ChatterBank3 mins ago
Bobby Brown
30 Answers
Do you think that Bobby Brown has to take some of the responsibility for Whitney Houstons drug addiction and untimely death?
Answers
Indirectly - but only insofar as any of us take any responsibili ty for anything that those close to us do - which is very little.
Adults do what they wish to do - good or bad. In Whitney Houston case it was singing and drugs, and she did both of those with varying degrees of success.
18:46 Sun 12th Feb 2012
I sympathise entirely with the loss of Whtiney Houston to the music world, and her family and friends, but I temper that with the mortal dread that we shall have a massive upsurge in the playing of her gawdawful version of 'I Will Always Love You' which has always been a gigantic example of technique over soul, and ham over content. I'm bracing myself now.
For anyone who wants to know how this song should be sung - please check out the YouTube link and wonder at how different a song can sing when an artist lets the song come out, and doesn't bury it under her vocal pyrotechnics.
For anyone who wants to know how this song should be sung - please check out the YouTube link and wonder at how different a song can sing when an artist lets the song come out, and doesn't bury it under her vocal pyrotechnics.
We must agree to differ there MarkRae.
Few people ever sing a song as well as its creator, and Dolly's hymn to her good friend and musical collaborator Porter Waggoner is beautiful in its fragility and pain, but i still think LR has the edge - partly because of the gorgeous arrangement by her own good friend and colaborator Andrew Gold who lets his own piano and the slide guitar bleed in and out just the correct amount, and if you can get Dolly herself and Emmylou Harris to do your backing vocals with you, then you have a musical treat indeed which goes a long way towards making WH's version a distant nightmare.
Few people ever sing a song as well as its creator, and Dolly's hymn to her good friend and musical collaborator Porter Waggoner is beautiful in its fragility and pain, but i still think LR has the edge - partly because of the gorgeous arrangement by her own good friend and colaborator Andrew Gold who lets his own piano and the slide guitar bleed in and out just the correct amount, and if you can get Dolly herself and Emmylou Harris to do your backing vocals with you, then you have a musical treat indeed which goes a long way towards making WH's version a distant nightmare.
I can see what you're saying, Andy, but I think it's precisely the over-arrangement which I don't care for (though nothing like Phil Spector's massacre of "Let It Be"), and the slide guitar is such a Nashville cliché that it just gets in the way, IMO.
Anyway, this is moving seriously off-topic now...
Anyway, this is moving seriously off-topic now...