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In popular music, a cover version or cover song, or simply cover, is a new performance or recording of a previously recorded, commercially released song by someone other than the original artist or composer. The article seems to use remake and cover interchangeably: In R&B, remakes are common,[15] often seen as tributes to the original artist.
In the United States, as of November 2016, the song "Hallelujah", written by Leonard Cohen, has seen 8 different versions enter the Billboard Hot 100, with 3 of those reaching the Top 40. I'm not sure whether this is the U.S. record for this particular feat, or whether any additional versions of the song have charted since then.
Hi tToE, I've closed this question as questions about making music are not on topic even through AI. I will add while the close reason is accurate, the music practice and theory SE does not handle this question either as finding software is off-topic on that site.
So it seems impossible to find the original cover artist without actually knowing who they are. Since the dance recording is quite old, and one of the dancers apparently died in 2009, this cover version must be at least around 15-16 years old. I already listened through many, many other cover versions on Spotify trying to find it, but no luck.
Finally, a cover has the original lyrics and roughly the same melody, but new vocals and instrumental (it's a karaoke cover if you use the original instrumental). In any of these cases, if you make money off the song, the original songwriters are considered your cowriters, and are entitled to a share of your profits, even if you don't keep ...
Problem with the billboard is that it was the B side of the "Cry Baby" single (placed #42) and the last recorded track (she died few days later) on the LP "Pearl" (placed #1) so it's hard to give it a rating of its own. It's been one of the more iconic performances and a lot of other singers made cover versions, though.
Generally speaking it's called "karaoke". There are many companies that sell rap karaoke tracks. These are re-creations or cover versions of hit songs, not the actual original instrumental tracks. Karaoke companies pay licensing fees to the songwriters and publishing companies that own the copyrights to the songs being covered.
Q&A for music historians, critics, and fans. I want to use AI tools to 'remake' some of my favorite songs. More specifically, I'm thinking of creating some piano cover versions of my favorite songs.
Q&A for music historians, critics, and fans. Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.
In 1976, the American white rock band Aerosmith made another cover-version of this song, and this version became a standard among rock bands. So with this example you can see how the theme and the music progressed from a black source that pre-dates rock and roll and carries through to the classic rock era.