Weight | 0.170 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 198 × 130 × 11 mm |
ISBN | 9781844135448 |
Cover | Paperback |
Publication Year | 2004 |
Publisher | Pimlico |
£4.00
Cover Versions: Singing Other People’s Songs
Back in pop’s early days, every record was a cover version. Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald were famous for interpreting other people’s songs, and the closest Elvis Presley ever got to writing one was when his manager, Colonel Parker, arm-twisted the rights away from the original songwriters. The balance of power shifted when The Beatles and the Stones wrote all their own material, yet the great tradition of the cover version never died. In this elegantly-tooled volume, Adam Sweeting gets the lowdown on cover versions – the worst, the most popular, the most frequently recorded, the most successful, the stupidest, the most tasteless, the most influential, and the ones nobody got around to yet.
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