Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumI woke up with this ear worm
(I am tuning out politics (mostly - old habits diehard ;-/ ) for a while since the bad news overload gets a bit dispiriting and I have to go work on my actual field after a break of some 13 years..dont ask..🙄 )
I used to like this as a kid. Though I just found out that its apparently a cover. Are all Carpenters songs covers? It was apparently a Canadian band called Klaatu that sang it originally. Not clear if its a reference to that scifi novel/flick:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaatu_(The_Day_the_Earth_Stood_Still)
Kinda giving up on signs of human intelligence (to the extent that I ever thought it existed..lol..), so alien intelligence (though definitely not AI) it is..probably why I thought of it this morning..
(Cant tell which is a bigger scam at this point-crypto or AI..Crypto is more obviously a complete scam. With AI there is just so much of that worthless junk out there poisoning every space..the grift and junk economy).

BootinUp
(50,176 posts)He did the writing/arranging of their music for themost part. But they were both extraordinarily talented by my reckoning.
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from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Carpenter_(musician)
Richard and Karen signed with A&M Records on April 22, 1969. "Let's hope we have some hits," Herb Alpert told them. According to Richard, Alpert gave them artistic freedom in the recording studios but after Offering, their first album, was released and wasn't a big seller, it was rumored that some of A&M's people were asking Alpert to abandon the Carpenters but he believed in their talent and insisted on giving them another chance.
Alpert suggested the Carpenters record a Burt Bacharach and Hal David song called (They Long to Be) Close to You written in 1963. Though Richard worked up an arrangement only at Alpert's insistence, the song was an overnight success. Released on May 14, 1970, it rocketed up the Top 40 charts to No. 1, where it stayed for four weeks during June and July,[13] paving the way for the duo's future records.
Sitting at home one night, Richard was watching TV and saw a commercial for Crocker National Bank. He recognized the voices of Paul Williams and Roger Nichols, two A&M songwriters on the commercial's theme song "We've Only Just Begun". Richard made some calls to confirm their involvement and asked if there was a full version of the song, which Williams affirmed. Carpenter managed to turn the bank commercial jingle into an RIAA-certified Gold record. It peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and has become a popular wedding song. The song also successfully launched the careers of Nichols and Williams, who went on to write multiple hits for the Carpenters and many other artists.[14]
Richard composed many of the Carpenters' hits as well with John Bettis as lyricist such as:
"Goodbye to Love" (1972; #7; one of the first pop ballads to have a fuzz guitar soloinfluenced the development of the power ballad[15])
"Top of the World" (1972; No. 1. Though the Carpenters originally opted to not release this song as a single, a version recorded by Lynn Anderson reached No. 2 on the Billboard Country chart; following the success of Anderson's version, the Carpenters decided to release their version as a single, and it reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100.)
"Yesterday Once More" (1973; #2)
"Only Yesterday" (1975; #4)
I used to listen to their songs as a kid. My dad told me that Karen Carpenter died due to an eating disorder.
Okay Wikipedia confirms that. Except for their cover of Beatles Ticket to Ride, I like all their songs. Its not as bad as Phil Collins take on Groovy kind of love but close ;-/.
Dad (who is musical) told me that when you make a cover there is a legal requirement that you change the original somewhat. I guess thats why covers never sound like the originals. I wondered why it sounded nothing like the Beatles version.
Figarosmom
(7,562 posts)I had it and played it quite a lot, but completely forgotten about it. Thanks for reminding me, I don't like completely forgetting things. But I saw the album cover in my mind as soon as I hit ay.
jfz9580m
(15,696 posts)I sometimes find that after I hear a cover and take to it, I dont like the original as much.
But in this case I like it..Thanks Figarosmom.
Wiz Imp
(6,485 posts)Ticket To Ride (The Beatles)
Please Mr. Postman (The Marvelettes)
There's a Kind of Hush (Herman's Hermits)
Beechwood 4-5789 (The Marvelettes)
Calling Occupants Of Interplanetary Craft (Klaatu)
Goofus (Les Paul)
I Believe You (Dorothy Moore)
Solitaire (Andy Williams)
Touch Me When We're Dancing (Bama)
jfz9580m
(15,696 posts)That was another band which made a lot of covers. Many of the bands from the 50s-70s did..The Hollies, Hermans Hermits..its hard to tell who sang the original sometimes.
I have been trying to locate a song called Freight Train sung by a band in the approx style of The Hollies have, but it was clearly a cover going by its Wiki entry:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freight_Train_(folk_song)
I cant find the cover I am looking for. If anyone knows which one it is, Id like to know..
Thanks