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It certainly feels like a good time for a swansong: Lily Allen is singing a cover of Somewhere Only We Know on the John Lewis Christmas advert with the animated bear and Keane's Greatest Hits album is released today.
It's actually the painting on the cover of Somewhere Under Wonderland.
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Her posthumous success began in Britain, the direct result of Terry Wogan repeatedly playing her cover version of Somewhere Over the Rainbow on his Radio 2 breakfast show.
But that's not the only strange transmutation effected by Bainbridge: he has recorded cover versions of Somewhere from the musical West Side Story and Anyone Can Fall in Love, aka the Eastenders theme, and they are both given the spectral funk treatment.
The mash-up peaked at number thirty-seven, while the cover version of "Somewhere Only We Know" trailed behind at number forty-seven.
Her cover of Keane's "Somewhere Only We Know", accompanying the John Lewis Christmas advert, topped the charts.
A delicate cover of Keane's Somewhere Only We Know for John Lewis's Christmas ad campaign was followed by the boisterous satire of Hard Out Here.
Lily Allen is enjoying a third week at the top of the UK singles chart with her cover of Keane's "Somewhere Only We Know", used as the soundtrack to the Christmas John Lewis advert.
The singles chart crowned DJ Calvin Harris' collaboration with Alesso and Hurts, "Under Control" as this week's top track, with Lily Allen's cover of Keane's "Somewhere Only We Know" dropping into fourth place.
From Lily Allen's cover of Keane's Somewhere only we know, to Tom Odell's cover of John Lennon's Real Love, swelling acoustics have the power to tug on people's heartstrings, something big brands know only too well.
As Allen's gentle cover of Keane's Somewhere Only We Know (the soundtrack to John Lewis's Christmas TV advert) enters the charts at No 2, Hard Out Here has had a far bigger impact.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com