Nov 232012
 

Under the Radar shines a light on lesser-known cover artists. If you’re not listening to these folks, you should. Catch up on past installments here.

It feels a little strange putting the Great Lake Swimmers in the “Under the Radar” category. After all, they’ve been recording albums for over a decade – their fifth, New Wild Everywhere, came out earlier this year. They’ve toured the world and elsewhere, with adoring crowds currently flocking to see them throughout Europe. They have nearly 50,000 Facebook fans and hundreds of thousands more around the planet. And yet, they’re still known for being little-known, their ambient-folk sound ever reluctant to cross the mainstream.

One more blog entry may not give Tony Dekker and company their passport to fame and glory, but if it can provide a gateway to potential fans – those who know and love the few songs the Great Lake Swimmers have performed near-definitive covers of – then the world may well become an incrementally better place. We think it’s worth taking that chance.

Great Lake Swimmers – Before They Make Me Run (The Rolling Stones cover)


2011’s excellent Paint it Black: An Alt-Country Tribute to the Rolling Stones leads off with the Great Lake Swimmers doing “Before They Make Me Run,” Keith’s defiant self-assertion from Some Girls. Here, it’s quieter, and comes off less a shout to the crowds than a vow to the self – a vow that’s got a soft beat, and you can sway to it.

Great Lake Swimmers – Our Mother the Mountain (Townes Van Zandt cover)


Townes Van Zandt’s Southern gothic classic “Our Mother the Mountain” has a richer sound in this cover than in the original, but the added beauty and echo don’t distract from the singer’s grim prairie tale.

Great Lake Swimmers – Song Sung Blue (Neil Diamond cover)


Over the course of five decades, there’s been a concerted effort to make Neil Diamond a walking punchline – an effort Neil has not been known to discourage (two words: Saving Silverman). But whenever the focus moves to Diamond’s songs, the effort crumbles; the best of his work retains all its power, its warmth, its singalongability. Musicians know this, and the best of them know how to put their own stamp on the material. Witness the Great Lake Swimmers’ hushed, sad, and ultimately moving “Song Sung Blue.”

Great Lake Swimmers – Don’t Cry No Tears (Neil Young cover)


Another Neil cover (Young, this time), another tribute album – this version of “Don’t Cry No Tears” comes from Borrowed Tunes II, by way of 1975’s Zuma. The Swimmers trade Crazy Horse’s psychedelic garage for a leaf-covered woodshed, while duplicating Young’s feat of mixing a little sadness with a lot of lack of self-pity.

Great Lake Swimmers – Innocent When You Dream (Tom Waits cover)


Performing before a crowd that doesn’t have the courtesy to shut up, the Swimmers close out a show with a Tom Waits cover, bringing their sense of benevolence to “Innocent When You Dream.” Replacing Waits’ whiskey growl with Dekker’s sweetly mournful murmur can’t help changing the song’s sound, but the song doesn’t suffer in the least for it – something even the distracted crowd comes to recognize by the end.

Learn more about the Great Lake Swimmers on their website.

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  3 Responses to “Under the Radar: Great Lake Swimmers”

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  1. […] Before things get too nutty for the band, founding singer and songwriter Tony Dekker took a few minutes to tell us about his favorite cover songs. His tastes span a wide genre and time range, from a 1961 Fats Domino single to a tribute album that came out just a few months ago. Dig in below (then go read our feature on the band’s own covers from 2012). […]

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