Tag: Rihanna

Happy Birthday, Punk Goes Prenatt!

Happy Birthday, Punk Goes Prenatt!

Wow. Guess I should blow out these candles.

Can’t believe that five years ago today, I created Punk Goes Prenatt. This blog was born from me wanting to do something with my journalism degree, as well as a way to not let my writing skills go to waste, or grow rusty. I wanted to write the articles I wanted to write, whether it was music news, album reviews, exclusive world premiers (I’ve only done that once so far), Prenatt’s Picks (which is coming back), lists, and other stuff. And while I don’t get the views or the clicks (or taps) like Kerrang! or Alternative Press, I enjoy every second of it.

Hell, this blog helped me do a lotta things. For example, when I put Floridian dreamcore artist ♥ GOJII ♥ in the 2020 Prenatt’s Picks list, they were ecstatic and we formed a friendship out of it. They even sent me a copy of their then latest record ALL MY HEART. And then while browsing Facebook, I saw an ad for the British music magazine DSCVRD. Using my articles from here, I was able to obtain a free internship with them. That lasted until last year, and I am forever grateful to the folks across the pond for allowing me to somewhat live out my dreams of writing for a music magazine.

Now what is the future for PGP? Well, starting this coming week, I will begin my most anticipated albums of 2023, featuring bands and acts like Rihanna, Fall Out Boy, See You Next Tuesday, Enter Shikari, and Meet Me @ The Altar. For the first time in three years, Prenatt’s Picks will be returning, and I’m very excited to restart this project. The pandemic and lack of motivation really prevented me from working on Prenatt’s Picks for the last three years, but it has allowed me to accumulate a ton of great bands and artists that I think you will love. Even though it is pretty late to write this, but there will be a Top 10 Albums Of 2022 soon. And later on this year, PGP will be attending When We Were Young in Las Vegas.

Looking back, I can’t believe how this simple blog has changed my life. Thank you all for checking out Punk Goes Prenatt for these five long years. Expect big things coming 2023.

Cheers,

Chris Prenatt

20 More Of The Weirdest Covers Ever Recorded (Part Two)

20 More Of The Weirdest Covers Ever Recorded (Part Two)

Better finish what I started.

Last year, I wrote a twopart article called “The 20 Weirdest Covers Ever Recorded.” When I wrote that, I did a lot of research trying to find the strangest covers you’ve (probably) never heard, such as singer/songwriter Adam French covering Millencolin’s “No Cigar,” Tori Amos’s haunting rendition of the Slayer classic “Raining Blood,” and Our Last Night butchering “Who Let The Dogs Out?” by Baha Men with help from the Baha Men.

However, as time went on, I found some more weird covers and felt that I had to make another one. And so, here it is, twenty more bizarre covers that were recorded.

As I mentioned in my previous articles, “I have to inform you that the songs on this list are covers that were recorded for a compilation, an album, or as a single. There will be no live covers on this list.” That is if I ever choose to do an article about the strangest live covers I’ve ever heard or seen.

This is part two. If you didn’t see part one, click here.

With that out of the way, let’s end this.

11. And Then There Were None – If You Had A Bad Time (Originally by Alkaline Trio)

A few years ago, I borrowed a CD from Jack Friend of ASHES. That CD was A Tribute To Alkaline Trio. It featured bands like Punchline, The Wonder Years, Allister, Into It. Over It., and Koji covering deep tracks and singles from the popular McHenry, Ill., punk group. However, there was one cover on this CD that I found bizarre: And Then There Were None’s rendition of “If You Had A Bad Time.” The original was a slow rock track and is a deep cut from Alkaline Trio’s ever-growing discography. So what was so weird about this cover? It sounds like One Direction singing it. No joke. Huge on poppy hooks, some guitar, and feels like it was made for Top 40 radio. I was shocked the first time I heard it and I’ve since grown to like it. It’s weird, but not bad.

12. Fall Out Boy feat. Missy Elliott – Ghostbusters (Originally by Ray Parker Jr.)

If you thought the 2016 Ghostbusters remake was bad, then you didn’t hear this track on the soundtrack. Whoever thought that Fall Out Boy and rapper Missy Elliott should collaborate on the beloved Ray Parker Jr. song should be shot. It’s beyond bad. If you actually wanna hear a decent cover of the song, just hear Walk The Moon’s version. They at least try to make it sound good.

13. NOFX – Vincent (by Don McLean)

Oh look, another Don McLean cover. On their version, NOFX give the acoustic folk song a punk retouch, doing it the way only NOFX can. It doesn’t even feel like it’s insulting the original, but instead feels as if they’re paying tribute to McLean in some way. But overall, what a weird song for NOFX to cover.

14. Scissor Sisters – Comfortably Numb (Originally by Pink Floyd)

Fucking why? This track from their self-titled debut record shows them putting a Bee Gees twist on this prog rock classic. Everything about this cover feels wrong. To quote someone on a YouTube video, “they managed to turn a very serious, angsty song about descending into madness into an ode to amyl nitrate.” There’s literally nothing more I can say about this. Fuck this shit.

15. The Story So Far – Wrightsville Beach (by A Loss For Words)

In 2012, now defunct clothing line Glamour Kills released a split 12″ featuring six bands on that year’s Glamour Kills Tour. Each band covered a song from another band on that tour, like The Wonder Years covering Into It. Over It., and vice versa. One of the most crazy covers on this record is the hardcore twist The Story So Far did to A Loss For Words’s “Wrightsville Beach.” The original pop-punk track gets reworked as a Terror song, going hard as all hell. Fun fact about this song: this was my first time ever listening to TSSF and I hated it. Once I listened to What You Don’t See, my opinion changed.

16. Set Your Goals – Put Yo Hood Up (by Lil Jon & The East Side Boyz)

Punk Goes Crunk is considered a gem. Artists like Forever The Sickest Kids, All Time Low, Say Anything, Hot Rod Circuit, and New Found Glory, covered rappers like 2Pac, OutKast, Skee-Lo, Rihanna, and Arrested Development. The craziness hits the fan the second the album begins, where easycore group Set Your Goals turn the Lil Jon track “Put Yo Hood Up” into a Star Wars song, featuring Yoda rapping the first verse and all “n-words” are replaced with “Jedi.” Dear God it’s insane.

17. I AM THE KID – Adam’s Song (Originally by Blink-182)

Many years ago I used to listen to fake Punk Goes albums on YouTube. There was this one song on the fake Punk Goes 90s 2 EP that just drove me bonkers: a metalcore version of the saddest Blink song ever recorded. The anti-suicide song gets an August Burns Red-ish makeover and it’s one of the most uncomfortable experiences I’ve had to, well, experience. Just why?

18. H2O – Someday I Suppose (by The Mighty Mighty Bosstones)

In 2011, hardcore punks H2O released a cover album titled Don’t Forget Your Roots. On it, they cover Bad Brains, 7 Seconds, Rancid, Dag Nasty, and Sick Of It All. Yet their rendition of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones’s “Someday I Suppose” just falls flat. Maybe it’s the fact that maybe some ska-punk songs don’t translate well without horns or the well-known riffs. It instead feels like some generic punk rock song. Overall, H2O’s cover feels kinda hollow, but it could be worse, right?

19. Duran Duran – 911 Is A Joke (Originally by Public Enemy)

Why? How the fuck do you make “911 Is A Joke” by rap group Public Enemy sound like a long lost Beck track? I don’t know but that’s what Duran Duran did on their version from their panned album Thank You. 911 may be a joke, but this cover is a bigger joke.

20. Veil Of Maya – Sunday Bloody Sunday (Originally by U2)

Remember the video game Homefront? One of the many promotions the game did was a soundtrack filled with several protest songs covered by metal bands. You had As I Lay Dying doing “War Ensemble” by Slayer, IWRESTLEDABEARONCE covering Muse’s “Uprising,” Arsonists Get All The Girls’s rendition of Bob Dylan’s “Masters Of War,” and, for some fucking reason, Winds Of Plague covering “For What It’s Worth” by Buffalo Springfield. Simply put, the whole album’s a mess, so it’s kinda hard to pick the worst of the worst. So let’s just go with Veil Of Maya’s rendition of U2’s “Sunday Bloody Sunday.” Trust me when I say that it’s a complete clusterfuck. No wonder the game flopped.

Maroon 5 Finally Confirmed To Play The Super Bowl, Will Be Joined By Two Rappers

Maroon 5 Finally Confirmed To Play The Super Bowl, Will Be Joined By Two Rappers

Looks like Variety was right.

The NFL finally confirmed on Sunday that Maroon 5 will headline Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta, Ga. The pop group will take the center stage during the Pepsi Super Bowl halftime show on February 3 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Maroon 5 celebrated the news by posting a video on their Instagram.

Joining Maroon 5 will be rapper Travis Scott and Atlantan rapper Big Boi who is one half of rap duo OutKast. Artists like P!nk, Rihanna, and Cardi B were scheduled to appear alongside the pop band, but dropped out in support of ex-San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick (P!nk dropped out when negotiations between her and the NFL fell through). According to Billboard, Scott only agreed to play if the NFL did something for him. “Scott required the NFL to make a joint donation to an organization fighting for social justice in order for him to move forward with the event,” a source close to Billboard said.

Performers at past halftime shows include Justin Timberlake, Aerosmith, Lady Gaga, U2, No Doubt, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, Prince, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, Bruce Springsteen, The Who, The Black Eyed Peas, Madonna, Beyoncé, Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, and Coldplay.