Under the Covers | |
Type: | cover |
Artist: | Dwight Yoakam |
Cover: | Under the Covers (Dwight Yoakam album) coverart.jpg |
Released: | July 15, 1997 |
Genre: | Country |
Length: | 36:48 |
Label: | Reprise |
Producer: | Pete Anderson |
Prev Title: | Gone |
Prev Year: | 1995 |
Next Title: | Come on Christmas |
Next Year: | 1997 |
Under the Covers is the seventh studio album, and the first covers album recorded by Dwight Yoakam. It peaked at No. 8 on Billboards Top Country Albums chart, and No. 92 on the Billboard 200.
As he had on the commercially disappointing Gone two years before, Yoakam continued to challenge expectations with a mixed bag of covers, including songs by The Clash, The Kinks, The Beatles, and the Rolling Stones that betrayed the singer’s affection for British rock. Two songs, "Here Comes the Night" and "Things We Said Today", were previously recorded for the 1992 compilation album La Croix d'Amour.[1] Various cuts, such as Roy Orbison’s "Claudette" and the Wynn Stewart hit "Playboy," fit him like a glove, with producer/guitarist Pete Anderson supplying arrangements that work to Yoakam’s strengths, but the Vegas lounge take of The Kinks' "Tired of Waiting for You" likely baffled listeners, with Yoakam biographer Don McCleese deeming it "a Rat Pack/Vegas miscalculation. According to Anderson, Yoakam was inspired by Louis Prima on the number. Yoakam also cut Sonny & Cher’s "Baby Don't Go" as a duet with Sheryl Crow. AllMusic’s Thom Jurek contends that track "doesn’t really work either, because Crow is not a country singer and there's enough countrypolitan in Yoakam's read that the two singers seem cold and at odds with each other." Amazingly, considering how hot the radio-friendly Crow was in the Nineties, the single did not chart, although Yoakam’s reportedly sour relationship with his label Reprise may have been a factor in it not getting pushed. ("Claudette," the LP’s first single, only made it to number 47.) Far more successful was the radically reworked "Train in Vain," originally recorded by The Clash but given full-on bluegrass treatment here with Ralph Stanley singing background vocals.
Writer Don McCleese deems the recording "strange, even by the standards set by Gone." AllMusic: "While this set is not perfect, it's still damn fine and warrants repeated listens to come to grips with Yoakam's visionary ambition."
Peak position | |
Australian Albums (ARIA)[2] | 74 |
---|---|
Canadian Albums Chart | 84 |
Canadian RPM Country Albums | 8 |
Single | Chart positions | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
US Country | CAN Country | |||
1997 | "Claudette" | 47 | 44 | |
"Baby Don't Go" (with Sheryl Crow) | — | — | ||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart | ||||