We’ve featured this 1965 Bacharach/David tune before, but this 2020 cover, performed and produced by students at Berklee College of Music and Boston Conservatory at Berklee, really speaks to our current moment. It’s certainly one of the most successful virtual choir/orchestra endeavors I have seen. Key change at 2:00.
Category: Henry
Grant Stott | Save Lives
Grant Stott is a Scottish broadcaster who went viral at the 2011 Radio Forth Awards with “That’s Fife,” a parody of Frank Sinatra‘s “That’s Life” and a tribute to the county of Fife in Scotland. Here, he utilizes the same idea with a different message, and even throws in a key change at 2:21.
Tori Kelly | Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing
Stevie Wonder‘s “Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing” was originally released in 1973 on his album Innervisions and exudes a positivity that we could all use a little bit of right now. The performance here features Tori Kelly in a cover included in the 2016 animated feature Sing Movie. Beginning in Eb minor, the tune kicks up one half step at 2:16, and then another at 2:32.
Voctave | Smile
Charlie Chaplin‘s classic 1936 song “Smile” is performed here by Voctave, whose members sang and sent in their individual parts from home. Key change at 0:47; also gotta love ending on the 9.
Camden Voices | True Colors
One of the bright spots during these long days have been the many virtual choir videos being produced from all corners of the globe. Here, Camden Voices covers Cyndi Lauper‘s classic “True Colors,” key change at 2:16.
Frédéric Chopin | Prelude in Db Major, Op. 28, #15 (Vladimir Horowitz, piano)
One of Frédéric Chopin‘s most beloved works, his Prelude in Db Major, Op. 28, No. 15 (1838) is often called the “Raindrop” prelude — the repeating patter of Ab/G#3 throughout the piece symbolizing raindrops. The piece is a large-scale ABA form, beginning and ending in Db Major, with the middle section in the parallel C# minor (the change to minor occurs at 1:35; the return to major at 4:05.) This piece has been on my mind over the last few weeks, as I think it presents as an interesting metaphor for the times we are living in: the first A section our lives before lockdown, the B section our darker present, and the final A section the light we will return to, with the incessant repetition of the Ab/G# our unyielding heartbeat, our humanity, staying consistent throughout. Performed here by the unparalleled Vladimir Horowitz.
We’re All In This Together (from “High School Musical”)
Recognizing a sentiment that is invoked frequently these days, today we feature “We’re All In This Together” from High School Musical (2006). Key changes abound, with the tune modulating by whole step between verses and choruses throughout — 0:25, 0:42, 0:58, 1:36, 1:52, 2:00, 2:33, 2:50.
A Quiet Thing (from “Flora, the Red Menace”)
John Kander & Fred Ebb‘s musical Flora, The Red Menace opened on Broadway in 1965, featuring Liza Minnelli, making her debut on the Great White Way in the title role. While the score overall is not particularly memorable, “A Quiet Thing” stands out as one of Kander & Ebb’s best ballads. Performed here by the late Marin Mazzie. Key change at 1:05.
In a Place of Miracles (from “Hunchback of Notre Dame”)
“In A Place of Miracles” is from, in your humble moderator’s opinion, Alan Menken‘s best score, The Hunchback of Notre Dame. The show, which premiered in Berlin in 1999 and became one of the city’s longest-running productions, has still not made its way to Broadway. But someday, in a place of miracles, it will. Key change at 1:37.
Jacob Collier | Hallelujah
I have posted Jacob Collier singing a different arrangement of this same song here before, but I came across this rendition today, filmed a few days ago, and it is so transcendent that I have to share it again. As Collier says before he begins, “It starts in C Major, but we’ll see where it ends up,” making it particularly fitting for this page.