Monday, 25 May 2026

Sure He's A Cat. Tribute To The Cats. Various Artists

Several artists on the Excelsior recordings label joined hands to pay their musical respect to one of the biggest pop bands, Nederbeat bands, from The Netherlands, The Cats. Hailing from Volendam they received the moniker Palingpop (Eelpop), as Volendam was once a fishing community on the borders of what is now the IJsselmeer but once had an open connection to the North Sea, the Zuiderzee.

The Cats started out as a vocal group consisting of Arnold Mühren, Jaap Schilder, Cees Veerman, Piet Veerman and Theo Klouwer with Piet Keizer stepping in later as a replacement. They started out with songs by other songwriters. In 1968 Piet Veerman became the lead singer and the band started to write their own material as well. With the single 'Times Were When' everything changed and it became the start of a string of top 3 singles and several number ones lasting years.

Being very young at the time, I am not certain what my first conscious The Cats single was. 'Turn Around And Start Again' (1968) for sure, but it may well be 'Sure He's A Cat' from 1967. Both are songs that stick out because of the singing and the instrumentation. Being that young, a hit was a hit, without knowing it. They were songs that were played on the radio, a lot. Sure, I did not like everything, but a lot I did.

And that went for The Cats for years on end. Today that could be called a guilty pleasure but it's more than that. I truly liked the songs at the time. For years on end I couldn't listen to those songs any more, but I noticed that has changed. I was a given a compilation record a few years ago from a friend who was cleaning her parents' basement and I could tap in to my younger self again with ease. That early hit songs are just made in such a good way, that they tickled my fancy once again.

What I have a very hard time doing, is explaining what kind of pop music the music of The Cats is. It's the same with the first years of Bee Gees. Fantastic songs, but what is it exactly? They are both a genre by themselves and because of that and the years in which they scored their first hits entwined.

So now there is a tribute album from the Excelsior label. The most famous singers are Johan's Jacco de Greeuw and Tim Knol. The other singers, judging by their family names, are all from Volendam, Bond, Tuip and Veerman, Donna Marie, so perhaps a grandchild of either Veerman in The Cats.

The music is all fine, but in most of the songs all I can do is thinking, you're not Piet Veerman. With his larmoyantly quivering tone and the constant tears in his voice he is inimitable. To do something completely different, like when Donna Marie Veerman sings, is what works best. Following the original too closely works less good for me at least. Hearing the songs once again though is great and what it also shows is that the band did move into country music, something I had totally forgotten. And, to finish up. The Johanification of 'End Of The Show' works really well. This is the only moment, Donna Marie aside, that I was not thinking for a second about Piet Veerman. It shows what the power of a great cover version is.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can order Sure He's A Cat here:

https://excelsior-recordings.com/products/v-a-sure-hes-a-cat 

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