Frankie Carle, Bert Kaempfert, Ray Conniff, The Cowsills, Kate Smith, Jerry Vale, and the Lettermen are among our Beatles-cover artists today. And a shout-out to the the earliest covers, starting with 1964: I Want to Hold Your Hand--Frankie Carle; and A Hard Day's Night--Marty Gold and His Orch. On to 1965: And I Love Her--Ferrante and Teicher. Hm. And that's it for 1965. But a nice batch for 1966: Yesterday--Boots Randolph; Michelle--The Fiesta Brass; Yesterday--Kate Smith; and Nowhere Man--Les and Larry Elgart.
And our fourth and fifth Somethings for this series to date, with more to come: Bert Kaempfert and Patti Page, both from 1970. Plus, our fourth Long and Winding Road, by my favorite pop-instrumental maestro, Andre Kostelanetz (also from 1970). From 1969, an unusually fine Paperback Writer by The Cowsills (!), Get Back by the Moog Machine (from their LP, Switched-On Rock), a great Eleanor Rigby by Aretha Franklin; a lovely Here, There and Everywhere by the Lettermen; and Dionne Warwick's take on We Can Work It Out (from her Soulful LP on Scepter).
Another Here, There, and Everywhere, this time by the always excellent Petula Clark, and our lone 1968 track--The Fool on the Hill, by the Billy Vaughn Singers. The latter is a fine EZ Fab Four fake. (Actually, a legit cover, but "Fab Four fake" sounds good...)
Two creative John Denver Fab Four covers, both from 1970: Golden Slumbers, and Eleanor Rigby. And three more 1970 tracks: Jerry Vale crooning Let It Be, Tony Mottola with a near-hard-rock Come Together, and a highly enjoyable Living Strings rendition of Hey Jude. And only we up-there-in-age folks remember when material like that last number was played on FM EZ radio.
Skipping ahead to 1973, a decent Ray Conniff presentation of the Paul and Linda McCarney Live and Let Die--one of those shouldn't-work-but-it-does tracks. And from 1974, the Starkey-Harrison Photograph, ably rendered by one of the blog's favorite crooners, Engelbert Humperdinck.
A technical note: Though I've added art to every Fab Forgery project in Windows' Media Player app, not all of that art seems to be showing up, even after I've checked it within the app. My apologies for any not-showing-up art. There's no apparent reason for this. (I know--get a Mac.)
DOWNLOAD: Fab Forgeries Pt. 5.zip
I Want to Hold Your Hand--Frankie Carle, 1964
A Hard Day's Night--Marty Gold and His Orch., 1964
Something--Bert Kaempfert and His Orch., 1970
Here, There and Everywhere--The Lettermen, 1969
Golden Slumbers--John Denver, 1970
Live and Let Die--Ray Conniff, 1973
Yesterday--Boots Randolph, 1966
My Love--Engelbert Humperdinck, 1974
Come Together--Tony Mottola, 1970
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da--Floyd Cramer, 1969
Paperback Writer--The Cowsills, 1969
Let It Be--Jerry Vale, 1970
And I Love Her--Ferrante and Teicher, 1965
The Fool on the Hill--The Billy Vaughn Singers, 1968
Something--Patti Page, 1970
The Long and Winding Road--Andre Kostelanetz, 1970
Michelle--The Fiesta Brass, 1966
Get Back--The Moog Machine, 1969
Yesterday--Kate Smith, 1966
Eleanor Rigby--Aretha Franklin, 1969
Here, There and Everywhere--Petula Clark, 1967
Hey Jude--The Living Strings, 1970
We Can Work It Out--Dionne Warwick, 1969
Nowhere Man--Les and Larry Elgart, 1966
Eleanor Rigby--John Denver, 1970
9 comments:
Thanks Lee for another great volume of Fab Four hits!
Hi Lee,
Thank you for another very interesting collection. While I have never been a true Beatles fan, I do like some of these other artists' renditions of their material.
As to Windows Media Player, I truly understand.
Once I opened up your list, using Windows, I noticed that those tracks that had artwork were labeled 5 in the artists and album titles. The others were some form of 4...4a, 4b, etc. Once I changed them all to 5 in Windows Media Player edit, they all now have the artwork you used.
Hi Lee,
I looked over and tried to do some edits to your playlist 4. Nothing really worked for that one. Pity?
Great to have you back! I have got a handful of the cover albums where some of these cuts appear on, like Frankie Carle Plays the Big Imported Hits (spent the price you are currently paying at Goodwill to add my copy of that album to my collection--original 1964 RCA Mono pressing!), Jerry Vale's Let It Be, Ray Conniff's Harmony, the infamous Kate Smith Today! and the Engelbert My Love albums. The Elgart's take on Nowhere Man is one of my favorite Big Band Fab Four adaptions (just got a legitimate CD-R of the album that song appears on a few months ago.) If there is a Part Six, hopefully we will have Enoch Light's take on A Hard Days' Night and Ray Conniff's great version of Ringo's Photograph. Will sample some of these eventually.
Thanks, Lee! Love the compilation series.
In case you missed it, Buster posted an album of Stan Getz playing Bacharach and David classics. Here is the link:
https://big10inchrecord.blogspot.com/2025/06/stan-getz-plays-bacharach-and-david.html
Thanks for the comments!
Bryan,
The 4a, 4b, and 4c are the "album" numbers for my VinylStudio program, which I use for ripping. And inside my Media Player, all of the correct art shows up... and then some of it fails to show up when exported. This shouldn't be happening, but... Microsoft in action, I guess. I might try editing the album titles, as you did. Maybe I can get all of the Part 4 tracks under a single heading.
musicman 1979,
I'll be featuring Enoch Light's "Hard Day's Night"--I have the Command label 45 right in front of me. And I can't believe I've only posted "I Feel Fine" so far--I have three other Enoch's to be ripped from cassette (for a total of four extra ELs). And the immortal Kingsmen version of "Night," which I first mistook for Bill Black's Combo when I ripped it from a CD-R with no track listing. And I don't think Ray Conniff's "Photograph" is in my cassette or CD-R stash. And I'm sure I had that LP at one time ("The Way We Were").
I'm going to see what I can accomplish by way of relabeling my album covers so that they don't come up in such an out-of-order fashion. This happens when I'm exporting the things from VinylStudio.
Enoch also covered "I Want To Hold Your Hand" on his Discotheque Dance Dance Dance album, of which I have a Capitol Record Club pressing in my collection that I paid a couple of dollars for a few years ago.
Ooops, almost missed this volume. Thanks, Lee! My keyboard keeps dropping keystrokes, especially the "o". Might be time for a new one.
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