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10 Awesome, Awful & Odd "Hey Jude" Covers
Rocks Off found this out firsthand when we searched "Hey Jude" on Spotify earlier this week - we found string quartet, electric sitar, New Age guitar, Pan pipes, Gregorian Chants, you name it. No wonder McCartney is so rich. In fact, Rocks Off is about ready to strangle Macca right now, but instead we'll just bring you a few of our more... interesting discoveries, and a couple we knew a long time ago were going to make this list.
4. Ella Fitzgerald: The First Lady of Song keeps the scatting to a minimum and the tone conversational on this swinging big-band arrangement that shows what an instant standard "Hey Jude" really was. Fitzgerald's version appeared mere months after The Beatles', on her 1969 album Sunshine of Your Love, which also includes her takes on Cream's title track and a couple of classy Burt Bacharach tunes. Nevertheless, not remembered as one of her finer efforts.
Alternate: Try the feather-soft arrangement Count Basie & His Orchestra give the tune on their album Basie On the Beatles. Just not while driving.
Alternate:Hollywood alt-rockers The Flys, whom you may remember from their 1998 hit "Got You (Where I Want You)," recorded a much less abrasive, though otherwise unremarkable, cover for the 2009 comp Covered In Classic Rock. Try Great White's "Eye of the Tiger" instead.
1. Paul McCartney, Live On Saturday Night Live:Yes, we know McCartney wrote the song, so this would not technically be a "cover." But this is our blog, and our rules; The Beatles were not the musical guest that night. Rocks Off missed this episode, hosted by Alec Baldwin in only his third SNL appearance, when it originally aired in February 1993; it's the one where Chris Farley famously asked Paul, "Hey, remember when you were with the Beatles?" We caught it on a Comedy Central rerun in 2000 or so, and "Hey Jude" has been our favorite Sad Beatles song ever since, albeit occasionally interrupted by John's "Across the Universe."
Alternate:Wilson Pickett, our real No. 1 and the only cover we've ever heard that even approaches the original. The horn arrangement is first-rate, that's Duane Allman on guitar and there's real pain in Pickett's vocals, before he unleashes a couple of those patented soul-man screams Rocks Off hopes to pull off just once before we die.
BONUS: FIVE FUN FACTS ABOUT "HEY JUDE"
Via songfacts.com
- "Paul McCartney wrote this as 'Hey Jules'; the change to 'Jude' was inspired by the character "Jud" in the musical Oklahoma! McCartney loves show tunes."
- "The 'na na na' fadeout takes four minutes. The chorus is repeated 19 times."
- "Ringo was in the toilet when recording started. He made it to his drums just before his cue."
- "The song debuted at No. 10 in the Billboard Hot 100, and in doing so it made history by becoming the first ever single to reach the Top 10 in its first week on the chart."
- "Sesame Street did a parody of this (and tribute to healthy eating) called 'Hey Food.'"
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