INSTANT KARMA The Amnesty International Campaign To SAVE DARFUR. WB “The Conflict in Darfur, Sudan, has led to some of the worst human rights abuses imaginable, including systematic and widespread murder, rape, abduction and displacement. Hundreds of thousands of civilians have been killed by deliberate and indiscriminate attacks, and over 2.5 million civilians have been displaced. Help Amnesty International end the atrocities.” www.amnesty.org/noise This 2 CD compilation of 23 John Lennon song covers by 28 major international acts could also help raise awareness of human rights abuses the world over including Iraq, Zimbabwe, Palestine, Guantanemo, China, North Korea. The list is extensive and growing. But the lack of any real progress in Darfur is symptomatic of today’s ‘freeworld leaders’ whose rhetoric is tragically louder than their actions – and for this the West (especially) must stand condemned.
CD 2 opens very strongly with the high point of the whole collection, Green Day’s almost perfect rendition of my Lennon favourite ‘Working Class Hero.’ The vibe is rockier and angrier with fabulous riffing from the middle-eight, ending finally with Lennon’s calm voice. Black Eyed Peas manage to fuck-up ‘Power To The People’ before Jack Johnson provides a poignant, acoustic version of ‘Imagine.’ Ben Harper provides another highlight with his haunting version of ‘Beautiful Boy’ followed by a dreamy and pleasant version of ‘Isolation’ by Snow Patrol. Matisyahu delivers a reasonable reggae version of ‘Watching The Wheels’ followed by The Postal Service and a wistful, very nice version of ‘Grow Old With Me.’ The Jaguares deliver another (rocky) highlight in their version of ‘Gimme Some Truth’ before the formidable Flaming Lips reprise the most suitable song for their style in ‘(Just Like) Starting Over’ – another highlight. Solid piano notes add depth and drama to a wonderful version of ‘God’ by Jack’s Mannequin featuring Mick Fleetwood before Duran Duran murder ‘Instant Karma.’ A further (poor) version of ‘#9 Dream’ by a-ha is compensated by a really good jagged, punk rock version of ‘Instant Karma’ by Tokyo Hotel. The compilation concludes with Regina Spektor’s piano-soaked, gorgeous and distinctive version of ‘Real Love’ – a fitting and moving conclusion. Sure there are a few duds here but that’s to be expected. Fortunately the highlights outweigh the negatives by a good margin, and in the knowledge that your cash is going towards a really worthy cause makes this Lennon song collection a solid, recommended purchase. ENJOY! 4/5
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