Friday, September 28, 2007

It's Not Easy Bein' Ol' Blue Eyes

     I remember seeing this record somewhere, picking it up, looking at the song titles and shaking my head in disbelief (and then buying it soon after).  Frank did a version of Something, the great George Harrison song?  But then I remembered hearing that it was his favorite Beatles song, so okay, fine.  But why, oh why did he feel compelled to do a version of Bein' Green?  (Why wonder?)  Now don't get me wrong--I am a fan, I really am.  But this song just shows once again how horrible the great ones can be.  (There's a Bob Dylan outtake my brother-in-law once played for me called "Straight A's in Love" or something.  Just awful).   And this is on a greatest hits compilation, no less.  I'm a Muppet fan as well, but I never really liked Kermit very much.  I'm more of a Gonzo kinda guy.  
     I wanted to include Aretha Franklin's version of My Way because I never knew there was one until recently, and because once you hear it you'll forget all about Frank's version (and Bein' Green too, I hope).  It's as though she's saying sorry Frank but this is definitive, no hard feelings.  (Of course she would probably never say that).  There's a moment towards the end where she sings "the one" and draws it out to such an ecstatic length--three or four syllables--and the note goes sharp with an intensity that gives me chills.  (If you listen closely you can also hear some spontaneous hand-clapping, which just adds to the overall transcendence of the moment).   It reminds me of  Merry Clayton's singing on Gimme Shelter, when her voice breaks on the word "murder".

2 comments:

Lefty said...

Awesome. I happen to like Kermit and Kermit's version will always be superior to this (for obvious autobiographical reasons), but still, Frank's irony-free delivery is kind of hilarious. I recommend Willie Nelson's sensational version of "The Rainbow Connection."

Mr. Poncho said...

man, the drumming on that aretha track is just amazing. It's like he was issued a ration of hi-hat strikes -- say, like, 20 -- for the whole song, where others would normally use around 800. What we call extraordinary restraint. You can feel the sub-pulse implied all the way, but he never has to spell it out. miraculous really.