Let me get over you
The way you've gotten over me
[NOTE: Today marks the third time that 2 or 3 lines has featured the Vanilla Fudge cover of “You Keep Me Hangin’ On” . . . and it may not be the last.
You don’t have a problem with that, do you, bro? ’Cause if you doubt me, dog, you’re gonna have to fight me, dog – and I always carry a loaded .44 on the low, where the cheese is at.
(Sorry, but sometimes my inner T.I. just can’t be contained. What you know about that?)
“You Keep Me Hangin’ On” was included in the first group of inductees into the 2 OR 3 LINES “GOLDEN DECADE” ALBUM TRACKS HALL OF FAME back in 2018. Vanilla Fudge’s cover of what may have been the best Supremes single ever was a stick of dynamite back then, and it’s still a stick of dynamite today.
Today the record is being inducted into the 2 OR 3 LINES “GOLDEN DECADE” COVER RECORDS HALL OF FAME – the first record to be inducted into two different 2 or 3 lines halls of fame.
Or maybe not – I’m not entirely sure, and I’m far too busy to go back and search through my blog to figure out whether that statement is true or false.
In any event, what follows is a slightly revised version of my original 2015 post about “You Keep Me Hangin’ On.”]
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Why is it so hard to do a cover version of a good song that is an improvement on the original?
I think it’s mostly a matter of familiarity. When you’re used to the original version of a song, a different version just doesn’t sound right. The more popular the original version was and the more familiar it is, the less likely it is that people will cotton to a cover version.
The covers that I think work the best are the ones that deconstruct the song and put it back together in a completely different way.
No one was better at doing that than Vanilla Fudge, who took simple little three-minute, top-40 songs and turned them upside down and inside out to such an extent that their own mothers wouldn't have recognized them.
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“You Keep Me Hangin’ On” was a classic Motown song that was a #1 hit for the Supremes. It was written and produced by Motown’s legendary Holland-Dozier-Holland production team, and I think it’s the best song the Supremes ever did. It has a little more punch than most of their songs.
Just in case you've forgotten what the Supremes’ version sounds like, you can
click here to listen to it.
That’s a really good performance of a really good song – don’t you agree?
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The Supremes |
If you had been living in Long Island in 1966 and playing in a psychedelic band with a bunch of other white guys, why in the world would you have picked that song to cover and release as your first single just a few months after it had been a big hit for the Supremes? What would have made you think you could do it better?
I certainly wouldn’t have chosen it as a song to cover. And I would have been wrong. (It just goes to show you.)
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I recently stumbled across a video of Vanilla Fudge performing this song on The Ed Sullivan Show in January 1968.
Sullivan's other guests that night included Duke Ellington and his band, Flip Wilson – he did a bit as “Geraldine” – and Topo Gigio, the famous mouse puppet who was a favorite of Sullivan’s.
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Ed Sullivan with Topo Gigio |
Make sure you’re sitting down before you watch this Vanilla Fudge video -- and if you have a bad heart, have those nitroglycerin tablets handy.
I’m not kidding. This performance is the damnedest thing you’ve ever seen. When it ends, you may feel like lying down in a dark, quiet room with a cool washcloth on your forehead. Or maybe you'll be so jacked up you'll run outside, grab a baseball bat, and start taking out your neighbors’ mailboxes.
Each of the band members appear to be completely spastic (to use a word that was one of our favorites back in 1968). I’m not sure which one is the most over the top, but I’m voting for drummer Carmen Appice.
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Vanilla Fudge |
Appice’s demented performance puts even fellow nutjob/genius drummer Keith Moon to shame, and that is saying something. (Check out how Appice twirls his drumsticks between beats, and literally hugs his cymbals to silence them.)
I wish I knew what Ed Sullivan was thinking as he witnessed the performance. It probably scared the bejesus out of him.
Click here to buy the album version of the song from Amazon.
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