by BuffetLibre

posted by AnnieB on Jul 13, 2008   •     Permalink2 Comments

Ready for a time warp? Relive the 80’s with some of today’s current artists.

From myspace:
Rewind is a non-commercial project intended as a unique tribute to one of the golden ages of music history.

For this journey back in time, Buffetlibre have been joined by 100 of the best artists of the moment. Big names such as Dragonette, Whitey, Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, Electric Soft Parade, Levy, Saint Bernardette and The Cloud Room, along with producers such as Frankmusik, Sidechains, RAC, CFCF, The Toxic Avenger and Moulinex have participated in the Rewind project. Each artist in the line up has boarded their very own time machine and covered one of their favourites 80’s anthems.

Covers and remixes from the first fifty participating artists were released on July 1st and can be accessed at buffetlibre.net. Part two will be released on September 1st.






Cloetta Paris – Cry Just a Little Bit
(Shakin’ Stevens Cover)



Findlay Brown – Promised Land
(Joe Smooth Cover)


PYT – Summer of ’69
(Bryan Adams Cover)



The Social Services – The Final Countdown
(Europe Cover)



Friday Bridge – Eyes Without a Face
(Billy Idol Cover)



Moulinex feat. Iris Maria – Come On Closer
(Pineapples Cover)


RAC feat. Karl F. Kling – Take On Me
(Aha Cover)



The Cloud Room – Blue Monday
(New Order Cover)



Belinda Carlisle – Heaven is a Place on Earth
(Hidden Cat Remix)



Madonna – Into the Groove
(SIDECHAINS Remix)



Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Relax
(Cryptonites Remix)



Marietta – Destination Unknown
(CSK OK Remix)


(Ideally, I’d love to put all these in a simple playlist for you guys, but I’m not the slightest bit tech savvy)

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2 Comments:


At July 13, 2008 10:26 AM , Blogger kafkajoubert said...

Oh wow, I really like Social Services' take on that horrible Europe song. (The RAC remix is great, as usual)

 
At July 14, 2008 6:54 PM , Blogger Michele Yamazaki said...

Haha, totally in agreement on the Final Countdown remake. 1000x better.

 

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Old Nerdy Bastard

posted by phreakymonkey on May 20, 2008   •     Permalink0 Comments

I thought there might be quite a few people around here who would be interested in a compilation of nerdy remixes that dropped yesterday, since there are quite a few names on it that should be familiar to all of you.
The ensuing round of musical mayhem is a collection of remixes, mash-ups, and re-orchestrations of geeky tracks from across the spectrum. There’s nerdcore, of course, and Wizard Rock, geek rock (or, grock, as it’s come to be called in some circles) and even a dash of foreign language goodness on the menu, reworked by a delightfully eclectic collection of DJs, producers, and musicians. I owe each of these participants an equal measure of thanks, as this is really their album.
thesixtyone artists involved with the compilation (I'm probably missing some):
Jonathan Coulton
The Grammar Club
Brad Sucks
Glenn Case
Hidari
nYgel

For those whose interest is piqued, it's a free download at hipsterplease.com

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Top O' The Morning To Ya: St. Patrick's Day Playlist

posted by Batface89 on Mar 17, 2008   •     Permalink4 Comments

Happy St. Paddy's Day to everyone! Here's playlist for today, which will most definitely put you in the spirit for green beer and corned beef and cabbage.

Christy Moore is a well-known Irish folk singer/songwriter, and guitarist, "known for his political and social commentary, which reflects a left wing Irish Republican perspective."
The Pogues, performing the same song, are also use a lot of political commentary in their music (politically themed songs are very common with Irish musicians, it seems.) The Pogues have a punk rock sound but used traditional Irish instruments such as the mandolin and tin whistle.

"This song is not a rebel song, this song is Sunday Bloody Sunday." Another example of politically themed Irish music, a terrific cover of the classic U2 song which describes "the horror felt by an observer of The Troubles in Northern Ireland".

Now for something a little less serious... House of Pain, an Irish-American hip-hop group that was very popular in the mid-90s, just as I was finishing college. Oh, those were the days.

What St. Paddy's Day would be complete with out a song about drinking pints?

Ro Tierney is an extremely talented singer/songwriter from Ireland. We have something in common too.
His favorite book is The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho and so is mine.

Conan Brophy is from the West of Ireland. I instantly liked Conan's sound when I heard it at The Sixty One. His voice reminds me of Ian Brown's. Conan's music runs the gamut from happy pop to more folky stuff and even electronic and he pulls it all off with finesse.

Analogue Mindfield blends elements of Trip-Hop, Reggae, Drum and Bass and Ambient sounds and they're from Dublin. Check out their MySpace for more music, since they only have one song on The Sixty One at this time.

West of Eden are the charming folksy pop duo, Kenn Davis and Cindy O'Keeffe from County Wicklow, Ireland and Dublin.
Fern Knight is a Philadephia based singer songwriter. This song seemed fitting enough to include for today's festivities.

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4 Comments:


At March 17, 2008 1:02 AM , Blogger silkworm said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At March 17, 2008 1:05 AM , Blogger silkworm said...

He's not on the t61, but Christy Moore's younger brother is the marvelous Luka Bloom (ne Kevin Barry Moore). His all-around best to my ears is Turf.

Happy St. Patricks Day! Raisin' a pint to ya!

 
At March 17, 2008 11:35 AM , Blogger K.E. said...

Also not on t61...but I am kicking it with Damien Dempsey this morning!

 
At March 17, 2008 11:38 AM , Blogger Batface89 said...

And Black 47 is my all-time favorite Irish (NY) band and not on t61 either. Funky Ceili and James Connelly are favorites. I hear they still play around New York. I'd LOVE to see them.

 

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Great Cover?!

posted by Apocalypse on Mar 3, 2008   •     Permalink7 Comments


I have always harbored very strong opinions on Live albums and Covers of other songs. In this post, I wanna focus on the Covers!

When an Artist does a Cover of another song, they are in fact doing one of two things: either paying homage to the original, or are just out of ideas and need filler of a popular song! To pay homage to a song is great, but I think that it takes little talent to do it exactly like the original... what value does that add? On the flip side, to do a cover and to interpret it with your style, approach and sound, and by doing that, to bring a new dimension to a song, is the greatest form of homage that can be paid to the original, while at the same time demonstrating the creativity and vision of the Artist covering the song.

Having spent countless hours on thesixtyone, I have noticed a lot of covers. Some of them are just a rehash of the same song and they make me wonder what value is added here? Others are great re-interpretations, where the Artist deconstructed the original song, reformed it and created something truly extraordinary. Below are some examples of songs that add new dimension to an already well known song and some of my favorite covers on the site:


The quintessential cover



Great reinterpretation:



And a haunting Cover to a familiar classic:



We'll get into Live songs in another post...

-Apoc

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7 Comments:


At March 3, 2008 11:59 AM , Blogger Michele Yamazaki said...

My favorite reinterpretations are Toxic - Yael Naim, Time is Running Out - Sarah Morgan, Surrender - Ox and who could forget Sunday Bloody Sunday - RX2008.

My favorite though, is The Lunatics are Taking Over the Asylum by Collide. What a terrific cover. Fun Boy Three was such an innovative band. I'd love to see one of those accapella groups cover 'It Ain't What You Do It's the Way that You Do It'.

 
At March 3, 2008 2:41 PM , Blogger TheFakeAnnieB said...

Too Polite, Apocalypse. How about the overly shitty songs that get Covered, because there is much Bumpage to be had? I can think of a few artists who've leveled up simply by taking a four minute song and with little imagination, turned it into mad bumps (Flomid , I'm looking at you!). At least give me something original.

And to the listeners, just because Bowie won't post a song on t61, doesn't mean you have to kiss the lazy bottom of those artists who post nothing but a dank remake of a stale song you made-out to when you were in middle-school. There is so much original stuff there.
/my 2cents

 
At March 3, 2008 4:02 PM , Blogger willie said...

I thought about doing a piece on covers, looks like you got it covered.
I'm not sure what's with the'thefakeannieb' but I've got to agree. On the whole Flomids contributions have been piss poor, or at least not worth the high bump count. IMO ;)

 
At March 3, 2008 4:11 PM , Blogger Batface89 said...

I think thefakeannieb has a crush on the real AnnieB!

 
At March 3, 2008 5:32 PM , Blogger ImOnlySleeping said...

I enjoy the odd cover every once and a while, but there are some artists I want to go back and revoke my bumps from (also looking at Flomid).
A few other well done ones on the61 would be...
Careless Whisper - The Gossip
Levi Weaver - Idioteque
Jose Gonzalez - Teardrop
and, even though I'm sure some people thought it was a travesty
Saul Williams - Sunday Bloody Sunday

 
At March 3, 2008 9:54 PM , Blogger timyjl said...

I think batface has multiple personalities : )

 
At March 3, 2008 10:54 PM , Blogger Michele Yamazaki said...

Haha, it would seem.

I would rather not use my real name here, so I'll have go back and update a few things. I opened a new account just for this.

I run about 8 other blogs and they all use my real name (for work).

 

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