WHAT'S HOT
Al Green Releases Moving Cover of R.E.M.’s ‘Everybody Hurts’
Published
2 years agoon
By
Tyler Jenke
Soul legend Al Green has turned his attention to college rock favorites R.E.M., sharing a cover of the Georgia outfit’s 1993 single, “Everybody Hurts”.
Released on Tuesday (Nov. 19), Green’s cover of the song sees the veteran singer reimagining the original in his trademark soul style, backing his delivery of the hopeful lyrics with a full band, including strings and backing vocalists.
“Recording ‘Everybody Hurts,’ I could really feel the heaviness of the song and I wanted to inject a little touch of hope and light into it,” Green wrote on social media. “There’s always a presence of light that can break through those times of darkness.”
Originally released on the 1992 album Automatic for the People, “Everybody Hurts” was issued as the record’s second single, becoming its most successful. While the album itself peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, “Everybody Hurts” reached No. 29 on the Hot 100, and peaked at No. 13 on the Pop Airplay charts.
It’s since been utilized by a number of charitable organizations, including the Samaritans in the U.K., and the Helping Haiti fund and the Disasters Emergency Committee, who organized a cover version to aid in support of the devastation from the 2010 Haiti earthquake. The cover featured contributions from the likes of Mariah Carey, Miley Cyrus, Rod Stewart, Jon Bon Jovi, Kylie Minogue, and many others, eventually peaking at No. 21 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart.
In February 2019, the song became embroiled in slight controversy when President Donald Trump shared clips from his State of the Union address cued to the track over a montage of congressional democrats looking dejected. R.E.M. later protested his usage of the song, evoking the title of their 1988 track “World Leader Pretend” in their response, and ultimately convincing Twitter to take down Trump’s original clip.
The cover of “Everybody Hurts” is Green’s first single to be released since last year’s cover of Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day”, which in turn followed his first new music in a decade with 2018’s cover of Freddy Fender’s “Before the Next Teardrop Falls”. Green’s last studio album, Lay It Down, was released in 2008 and peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard 200.
Tyler Jenke
Source link
Akon Discusses How Multiple Wives Work In Reality
Hip-Hop Legends Split On Trump’s Freedom 250 Event
Regina King, Taye Diggs And Chloe Bailey Headline ABFF’s Landmark 30th Anniversary
Jet Phynx Introduces “Camera Time”A Cinematic Hip-Hop Experience Blending Music, Film, AI & Media Obsession
Court Rules Nelly Deserves $67,586 For Defending Country Grammar Rights
Exclusive Interview With Positive Society
Exclusive Interview with Robert Flournoy
Exclusive Interview with Humble Hefe
Exclusive Interview with Christian K
Exclusive interview with Hefe OG
Cardi B – Bongos (feat. Megan Thee Stallion) [Official Music Video]
Travis Scott – KICK OUT
Kevin Gates – F*k Em (Official Music Video)
Enphamus – No Biggie 2 ft Big Yavo (Official Video)
Rod Wave – Feed The Streets (Official Music Video)
TRENDING
Akon Discusses How Multiple Wives Work In Reality
Akon is the one, but his wives are the many. He’s just not saying how many. Akon is finally pulling...
Hip-Hop Legends Split On Trump’s Freedom 250 Event
Ok. Buckle-up. Young MC and Morris Day are backing all the way away from a major Washington, D.C. celebration that many think...
Regina King, Taye Diggs And Chloe Bailey Headline ABFF’s Landmark 30th Anniversary
The American Black Film Festival returned to Miami Beach for its 30th anniversary celebration with major premieres, star-studded conversations and...
Jet Phynx Introduces “Camera Time”A Cinematic Hip-Hop Experience Blending Music, Film, AI & Media Obsession
Jet Phynx is building anticipation for his upcoming album “Camera Time” with a new single and visual release arriving this...
Court Rules Nelly Deserves $67,586 For Defending Country Grammar Rights
Nelly just collected $67,586 after a federal judge ruled his legal defense against Ali Jones’ baseless copyright claim was worth...
