Foxy 106.9
There are very few artists that can take a song recorded by someone else and make it their own…and there are even fewer that could do it like the late Luther Vandross.
Nearly 20 years after his passing in 2005, the R&B icon is still one of the greatest singers of the 20th century – a vocal stylist who can make any song into a soulful hit.
Fans got their reminder this past Friday (Oct. 25) as his estate put out a previously unreleased cover of The Beatles’ 1965 hit, “Michelle.” The track’s release coincides with the singer’s upcoming documentary, Luther: Never Too Much, which opens in select cities on Friday (Nov. 1). “Michelle” is also one of several unreleased tracks on his upcoming greatest hits album, set for a December 13 release.
Fonzi Thornton, a close friend and collaborator of Vandross, found the tape while looking through the singer’s archives with family following his passing.
He tells The Hollywood Reporter:
“I found two cassettes labeled ‘Michelle’ in his handwriting — [I had] no idea what it was [and then I] played it! I realized it was a beautiful rendition of the Beatles classic that had been vocally and musically Lutherized. I played Luther’s version for Jeff James, A&R at Sony and Dave Gottlieb, manager of the Vandross Estate, and we agreed it was such a find. We decided to save it until the right time — which is now.”
The Beatles are just the latest in a long list of musicians to have seen their classics remade by one of the greatest vocalists in R&B music. And, to be honest, Luther’s version makes you almost forget that it was a cover to begin with.