drakula63 wrote:The thing is... once you get a name/reputation for mainly doing instrumental covers of well known songs, etc, you can't really get away with anything else. If Hank brought out an album of all new, original compositions, people would pick it up, look at it and go "I don't know that one... I don't know that one... I don't know any of these. I'll give it a miss." The days of guitar instrumental music are, sadly, long gone and Hank has to compromise to a very great degree to get his albums made and out there in the shops, etc.
I think that maybe The Shadows could get away with an album of all new stuff with unfamiliar titles, but Hank on his own probably not.
And I say all this as someone who's favourite Shads album was Rockin' With Curly Leads...
I agree, but we could have had this debate with the same comments almost 40 years ago (and indeed people have debated this many times!) It's a difficult fact to accept for the hard-core fans but The Shadows and Hank have always been more successful recording covers than originals. But there's a big difference between a handful of really good originals on an album of mostly covers, and no originals at all. Some of the most successful Shads/Hank albums have included
some originals (
Into the Light, Steppin'..., Life in the Jungle etc.) so I've always found it difficult to accept the '100% covers' policy; I would have thought the majority of prospective Shads/Hank record buyers would accept the fact that three or four songs on an album were unfamiliar so long as they recognised most of them. Taking
Into the Light as an example, I think
Steel Wheels contains plenty of
Apache-style excitement and
Moontalk and
Scirocco are fantastic melodies too - and that was a successful album wasn't it? It's the total lack of any originals on an album that I bemoan, because despite being a lifelong fan of Hank's unique talent and artistry I have no inclination to listen to his versions of songs like
I Will Always Love You or
Everything I Do (I Do It All Over You) - as Hank himself once described it in an interview!
Regarding covers, it's a bit more complicated than just saying "some songs work as instrumentals - others don't". My own view is that some songs are such great pieces of music that almost anyone's version will sound good (e.g.
Argentina and
Semi-Detached Suburban Mr James - which, as I think I've said before, I actually prefer to the Manfred Mann no.1 version); others are so identifiable with a particular recording or instrument (I'm thinking of
Baker Street and
Classical Gas off
String of Hits) that I can't really see why anyone would want to hear any other version in preference to the original - however hard The Shads or Hank might try to make it sound good.