Blandade Artister - This Bird Has Flown: A Tribute To

Need to be reminded just how singular a phenomenon the Beatles were? Take a listen to This Bird Has Flown, Razor & Tie's 40th anniversary indie-rock tribute to their second album of 1965, Rubber Soul. Tributes to other artists that aim to include songs as timeless as »Drive My Car,« »Norwegian Wood,« »Michelle,« and »In My Life« typically have to cover their entire careers, and even then that's often not enough. This, however, is a one-album show, sequenced in the same order as the original, and the same thing could have been done with almost any other of the Beatles' LPs, with similar results. In some cases--the Donnas' »Drive My Car,« Dar Williams's »You Won't See Me,« Rhett Miller's »Girl«--the arrangements are a little too note-perfectly faithful to remain compelling. But a good number of the tracks here are sufficiently obscure to keep things interesting even if their arrangements do hew a little too closely to the originals. Into this category fall Yonder Mountain String Band's »Think for Yourself« and Mindy Smith's »The Word,« two rarely covered songs it's a delight to hear recast in the Americana mold. The best listens on This Bird Has Flown, however, are those that exhibit some of the experimentalism and innovation that was the mid-period Beatles' hallmark. On »If I Needed Someone,« Nellie McKay turns George Harrison's Byrds pastiche into a breezy day at a Brazilian beach; Low strip »Nowhere Man« to its bones in a typically minimalist performance; the Fiery Furnaces recast »Norwegian Wood« as a keyboard-driven funhouse extravaganza; and Sufjan Stevens warbles »What Goes On« beyond recognition, taking it from country Ringo vehicle to jazzy woodwind spectacle. The disc closes with the Cowboy Junkies' »Run for Your Life«: with murderous lead vocals and ominous, threatening instrumentation, it's a far cry from the slight number that weakly ended the original.
Skrivet av Håkan Olsson
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