Song Of The Day 4/21/2015: Dionne Warwick – “Geh Vorbei”
For some reason it was therefore believed that rock and roll, or indeed any other English-language-centric music, wouldn’t fly in Deutschland. Especially East Germany where the Communist bloc feared the influence of das kapitalists, but even in West Germany. Eventually this would prove to be bunk, but in the early-to-mid ’60s this led labels to encourage their artists to record German-language versions of their hits. The process was painstakingly accomplished through phonetic spellings and, one would hope, very disciplined dialect coaches. The Beatles recorded a pair of their hits in German somewhat reluctantly, resulting in the global cult favorites “Sie Liebt Dich” and “Komm Gib Mir Deine Hand.” But you also had Marvin Gaye, the Temptations, and another gentleman we’ll unveil at the end of this week who gave their hits over to that harsh, consonant-rich yet curiously romantic language.
I like Dionne Warwick’s German version of her hit “Walk On By” the best, though. It retains an appealing naïveté, a blitheness that cuts through the crossing gate of annihilated romanticism, metered self-restraint and bleak, grey but ultra-functional architecture overseen by piercing eyes with a ghastly depletedness who’ve seen the promises of neo-futurism dissolve in the turncoat shadows of exasperating time. So just keep walkin', Übermensch.
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