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Author: Money Mike

  • CriticClash: Seal’s Soul

    sealCovers albums are a tricky concept. Not too many folks have gotten it right. While I’d imagine it’s fun and maybe even challenging to tackle music made popular by someone else, a lot of times those songs are so identifiable with the original artist(s) that your album winds up sounding more like well-produced karaoke than anything else.

    This is the problem that plagues British singer Seal on his sixth studio effort, entitled “Soul”. While the album itself is sung beautifully, the songs he chooses to cover are songs that were sung beautifully the first time around. And the second. And the third. The album might have been a bit more interesting had Seal decided to tackle some songs that are less familiar, but, let’s be honest here. How many versions of “A Change is Gonna Come” do you really need to hear when Sam Cooke’s original is still the definitive version?

    Seal obviously put his heart into this recording, on which he gives us the best vocals of his entire career. “Soul”‘s major redeeming quality, actually, is Seal’s voice. Gravelly and soulful, he does a good job with songs like Otis Redding’s “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long”, but after a while, you realize that you still want to hear that voice, just performing Seal’s material, not someone else’s.

    The album’s biggest problem, aside from the very unimaginative song choices, is the production. David Foster was smart enough to back Seal with a live band, but wound up runining some of the songs with obnoxious amounts of horns and strings. The reliance on horns especially, occasionally makes this album sound more like “Seal Does Vegas!!” than it does Seal sings soul classics.

    Ultimately, though, it comes down to the material. The songs are top-notch, but the definitive versions have been made already and nothing more can be added to them. Not that many folks haven’t tried. Remember UB40’s remake of Al Green’s “Here I Am (Come & Take Me)”? How about Amii Stewart’s disco version of Eddie Floyd’s “Knock on Wood”? The six million versions of “People Get Ready” in existence? Seal covers all these songs here, and while his versions are all pleasant, they’re also totally unnecessary. Seal wrings every bit of emotion out of “It’s a Man’s, Man’s, Man’s World” and STILL can’t touch James Brown’s original. Even when Seal and Foster try to add a bit of contemporary bounce to Ben E. King’s “Stand By Me”, all it winds up doing is reminding me of the techno-funk remake of the song that Earth, Wind & Fire’s Maurice White did back in 1985.

    Seal has the right idea when he tackles the comparatively unknown “Free” by Deniece Williams. He’d have served himself much better by going with material that wasn’t so obvious. He’d have been BEST served by following the template that’s given him a twenty-year career and stuck with his own material.

  • Infatueighties #53: Tainted Love

    taintedHow does a British duo take a fun but pedestrian 60s song and turn it into an iconic synth-pop classic? Well, I don’t know, you’d have to ask Soft Cell how they did it. But the fact of the matter is that it was done!

    In it’s original form, “Tainted Love” is a pleasant upbeat soul number which bears an uncanny resemblance to Fine Young Cannibals’ “Good Thing”, which arrived a quarter-century later. In it’s more popular, remade version, it’s synthed out and camped out, and Soft Cell were smart enough to add a chunk of The Supremes’ 1964 hit “Where Did Our Love Go” as the coda. Genius stuff.

    “Tainted Love” has held up remarkably well for a song that barely scraped the inside of the Top 10 upon its’ release in 1982. Rihanna adapted it perfectly into her hit “S.O.S.” you can’t shake a stick at an 80s station without hearing it once an hour or so, and it’s also lived on as a karaoke staple.

    I’d actually never seen the video for “Tainted Love” until I prepared this post. Wow, this video is gayer than a sack of pink triangles!

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  • Epic Fail (or Not…): Chris Brown

    cbrownIn light of the events of the past couple of days, Chris Brown must be wondering what the hell caused him to be so stupid as to put his freedom and career in peril. In the barely 72 hours since his arrest on charges of domestic abuse and making a criminal threat, the cherub-faced R&B singer has already had his endorsement deal with Wrigley’s suspended, and one must assume that he’s lost a fair amount of fans, especially if the rumors are true and the woman he assaulted is his girlfriend, pop sensation Rihanna.

    In one fell swoop, Brown has gone from a teen dream pinup (albeit a tattooed teen dream pinup with a hint of bad boy) to a criminal. However, it can be argued that this incident might actually HELP his career, especially if Brown takes the usual celebrity scandal perp walk-making the rounds of the talk shows, doing candid interviews, reviewing his past as a victim of domestic violence himself. A few flashes of that mega-watt smile and all will most likely be forgiven. But should it?

    Let’s be real here. If you’re a celebrity, there’s not much you can do to lose your fanbase if your product is still saleable. All you have to do is look at R. Kelly, whose Platinum career has continued virtually unscathed in light of his child abuse allegations (and subsequent acquittal). One could conversely argue that Michael Jackson’s career has suffered in light of similar allegations, but MJ’s career was on a decline before even the first molestation allegations hit. That’s not to mention his pre-established image as a weirdo of the first order. For better or for worse, the public has proven that they’ll turn a blind eye to all manner of indiscretion as long as the artist comes back with a hot single.

    And what about Rihanna? Questions about the incident will inevitably come up next time Rihanna has a project to promote. How will she handle the questions? Will she have to defend herself against Chris Brown fans who will accuse Rihanna of “snitching” or “provoking” Chris and will see the abuser as the actual victim? How will this affect the songwriters, producers and guest artists that will appear on future projects?

    Of course, this is America. Everyone’s innocent until proven guilty. Until proven in a court of law, Brown should have no sanctions against him. However, it’s hard to imagine that even if he is convicted, there will be any fallout from either his record label (who tend to turn a blind eye to their artists’ indiscretions) or his fan base.

    Jerry Lee Lewis, who famously flushed his pop career down the toilet when he married his 14-year old cousin back in the Sixties, must be kicking himself for not being popular forty years later.