Customer Rating: 




Summary: Great Album
Comment: Look this album ins't for everybody. I love it as it shows the diverse interpretations of a great song and they are good versions. People like to make songs their own and this is a great example. Andrew Denton went on to do similar things with his breakfast radio show called the Music Challenge. They are also great covers with some from international artists and most of them are just as hilarious.
By the way the guy who implied Australian bands are, in the majority, cover bands, I suggest you listen to some Australian rock/pop music to find out that you are very incorrect.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: Lots of words have two meanings.
Comment: This CD features 12 versions of "Stairway to Heaven". They were recorded for the Australian talk show "The Money or The Gun", hosted by Andrew Denton, which ended every episode with a different guest artist performing that song. Lots of different kinds of styles are featured here. Some of the styles are: big band, Doors tribute band, Elvis impersonator, B-52s cover band, opera, Beatles cover band, reggae and spoken word. But the highlight is the version of "Stairway to Heaven" by Rolf Harris. You may remember Harris from his novelty hit "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport". Well, his version of "Stairway" is done in an arrangement similar to "Kangaroo", and is absolutely hilarious. The CD is worth getting for that track alone, but most of the other versions of "Stairway" are also amusing.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: cute, but overpriced
Comment: While this album is a great novelty it is not something I would pay more than $10 for. The musicianship is minimal and the quality of the versions has much to be desired.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: The Money or the Gun
Comment: Listeners may be interested to know that this album came out of a TV series. "The Money or the Gun" aired on Australian public television in the early nineties, a unique combination of documentary and variety show. Each week, host Andrew Denton (since sold out and gone commercial, alas) developed a theme around interviews, sketches, musical numbers, and plain, old-fashioned news reports. It was pretty hard-hitting; the episode on Prostitution got censored when a madam demonstrated, using her mouth and a handy microphone, how to get a condom on an unwilling customer.
Every show ended with--you guessed it--a different artist/band doing its version of Stairway to Heaven. Denton is on record somewhere explaining why he chose this ever more bizarre way to close the show, but his exact words escape me.
The joke worked better when it was delivered once a week rather than, in the words of Rolf Harris, "all-together-now". But on listening to the CD, I'm surprised at what a diverse and stimulating collection a dozen versions of the same song can be.
But then, it's a great song.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: A Dozen Delicious Versions of the Greatest Rock Song Ever
Comment: I am here to tell you that there is clearly no middle ground on this album. You either love "Stairways to Heaven," with its dozen different versions of the consensus choice of greatest rock and roll song of all time or you look at people who love this album as if their brains had melted and were oozing out of their ears. But then I had a teacher who played Spike Jones in grade school, I grew up on the Smothers Brothers, got hooked on Tom Lehrer and thoroughly enjoy Weird Al Yankovic. Add to my vote for Led Zeppelin as the greatest rock and roll band since the Beatles and why wouldn't I love this album? It is even better than the first Dred Zeppelin album. But then, I recall once hearing on the radio the infamous song that set the lyrics to "The Ballad of Gilligan's Island" to "Stairway to Heaven," so my mind was warped in this direction a long time ago.The contents of this album are easily reduced to a single declarative sentence. One dozen versions of Led Zeppelin's classic "Stairway to Heaven" done in the (mostly) notable styles of different musical groups. This album was produced in Australian and is a major reason they were awarded the Summer Olympics (which took place just after the Australian winter). If you prefer early Beatles there is a "I Want to Hold Your Hand" style version by The Beatnix as well as a "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" version done by Robyne Dunn for those who prefer the later work of the Liverpool lads. There is Elvis in a "Blue Hawaii" mood courtesy of Neil Pepper and a dignified Moody Blues poetry reading from Leonard Teale that appropriately closes out the album. The Rock Lobsters do a B-52's take on the song while the Australian Doors Show do, well, you should be able to figure it out. John Paul Young does a disco version, the Vegimite Reggae a reggae version, Kate Ceberano and The Ministry of Fun a sulty soul version. Sandra Hahn and Michael Turkic tackle an operatic duet, Pardon Me Boys a Be-Bop duet, and Rolf Harris is just out in the outback doing whatever comes into his fertile little mind ("All together now!"). Jimmy Page might have played his guitar with a violin bow, but you must admit he never tried playing a saw.
I have yet to grow tired of listening to this album and have found a great way of having fun with it at the expense of others. Simply go up to a family member, friend, co-worker or somebody walking down the street with a CD player and ask them to pick their three favorite groups a list that covers the above. When they have made their choices, from Early Beatles to Joan Sutherland (note the Australian reference in keeping with the origin of this CD down under), play the appropriate trio of tracks from "Stairways to Heaven." Watch their faces contort as they go from confusion to understanding, from amusement to trepidation, and from familiarity to contempt. And when they have turned their backs on you, just remember: "There's a lady who's sure all that glitters is gold . . ."