Cover version of the month #102
Betty Everett covers The Beach Boys God Only Knows
It was The Avalanches that alerted me to this cover version of God Only Knows. A couple of years ago they posted a video of them playing this impeccable 7-inch single.
Many artists have covered this truly special song; Neil Diamond, Taylor Swift, David Bowie and Glen Campbell to name four. But I'm going to focus on this gem of a version by Everett.
Recorded and produced over March & April 1966, God Only Knows was a landmark recording for The Beach Boys. Brian Wilson wasn't just pushing boundaries, he was blasting them away, bringing in 20 session musicians to play clarinet, flutes, strings, French horns, upright bass, sleigh bells ...
For reference, The Beach Boys previous album, Beach Boys Party released in November 1965, consisted mostly of cover versions. Wilson, only 23, decided to shoot for the stars and beyond with his next recordings.
The reason Wilson was determined to reach higher than ever before was because his mind had been blown by The Beatles Rubber Soul album. Copious amounts of marijuana helped as well! Nothing was off limits, including referencing God, not only in the song, but in the title.
You can listen to a great deal of the God Only Knows (and Pet Sounds) recording sessions online. Wilson is in his element, conducting, cajoling, energising, encouraging ... there are hours and hours to dig into.
Brian Wilson - genius at work
Remarkably, God Only Knows was released just a month after completion, as part of the momentous Pet Sounds album. In a pre-internet age, this was an album spoken of in hushed and revered tones and it wasn't exactly easy to buy for a while. It's an incredible piece of work, the songwriting, singing, harmonies, production, musicianship, arrangements ... everything is just perfect.
Carl Wilson takes on lead vocals, delivering an exceptional performance that plays on listeners heart strings in addition to the strings on the song. God Only Knows is only 2 verses, it's only 3-minutes long ... yet it says so much, it makes you feel so much, it's an outpouring of love in a way that love had never been portrayed before in popular music - lyrically and musically.
I may not always love you
But long as there are stars above you
You never need to doubt it
I'll make you so sure about it
God only knows what I'd be without you
If you should ever leave me
Well life would still go on believe me
The world could show nothing to me
So what good would living do me?
God only knows what I'd be without you
The verses are delivered in just over a minute. Brian Wilson then takes listeners on a magic carpet ride through the clouds, coming back to the second verse, then falling to almost nothing at 2-minutes before layering everything back up again.
Betty Everett's version was released in 1975 and you can immediately see why The Avalanches fell for it ... it is very Avalanche-y! The horns, the little twists and tweaks on the melody, the dreamy quality of the production, the heavenly backing vocals and the sublime arrangement. The vocals are simply stunning, the musicanship and production is absolutely first class. It's impeccable, gorgeous.
The instrumental from 2-minutes flows and floats, before Everett and her backing singers come back in to take the song to conclusion, driving things for a wonderful 48-second outro, their voices dovetailing over the top of each other.
God only knows, what I'd be with out you
God only knows, baby
(God only knows) God only knows, (what I'd be without you)
The Beach Boys masterpiece and the sublime Betty Everett cover version of God Only Knows are added to my Everything Flows Cool Cover Versions playlist on Spotify which also features all of the songs listed below. Search for the title or CLICK HERE
Previous covers of the month blogs
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