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The Bird and the Bee|Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall And John Oates

Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall And John Oates

the bird and the bee

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The very title of Interpreting the Masters suggests that the Bird & the Bee are digging into a catalog of a widely respected pop songwriter -- a Burt Bacharach, perhaps, or a Jimmy Webb. That’s not the case: children of the ‘80s that they are, singer Inara George and producer Greg Kurstin have chosen Daryl Hall & John Oates for the first volume of Interpreting the Masters, a sly move that reveals both their age and intended audience -- i.e., ex alt-rockers raised on new wave and now settling into a tasteful, hipster middle age, hauling around kids dressed in Ramones t-shirts -- and a reflection of Hall & Oates’ increasing reputation as soul-pop songwriters and record-makers. The Bird & the Bee don’t dig deeply into Hall & Oates catalog -- there’s none of the burnished folk-rock of Whole Oates, nor do they pluck album tracks like “Looking for a Good Sign” off of Private Eyes -- they simply choose the biggest hits, then give them a slyly modern update, one that consciously recalls the modernist new wave productions of the duo’s biggest hits yet fits within the Bird & the Bee’s nicely tailored AAA pop. So if Interpreting the Masters, on the surface, provides no surprises, why is it such a wonderful surprise as a whole? Perhaps it’s because the Bird & the Bee manage to make these very familiar hits sound fresh without radically reinventing them. That in itself is a much trickier move than turning these all into slow acoustic dirges, but it’s better still because these arrangements are true to both Hall & Oates and George & Kurstin. The Bird & the Bee illustrate just how much they’ve learned with their introductory original “Heard It on the Radio,” a song about the tunes they’re about to sing that holds its own with the covers, but the heart of the album lies in these covers of ‘80s staples: they shift the spotlight just enough to prove how good both the original song and singles are, and by never drawing attention to their own performance and arrangements, the Bird & the Bee prove just how good they are too.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall And John Oates

The Bird and the Bee

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1
Heard It On The Radio
00:03:02

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, ComposerLyricist, Bass (Vocal) - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer, ComposerLyricist

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

2
I Can't Go For That
00:03:36

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Guitar, Keyboards, Percussion, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - John Oates, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - SARA ALLEN, ComposerLyricist - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

3
Rich Girl
00:02:48

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

4
Sara Smile
00:03:06

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - John Oates, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

5
Kiss On My List
00:04:18

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer - Janna M. Allen, ComposerLyricist

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

6
Maneater
00:03:31

Shirley Manson, Background Vocalist, AssociatedPerformer - Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Guitar, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, Composer - John Oates, Composer - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - SARA ALLEN, Composer - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

7
She's Gone
00:03:02

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - John Oates, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

8
Private Eyes
00:03:03

Warren Pash, ComposerLyricist - Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - SARA ALLEN, ComposerLyricist - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer - Janna M. Allen, ComposerLyricist

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

9
One On One
00:03:40

Greg Kurstin, Producer, Drums, Keyboards, Programmer, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, AssociatedPerformer, StudioPersonnel, Bass (Vocal) - Daryl Hall, ComposerLyricist - Gavin Lurssen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Reuben Cohen, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Bird And The Bee, MainArtist - Inara George, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 2010 Blue Note Records ℗ 2010 Capitol Records, LLC

Album review

The very title of Interpreting the Masters suggests that the Bird & the Bee are digging into a catalog of a widely respected pop songwriter -- a Burt Bacharach, perhaps, or a Jimmy Webb. That’s not the case: children of the ‘80s that they are, singer Inara George and producer Greg Kurstin have chosen Daryl Hall & John Oates for the first volume of Interpreting the Masters, a sly move that reveals both their age and intended audience -- i.e., ex alt-rockers raised on new wave and now settling into a tasteful, hipster middle age, hauling around kids dressed in Ramones t-shirts -- and a reflection of Hall & Oates’ increasing reputation as soul-pop songwriters and record-makers. The Bird & the Bee don’t dig deeply into Hall & Oates catalog -- there’s none of the burnished folk-rock of Whole Oates, nor do they pluck album tracks like “Looking for a Good Sign” off of Private Eyes -- they simply choose the biggest hits, then give them a slyly modern update, one that consciously recalls the modernist new wave productions of the duo’s biggest hits yet fits within the Bird & the Bee’s nicely tailored AAA pop. So if Interpreting the Masters, on the surface, provides no surprises, why is it such a wonderful surprise as a whole? Perhaps it’s because the Bird & the Bee manage to make these very familiar hits sound fresh without radically reinventing them. That in itself is a much trickier move than turning these all into slow acoustic dirges, but it’s better still because these arrangements are true to both Hall & Oates and George & Kurstin. The Bird & the Bee illustrate just how much they’ve learned with their introductory original “Heard It on the Radio,” a song about the tunes they’re about to sing that holds its own with the covers, but the heart of the album lies in these covers of ‘80s staples: they shift the spotlight just enough to prove how good both the original song and singles are, and by never drawing attention to their own performance and arrangements, the Bird & the Bee prove just how good they are too.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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