LOL ~ Isn't it funny how our tastes vary so much. I've lived with the original, for oh so long before I heard the cover. I voted earlier, but had to locate my cd [vs. the album] for listening to directly compare.
The meaning of the song for me is in its title. Despite so many other things that may not be right, at least "
Tonight will be fine." The way Leonard sings it, he's remaining in the moment of appreciation of what he has, at least for now. Teddy seems to be losing out on that moment and looking to the beyond, when tomorrow night and the nights after
won't be so fine.
Carpe diem [carpe noir
?],
Teddy... tonight really WILL be fine

. Leonard is focusing on the positive of what he has with this woman, basically here and now... how he loves to see her undressing for him, and her being the soft, naked lady that love meant her to be... how he loves seeing her move her body so brave and so free... and how, no matter what else he's lost with her... that, surely, IS a FINE memory. With varying emphasis on these lyrics, this is made very clear.
Leonard also gives vocal emphasis on the words that convey how it is that he knows that "tonight" will be fine... "from your eyes... from your smile" ~ perhaps, those who have experienced those times when people have come back together for a brief time and how so much can be seen in the eyes and the smile that recall when times were good... and the desire to share at least what was good between them then... now. The way Leonard slows the pace and elongates his vocal expression, with greater emphasis on those lyrics; those lines bring to the fore his and the woman's shared recognition of that remembered, emotional space.
I like the variance in Leonard's guitar... is it quick finger-picking? Thompson's guitar is more of a monotonous strumming and restrumming of the same chords, which for me pretty much replicates his vocals on the lyrics. He also omits a word that for me makes a difference... "surely" in ". . . our love would surely last." There's an emphasis on the absolute certainty of how they felt at the time, which creates a greater contrast of what is now... yet,
in that relationship that was so "surely" to last, there remains a bond that allows for them to still have a night together that Leonard KNOWS will be fine... will be fine... will be fine!!!
For me, it's one of those songs where the loss can still be felt, despite its jauntiness... and, perhaps, even moreso because of it. It remains a song of hope, if only through the certainty of how tonight will be... FINE.
Thompson doesn't seem to me to sing it with much expression at all, each line and verse, the same as the next and the last... and as though "Tonight will be fine... " isn't really perceived by him. Leonard's voice quickens and slows and varies in its expression between melancholy and hope, alongside the jauntiness of the tune. His anticipation of the good of the night to come is real, as he listens all night for her step on the stair. Thompson misses all the nuances and, for me, simply makes it a 'recitation' of a song of loss, just singing the lyrics without real recognition of the situation that night.
That's my why on the how of what I feel. I voted Leonard

.
~ Lizzy