Listen back to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ (24/1/2020)

A

Anonymous

Guest
Listen back to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’

One of the starring lights of the mid-nineties British rock and roll scene, Placebo offered something that the rest of the Britpop scene could get anywhere near. Brian Molko and the rest of the band were an authentic alternative act. This cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ is an example of why.

Blur and Oasis paid homage to the icons that came before them. To some extent emulating their heroes The Kinks and The Beatles, Britpop has always given thanks to its predecessors. Placebo, however, took those values and tried to reach a new, previously alienated audience by subverting them.

Formed in London in 1994 by vocalist–guitarist Brian Molko and bassist–guitarist Stefan Olsdal. Placebo were soon joined by drummer Robert Schultzberg, who left in 1996 due to conflicts with Molko with Steve Hewitt completing the band’s line-up. Their self-titled debut album received critical acclaim wherever it was heard and the lead single ‘Nancy Boy’ blasted the band into the velvety dark stratosphere.

Meanwhile, Blur were releasing their own self-titled LP and Oasis ruling the world for a few nights at Knebworth. Each one using the foundations of British rock and roll from the sixties to create some of the nineties’ most infectious tunes. But Placebo were looking a little closer to home as they took the glam rock styling of Bowie and T-Rex to a new darker direction. Black sequins all the way.

Another moment of Placebo subverting the icons of the past is with their cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’. The group were asked to cover the song as part of The Smiths Is Dead which acted as a celebration of the 10th anniversary of the LP’s release from French magazine, Les Inrockuptibles.

The version Molko and the rest of the band provide is simply brilliant. The band take the song’s gentle beginning and amplifies it by slowing down the tempo and stripping it back with acoustic guitar lulling us all into a safe sense of security. Until the band breakthrough into the song’s main body and begin to slash and stab with a swaggering confidence. Molko’s vocal performance is both far removed and utterly akin to Morrissey’s own performance, yet somehow Molko takes it to another level.

It’s the mark of a band not daunted by the prospect of paying homage to a legendary act. But are instead intrigued to find the inner workings and manipulate them for their own. It is the mark of a band determined to never compromise and never give an inch, it’s something throughout their career that they’ve held as a badge of honour.

Listen below to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ from 1996.

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/placebo-the-smiths-cover-bigmouth-strikes-again/


 
By rights they should be bludgeoned in their beds. They have no right to take their place with the human race. Now I know how Joan Of Arc felt.
 
It is rare that covers are better than the original but one such example is the Joy Division song "Love will tear us apart" that was made so much better by Swans.



It drives Joy Div fans nuts when I say it cause some songs are so holy to people but the Swans version kicks Ian Curtis into orbit.
 
It is rare that covers are better than the original but one such example is the Joy Division song "Love will tear us apart" that was made so much better by Swans.



It drives Joy Div fans nuts when I say it cause some songs are so holy to people but the Swans version kicks Ian Curtis into orbit.


This is shit.
 
Listen back to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’

One of the starring lights of the mid-nineties British rock and roll scene, Placebo offered something that the rest of the Britpop scene could get anywhere near. Brian Molko and the rest of the band were an authentic alternative act. This cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ is an example of why.

Blur and Oasis paid homage to the icons that came before them. To some extent emulating their heroes The Kinks and The Beatles, Britpop has always given thanks to its predecessors. Placebo, however, took those values and tried to reach a new, previously alienated audience by subverting them.

Formed in London in 1994 by vocalist–guitarist Brian Molko and bassist–guitarist Stefan Olsdal. Placebo were soon joined by drummer Robert Schultzberg, who left in 1996 due to conflicts with Molko with Steve Hewitt completing the band’s line-up. Their self-titled debut album received critical acclaim wherever it was heard and the lead single ‘Nancy Boy’ blasted the band into the velvety dark stratosphere.

Meanwhile, Blur were releasing their own self-titled LP and Oasis ruling the world for a few nights at Knebworth. Each one using the foundations of British rock and roll from the sixties to create some of the nineties’ most infectious tunes. But Placebo were looking a little closer to home as they took the glam rock styling of Bowie and T-Rex to a new darker direction. Black sequins all the way.

Another moment of Placebo subverting the icons of the past is with their cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’. The group were asked to cover the song as part of The Smiths Is Dead which acted as a celebration of the 10th anniversary of the LP’s release from French magazine, Les Inrockuptibles.

The version Molko and the rest of the band provide is simply brilliant. The band take the song’s gentle beginning and amplifies it by slowing down the tempo and stripping it back with acoustic guitar lulling us all into a safe sense of security. Until the band breakthrough into the song’s main body and begin to slash and stab with a swaggering confidence. Molko’s vocal performance is both far removed and utterly akin to Morrissey’s own performance, yet somehow Molko takes it to another level.

It’s the mark of a band not daunted by the prospect of paying homage to a legendary act. But are instead intrigued to find the inner workings and manipulate them for their own. It is the mark of a band determined to never compromise and never give an inch, it’s something throughout their career that they’ve held as a badge of honour.

Listen below to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ from 1996.

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/placebo-the-smiths-cover-bigmouth-strikes-again/




This is shit.
 
It is rare that covers are better than the original but one such example is the Joy Division song "Love will tear us apart" that was made so much better by Swans.



It drives Joy Div fans nuts when I say it cause some songs are so holy to people but the Swans version kicks Ian Curtis into orbit.

Cut short sadly and another thing with it is that Courtney Love stole her looks from the female in the band The Swans. The band featured heavily on MTV indie shows in the 90's.
 
Listen back to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’

One of the starring lights of the mid-nineties British rock and roll scene, Placebo offered something that the rest of the Britpop scene could get anywhere near. Brian Molko and the rest of the band were an authentic alternative act. This cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ is an example of why.

Blur and Oasis paid homage to the icons that came before them. To some extent emulating their heroes The Kinks and The Beatles, Britpop has always given thanks to its predecessors. Placebo, however, took those values and tried to reach a new, previously alienated audience by subverting them.

Formed in London in 1994 by vocalist–guitarist Brian Molko and bassist–guitarist Stefan Olsdal. Placebo were soon joined by drummer Robert Schultzberg, who left in 1996 due to conflicts with Molko with Steve Hewitt completing the band’s line-up. Their self-titled debut album received critical acclaim wherever it was heard and the lead single ‘Nancy Boy’ blasted the band into the velvety dark stratosphere.

Meanwhile, Blur were releasing their own self-titled LP and Oasis ruling the world for a few nights at Knebworth. Each one using the foundations of British rock and roll from the sixties to create some of the nineties’ most infectious tunes. But Placebo were looking a little closer to home as they took the glam rock styling of Bowie and T-Rex to a new darker direction. Black sequins all the way.

Another moment of Placebo subverting the icons of the past is with their cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’. The group were asked to cover the song as part of The Smiths Is Dead which acted as a celebration of the 10th anniversary of the LP’s release from French magazine, Les Inrockuptibles.

The version Molko and the rest of the band provide is simply brilliant. The band take the song’s gentle beginning and amplifies it by slowing down the tempo and stripping it back with acoustic guitar lulling us all into a safe sense of security. Until the band breakthrough into the song’s main body and begin to slash and stab with a swaggering confidence. Molko’s vocal performance is both far removed and utterly akin to Morrissey’s own performance, yet somehow Molko takes it to another level.

It’s the mark of a band not daunted by the prospect of paying homage to a legendary act. But are instead intrigued to find the inner workings and manipulate them for their own. It is the mark of a band determined to never compromise and never give an inch, it’s something throughout their career that they’ve held as a badge of honour.

Listen below to Placebo’s brilliant cover of The Smiths’ ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’ from 1996.

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/placebo-the-smiths-cover-bigmouth-strikes-again/



The song that made me fall in love with Morrissey! Unfortunately, this weak cover can’t beat the original by any stretch of imagination. I find the band annoying and pretentious just like Suede. Can’t stand men with feminine voice.
 
It is rare that covers are better than the original but one such example is the Joy Division song "Love will tear us apart" that was made so much better by Swans.



It drives Joy Div fans nuts when I say it cause some songs are so holy to people but the Swans version kicks Ian Curtis into orbit.


Atrocious and she looks like she’s gagging on a piece of plum
 
I wondered how long it would take. They added more to the song and gave it more depth. The original is in fact quite weak.
Having a man and woman singing it together was clever and Ian Curtis never thought of that cause it is a song about a man and woman of course. Then the distinct piano and more drive from bass and guitars makes The Swans version the ultimate cover of Love will tear us apart.
 
It is rare that covers are better than the original but one such example is the Joy Division song "Love will tear us apart" that was made so much better by Swans.



It drives Joy Div fans nuts when I say it cause some songs are so holy to people but the Swans version kicks Ian Curtis into orbit.


Are you kidding me?
 
Are you kidding me?
Not at all and the Joy Division version is crap compared to The Swans. The Joy Div is in mono and The Swans is in stereo and hell yeah even 7.1 surround sound compared to the original one channel disaster.
 
Back
Top Bottom