Oh I remember this version! Glad I came across it again. I love her vocals.
Nice!
This is surrealism at the house!
This is so ethereal it’s like in angel 👼 singing. I know it’s from Nymphomaiac but from Vampire Diaries with Nathalie Kelley it’s angelic. Hottest version ever. Charlotte you’re amazing
Me too I was watching Vampire Diaries when I first heard this beautiful song.
I love how she turned the song around 💕 love it bob graham
я пришла за песней, а осталась за видеорядом. очень круто!
Too cool!!!
I hadn't seen this video you put together until tonight. Thank you for putting it out on UA-cam. Looks like it might be a pretty good cinema.
Pleased to learn of it!
Heel mooi!! @-@
fargo, S5 E1 🔥
Rips-tosses half over here the other over there.
From the show Gypsy on Netflix.
You deserve more views and likes
love it
🌹🌹🌹
Песня вечная и актуальная. Перекликается с zombie.
The description box refers to this song, Hey Joe, as a "Song by Charlotte Gainsbourge" but, for the record, this Gainsbourge version is just the latest cover of a song that dates back to at least the early 1960s and whose original authorship is contested. It was copyrighted by Billy Roberts in the early 1960s but it has also been attributed to Dino Valenti and has, at times, been credited as a traditional song whose original authorship is unknown. Whatever the case, it has been coverd by many artists over the years but the most famous cover, by far, and the version that this Gainsbourg cover is very clearly based on, is the classic 1965 version by Jimi Hendrix.
Hendrix did not cover the song in 1965. It was California garage rock band ‘The Leaves’ who first popularized the song in 1965 after Billy Roberts had the song copyrighted in 1962, though Roberts most likely nicked his version from his girlfriend Niela Horn Miller who penned “Baby, Please Don’t Go To Town” around 1958. Hendrix’s cover is actually based on Tim Rose’s rendition first recorded in 1966, a few months before Hendrix recorded his own version late in 1966.
ua-cam.com/video/BEK2EDqxpcY/v-deo.html
This is the version Jimi Hendrix said he first heard and wanted to stay true to, after seeing Tim Rose perform it live in London, early 1966. Hendrix then went into the studio and recorded his own version shortly after. But it’s Tim Rose’s version Henrdrix’s rendition stays closest to.
ua-cam.com/video/BynwqM3gz30/v-deo.html
🥰🌋
i dont know..
A bit “trying too hard” with the sultry vocals on what is basically her take on Jimmy hendrixs version of “hey Joe”.
Seriously, last comment 2 years ago. I follow this song almost all of my life but this version I heard the first time today. And that really made my day. It features exactly that kind of haunting, slow atmosphere I was searching for in books and video games. This song version just delivered. Thank you so much!