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Wailing Souls — Tomorrow Never Knows
Album: Psychedelic Souls
Avg rating:
5.8

Your rating:
Total ratings: 1239









Released: 1998
Length: 3:37
Plays (last 30 days): 2
(no lyrics available)
Comments (103)add comment
 jpfueler wrote:


Somewhere I have MP3s of several different covers of this. including this one. Leftovers from the days of WinMX



Oh, and checkout the Los Lobos version of this on YouTube. Muy Excellente!
 Shimmer wrote:
anamacha wrote: That would be an obscure group from England called "The Beatles".


I think OP was being cheeky. ;)
 romangaslan wrote:

Anyone who has the juevos to tackle this Lennon/Beatles masterpiece gets a huge thumbs up from me.



Somewhere I have MP3s of several different covers of this. including this one. Leftovers from the days of WinMX
Anyone who has the juevos to tackle this Lennon/Beatles masterpiece gets a huge thumbs up from me.
 csumby wrote:


I love that version!


Carla Azar also did an excellent cover of this on the Sucker Punch (movie) soundtrack
Reggae covers often suck. Just not this bad
 pktinkler2984 wrote:


Which is awesome...and I saw them perform it at the Reading Festival in 1976.  Old man ramblings...…..


O you so lucky!
 chuck.b.meyers wrote:

There is also a version of this by 801 featuring Eno and Phil Manzanera of Roxy



I love that version!
This is a great album, full of quirky covers with an excellent feel to it.
Love it!
 Shimmer wrote:
anamacha wrote: That would be an obscure group from England called "The Beatles".


Phil Manzanera's 801 did a tremendous version of this live.  I had the privilege of seeing them do it at the Reading Festival in 1976...with a very youthful Simon Phillips on drums, and Eno on vocals.  A brilliant take on the original.
 dmiley wrote:


John Peel's a ****. '78 good times.



This comment drove me to a search engine. This guy was the gatekeeper of psychedelic and progressive rock in Great Britain, correct? I defer to your obviously more familiar acquaintance with the DJ.
 pktinkler2984 wrote:


Which is awesome...and I saw them perform it at the Reading Festival in 1976.  Old man ramblings...…..


John Peel's a ****. '78 good times.
 chuck.b.meyers wrote:

There is also a version of this by 801 featuring Eno and Phil Manzanera of Roxy



Which is awesome...and I saw them perform it at the Reading Festival in 1976.  Old man ramblings...…..
A rocking cover was also done by 801 (Phil Manzanera / Eno / etc) on the live album. (1976)

the rushed tempo and the Nintendo instrumentation are annoying 
"Blue weedo"? 
 yougivememosi wrote:
Didn't the beatles cover this?


ummm....
Yet another cool cover of a great song.
Blasphemous
...sure beats Sarah Mclachlin's  version of Blackbird or all those annoying  ukulele   Beatles  covers 
I thought this was Sting at first and was highly disappointed that he would try to cover a great Beatles tune.  But once I saw that it was Wailing Souls, somehow it seemed OK.
 yougivememosi wrote:
Didn't the beatles cover this?
 
Was prepared to dislike this but psychedelic reggae has got me hooked.
 David_Ernst wrote:
Ugh... play the Beatles' version
 
oder 801

Greetings from Bavaria to all the listeners outside. Stay safe!
Ugh... play the Beatles' version
Interesting... I love the original, but this is fun. And with the title of the album being what it is, I am further intrigued.
I might be brought to like this were it not played at meth speed!
dissection
 TheLongshot wrote:
I never realised that this is a Beatles tune. The version I'm familiar with is on the new Living Colour album...
 

I didn't realize they covered it... lost track of that band. I like their approach, but I think they speed it up too much. But the drumming is great as LC's always is. 
About the only Beatles cover better than the original is Elton John”s Lucy and even then Lennon was involved but this is well done. Me likey.
 chuck.b.meyers wrote:
There is also a version of this by 801 featuring Eno and Phil Manzanera of Roxy

That is unquestionably my favorite cover of TNK.  This Wailing Souls one......not so much. 


I love this zippy cover to the dull (IMO) original, and the guy's accent is cute. Where's this band from? 8 from the bouncing Nottingham jury 😎
good cover of a great Phil Collins cover
 alain.brault wrote:
Brilliant! This isn't a cover, it's a reinterpretation of a song andn how they felt it.
 
So then, what is a cover exactly?
 studionord wrote:
nice for those who dont know the original from 66...
 
And who WOULD NOT know the original from 66?
 rpdevotee wrote:
Insulting and blasphemous
 

There is also a version of this by 801 featuring Eno and Phil Manzanera of Roxy
The fact that the original was released in 1966 shows how advanced The Beatles were in their day.
What a fascinating version of this song!
Didn't the beatles cover this?
Insulting and blasphemous
nice for those who dont know the original from 66...
Excellent interpretation. Not your standard Reggae cover.
Brilliant! This isn't a cover, it's a reinterpretation of a song andn how they felt it.
Never normally like covers but this is something so different about this one that I love it. Would John Lennon have approved? I think so.
I love this quirky version!
Love the song; love quirky covers.
 
I'm OK with it!!
Some Beatle songs can be covered. Not this one. Gonggggggggggggggggggg!
Tell me why?
Please.
{#Frown} {#Stop}
I consider this as rudeness.
Beatles are sacred. 
Blasphemous...
Please don't play this again
I normally disagree with Beatles covers but it works!
 oldsaxon wrote:
Nice. This is unexpected and wonderful. Proper RP content

 
I was thinking just the same... :-)
Nice. This is unexpected and wonderful. Proper RP content
Dear God, no! Just no.
Plain and simple the worst i've heard in a loooong time......
The Beatles' version was special! Donovan in his last Boulder show said that he helped them figure out how to use the sitar in Western Music (whereas Ravi Shankar playing Indian ragas on it is another thing), and maybe that's why 👎. I also think the tempo doesn't suit.
 thewiseking wrote:
Now, this sucks

 
You are indeed wise in this regard.  PSD.
Now, this sucks
I wish they'd play Shark attack...great song by this band. Check out the video..some fine dancin, mann 
 raga wrote:
This can help to understand how great is the original version

 
{#Shhh}
This can help to understand how great is the original version
very cool mix {#Music}
 scarletdancer wrote:
Drum & Bass?  I admit I'm not that well-educated on all these "new-fangled" electronic music styles, but I would describe this as psychedelic ska (with a bit of Animal from the Muppets thrown in.)  Personally, I like it, and I'm a huge Beatles fan. 
 

Me, too. Um, liking it and a huge Beatles fan.
Drum & Bass?  I admit I'm not that well-educated on all these "new-fangled" electronic music styles, but I would describe this as psychedelic ska (with a bit of Animal from the Muppets thrown in.)  Personally, I like it, and I'm a huge Beatles fan. 


DD joe1 wrote:
This is poor...Drum & Bass on this?....Pah! Best version I heard was Peter Gabrial....if he did cover it!
 


Absolutely horrendous.... not even amusing like some campy covers heard on RP.
I approve of this remake.
Have not heard this version before.  I like it!   {#Daisy}
Sorry. This is one case in which I just think it's a stupid rendition. To each his own...
Love it!! :sunny.gif: I am amused by those of you that can not seem to except any other arrnagement to a song that you first heard. The narrow mindedness would kill me. How can you guys live that way?? I don't get it, and I guess you guys don't either, which is sad! :roll:
eco wrote:
Gabriel did do a version of Strawberry Fields for some compilation album.....
That would be "All This and World War II," which I picked up on vinyl in a cut-out bin many years ago. The album is all Beatles tunes created as the soundtrack to a documentary. Lots of great artists doing some interesting renditions, with the Gabriel cut definitely a standout.
Interesting rendition... A 7.
Plleease. No more! This is just one too many bad covers! :headshake:
joe1 wrote:
This is poor...Drum & Bass on this?....Pah! Best version I heard was Peter Gabrial....if he did cover it!
Gabriel never recorded (to my knownledge) a cover for this song. You may have been thinking of the Phil Collins version from Face Value.... Gabriel did do a version of Strawberry Fields for some compilation album.....
spoko wrote:
What is THAT?
Umm. A very aptly named band?
What is THAT?
All this cover talk gives me an idea COVER DAY Play the orig, then a good cover, and lastly a bad cover for every song
Interesting cover, I like it.
Jah Man! I have never heard this version.
BillG wrote:
I have software systems that warn me if I'm getting ready to play a song or artist that has been played too recently (& I keep upping the definition of "too recently" all the time) - but it doesn't account for versions of the same song by different artists. I'll need to fix that. -bg
That's just cool. I wondered how two people could keep track of so many songs ....
Still like Phil Collins' cover best.
This isn't a bad version at all. But nothing beats the beatles version because it was very experimental at the time. Still a groovin track.
IRIE! Turn off your mind, relax and float down to Montego Bay....fun version...never heard it before
I never realised that this is a Beatles tune. The version I'm familiar with is on the new Living Colour album...
Not an entirely bad cover. But, for my money, my favorite cover of this oft-covered classic is Michael Hedges' from "Oracle" - more sparse, and takes the song into some new dark corners. Living Colour's latest album has a decent heavy-edged cover too.
First time I've heard this version -- two thumbs up! Wailing Souls took a great song and put their own stamp on it, for a groovin' result. I agree with the previous poster who surmised that John would like this! (I did think I was having trouble with my connection/stream there for a minute, though -- the electronic wah-wah or whatever you call it sounds just like a faltering MP3 stream...)
I have to say, every time I hear the original of this song it blows me away. And every time I hear a cover of this song I feel that it at best comes close to the original... and then I wonder why not just hear the original? It seems the "best" covers of this song are near imitations that don't bring much to the table; and those covers that do bring something seem to be gilding the lily. I'm not a huge Beatles fan by any means, but I think the original version of this song is truly magical, and the covers feel like charlatan-trickery; --d
anamacha wrote:
nice! who does the original again? I can't remember where I've heard this before.
That would be an obscure group from England called "The Beatles".
Wow. Hard to imagine a cover coming close in quality to the original, but this one's trying hard. I think John would like.
Okay, not that I trying to be contrarian, but I enjoyed this song, and yes I have heard many, many different versions of Tomorrow Never Knows. But this one was one of the more interesting covers along with one I heard many, many years ago by 801. As to the galaxy of songs that remain to be listened to, and the delay encurred by playing covers of oft-listened tunes, well to that I say \"musicality is in the ear of the beholder.\" I obtain more enjoyment and even revelation from a great cover than I do from listening to a pallid original. I agree with Bill in that you don\'t want to unintentionally fall into a trap of listening to the same tune, no matter how superb it may be. But to me that applies to a treatment of the song by the same group and even by the same group in the same session. Anyone who has ever listened to \"All Along the Watchtower\" will remember that Jimi took a great Dylan song and made it even greater and within that, he had good and not-as-good performances of it. Listening to Jimi at his best doing Watchtower is orders of magnitude in quality better than listening to, oh say Dave Mason, doing that song. (Not that I dislike Mason, it\'s just that his version of it, other than some decent singing, is pretty bland.) That\'s it - I\'m for diversity within repetition. :D - Riff
Originally Posted by (8?»: I'm not against playing various covers of a song, but hearing a version of Darkness, Darkness or Tomorrow Never Knows everyday is cultural death. I don't know how big the playlist is here, but I'm guessing we only hear a small percentage of it. Repetition displaces diversity. Just look at what it has done to FM.
I have software systems that warn me if I'm getting ready to play a song or artist that has been played too recently (& I keep upping the definition of "too recently" all the time) - but it doesn't account for versions of the same song by different artists. I'll need to fix that. -bg
Ja, mon, pass that spliff over here... Much in the psychedelic flavor of the original.
It sounds like Moby and Steel Pulse had a b**tard child...and this is the result.
A song that\'s very suitable for a new dance/techno version or a great remix. This doesn\'t do it for me, though.
Originally Posted by Skid_Mark: Geez, it might as well be: 801 - Tomorrow Never Knows Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows Danielle Dax - Tomorrow Never Knows Jai Uttal - Tomorrow Never Knows/Shivaya Phil Collins - Tomorrow Never Knows Wailing Souls - Tomorrow Never Knows
And your point is? Which of the versions have merit? Maybe rank them? Is there a certain point where frequency of cover versions is in and of itself a bad thing? As for me - WOW! What a great set of music. Fairport, Kate Bush and Beatles from this. Excellent. And finally, this Wailing Souls version of "Tomorrow..." is great. Really moves and grooves. Is this new?
Originally Posted by (8?»: At least it isn't another Darkness, Darkness.
Geez, it might as well be: 801 - Tomorrow Never Knows Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows Danielle Dax - Tomorrow Never Knows Jai Uttal - Tomorrow Never Knows/Shivaya Phil Collins - Tomorrow Never Knows Wailing Souls - Tomorrow Never Knows
nice pace to this remake, snappy!