
Demo Songs
Here are some tracks of the band, so you can hear how
great we sound! Just click on each of the titles below. We've
added some interesting facts and background on each song, in case you're
interested!
Note: These tracks were produced from the actual backing tracks
we use, with added guitars and vocals; so this is exactly what we sound like
live.

Have I Told You Lately That I Love You
One of the best pop ballads ever written, and a major hit for composer Van
Morrison, it's also been covered by many others including Rod Stewart.
Van's original version is No. 6 on a list of most
popular first dance wedding songs in the UK! Our version is a showcase for Emma's sweet but sultry voice, and also features a
stunning guitar solo from John (says John...) in the middle .
Valerie
The breakthrough hit for the
Zutons and a hit a second time for
Mark Ronson featuring Amy Winehouse, this one shows the band's
versatility and variety of material and Emma's ability to deliver in any
style.
The Zutons' drummer Sean Payne revealed that the song was
written about a US girl friend of their lead singer Dave McCabe who got
caught drink-driving. The Zutons bass guitarist Russell
Pritchard was asked if the band expected Ronson's cover to be a hit. He
replied: "I wouldn't say we're fans, but we don't hate it. It's not a bad
thing - he's just stuck the beat from The Jam's' 'Town Called Malice' behind
it. I quite like it. It proves how catchy the song is that it can be played
in two very different ways and still be a hit. It shows that we're good at
songwriting, or at least that we can be."
Get Ready
This fast tempo Tamla Motown soul classic written by Smokey Robinson was
originally a hit for the Temptations. It was also made famous by
Motown's 'rock band' Rare Earth, whose showcase twenty minute live version
was edited down to a three minute single and became a bigger hit than the
original. It was also covered by The Supremes, The Miracles and,
unlikely as it might seem, The Proclaimers!
Superstition
Always a crowd-pleaser and one of our firm favourites,
Stevie Wonder wrote the song for Jeff Beck as a thank you for Jeff playing
on Stevie's album 'Talking Book'. By using Jeff, Stevie was trying to
introduce rock elements to the album in order to widen appeal to both black
and white audiences, and this worked. However, Tamla Motown's boss,
Berry Gordy, figured it would be a big hit for Stevie, so they rushed it out
as a single before Jeff Beck could get around to it, and it was. Jeff
Beck did release it, both as a single and an album track, but his version
was a massive, thunderous, heavy rock version in the style of the band he
was heading up at the time, Beck Bogert & Appice.
