A sweet collection of B-Sides and live tracks recorded from 1993 to 2000 by the oh so great PJ Harvey. The acoustic tracks alone make this a must have. C’mon Billy (acoustic) 2. Highway 61 revisited (live) 3.
Who will love me now 4. Dress (acoustic) 5. Lying in the sun (live) 6. The Dancer (acoustic version) 7. Snake (live) 8.
A place called home (live) 10. Dreams end with you (live) 12. Hardly wait 13. This wicked tongue 14. Sweeter than anything 15. Is this desire (live) 16.
PJ Harvey's gift is that she has real musical chops—she's a classically trained vocalist, after all. Besides, she pays attention to structure and writes mature lyrics I recently bought the limited edition double CD which also includes the B-Side CD. To Bring You My Love is slowly growing on me, but I.
Down by the water (acoustic) 17. Satisfaction (live Bjork) 18. This is love (live) 19. The ballad of the soldier’s wife 20. 50ft Queenie (live) 21.
Crawl Home 22. One line (live) Download.
The laundry machine breaks, your bike gets a flat, you have to cover a shift for your co-worker (who you think is faking being sick since you know her boyfriend is town)What I’m trying to say is, sometimes you aren’t always able to catch the Oprah Winfrey Show. And if you didn’t catch it yesterday, you missed the one and only about giving back to the women of her Yonkers neighborhood. You know what else happened? She covered Led Zeppelin, and it ruled. What’s interesting is that she’s not the first pop diva to cross genres into 70s rock, Dolly Parton covered “Stairway” as well at the Grand Ole Opry in 2002. The YouTube gods have taken down the live video, but at least you can still listen to it, though the New Age-y clip art does not compare with Parton belting out the finale. Now, I’m not saying that women need to cover canonical dude rock bands to achieve some sort of I Covered Robert Plan Badge of Holiness–women like Dolly and Mary J.
Blige have established their own legacies already through their songwriting and prolific recording careers. Covering Led Zeppelin only proves how versatile and talented they are. Plus, as Dolly, one of the reasons she was drawn to the song was its gospel tendencies. Having R&B and country singers give their own take on “Stairway” in a way returns the song to its roots–as even though Led Zeppelin was revolutionary in a lot of ways, many of their songs were influenced––traditional genres of blues and folk, as are the works of many popular white artists of then (Elvis) and now (Amy Winehouse). But back to the divas.
They say two is a coincidence but three is a trend. Who will be the next singer to give their personal spin on Zep? Personally I’d like to see takes by Jill Scott, Sharon Jones, and Beth Ditto, since they have the vocal chops and “Stairway” filtered through their respective genres of R&B, soul, and dance-rock would definitely make for some magical moments. Joanna Newsom would have a great version too, since she seems to be into seven minute ballads these days and a harp rendition would be pretty fabulous. Your thoughts?
Does “Stairway” have staying power or is this the stupidest measuring stick you’ve ever heard?