Comment from: bonehead [Member] Email
putting out fire with gasoline,by bowie.i prefer the single with stevie ray.
09/02/08 @ 07:09
Comment from: shawnkilroy [Member] Email
She's My Best Friend by The Velvet Underground from the awesome VU Album.
Lou later re-records this tune rather suckily on Coney Island Baby.
09/02/08 @ 07:26
Comment from: bonehead [Member] Email
halloween by danzig 1 w/misfits 1 w/samhain.i prefer misfits.is that cheating
09/02/08 @ 07:31
Comment from: mac [Member] Email
"Here Comes the Night" by the Beach Boys

1st on Wild Honey

and then the gloriously bizarre 11 minute disco version on M.I.U.
09/02/08 @ 08:18
Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
"Revolution" by the Beatles.

"In..."

-db
09/02/08 @ 08:30
Comment from: bonehead [Member] Email
beatles revolution,i like the slow version
09/02/08 @ 08:36
Comment from: bonehead [Member] Email
how low will a punk get,bad brains.rock for light,or black dot sessions.i prefer bds.
09/02/08 @ 08:42
Comment from: bonehead [Member] Email
sorry bout the repeat
09/02/08 @ 08:43
Comment from: mockcarr [Member] Email
Does One After 909 from the Beatles count since the first better take has been released in the Anthology series? The 1963 version is so much better than the Let It Be one.
09/02/08 @ 09:28
Comment from: mockcarr [Member] Email
The single version of Honky Tonk Women beat the hell out of Country Honk on Let It Bleed, obviously.
09/02/08 @ 09:32
Comment from: latelydavidband [Member] Email
How about "Do Ya"? Jeff Lynne did it first with The Move, then again with ELO. I can;t pick a favorite there. Maybe The Move? On a given day I'll take ELO.

TB
09/02/08 @ 10:01
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
"Do Ya" by two different bands with Lynne does NOT count. Same for the Misfits/Danzig entry. For some reason, though, I'll allow a band leader to re-do his or her own song as a solo artist, as in the case of Velvet Underground and Lou Reed.

"One After 909" does count. The rocking single version of "Revolution" is my favorite. You guys who prefer the White Album version are "wrong," but that's OK. There's no right and wrong in this regard.

As for VU/Lou versions, I prefer Berlin's "Caroline Says" to the sprightly "Stephanie Says" that the VU first recorded.
09/02/08 @ 10:17
Comment from: alexmagic [Member] Email
Pixies - Wave of Mutilation. I like the slower "UK Surf" one better.

I honestly don't know which Revolution I like better. I do love the false start on the White Album version.
09/02/08 @ 11:01
Comment from: mwall [Member] Email
Richard Thompson, "Withered and Died," and Elvis Costello, "Withered and Died." Thompson by a wide margin.
09/02/08 @ 11:06
Comment from: 2000 man [Member] Email · http://www.whammoblammo.blogspot.com/
David Bowie released a single as a band called Arnold Corns that had Moonage Daydream and Hang on to Yourself on it. It's on Rykodisc's version of The Man Who Sold the World. The versions from Ziggy Stardust are much better.
09/02/08 @ 12:02
Comment from: Oats [Member]
2000 Man reminds me. Bowie released "The Prettiest Star" twice. First as a single in the early '70s with Marc Bolan on guitar; then a re-recording with the Spiders from Mars on Alladin Sane. I veer back and forth, but I think I prefer the more melancholy Bolan version.
09/02/08 @ 12:06
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
Mwall: maybe it's not clear, but it must be the same song by the same artist. Thompson and Costello do not meet those criteria as one artist.

Elvis Costello, "Clowntime Is Over". Although I think the mellow alternate take from Taking Liberties is cool, the Get Happy!! version gets the job done without all the gimmicks.
09/02/08 @ 12:23
Comment from: cherguevara [Member] Email
Modern English - I melt with you. The remake is only distinguishable to me in that the drummer isn't hitting the cymbal every four bars (which, actually, is a notable improvement).
09/02/08 @ 12:44
Comment from: andyr [Member] Email
True Confessions by the Undertones - on their 1st EP as well as their 1st Album. I prefer the album version.
09/02/08 @ 12:53
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
R.E.M. re-recorded Radio Free Europe for Murmur.
09/02/08 @ 13:42
Comment from: mac [Member] Email
I'm not going to list every song, but every song on Gang of Four's "Return The Gift" is a new version of one of their older songs.
09/02/08 @ 13:43
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
The Pogues covered Eric Bogle's And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda twice. An early version is included as a bonus track on the re-issue of Red Roses For Me, but the version that closes Rum Sodomy & the Lash beats it hands down.
09/02/08 @ 13:55
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
BigSteve and Mac, please choose your definitive versions of the REM track and the Go4 album. Good additions to the pile.

Carry on!
09/02/08 @ 13:57
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
I used to actually have the Hibtone single of Radio Free Europe, but it's been ages since I heard it. The hipster choice would obviously be the indie single, so I'll be contrary and say the album version is better.
09/02/08 @ 14:02
Comment from: Oats [Member]
Bowie again: three versions of "John I'm Only Dancing"; one each recorded during the Ziggy, Alladin Sane and Young Americans sessions. I like the meaty production of the Alladin version best.
09/02/08 @ 14:04
Comment from: Oats [Member]
The Kinks did a surprisingly good studio recording of "Days" for their '91 EP Did Ya.
09/02/08 @ 14:08
Comment from: mwall [Member] Email
Little Feat recorded "Willin'" for both their first and third albums. The version on the third album is definitely superior, although the first album version has a rickety charm.
09/02/08 @ 14:33
Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
Jimi Hendrix "Voodoo Chile" and "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)". It's hard not to side with the concise power of "Slight Return" but last time I pulled out ELECTRIC LADYLAND I appreciated the long jam more than ever.
09/02/08 @ 14:33
Comment from: alexmagic [Member] Email
"25 Or 6 To 4" - Chicago re-made it in 1986 with their Cetera Replacement. Whatever you think of the original, the remake is terrible. It did have an amusingly bad video, though.
09/02/08 @ 14:39
Comment from: mac [Member] Email
Again, I'm not going over all of the songs on the "Return the Gift" album. I generally think the rerecorded songs sound like decent remasters of the originals, but somehow some "old man" was accidentally mixed in. So for the most part I would go with the original versions.

The exception I think for me is "Anthrax." I think I prefer the "Return the Gift" version.

But Kudos to them for finding a creative way for making money off of old songs they weren't really going to get royalties for with a normal greatest hits album.

And I'll add Brian Wilson's "Good Vibration" originally a single (and then put on Smiley Smile), and the new version off of Smile.

Sound wise, the original is the definitive, but I prefer the newer version lyrically.

I wanted to add "I Know There's an Answer" and "Hold on to Your Ego," but I think "Hold on to Your Ego" qualifies more as a B-side really, "Hold on to Your Ego" being the definitive version.
09/02/08 @ 14:47
Comment from: latelydavidband [Member] Email
I suppose my ace in the hole was going to be Michael Nesmith. He rerecorded several of his songs as a solo artist after he left The Monkees. But, I might argue that they were solo efforts while he was still technically a Monkee, they are still credited to "The Monkees", therefore, they don't count here. I'll list them anyway, because I'm a nerd (just not the last nerd standing):

"Carlisle Wheeling" became "Conversations"
"Nine Times Blue"
"Listen To The Band"
"Propinquity"
"Some Of Shelley's Blues"
"The Crippled Lion"

It's apples and oranges as to which versions I prefer.

TB
09/02/08 @ 15:01
Comment from: Oats [Member]
Pink Floyd recorded "Money" twice; there's the famous Dark Side rendition. Then, in the early '80s, they recorded an almost identical version for a best-of. Well, maybe not "they." Wikipedia says:

"Money" was re-recorded for the 1981 Pink Floyd album A Collection of Great Dance Songs because Capitol Records refused to license the track to Columbia Records in the US. As a result, David Gilmour re-recorded the track himself playing all of the drums, guitars, keyboards, bass guitar and vocals and co-producing the song with James Guthrie. Dick Parry played tenor saxophone on the track like he did the original.
09/02/08 @ 15:42
Comment from: 2000 man [Member] Email · http://www.whammoblammo.blogspot.com/
Eric Clapton went and lounged up After Midnight for a Michelob commercial and it actually seems to have some fans.
09/02/08 @ 15:55
Comment from: cdm [Member] Email
Strutter and Strutter '78 by KISS
09/02/08 @ 16:08
Comment from: andyr [Member] Email
I have a feeling others may have this in the hole:

Re-make/Re-model - 1st Roxy Album and Bryan Ferry's "Let's Stick Together"

I got to go with the Roxy version though I do like the Ferry solo version
09/02/08 @ 16:29
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
Good one, Andyr. I'll follow that up with the two versions of "2HB", also from the same two albums involving Ferry. I prefer the former, although the solo version has its merits.

Does anyone know the story behind Ferry choosing to re-record those two songs?
09/02/08 @ 16:33
Comment from: latelydavidband [Member] Email
Okay. I've got one! Or several.

The Everlys rerecorded their hits for Warner Brothers in 64 (?). While technically superior, the songs themselves suffer from glossy modern production.

TB
09/02/08 @ 16:42
Comment from: alexmagic [Member] Email
Do the two versions of "Candle in the Wind" count? If so, uhh...the original, I guess.
09/02/08 @ 17:00
Comment from: 2000 man [Member] Email · http://www.whammoblammo.blogspot.com/
I'll toss in Roxy Music's Angel Eyes, which we were talking about a week or two ago.
09/02/08 @ 17:09
Comment from: shawnkilroy [Member] Email
2000Man: I honestly prefer the Micheloeb After Midnight to the Derreck and the Dominoes version

What about Elton's reworking of Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, the excellent, Goodbye Anna Nichole?
Does that count?
If so, I totally prefer the newer one.
09/02/08 @ 17:10
Comment from: dr john [Member] Email
The Police, "Don't Stand So Close to Me." The remake for their greatest hits collection adds a bloated keyboard part that drags the song down.
09/02/08 @ 17:20
Comment from: mwall [Member] Email
Didn't Roy Orbison remake "In Dreams" for an eighties record? I'm not sure and haven't heard it, but I seem to recall something to that effect.
09/02/08 @ 17:34
Comment from: dbuskirk [Member] Email
Yeah, Orbison (badly) re-recorded his hits for 'Virgin in '87, to cash in on David Lynch using "In Dreams" in BLUE VELVET. I think his Monument Recordings were out-of -print at the time.

Most of the early stars of rock and roll did this at some time, The Everlys did it for Warner Brothers, Chuck Berry did it for Mercury and Jerry Lee Lewis did it for Smash (probably the best of the lot).
09/02/08 @ 17:49
Comment from: 2000 man [Member] Email · http://www.whammoblammo.blogspot.com/
The Psychedelic Furs redid Pretty In Pink for that John Hughes movie.
09/02/08 @ 18:18
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
I don't know the story behind the remakes on Let's Stick Together, but there were a total of FIVE Roxy songs on that album:

Re-Make/Re-Model
2HB
Chance Meeting
Sea Breezes (all from the 1st album)
and Casanova (from Country Life)

I have to go with the originals, but the remakes are not at all bad; they just seem to have some of the edges knocked off.
09/02/08 @ 20:48
Comment from: chickenfrank [Member]
Have all you Strummer fans left me with a two foot gimmie of Keys to Your Heart by the 101ers. Single and album versions. I pick the album version only because I know it better.
09/02/08 @ 21:15
Comment from: chickenfrank [Member]
Thanks for the unpleasant memory, Dbuskirk. I selected Chuck Berry's Greatest Hits as one of my 11 free Columbia House record selections. Man, was I disappointed to hear they were all re-recordings. There was no internet support group to warn me back then.
09/02/08 @ 21:20
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
I think it's contrary to the spirit of Last Man Standing to hold onto entries for later in the game, so I won't string these out one by one, even though I believe the original rules dictate one entry per post.

Bob Marley re-recorded many of his early tracks later when he was on Island:

Duppy Conqueror
Small Axe
One Love
Put It On
Bend Down Low
Lively Up Yourself
Kaya
Concrete Jungle
Sun Is Shining
Trenchtown Rock

I may have missed one or more. In general I prefer the earlier recordings, basically because I prefer the way reggae was played earlier in its development, but the later version of Kaya on the album of that name is really ... herbal.
09/02/08 @ 21:30
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
Similarly Charlie Rich re-recorded his best Sun material periodically throughout his career, notably Everything I Do Is Wrong redone for Smash and Sittin' and Thinkin' when he was on Epic. I thought sure he had recut Who Will the Next Fool Be?, but maybe he thought after Bobby Bland recorded it he should leave well enough alone. Lonely Weekends was re-recorded a couple of times.
09/02/08 @ 21:48
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
The Dead recorded New Minglewood Blues twice in the studio (many times on live recordings). On the eponymous debut album it's called New New Minglewood Blues, and on Shakedown Street it's called All New Minglewood Blues.
09/02/08 @ 21:55
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
As with Chuck Berry, you have to be very careful when buying Little Richard. Always make sure it says Specialty (his original label) somewhere prominent on the package.
09/02/08 @ 21:56
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
I prefer the single verson of "Keys to Your Heart" and the later, album version "Small Axe". Both versions of each song are good though.
09/02/08 @ 22:24
Comment from: the great 48 [Member] Email
"Jilted John" by same. The single version absolutely shreds the album remake.

Same with "Shot By Both Sides" by Magazine -- the single is way the hell better.

One that's basically not different at all: Slow Children's one good song, "President Am I," appears on both of their albums in almost identical versions.
09/02/08 @ 23:31
Comment from: cherguevarra [Member] Email
I may not be the last man standing, but I may win the "lamest contribution" award: Howard Jones re-recorded "no one is to blame" and had a hit with it with Phil Collins' production.
09/03/08 @ 00:07
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
The Jam, "Smithers Jones": I prefer the album version to the one that came out on some odds and sods record, in which the full band played along on their standard instruments.
09/03/08 @ 07:54
Comment from: alexmagic [Member] Email
I read that as "Jan Smithers Jones" when I scrolled down the page.

Radiohead put out two different versions (as a b-side and on an EP) of the non-album track "Killer Cars". I really like them both, but in this case, I like the faster one better than the aptly named "Mogadon" version.
09/03/08 @ 09:35
Comment from: mockcarr [Member] Email
The Shins released two versions of Gone For Good, one on Chutes Too Narrow, the other as an extra b-track sort of on the So Says I single. I like both, but come down on the album version's side.
09/03/08 @ 12:32
Comment from: general slocum [Member] Email
Steve, I would figure the remake of Casanova has some of that Ferry groove that you'd appreciate. I really like that remake, of the ones on that record.

Also, Johnny Cash has great bookends from either end of his career doing Give My Love to Rose. Both fine recordings.
09/05/08 @ 09:15
Comment from: mockcarr [Member] Email
Yo La Tengo has at least two versions of Did I Tell You, on New Wave Hot Dogs, and again on Fakebook. The Fakebook version is sung a little better, and is well served by a more acoustic/folky sound.
09/05/08 @ 11:36
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
Btw, fans of Yo La Tengo's Fakebook might want to head over to the groovy Setting the Woods on Fire blog, where the intrepid blogger Paul has gathered together mp3's of the originals of all the songs covered on Fakebook. Very handy.

http://www.settingthewoodsonfire.com/2008/08/fakebook-originals.html

This is an irregular regular feature there. He's done the Almost Blue originals, Sweethearts of the Rodeo, etc. Lots of other good stuff too. Check it out.
09/05/08 @ 12:28
Comment from: BigSteve [Member] Email
At the general's prompting I just went back and checked out the version of Casanova on Let's Stick Together. Doing it with Al Green-style drums is an interesting idea, but the rhythm guitar is just not up to the task. I guess it's harder to reproduce Teenie Hodges than Al Jackson. I do like the snake charmer oboe solo though.

The version on Country Life just really brings the thunder, especially Paul Thompson's drums. Add that prominent Rickenbacker bass and clavinet as the main rhythm instrument, and it's just funkier. Plus it's got that weird synth break and psyched out Manzanera leads. I just really like the hard-edged sound the band had on Country Life.

If I hadn't heard the original, I'd probably like the remake better, and that goes for the others on that album too. I love the covers, especially The Price Of Love.

As usual I can't make much of the lyrics. "Casanova, is that your name, or do you live there?" Casanova would translate as 'new house' right? Where's saturn when we need him? Anyway it just struck me that Ferry was from Newcastle, and that would be more or less analogous to Casanova.
09/06/08 @ 13:53
Comment from: Mr. Moderator [Member]
BigSteve, you and Saturnismine may have to have an RTH Brainiac showdown someday. Who else around here has ever thought about "Casanova" in terms of Ferry's hometown. Oats?
09/06/08 @ 15:04
Comment from: Oats [Member]
I'm actually not a huge "Casanova" fan. The groove and freak-out instrumental breaks are great, but finger-pointing lyrics are not Ferry's strong suit.
09/06/08 @ 15:59

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