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  #1  
Old 06-07-2000, 01:53 AM
panamajack panamajack is offline
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Okay, what is the worst example you've heard of a song that has been modified or misappropriated just to fit some context? The kind of thing that makes you cringe and say, "I can't believe they're using that for that!!" And forever after for you the song is ruined because the memory of what was done to it is so strong.

My nomination : The song "War" (Edwin Star) was used in a shoe commercial (I forget by whom) and was edited so that it was no longer anti-war. IIRC, the commercial had scenes of competitveness in sports with the music going on :
"WAR! Hunh!. (nothing) ... Good Gawd, y'all! Say It Again! WAR!". Only if the Army had done it could it have been worse.

Runner-up : In the movie Philadelphia, the song Heaven(Talking Heads) is being played at the wake/party/whatever it was and the lyrics are changed from :
"Heaven is a place where nothing ever happens" to:
"Heaven is a place where nothing ever hurts you".
That may not be verbatim, but I didn't much like the movie and I won't see it again just to check. According to a member of the group, the song was about the dream of a rock star to get away from so much stuff happening all the time.

So what other instances have y'all noticed? (Doesn't have to be changed lyrics per se, these just happen to be)


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  #2  
Old 06-07-2000, 02:11 AM
Crusoe Crusoe is offline
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The Bob Dylan song about Mercedes-Benz being used in an advert about, well, Mercedes-Benz just shows how far the marketing executives responsible for that campaign missed the point.
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  #3  
Old 06-07-2000, 02:27 AM
Omniscient Omniscient is offline
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Not the context that the OP wants, but it fits the topic line exactly.

Madonna's American Pie

Now thats abusing a great song.
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  #4  
Old 06-07-2000, 03:29 AM
Ayesha Ayesha is offline
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Quote:

Not the context that the OP wants, but it fits the topic line exactly.

Madonna's American Pie
I have to agree with Omni on that one.

Along with Shatner's murder of Freebird !
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  #5  
Old 06-07-2000, 07:48 AM
flodnak flodnak is offline
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Anyone else besides me remember when the Republicans (sometime during the Reagan Administration) were using the chorus from Springsteen's "Born In The USA" as campaign theme music?

Somebody apparently didn't listen to the rest of the lyrics...
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  #6  
Old 06-07-2000, 08:17 AM
RealityChuck RealityChuck is online now
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Quote:
Along with Shatner's murder of Freebird !
You can't murder what's already dead.

A local radio station once did a promotion with "I don't Like Mondays" by the Boomtown Rats. Or they planned to -- the weekend before it was supposed to happen, they must have listened to the lyrics, and the promotion was called off.
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  #7  
Old 06-07-2000, 08:37 AM
JimmyNipples JimmyNipples is offline
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Poor use of tunage

Start me up...... Rolling Stones

Bill Gates and windows.....evil
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  #8  
Old 06-07-2000, 09:25 AM
Joe_Cool Joe_Cool is offline
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My votes go to:
"Revolution" in the Nike commercial...How can you take an anti-establishment, anti-everything song like Revolution and use it to promote one of the largest money-grubbing corporations in the world?????

...and any song from the Who, misappropriated for a Gateway commercial. Ugh. that is pretty cheesy.
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  #9  
Old 06-07-2000, 09:59 AM
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Bob Dylan? Where the hell did I get Bob Dylan from? I meant Janis Joplin, obviously.
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  #10  
Old 06-07-2000, 10:58 AM
cmkeller cmkeller is offline
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More along the lines of the Madonna/American Pie thing, I'd have to say its awfulness was eclipsed by Nikki French's remake of "Total Eclipse of the Heart."
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  #11  
Old 06-07-2000, 11:02 AM
struuter struuter is offline
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Okay...I've got one pet peeve and it seems like I'm the only one it bothers. The new ad campaign for the thin tv from Phillips/Magnavox with the Beatles classic, anyone seen the commercials? Anyway, the spot always end with the lyrics

I've got to admit it's getting better
It's getting better all the time...

Anybody else out there finish the song like I do?

...It's getting better all the time
It can't get much worse

Everyone says I'm goofy (which is true, but beside the point)...anybody else hear that last line when they see those commercials?
*Add my vote to the list against Madonna's slaughter of a perfectly good song.
Oh, can I add one more? Puff Daddy's remake(?) of "Every Breath You Take.' Nice sentiment, but not what Sting had in mind when he wrote it.
struuter
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  #12  
Old 06-07-2000, 11:27 AM
Biggirl Biggirl is offline
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The fairly new Smash Mouth song that's in a car commercial. Then The Morning Comes is a song about being let down, but you wouldn't know it from the commercial
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  #13  
Old 06-07-2000, 11:34 AM
Koxinga Koxinga is online now
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Last time I was in the US I heard a TV commercial using Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" to sell shoes or some goddamned thing. That's just plain wrong. "We dance like hypnotized chickens."

On the other hand, I would love to hear some misguided corporate ad wonks use Lou Reed's "Kicks" to sell a car or something.
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  #14  
Old 06-07-2000, 11:44 AM
PTVroman PTVroman is offline
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Reagan not only wanted to use Springsteen's "Born in the USA", he also wanted to use Meloncamp's "Pink Houses". One song about Americans shitting on veterans; one song about Americans shitting on the poor. Yeah, that's Reagan's America.
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  #15  
Old 06-07-2000, 04:08 PM
Rock-n-Rolga Rock-n-Rolga is offline
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Here's another (slightly obscure) example of people falling for the chorus and failing to listen to the verses: The *ahem* triumphant performance of Neil Young's "Keep On Rockin' In The Free World" by the likes of Bon Jovi and Skid Row at the 1989 Moscow Music Peace festival. That song is about as far as you can get from calling the U.S. a like, totally awesome place where you're y'know, free to RAWK, d00d! Would have been nice to see good ol' Neil appear on stage and bitch slap a little understanding into each smug hair farmer up there...then exile the poodle heads from the stage and be joined by Crazy Horse for REAL show! Och, me and my daft rocknroll fantasies...

As for horrid covers, look no farther than Metallicrap's recent mutilations of Thin Lizzy and Lynyrd Skynyrd classics. IMO, ANYONE who attempts to mess with Lizzy is committing sacrilege and should be exiled, instrumentless, to Vladivostok via the the slowest, coldest train the Trans-Siberian has. Preferably seated next to a drummer. Eh heh.
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  #16  
Old 06-07-2000, 04:18 PM
jayron 32 jayron 32 is offline
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There's the new "Tigger Movie" coming out where Disney uses the "do-doo-doo-doo" portion of 3EB's "Semi-Charmed Life" to promote the film. I'm not sure which part of the song Disney wants kids to relate to, whether it's the crystal meth trips or the meaningless frat-party sex, or what. I mean, LISTEN to the lyrics before using a cut of the song. FTR, it is one of my favorite songs, but it is also entire inappripriate for promoting a kids movie, even if the choral bridge is kinda catchy.
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  #17  
Old 06-07-2000, 04:23 PM
Stephe96 Stephe96 is offline
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OK, I will reserve comment about Mellencamp's idiotic "Pink Houses" song (he snarls something about vacationing "down in the Gulf of Mexico!" as if THAT were the were the worst thing in the universe), but I will (sort of) defend Reagan's use of Springsteen's "Born In The USA".

Yes, the lyrics are about a Vietnam vet's trials and tribulations upon returning to this country after the war, but.....the song ROCKS! Who listens to lyrics anyway? Despite Springsteen's sentiment, I actually DO start to feel patriotic as hell when that song is blasting. So sue me. Heck, even our own national anthem contains lyrics that aren't exactly "America The Beautiful."
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  #18  
Old 06-07-2000, 04:38 PM
Lord Derfel Lord Derfel is offline
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In Canada, the Bank of Montreal (IIRC) used Dylan's The times they are a'changin' in an ad to advertise their web banking. Talk about an inappropriate song!
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  #19  
Old 06-07-2000, 04:41 PM
Whammo Whammo is offline
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As long as were hijacking the OP

Sheril Crow's remake of Guns and Roses "sweet child" almost makes me cry.
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  #20  
Old 06-07-2000, 05:25 PM
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Regarding the OP:
Parachute Club's protest song "Rise Up" was (briefly) used to sell "rising crust" frozen pizza.

Regarding the hijack:
Janet Jackson's abuse of the chorus of "Big Yellow Taxi", and calling the thing "Got 'Til It's Gone".
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  #21  
Old 06-07-2000, 05:52 PM
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I always groan and roll my eyes whenever a commercial for a luxury car (or some other High Society status symbol) plays the Spring concerto from Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, or the Pachabel Canon, or Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. Those three pieces were not originally written to be snobbish!
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  #22  
Old 06-07-2000, 06:08 PM
Argeable Argeable is offline
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["Tigger Movie" ..."Semi-Charmed Life" [/b][/quote]
Just what I was thinking...it just doesn't work.
As Jenkins (3eyeBe lead singer) says: 'I don't get you guys. This is one hell of a depressing song, but you think it's all great and happy, like the gullible audience you are, well, that's why we love you.'
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  #23  
Old 06-07-2000, 09:19 PM
PaperBlob PaperBlob is online now
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OP: The Wind Cries Mary (or whatever that Hendrix song is called) as Muzak.

Hijack: William Shatner's renditions of Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds and Mr. Bojangles. Just unbelievably bad!
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  #24  
Old 06-07-2000, 10:10 PM
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Remember those Dean's Milk-whatevers...Chugs? I can't believe they mangled Roger Miller's Chug-a-lug like that. Geez, it's a fun song about underage kids drinking moonshine! And they just distorted it to sell milk. And those whatever-they-were called tasted horrible, too.
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  #25  
Old 06-07-2000, 11:05 PM
TVeblen TVeblen is offline
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Just adding more nonsensical clutter:

* Regan (The Vile) was clueless about the intent of Born in the USA. This was the same elected veggie that depende on Nancy to defend the Beach Boys.

* Clinton (The Putz) was no less clueless on [i]Don't stop thinkin' 'bout tomorrow[/i}, especially since it's a musical reference to divorce. The irony stuns.

* Madonna and American Pie; she took a perfect, quirky, minor little rock anthem and warped it into a big, boring MADONNA thing. Is no one else tired of this media whore?

Minor digression: a splendid and little-known use of rock in cinema is Hit The Road, Jack in The Dream Team. Good cast, witty writing, and the 4 asylum inmates boogeying down the highway to the "the song" is just fine.

Veb
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  #26  
Old 06-08-2000, 12:35 AM
Greg Charles Greg Charles is offline
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Look what they did "Look What They Did To My Song, Ma!" by Ray Charles (no relation). Quaker or someone turned it into a jingle, "Look what they did to oatmeal, ma!" Even a Madison Avenue type couldn't miss the irony there. They're just too cynical to care.
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  #27  
Old 06-08-2000, 01:11 AM
Kyla Kyla is offline
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The use of Baba O'Riley in that SUV commercial where a bunch of idiots tear up perfectly nice scenery playing polo. Ugghh.
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  #28  
Old 06-08-2000, 02:13 AM
PowerpuffKue PowerpuffKue is offline
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1. Any song on a Gap Commercial ("Dress You Up (In My Love)", "Mellow Yellow", and some West Side Story Songs).

2. Limp Bizkit's "Faith," that used to be such a good song too(The George Micheal version of course). Sigh.
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  #29  
Old 06-08-2000, 08:51 AM
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I have to nominate Puff Daddy rapping over Led Zep's "Kashmir" on the Godzilla soundtrack. The horror, the horror.
And using James Brown songs in theatrical trailers to promote mindless, white, suburban, teen movies. What an insult to The Hardest Working Man in Show Business.
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  #30  
Old 06-08-2000, 11:25 AM
Heloise Heloise is offline
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Quote:

Last time I was in the US I heard a TV commercial using Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" to sell shoes or some goddamned thing. That's just plain wrong. "We dance like hypnotized chickens."
OMG!!! You have no idea the aggravation you have saved me!!! I heard the commercial, fell in love with the song (again???) and couldn't find it! Why? Because I was thinking (remember, this isn't the pit, don't flame me for this) Rolling Stones and looking for the song under Stones, not Iggy. Of course, I was able to find it immediately thereafter and just now enjoyed listening to it, sans commercial. THANK YOU!
Yes, it sucks when they mis-appropriate a song, using it for something completely beyond the original meaning, but for me it can be cool. Mainly because I might hear a song that I used to love but that somehow fell by the wayside and then I hear it, find it online and can get all nostalgic, dance around like an idiot to it again, or just sit at my desk and enjoy the beat. Whatever.

Did that make sense? I do have a tendency to ramble.
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  #31  
Old 06-08-2000, 12:45 PM
Joe_Cool Joe_Cool is offline
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Quote:
*Add my vote to the list against Madonna's slaughter of a perfectly good song.
Oh, can I add one more? Puff Daddy's remake(?) of "Every Breath You Take.' Nice sentiment, but not what Sting had in mind when he wrote it.
Unfortunately, I believe Sting worked with Punk Daddy on that song. I was really disappointed to hear that. But, Sting has always been into musical experimentation.

My vote for crappiest cover song goes to whoever did the lame Beck-sounding version of "Boyz-n-The-Hood" (yes, the one from Eazy-E) that is currently playing on alternative rock stations. Bleccch.
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  #32  
Old 06-08-2000, 01:00 PM
Pizzle Boy Pizzle Boy is offline
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B_Line12: I like the Sheryl Crow remake

What about Puff Daddy bastardizing "Every Breath You Take".

Makes me wanna barf.

::WHAP:: take that Puffy!
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  #33  
Old 06-08-2000, 01:01 PM
Pizzle Boy Pizzle Boy is offline
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oops. The puff daddy thing was stale
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  #34  
Old 06-08-2000, 02:33 PM
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An old punk anthem, "If The Kids Are United", is currently being used in Britain to advertise McDonald's. I really do think this is a sign the world is coming to an end.

Here's a funny one: Guinness are using The Jesus and Mary Chain's "Just Like Honey", which isn't so funny in itself, except for that the point in which the actor lifts the glass of Guinness to his lips coincides with the lyric "eating up the scum is the hardest thing for me to do ..."
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  #35  
Old 06-08-2000, 07:41 PM
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my to votes

Duran Duran's remake of David Bowie's Fame

and the Bye-Bye Mr. Telemarketing guy missappropriation of Bye-Bye Miss American Pie.
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  #36  
Old 06-09-2000, 09:58 AM
xizor xizor is online now
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Adding to the hijack - Hootie & the Blowfish's remake of Led Zeppelin's "Hey Hey What can I do?". totally ruined the song for me. I don't even like the original anymore.
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  #37  
Old 06-10-2000, 07:40 AM
casdave casdave is offline
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Demond Dekkars - The Isrealites is now used to advertise Vitalite margerine, isn't this a song about self sacrifice ? Surely some irony there

Remakes I hate

Boyzone - Father and son.
Boyzone - cannot remember the title but the first words are, "No matter what they say". I remember it was originally done by Meat Loaf and the meaning of the song has been taken completely out of context.

Maybe there's room here for a best/worst cover version ever thread ?
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  #38  
Old 06-10-2000, 08:03 AM
London_Calling London_Calling is offline
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Don't know if an Australian loon by the name of Rolf Harris ever hit the US but he did a version of 'Stairway to Heaven' with a kind of Reggae beat imposed by way of one of those thin wooden boards that you can get to go 'woop, woop. woop'. The board has considerably more ability than does Rolf’s larynx.

Gravity increases about 50 fold for the 5 minute duration.
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  #39  
Old 06-10-2000, 11:25 AM
hawthorne hawthorne is offline
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Rolf Harris doesn't count London Calling. His Stairway version was recorded for the Australian TV programme The Money or the Gun. The host of this was Andrew Denton who really hates Stairway. Every week he had a different band come in and murder the song for sport. The fact that the Brits subsequently bought the thing is down to them.

picmr
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  #40  
Old 06-10-2000, 01:48 PM
Al Phosgene Al Phosgene is offline
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Frank Zappa sang the Bonanza Theme for his stage act.
Funny as hell.
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  #41  
Old 06-10-2000, 02:44 PM
London_Calling London_Calling is offline
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picmr - it does count, so!

He sung the thing on the main TV 'pop music' shows, did the whole media circus and built his next album around it. What does he need to do to qualify - sing in tune ?

I don't like 'Stairway' that much, either (ok, the guitar break...) but the way he did it was akin to torture with a dentist drill, piano wire and a rusty bread knife, all slowly and variously applied to one's nether regions.

Not nice.
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  #42  
Old 06-10-2000, 08:15 PM
TheNerd TheNerd is offline
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I don't know if this one counts as abusing a song necessarily, but for a while, Motorola's theme song was "You can't always get what you want"

I have trouble imagining the chain of stupidity that let this go on the air.
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  #43  
Old 06-11-2000, 10:55 AM
Koxinga Koxinga is online now
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Surprised no one has mentioned Tom Jones's rendition of Talking Heads' "Burning Down the House", sung in duet with that chick from The Cardigans. Am I the only one who's seen this?

Tom looks positively scary in that video.
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  #44  
Old 06-12-2000, 11:10 AM
Barney111 Barney111 is offline
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Cat Steven's "The Wind" being used in not one, but two, different commercials. One is for Timberland; I can't think of the other one offhand.
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  #45  
Old 06-12-2000, 11:25 AM
SoSueMe SoSueMe is offline
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That Pepsi girl singing Aretha Frankin stinks.
What a waste. And just because A.F. is in the audience, it's supposed to be okay? No.
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  #46  
Old 06-12-2000, 11:48 AM
ThisYearsGirl ThisYearsGirl is offline
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Quote:

Duran Duran's remake of David Bowie's Fame
Duran Duran also covered Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" and Iggy Pop's "Success" (along with a whole bunch of other really good songs on a "tribute album" to bands that inspired them) and killed them.
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  #47  
Old 06-12-2000, 11:59 AM
Olentzero Olentzero is offline
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Well, I'm glad this one hasn't been mentioned yet so I can come in with something original for once.

I really, really despise the fact that they used Jimi Hendrix' version of the "Star-Spangled Banner" for a frigging Pop-Tarts commercial.

Of course, I've also discovered that the words to both SSB and the old Soviet national anthem fit wonderfully well to the tune of Irish Washerwoman so I probably shouldn't kvetch too loudly.
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  #48  
Old 06-12-2000, 06:28 PM
Sam Stone Sam Stone is offline
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How about Cher's remake of "Love Hurts"? The part that cracks me up is the line she changed from, "Love is like a flame, it burns you when it's hot", to "Love is like a Stove, it burns you when it's hot". Excuse me... A STOVE? Who was the genius who decided THAT line needed changing?

Someone needs to go back to metaphor 101.
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  #49  
Old 06-12-2000, 08:46 PM
Stephe96 Stephe96 is offline
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SAM,

I can't stand Cher, but I'll defend that line change. The original is pretty stupid as it stands. When the hell is a flame NOT hot?
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  #50  
Old 06-12-2000, 09:14 PM
DrFidelius DrFidelius is online now
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Jumping in here to complain about something.

A re-write of Bohemian Rhapsody to sell Mountain Dew.

Seismologists report an estimated rotational speed in excess of 1500 rpm in Freddy Mercury's grave.

And don't get me started on the whoremongers who have been abusing John Lennon's songs for commercials. (I'm now older than he ever got to be. There is no justice in this world.)
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