Originally posted by Tuberski
Sure it's pronounced both ways, but not when it's David Bowie.
David Bowie is pronounce 1 way.
Everybody, but Canadians, apparently, knows who the hell David Bowie is.
ACK!
Sure it's pronounced both ways, but not when it's David Bowie.
David Bowie is pronounce 1 way.
Everybody, but Canadians, apparently, knows who the hell David Bowie is.

Not (take a) bow e
or worse yet, the Americanised boo e

I like Lulu's cover versions of 'The Man Who Sold the World' and 'Watch That Man'- she shows just what a soul/blues belter she could have been. Bowie's live version of 'O Superman' with lead vocals by Gail Ann Dorsey was worth a listen.
An excellent compilation of covers is the album 'Songs from the Cold Seas', orchestrated by Hector Zazou, with contributions from Jane Siberry, Suzanne Vega, John Cale, Bjork and Siouxsie Sioux.
I would cheerily recommend the various 'This Mortal Coil' incarnations and albums, for those who might like to hear songs by Alex Chilton, Tim Buckley, et al, done in a kind of 'English Pastoral' meets Portishead in an ambient wonderland with injections of global influence style. Some of the stand outs are versions of 'Song to the Siren', with the soaring voice of the Cocteau Twins' lead singer, 'Another Day' and 'Tarantula'.
In the main though- why do a cover version that's simply a retread of the original? If you're not bringing anything new to the song, the original artist has usually done it better. Whitney Houston's roaring girl version of Dolly Parton's 'I Will Always Love You' replaces a delicate love song with the aural equivalent of a sledgehammer- presumably done for the benefit of those people who imagine country to be irredeemable/unlistenable.
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