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Cascada - 'Because The Night'

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Fraser McAlpine | 09:29 UK time, Wednesday, 30 July 2008

CascadaCascada used to scare the pants off me. They were the sort of noise I'd try and listen to, feel a bit funny and have to turn off because it was so alien and disturbing to my aesthetics; pushy melodies turning generally quite sweet lyrics into aggressive manifestos, with driving eurodance beats and unironic rave horns. Plus those brassy female vocals always scare me a bit.

Not that I'm a music wuss, you understand. I like aggressive electronica, it's one of my first music loves; I adored industrial noise when I was younger and I'm still partial to the occasional excursion into, say, the Hellfish back catalogue. There are a lot of people who like that kind of thing and laud it as a very true form of music that pushes boundaries, as opposed to, say, 'happy hardcore', which they would claim does not.

This is of couse total rubbish, both genres are equally unlistenable and boundary-pushing and tend towards a certain level of generic content, due to being vaguely poorly-defined outside a few, very specific perameters.

Technically, then, Cascada should have held no fear for me. After all, they at least didn't spend ten minutes going NNNN NNNN NNNN NNNN SPOG SPOG SPOG SPOG THUD at any point during the song. Nevertheless, during 2006 I found myself feeling very panicked that anyone could hear me listening to 'Everytime We Touch' and indeed that I could hear it myself.

Eventually, of course, I came round to the whole idea and quite happily sat there sniggering at the fact 'Miracle' contains the line "you cheated on me from behind" and the sheer weirdness of the 'Everytime We Touch' library riot video. The extremity of Cascada's dedication to melody stopped being pants-wettingly fearsome and eventually it made them one of the more exciting things I'd discovered since, well, Steps, for my ex-rocksnob brain.

What's even better, though, is that this is a cover of a Patti Smith song. Beloved of rocksnobs, and pretty much everyone else, she's also written some of the catchiest, most balls-out melodic songs ever, this one definitely included (and yes, we know it's a co-write with Bruce Springsteen).

'Because The Night' is a masterpiece, an untouchable sort of work, which of course made it all the better that Cascada were about to throw all subtlety to the wind, butcher it in the eyes of muso snobs everywhere and make millions of kids go absolutely mental over it. It would be literally amazing.

That was how I imagined it, anyway. It was a beautiful imagining. Then I actually got hold of 'Perfect Day,' the band's second album and I watched this beautiful thought slowly crumble.

OK, there is nothing technically wrong with this (other than 'everything' in the eyes of many Patti Smith fans) and millions of kids probably have gone absolutely mental over it but there is something so, so disappointing about it, for me.

Where there was an obvious chance for the band to pull out every ridiculous stop here, they actually played it ...well, 'safe' isn't generally a word I'd associate with Cascada but it seems like there's been a retreat from their original style. Where I'd imagined a solid rave beat blaring beneath Natalie Wossname's most obnoxiously unsubtle vocals, it actually seems to be attempting a level of class, which simply does not work.

Whatever genre the band fall into - they're a bit too hard to be straight eurodance but not quite mad enough to be happy hardcore proper, at least not until Styles and Breeze have put them through the bosh-o-tron - they really can't afford to back away from their roots, and those roots consist of a bloody loud beat, a massive melody, and bit with a horn. As soon as they start messing around trying to make a semi-faithful cover of a Patti Smith song, then they seep from 'terrifying' into 'mediocre'.

It's just not... big enough or something; a degree of subtlety/sensitivity to the original song remains and that just isn't going to cut it, as soon as you stick a europop aesthetic anywhere near it. This ends up sounding like a kind of poor remix, rather than a stonking, audacious hit on its own merits.

Worst of all, it is not even a little tiny bit scary. Bah...

Three starsDownload: Out now
CD Released: August 4th

(Hazel Robinson)

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Anyone who knows anything about Patti Smith(and was there when it was released),knows that 'Because The Night' is not loved by rocksnobs or patti smith fans. It was her lamest release at that point and an obvious stab at chart success as "Jesus died for somebodys sins but not mine" wasnt that palatable for the public.It would be an ok song if released by a faceless indie band in 2008 but its a boring song compared to her 1st album. Also if time travel were possible you would see what 'rocksnobs'(presumably people that dont just like the stuff in the Hard Rock Cafe etc) really think is great from 1978 WIRE-Chairs Missing..PUBLIC IMAGE LTD - 1st Issue..ALTERNATIVE TV-The Image Has Cracked etc. One of the best years for 'British Music' Ever. Even an American would agree with that. 'Because The Night' was closer to REO Speedwagon and Styx than MAGAZINE or 'The Scream' or 'All Mod Cons' or 'Another Music In a Different Kitchen'. The track in question is so far off the mark of what was happening in that year its almost unbelievable.

  • Comment number 2.

    So do you like the Cascada version or what?

  • Comment number 3.

    Still a good song though. :)

    The Cascada version is awful though, which is a shame, I had a kind of twisted respect for them at first.

  • Comment number 4.

    Cascada are superb, so long as you drink so much alcopop and/or red bull that you're liable to vibrate across the dancefloor vigorously enough for your eyeballs pop out and slither down your greasy, sweaty face.

  • Comment number 5.

    I seem to remember there already being a dance cover of this song, in about 2002 or so. I had no idea it was a Patti Smith cover, though *shame* For a dance song, it's not too bad. It has some sort of tune, at least.

  • Comment number 6.

    The style of this reminds me a lot of Scooter's 'I'm Raving' with the whole subdued pre-chorus thing going on there.

    I like this though! It's not as good as 'What hurts the most' or 'everytime we touch' but I love the way she only enunciates the 't' in 'night' at the very end of the chorus. And I'm a sucker for those sparkly pants.

  • Comment number 7.

    Being partial to a bit of UK hardcore myself, I would like to know whether you have any more information on Darren Styles "bosh-o-tron". If it can do everything he can to any song that is 'processed' by it, then I would like to know when they will be available and where.

    I might go down to Woolworth's and see if they have any...

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