At what point does a song that references another song, lose you?
We live in a day and age of samples and remix and such, so the idea of one song sounding like another isn't especially foreign.
But in the singer-songwriter and rock world, if your song sounds too much like another tune, well, sometimes you're written off.
Or maybe, it's just that if you don't acknowledge the similarity, you're written off.
Because the melody rip-off worked well for The Old 97s, who openly admit the the melody of "Champaign Illinois" was lifted directly from Bob Dylan's "Desolation Row."
But people (radio programmers, at least) have been less forgiving on Stephen Kellogg And The Sixers' new song "Gravity," which seems to reference the Simon & Garfunkel tune "Cecilia" pretty directly.
So they did an interesting thing. They re-recorded Stephen's delivery for that one vocal hook. And traces of the original single have all but disappeared from Youtube, leaving only this new, less-"Cecilia"-like version.
Instead of going down, the notes go up, and it's changed enough that it doesn't sound like a rip-off.
Does it work?
You can hear the original vocal line at the 20 second mark on this promotional video.
Check out the 20 second mark on Youtube.
But now all the online videos have been replaced with the new version. You can hear the new hook at 25 seconds.
Hear the song on Youtube.
And check out "Cecilia" and "Gravity" right next to each other.
Hear the comparison on Youtube.
Hear the S&G original on Youtube.
Kellog has a 2nd song that sounds way too much like John Mellancamp's "I fought Authority (& Authority Always Wins).."
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