
Speaking of covers: I've been on a kick lately with Dionne Warwick's interp of the Bacharach-David tune "Anyone Who Had a Heart," one of the very best of the pair's efforts both lyrically and melodically. Went on a YouTube hunt for Dusty Springfield's cover, since one of my general music rules is "anything Dionne can do, Dusty can do better" - but alas, it was nowhere to be found. (Ed. note: Someone has since posted it! Speak Ts'ao Ts'ao's name, and Ts'ao Ts'ao shall appear!)
I also found a number of other covers of the song varying wildly in quality. In roughly descending order, I checked out covers from such determined dames as Cilla Black, Shelby Lynne (whose recent album of Dusty covers left me wanting), Atomic Kitten, Bjork, Cliff Richard, Shirley Bassey, Luther Vandross, and even Tim Curry. (The mouthy humorman falls atypically flat with this one, carelessly tossing that beautiful melody around as if it were a damn Nerf football.)
What it all comes back to: There is no topping Dionne's performance of this majestic song, even by Dusty. Especially when, at the repeated coda, she hits what would seem to be the highest note in her range - then sustains and tops it, for several notes, and repeats the whole coda line twice more without even taking a breath. It's an astonishing effort that she gets little credit for - just because she doesn't melt down doesn't mean it's not soulful or meaningful - and I've been thinking it really warrants a few spins. Especially if you're feeling like you're loving more than you're being loved.
2 comments:
Pop Argot uses Wade-Giles, not Pinyin, I see.
And you got the apostrophes in the right places. It made me happy to see it.
-D*
Haha, I was quoting you from memory! If I got it right, I'm delighted!
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