Collected by popdose
Itâs generally agreed upon that if you donât have any new flavor to add to the original, you shouldnât bother doing a cover. Â But what exactly are the ingredients for a great cover?
Thereâs no secret recipe. Â Some of the songs below are great because they completely deconstruct the original, stripping it down to its most basic components of chords and lyrics, and build it back up again in a completely different style. Â For others, the genius of the original song was always present but the presentation was lacking, and when the talents of a different performer are added, the song gains a gravity that it didnât have in its original form. Â And some of them, whether by generational ignorance or through the general obscurity of the original artist, simply didnât receive the exposure they needed for their greatness to be recognized until they were delivered by a more familiar voice. Â But the finest of these, the ones we love the best, are simply great songs by great artists where the addition of a new twist and a new voice creates something that is greater than the sum of its parts. Â You can hear and recognize the glory of the original version in every note of the cover, but the listening experience is taken to another level through the talents of the covering artist.
The process for generating our list was fairly simple.  We created a huge list (800+ songs) of nominees, and each of the authors that participated selected their own top 100.  Those top 100 lists were weighted on a curve and used to generate the list that you see below.  Next week, weâll publish a separate âhonorable mentionâ post featuring some of the songs that didnât earn enough votes to make the list, but were important enough to individual authors that we wanted to make sure they received some attention as well.  If youâve got a Spotify account, you can listen to most of the originals here, and the cover versions here.  If you donât have an account yet, you can request an invitation (they issue them pretty promptly now).  Enjoy! â Zack Dennis
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100. âAloneâ â Heart. Â Originally performed by I-Ten.
The people who end up becoming the top pop songwriters often end up in that position because their days as pop performers never came or ended too early. Linda Perry or Richard Marx, for example. People like that. Or the duo of Billy Steinberg and Tom Kelly. Steinberg had a pop band in the late â70s called Billy Thermal, with whom he recorded his composition âHow Do I Make You,â far better known for being sung later on by Linda Ronstadt. Soon thereafter, Steinberg met session and backing musician Tom Kelly, and they started writing together. They scored a ton of hits, for other people, primarily women â they had an uncanny knack for writing songs from a female point of view. Their songs were recorded over the last three decades by Pat Benatar, Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Whitney Houston, the Bangles, and the Divinyls. But back in 1983, they still had those pop star dreams they couldnât quite let go, so Steinberg and Kelly formed a band called I-Ten. One of the songs they recorded was a sheeny rock ballad called âAlone.â It was not a hit. Nor was it when it was covered for the first time by, of all people, John Stamos, in character as Gino Minelli of the fake rock band The Dreams on the 1984 sitcom Dreams. Then Heart got a hold of it, well into their second era as an â80s arena rock band. A million miles from âMagic Man,â they were free to make âAloneâ an even slicker, junior high-slow-dance histrionics nâ hooks kind of song than even I-ten could do. âAloneâ wound up being Heartâs biggest hit ever, going to #1 for three weeks in 1987. â Brian Boone
99. âJersey Girlâ â Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band. Originally performed by Tom Waits.
Springsteen sure knows how to pick the best cover songs, as he proved when he chose this 1980 Tom Waits to close out his series of concerts at the Meadowlands in 1981. Waitsâ tender lyrics are so tapped into the same Jersey mythology that Bruce popularized, and the Boss sings Waitsâ song with such reverence and conviction (with only some minor lyrical changes), that it almost seems as if âJersey Girlâ was written specifically for Springsteen. Everything about this recording sparkles: the beautiful harmonies by Little Steven and Clarence Clemons, the subtle guitar and organ accompaniments, and the lovely sax solo by the Big Man to bring the song to a close. âJersey Girlâ was never an official from Springsteen; that it remains one of his most popular songs is attributable to the E Street Bandâs stellar performance and the beauty of Tom Waitsâ composition. â Scott Malchus
98. âI Know (Iâm Losing You)â â Rod Stewart. Originally performed by The Temptations.
Rod Stewart had already begun to stir up a considerable buzz by 1971, both with the Faces and on his first two solo albums, which were moderate hits. However, that yearâs Every Picture Tells a Story and its hit single âMaggie Mayâ rocketed him into the stratosphere. The album is rightly considered by most to be the best record he ever did, and this Temptations cover, recorded with the full Faces lineup of Ronnie Lane, Kenny Jones, Ron Wood and Ian McLagan (contractual issues required that the sleeve credits be vague, since Rod solo was on Mercury and the Faces were with Warners), is regarded by many as one of the best tracks. Where the Temps played it smooth, the Faces apply their usual instinctively loose and ragged bash and crash, and Rodâs sandpaper vocal brings out the hurt and heartbreak inherent in the lyric. The middle section where the boys âmm-hmm-mmâ as Rod sings down low over Macâs piano, is a revelation. Wonder whatever happened to that Stewart fella, anyway? Never mind, I donât think I wanna know. â Johnny Bacardi
97. âIf Not For Youâ â George Harrison. Originally performed by Bob Dylan.
Have I ever told you how achingly I crushed on Olivia Newton-John at the dawn of my pubescence, even before âGreaseâ? She was so adorable â and yet somehow so sexy â early in her career, with those doe eyes and that crystalline voice and those Aussie-goes-country singles of hers, and I canât imagine anyone else singing âIf Not for Youâ with anything like the austerely romantic groove she brought to it. Oh â this is about George Harrisonâs version? Yeah, thatâs good, too. â Jon Cummings
96. âI Need Loveâ â Luka Bloom. Originally performed by LL Cool J.
Covering LL Cool Jâs seminal rap-ballad was not easy, says Luka Bloom: in an interview he called it âthe most challenging song Iâve ever learnedâŠIt took me a year to get [it] right.â Bloomâs version exchanges the slickness of the original for a warmer, more intimate vibe. The language is still hip-hop circa 1987, but the sound is a seductive mix of folk rock and Irish traditional music. For Bloom, the connection between his form and LLâs is a simple one: both come from, and are for, the people in the streets. â Robin Monica Alexander
95. âHow Soon Is Nowâ â Love Spit Love. Originally performed by The Smiths.
Iâm not thrilled with the idea of anyone covering songs by the Smiths â thereâs very little anyone could do to any of them to make them better (or even do them justice). But if someone held a gun to the head of a kitten and told me that to save its life I had to articulate a genuine complaint about âHow Soon is Now,â Iâd say that perhaps their near-perfect anthem to loneliness meanders along too much and the music eventually becomes repetitious. Although Richard Butler and Love Spit Love were initially reluctant to meddle with the classic when asked to record their own interpretation for the 1996 witchcraft movie âThe Craft,â they eventually relented and delivered a version that trims the song down to just over four minutes, and adds just the right amount of angst to counterbalance Morrisseyâs self-pitying shyness. â Zack Dennis
94. âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ â Tori Amos. Originally performed by Nirvana.
As different as their musical styles may be, Kurt Cobain and Tori Amos have a few important things in common: theyâre both angry, damaged weirdos who came of age in the 1980s and werenât too thrilled about it. Both are also masters at putting across a lyric that is somehow brutally honest and darkly comic at the same time. Kurt shreds away at a song (with voice and guitar) while Tori keens over her piano, but when the latter covered the formerâs breakout record, she matched his intensity note for note. Tori Amosâ âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ is the yang to Nirvanaâs yin, the feminine response to the originalâs moment-defining adolescent male fury. â Robin Monica Alexander
93. âBaby, Now That Iâve Found Youâ â Alison Krauss. Originally performed by The Foundations.
This was #1 on my personal list not just because I love Alison Krauss, but because she accomplished something with âBaby, Now That Iâve Found Youâ that no other cover on this list did. She took a song that had DESERVEDLY faded into obscurity, because the Foundationsâ original recording was pretty terrible to begin with and had aged badly to boot, and turned it into a classic with one of the most exquisite vocal performances of the last two decades. â Jon Cummings
92. âRaspberry Beretâ â Hindu Love Gods. Originally performed by Prince.
In which the late great Warren Zevon and the non-Stipe part of R.E.M. got together while recording Zevonâs 1987 Sentimental Hygiene album, got very drunk, and cut a bunch of old blues songs. They also worked up this cover of the Prince hit, and when the results finally saw release in 1990, this was the single, which made it to #23 on the Modern Rock charts. Itâs a fun, rocking romp with an intriguingly syncopated opening riff (hats off to the sadly missed Bill Berry) thatâs repeated often as the song goes on, and a bemused vocal by Zevon which plays up his ability to sound sincere and tongue-in-cheek at the same time. â Johnny Bacardi
91. âGot the Timeâ â Anthrax. Originally performed by Joe Jackson.
Young metalhead as I was in 1990, I looked at the credits for Anthraxâs Persistence of Time album and wondered aloud, âWho the hell is Joe Jackson?â I figured he must be some kind of clever badass to write a song as catchy and yet as aggressive as âGot the Time.â Turns out that even in my ignorance I was right. â Chris Holmes
90. âYou Are In My Systemâ â Robert Palmer. Originally performed by The System.
Robert Palmer had this great knack for taking tunes made for R&B radio right after their release and turning them into mainstream rock hits. âYou Are In My Systemâ was released by The System only a short time before Palmerâs version in 1983 and while the original burned up the R&B charts, his version climbed the Billboard Hot 100. Iâve always loved what Palmer did for black music. He took soul and funk and made it rock enough that white radio would play it therefore exposing the original artist to the best of both worlds. â Dave Steed
89. âCrimson and Cloverâ â Joan Jett & the Blackhearts.Originally performed by Tommy James.
A lot of rock and roll songs pretend to be about something complicated when all they are really about is someone wanting to get freaky with someone else. âCrimson and Cloverâ does not pretend. Itâs pretty clear what âI wanna do everything/What a beautiful feelingâ means, no matter whoâs singing it. The only mystery is exactly what âcrimson and cloverâ refers to. Tommy James claimed that it was simply a merging of his favorite color and favorite flower. Maybe he could get away with that in 1968, but add fifteen years and Joan Jett to the equation, and now we know exactly what it means. Ask Charlize Theron and Christina Ricci, who made passionate, fucked-up love to it in the film Monster. â Robin Monica Alexander
88. âBizarre Love Triangleâ â Frente.  Originally performed by New Order.
While almost noone is going to make the mistake of thinking that this was a Frente original, what may come as a surprise to most folks is that the cover from the Austrailia-based quartet performed better on the charts than the original did. Â Â Frenteâs light touch adds the right touch of yearning to the protagonist of the song, who comes across as rather aloof in the New Order version. â Zack Dennis
87. âAll Through the Nightâ â Cyndi Lauper. Originally performed by Jules Shear.
For a time in the 80?s, it seemed like Jules Shear was going to break through in a big way- he had a couple of well-regarded solo albums, and his earlier band The Polar Bears had generated a lot of buzz. Plus, people were covering, and in a couple of cases, even having hits with his songs. He even parlayed that success into a hosting gig on the first iteration of MTVâs Unplugged program. But, as so often is the case, the momentum stalled and now heâs an afterthought. Part of the problem was that he never had a mouthpiece that had as much mojo as the then up-and-coming Cyndi Lauper, whose Betty Boop coo gave her synth-heavy cover of his song (which had appeared on his Rundgren-produced Watch Dog album the previous year) a winsome, starry-eyed, yet melancholy charm which resonated with listeners who were already charmed by Lauperâs first big hit âGirls Just Want to Have Funâ. This one went to #5, and helped make Sheâs So Unusual the monster hit record that it was. â Johnny Bacardi
86. âMy World Is Empty Without You / I Hear A Symphonyâ â The Afghan Whigs. Originally performed by The Supremes.
Greg Dulli doesnât have the prettiest voice (though in fairness he has smoothed out a lot of his rough edges over the past five years), but heâs got heaping truckloads of soul to make up for it. As a fan of classic R&B, Dulli took many opportunities with the Afghan Whigs to put his own personal stamp on his favorite songs, and the Whigsâ cover of âMy World Is Empty Without Youâ just might be their greatest cover ever. So powerful was this recording when I first heard it blaring out of my car radio as I was driving down the road, I had to pull over so I could take it all in without getting myself into a wreck. This is the song that made me a Dulli fan for life. â Michael Fortes
85. âA New Englandâ â Kirsty MacColl. Originally performed by Billy Bragg.
Billy Bragg was 21 years when he wrote this song, or so he claimed. Itâs about the joys and frustrations of young adulthood, happy for MacColl and wistful for Bragg. The lines written to be sung by a diffident man become ambivalent feminism in MacCollâs version:âI put you (you put me) on a pedestal, they put you (me) on the pillâ; âI donât feel bad about letting you go, I just feel sad about letting you knowâ; âAll the girls I left at school already pushing pramsâ. It was the first single on Braggâs first album, Lifeâs a Riot with Spy vs Spy, but it was MacCollâs cover that cracked the UK Top 10. She later recorded with The Pogues and was killed by a renegade motor boater while snorkeling in Mexico, thus doing the unimaginable and failing to outlive Shane MacGowan. â Annie Logue
84. âKissâ â Art of Noise with Tom Jones. Originally performed by Prince.
My junior year in high school, I had an English teacher who decided to give the entire class a birthday party and asked all of us to write down what we wanted. My wish: to see her dancing on top of a table in the quad to the strains of Art of Noise and Tom Jonesâ cover of âKiss.â Unbelievably, she actually did it. Moral of the story: Never underestimate the power of Tom Jones. â Jeff Giles
83. âJust a Gigoloâ â David Lee Roth. Originally performed by Louis Prima.
David Lee Roth may be rock nâ rollâs biggest clown, and I say that with nothing but love and respect. I mean, the guy was (and is now again) the lead singer of one of the awesomest hard rock bands of the 1980s, and he went toe to toe with that bandâs hot shot guitarist in ways that many of us feel were the hallmark of of what made hard rock so fun, before it devolved into hair metal excess. He did this by balancing Eddie Van Halenâs seriously awe-inspiring guitar chops with a kicked-up, party-all-the-time attitude in nearly everything he did. It was Diamond Daveâs sense of humor that carried his best known solo hit, a cover of the classic Louis Prima medley of âJust a Gigoloâ and âI Ainât Got Nobody.â Dave was just the guy to bring a taste of the swing era into the â80s, and while he didnât really veer too far off from the overall feel of the original performance, his wild eyed charisma made it impossible to resist. â Michael Fortes
82. âEasyâ â Faith No More. Originally performed by Commodores.
âTurn the lights off, baby,â coos Mike Patton at the start of Faith No Moreâs take on the Commodoresâ classic âEasy,â and if nothing else, you know this perhaps is not going to be the most reverent cover version youâve ever heard. Yet despite that (and Pattonâs little-boyish, girls-are-icky-sounding âEwww!â leading into the solo), the song works â partly because itâs just a damn good song thatâs always going to work when played by half-decent musicians, and partly because the humor doesnât undercut the song or diminish it. If the band winks here and there, itâs to let you know that this song is not, in fact, something âfor the ladies in the houseâ: itâs a sweet, soulful groove that deserves to survive and be heard without necessarily calling to mind images of guys in flared pants trying to lure chicks upstairs and into the waterbed. Not that thereâs anything wrong with that. â Dan Wiencek
81. âDancing in the Streetâ â Van Halen. Originally performed by Martha and the Vandellas.
While not nearly the triumph that ââYou Really Got Meââ was, Iâve always enjoyed Van Halenâs take on this Martha Reeves & the Vandellas gem. Itâs one of the lighter songs the original quartet ever recorded, but its nimble arrangement works in its favor. That Eddie Van Halen synth part has always fascinated me, but of course he steals the show with another ridiculously effortless guitar solo.
â Chris Holmes
80. âWe Can Work It Outâ â Stevie Wonder. Originally performed by The Beatles.
I love the way Stevie Wonder records his drums. Itâs like your head is basically stuck inside the can and heâs beating the skin above you. Catch that dirty riff in the opening of the track tooâis that a guitar or a fuzzed-out organ? Thereâs acres of space inside this cut; you could build a house and live in it. There are worse places to reside. â Matt Springer
79. âWorking My Way Back to Youâ â The Spinners. Originally performed by The Four Seasons.
I know itâs sacrilege for a Jersey native to admit this, but on some days I prefer the thumping disco beat of the Spinnersâ take on this track to the more easy-going, Motown-esque arrangement of the 4 Seasonsâ original. Those vocals, theyâre just so damn smooth. And then when the late Pervis Jackson drops in with those bass vocals (âbeen payinâ every day!â), itâs just too much awesome to deny. â Chris Holmes
78. âWild Nightâ â John Mellencamp and Meshell Ndegeocello. Originally performed by Van Morrison.
âThey made it all about the bass line,â a friend said to me bitterly as this duet rode up the charts. And yeah, maybe they did a little, but when youâre talking about a bass player like Meshell Ndegeocello, why wouldnât you want to hear the bass? âWild Nightâ provided John Mellencampâs Dance Naked album with not only its only hit, but also with its most lively and liberating song, an upbeat highlight to a generally morose and introspective record. Mellencamp and Ndegeocello sound great together, Ndegeocello plays awesomely (did I say that already?) and the song as a whole is irresistibly energetic â the perfect prelude to a wild night. â Dan Wiencek
77. âIâm Freeâ â Soup Dragons. Originally performed by Rolling Stones.
Tapping into the Manchester/baggy music scene that swept through the UK in the early 90?s, Soup Dragons covered this obscure Rolling Stones b-side and took us on a funky soul ride. Together with Junior Reid (whose shout out âDonât be afraid of your freedomâ seemed to wake up many of the dormant college crowd just before the 1992 election), the Soup Dragons found themselves on MTV and a part of the burgeoning alt-rock scene that was finding its footing on the FM dial. For most of us, it came as quite a shock that this danceable expression of free will was written by the same corporate gods who were charging a hundred bucks a pop for one of their stadium shows. The popularity of the Soupâs âIâm Freeâ was a reminder that once upon a time Mick, Keith and company played as if their lives depended on it. â Scott Malchus
76. âAlways On My Mindâ â Pet Shop Boys. Originally performed by Brenda Lee.
Three months after they hauled Dusty Springfield out of mothballs for âWhat Have I Done to Deserve This?,â Pet Shop Boys reached back into the past, sprinkling a few layers of pillowy-soft synth dust on this country standard and striking the perfect blend between plastic â80s artifice and classic pop songcraft. â Jeff Giles
75. âWichita Linemanâ â Glen Campbell. Originally performed by Jimmy Webb.
Iâve seen this described as the âfirst existential country songâ, and that is pretty apt, but itâs the stirring string arrangement, heart-rending guitar (by James Burton- that solo is to die for), and of course Campbellâs oh-so-sincere Arkansas countryboy vocal which makes this, in the words of Stuart Malcone, âThe greatest pop song ever composedâ. Jimmy Webb never had a finer interpreter than Campbell, who was riding high with his CBS primetime variety show The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour at the time. âAnd I need you more than want you/and I want you for all timeâ is simply a genius couplet, no doubt about it. â Johnny Bacardi
74. âI Love Rock nâ Rollâ â Joan Jett & the Blackhearts. Originally performed by The Arrows.
Of all the songs on this list, I felt sentimentally obliged to tackle this one. The Arrows were a British rock band fronted by American singer Allan Merill, who wrote âI Love Rock ânâ Rollâ in 1975 as a Slade-influenced pop-glam song with his bandmate Jake Hooker. Released as a B-side, then as a single, the song tanked in England despite the Arrowsâ relative popularity (they had a TV variety show!), but it became something of an underground classic. Which is how Joan Jett came to record her version, ultimately her biggest hit and signature song, in 1981. She changed a couple of things: she made it more metal, and she switched the genders of the songâs principals around. Because while arguably the definitive rock nâ roll song that namechecks rock nâ roll itself, âI Love Rock nâ Rollâ isnât really about rock ânâ roll. At least not in the musical sense; it is about rockinâ and rollinâ in the blues slang sense. By which I mean boninâ. Itâs about lusting after somebody near the jukebox who is âabout 17,â give or take. The Arrows did it about a girl and it seemed predatory and weird, yet still innocent as it falls into the canon of pop songs about underage girls (âYouâre 16,â âSweet Little Sixteen,â âInto the Night,â âSeventeenâ), while Jettâs seems amusingly predatory and cool, because what cocky 17-year-old broseph wouldnât want and wouldnât be surprised by Joan Jett stalking him at the record machine? Jettâs version went to #1 in the U.S. and #4 in the U.K. Other artists that have covered âI Love Rock ânâ Rollâ include Britney Spears, the Dresden Dolls, L.A. Guns, and Weezer, who called their version âBeverly Hills.â â Brian Boone
73. âWild Thingâ â The Troggs. Originally performed by The Wild Ones.
A, A, D-D-D E, E. With those three chords, played just that way, the Troggs minted arguably the greatest garage-rock song ever. It began life as anything but: the original version of âWild Thingâ is a ramshackle, utterly undistinguished affair, with a honking harmonica line and a comically drawled vocal suggesting Sonny Bono doing his very worst Dylan parody. When it found its way across the Atlantic to Troggs lead singer Reg Presley, he had the great fortune of hearing not the Wild Onesâ version but the original demo by songwriter Chip Taylor. Taylor, not a trained guitarist, banged out a simple I-IV-V chord progression with a distinctively punchy rhythm, and it was that hook that sold the song to Presley and his bandmates. Add a vintage rock nâ roll âWhat the hell is that?â moment â an ocarina solo in the bridge â and a too-cool-for-school vocal, and you have one of rockâs DNA numbers, a song that any band can play and that will never go out of style. â Dan Wiencek
72. âHallelujahâ â Rufus Wainwright. Originally performed by Leonard Cohen.
Who HASNâT covered âHallelujahâ in the years since Jeff Buckleyâs death? Rufus doesnât venture too far from the Cohen/Buckley template here, but his version of âHallelujahâ gets bonus points for bringing a highly charged emotional moment â and a very adult one, at that â to the wedding-preparations scene in âShrek.â â Jon Cummings
71. âJealous Guyâ â Roxy Music. Originally performed by John Lennon.
Bryan Ferry spent almost as much time recording other peopleâs music as he did recording his own â and in the last 20 years, that ratio of covers to originals has gone from 30:70 to 80:20 â but most of his spins on other peopleâs songs seem to be for a lark, the work of a guy trying to get his ya yaâs out (a fitting reference, considering he covered âSympathy for the Devilâ) while waiting for inspiration to strike. In the case of Roxy Musicâs decision to cover John Lennonâs âJealous Guy,â however, it went the other way around. Ferry wasnât waiting for inspiration so much as he was dumbstruck by tragedy, and what began as an honorary cover version in the bandâs live set shortly after Lennonâs death in 1980 eventually turned into a 1981 studio recording and, subsequently, Roxy Musicâs only #1 single. It admittedly reeks of opportunism, a criticism the band had to deal with at the time, but of the many, many songs Roxy Music covered in their illustrious career, never have Ferry and his mates sounded so determined to make someone elseâs song their own. And thatâs exactly what they did. â David Medsker
70. âThe Passengerâ â Siouxsie and the Banshees. Originally performed by Iggy Pop.
Siouxsie and Bansheesâ 1987 Through the Looking Glass is a game-changer in a couple of ways. The smartest, most focused covers album since Bowieâs Pin-Ups, it runs through an idiosyncratic mix of cult favorites, 60s classic rock, and Tin Pan Alley. The horn punches and razor-sharp guitars of âThe Passengerâ show the Banshees reinventing themselves as well as reinventing the songs, evolving from droning goth-rockers to a shiny, spiky hyper-pop outfit. â Jack Feerick
69. âGet it On (Bang a Gong)â â Power Station. Originally performed by T.Rex.
Marc Bolanâs one and only major U.S. hit, written as a Chuck Berry swipe (as many of Bolanâs songs were, to be honest), proved an apt canvas for what the ad hoc group Power Station wanted to do. Recorded while the double Duran was on hiatus and a bit of a coming out party for DD guitarist Andy Taylor, the followup to their first hit âSome Like It Hotâ featured crunchier, nasty guitar, vocals by the late Robert Palmer (who by that time had become a dab hand at clever cover versions himself) and the Stationâs one true ace in the holeâChic drummer Tony Thompson, who brought his thunder and elevated it above the norm. â Johnny Bacardi
67. âMrs. Robinsonâ â The Lemonheads. Originally performed by Simon & Garfunkel.
The gentle, lilting rhythms of the Simon & Garfunkel original, which is indelibly associated with the 1967 film The Graduate, are a very good representation of the kind of folk music that Paul Simon and similar artists were producing at the time the film was released. Similarly, when the Lemonheads released their own version in 1992 as part of a celebration of the movieâs 25th anniversary, their upbeat version perfectly encapsulated the post-punk stylings of the early nineties. Lemonheadsâ leader Evan Dando fell from grace in the late nineties due to an addiction to crack cocaine and has rarely been heard from since, but this song remains his greatest legacy as one of the defining acts of alternative rock. â Zack Dennis
66. âYou Really Got A Hold On Meâ â The Beatles. Originally performed by The Miracles.
What made the Beatles the Beatles? Tough question. I have no good answers. Certainly they were incredible musicians, some of the best songwriters of all time, leveraging the studio as an instrument by sheer force of will. Part of it had to be their unique ability to mix up the Liverpool gumbo of rock, blues, country, and soul into a single unified sound. Here we find the Fab Four paying dutiful homage to the soul part of their heritage with a cover of a Smoky Robinson classic. The star here is John Lennonâs vocal; I know history tells us he always hated his voice, but good gravy was he crazy to feel that way. There have been few sharper blades to emerge from the mouth of a singer in the decades since. Itâs all thereâthe anguish, the anger, the pain. â Matt Springer
65. âSuperstarâ â The Carpenters. Originally performed by Delaney & Bonnie.
The Carpenters were certainly not the duo anyone would have expected to cover a tune whose original title was âGroupie Song,â but Richard knew a good melody when he heard one, and Karenâs wholesome, yearning voice turned what was originally somewhat tawdry into something truly heartbreaking. âSuperstarâ has been sung by numerous artists, in various styles, including rock, pop, and R&B, but the Carpentersâ interpretation has become the definitive version: like all their best music, it is painfully beautiful, with an emphasis on pain. â Robin Monica Alexander
64. âTry a Little Tendernessâ â Otis Redding. Originally performed by Ray Noble/Bing Crosby.
âTry a Little Tendernessâ doesnât deserve to be as low as #65 on ANY list, as far as Iâm concerned â but who the hell remembers anymore that this is a cover? Otisâ vocal, particularly on that much-imitated, never-ever-EVER-equaled finale, virtually defines male soul singing â and the MGâs contributions on horns and in the rhythm section are similarly iconic. â Jon Cummings
63. âThe Air That I Breatheâ â The Hollies. Originally performed by Albert Hammond.
There is an old story among comedians that you should never tell a joke while Robin Williams is in the room, because not only will he use it, he will tell it better than you ever will. One wonders if a similar story circulated around the Hollies when they were at their peak. George Harrison may have told the press that their version of his song âIf I Needed Someoneâ was rubbish, but behind closed doors, you had to think that he secretly shook a fist at Allan Clarke for turning in a better vocal than George ever could. Fledgling folkie Albert Hammond, on the other hand, surely felt no such misgivings about having another group sing circles around him. Indeed, Phil Everly had already beaten the Hollies to the punch in not only covering the track (with an arrangement by Warren Zevon, no less) but outperforming the original, so Hammond surely welcomed his song getting Hollified, for lack of a better word. The Holliesâ major contribution over Hammond and Everlyâs takes: holding the note in the chorus from major to minor and through the next four measures, creating one of the most memorable hooks in all of pop music. Dozens of artists have tackled the song since the Hollies turned it into a Top 10 hit in seven countries in 1974, but none of them have tried to replicate both the triple-decker harmonies and the 13-second note that the Hollies made famous. Thereâs a reason for that â they couldnât possibly do it better. â David Medsker
62. âRing of Fireâ â Social Distortion. Originally performed by Anita Carter.
One of the purposes of performing a cover version is to add something new to the original, and Social Distortion essentially takes Johnny Cashâs biggest hit (originally penned by June Carter and Merle Kilgore and recorded by Juneâs sister Anita), rips off the restrictor plate, and flushes about six straight charges of nitrous oxide straight through the engine manifold. The end result is a breakneck vision of a scorched-earth relationship that burns hot, bright, and fast, and can only reach its inevitable conclusion in a tattoo removal parlor, a prison cell, or a morgue. Social Distortionâs self-titled 1990 album was the groupâs major label debut and their first exposure to attention outside of the punk scene, and while âTake Away This Ball and Chainâ and âStory of My Lifeâ provided fans an opportunity to see what they had to say, their cover of âRing of Fireâ showed everyone else what they could actually do. â Zack Dennis
61. âYou Can Leave Your Hat Onâ â Joe Cocker. Originally performed by Randy Newman.
As is so often his wont, Newman wrote and recorded this song from a loserâs point of view â the unappealing fumblings of a sweaty, skeevy would-be Lothario whose come-ons would make any sensible womanâs skin crawl. Joe Cocker took it and turned it into a soulful expression of triumphant lust. A classic example of how a cover can work even if the person covering it doesnât share the writerâs intent. â Jeff Giles
60. âIstanbul (not Constantinople)â â They Might Be Giants. Originally performed by The Four Lads.
The sort of witty novelty that rarely gets written anymore, but was terrifically commonplace in the postwar years, âIstanbul (Not Constantinople)â four decades later allowed They Might Be Giants to whip up one of the most successful in their series of hyper-verbal alt-rock souffles. Why havenât they pursued a dozen other such covers in subsequent years? Thatâs nobodyâs business but the Turksâ. â Jon Cummings
59. âThe First Time Ever I Saw Your Faceâ â Roberta Flack. Originally performed by Peggy Seeger.
Originally done in a straight folk style by Peggie Seeger, âThe First Time Ever I Saw Your Faceâ was very nearly overlooked when it was re-recorded by Roberta Flack in 1972. It took Clint Eastwoodâs stalker horror flick Play Misty for Me,released three years later, to demonstrate what had been sitting there in plain sight all along: this is a powerful, dramatic, even unnerving performance, with Flackâs voice alternately booming and sighing against a murmurous background of double bass, piano, guitar and strings. Ewan MacColl, the political songwriter who penned it (allegedly on a bet), hated Flackâs version, yet 35 years have done nothing to diminish its slow-burning passion and impeccable craftsmanship. â Dan Wiencek
58. âLove Hurtsâ â Nazareth. Originally performed by Everly Brothers.
Iâd love to tell you all the reasons why this is such a great cover, but Rob Smith already said everything I could possibly think to say about the song â and more â in his Death by Power Ballad column back in May. What he said, man. â David Medsker
57. âStop Your Sobbingâ â The Pretenders. Originally performed by The Kinks.
I was in 8th Grade in Youngstown, Ohio when the Pretenders cover of âStop Your Sobbingâ came out. The DJ at WHOT said that the singer was from Akron â just up the road! â and that she got bored one day, dropped out of Kent State, and bought a plane ticket to London. That told me that there were possibilities in the world that I had not imagined up until then. Hyndeâs dream was even bigger; she was a huge Kinks fan and wanted to meet Ray Davies, who first sang âStop Your Sobbingâ. Unlike most teenage fangirls, though, her wish came true; she had an affair with Davies (âThe Adulteressâ on Pretenders II) and bore his child. And, she wrote several amazing songs all by herself. â Annie Logue
56. âThing Called Loveâ â Bonnie Raitt. Originally performed by John Hiatt.
John Hiattâs Bring the Family is one of my all-time favorite records, and there isnât a note on the thing that needed to be interpreted by another artist â which makes it that much more impressive that Bonnie Raitt ended up turning her version of the Family standout âThing Called Loveâ into a classic in its own right. It didnât hurt Hiattâs bank account, either. â Jeff Giles
55. âMy Back Pagesâ â The Byrds. Originally performed by Bob Dylan.
Originally released by Bob Dylan on his 1964 album Another Side of Bob Dylan, the Byrds swiped it in 1967 for their Younger Than Yesterday album, the last in a string of popular Dylan covers by the band in the 1960s (âMr. Tambourine Man,â âChimes of Freedom,â âThe Times They Are a-Changinâ). It may seem like sacrelige but this oneâs my favorite. Dylanâs version is good, earnest, folkie Dylan; the Byrds dig deep to find the bittersweet message at the heart of the song. âI was so much older then; Iâm younger than that nowâ may be one of the greatest lines Dylan ever wrote, but itâs one of the best tunes the Byrds ever recorded. â Matt Springer
54. âMustang Sallyâ â Wilson Pickett. Originally performed by Mack Rice.
Mack who? âMustang Sallyâ made Mr. Rice a one-(minor)-hit wonder as an R&B singer, though he would go on to write songs like âCheaper to Keep Herâ and the Staple Singersâ âExpress Yourself.â But âMustang Sallyâ is his greatest legacy because the Wicked Pickett, a year removed from finding his signature groove with âIn the Midnight Hour,â gave âMustang Sallyâ a similarly horny (I mean that in more than one way) and big-voiced treatment. â Jon Cummings
53. âI Didnât Mean To Turn You Onâ â Robert Palmer. Originally performed by Cherrelle.
Robert Palmerâs sudden surge of success in 1985, after fifteen years in the business, was attributable to a perfect storm of good decisions: his stint with the Power Station, those unforgettable videos with the expressionless models, and bold, witty choices of material. âI Didnât Mean to Turn You On,â originally recorded by R&B cutie Cherrelle a year earlier, went to #2 on the Hot 100. The absurdity of a thirty-something man singing lyrics clearly intended for an ingenue struck Palmer himself as extremely funny. He laughed all the way to the bank. â Robin Monica Alexander
52. âTrappedâ â Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band. Originally performed by Jimmy Cliff.
There may be no artist more comfortable with performing covers than Bruce Springsteen. Although he has focused on mostly his own material for albums, his live shows have featured cover songs from the start. The âDetroit Medleyâ made famous by Mitch Ryder was a climactic moment at his marathon shows for years, as were such rock and soul chestnuts as âQuarter to Threeâ and âTwist and Shout.â When heâs not cherrypicking sixties party classics for his encores, Springsteen selects covers that echo and amplify the thematic concerns of his own material. First covered on the 1981 River tour and recorded for release on the 1984 Born in the USA tour, âTrappedâ fits in with the Bossâs righteous anger toward a country willing to slowly destroy its working class in favor of the rich and entitled. Aside from Springsteenâs vicious vocal, the standout here is âMightyâ Max Weinbergâs drumming, mowing down any who wander into its path. â Matt Springer
51. âSummertime Bluesâ â The Who. Originally performed by Eddie Cochran.
The average Who fan in 1970 had probably never even heard of Rockabilly, but the group understood and appreciated the history of rock. This Eddie Cochran classic was a staple of the Whoâs live set early on, and they had honed it to vicious perfection by the time Live at Leeds was recorded. The fun, upbeat spirit of the original is still very much intact, but here itâs infused with a thuggish intensity â not to mention an extra 1,000 decibels or so. How many arms did Keith Moon have anyway? â Chris Holmes
50. âBlueberry Hillâ â Fats Domino. Originally performed by Gene Autry.
Why is âBlueberry Hill,â recorded by so many, a Fats Domino song in the end? First, because it was Fatsâ biggest hitâbigger than âAinât That a Shame,â bigger than âIâm Walkinâââand second, because Fats introduced it to the rock and roll era. Before him, the song had been recorded by Glenn Miller, Gene Autry and Louis Armstrong; after him, it would be covered by Elvis, Little Richard, and the Everly Brothers. Fats Dominoâs 1956 version isnât just a damn good record; itâs part of a moment in musical history. â Robin Monica Alexander
49. âBlack Magic Womanâ â Santana. Originally performed by Fleetwood Mac
Carlos Santana and his original Woodstock-era band made a career out of repainting othersâ tunes in their own image, from Willie Boboâs âEvil Waysâ to Tito Puenteâs âOye Como Vaâ and âPara Los Rumberos.â But it was Santanaâs definitive rendition of Fleetwood Macâs Peter Green-penned âBlack Magic Womanâ that we remember best. That driving intro, with fluid lead guitar melodies that could come from no one else, set the tone for a Latin-ized workout on an otherwise obscure English blues rock tune. Better still was Santanaâs awe-inspiring segue from âBlack Magic Womanâ into Gabo Szaboâs âGypsy Queen,â an intense, percussive instrumental that effectively serves as the coda to âBlack Magic Womanâ and takes the tune to a universe that Peter Green never imagined. â Michael Fortes
48. âTears Of A Clownâ â The English Beat. Originally performed by Smokey Robinson.
One of the things I love about Motown (and there are many, many things I love about Motown) is that it was a cultural force created and defined by African-Americans that defined itself simply as âthe Sound of Young America.â Two-tone bands like the Beat made the pitch explicit; the groups, like the audiences, were racially integrated, and brought an Afro-Caribbean twist to the Motown formula â cleverly written, expertly-played, and compulsively danceable â most explicitly with this joyous homage; the children of Smokey and the Skatalites, making good on the promises of their elders. â Jack Feerick
47. âRed Red Wineâ â UB40. Originally performed by Neil Diamond.
While Neil Diamond takes the writing credit, UB40?s take on âRed Red Wineâ is the direct descendant of another cover, recorded in 1969 by Tony Tribe. For what amounts to an ode to drinking your cares away, it certainly struck a chord in my teenage heart â despite having never had a taste of the titular nectar. â Michael Parr
46. âEverytime You Go Awayâ â Paul Young. Originally performed by Hall & Oates.
Listen to it in the background â in the frozen foods section of your grocery store, or perhaps at the dentistâs office â and âEverytime You Go Awayâ sounds like just another synthy â80s ballad, albeit one with a better-than-average blue-eyed soul singer handling vocals. But itâs really so much more: One of Daryl Hallâs finest moments, and one of the last true torch songs to come out of the rock era. Strip away all that production, and what are you left with? A timeless, brokenhearted plea. â Jeff Giles
45. âChina Girlâ â David Bowie. Originally performed by Iggy Pop.
When Iggy Pop released the original version of âChina Girlâ on his classic 1977 album The Idiot, the sound was very cold, stiff and unfunky, like just about everything David Bowie had been recording at that time. The entire album was essentially an extension of Bowieâs Berlin period with Iggy as the lead singer, which gave it the reputation of being one of the least Iggy-sounding albums in his entire catalog. Bowie ended up hearing something else bubbling in âChina Girlâ and in 1983, he gave it a new reading with a dash of pop and funk, along with a stereotypically Chinese-sounding synth riff that serves as the songâs hook, and a 100-times-sexier vocal. â Michael Fortes
44. âBlinded by the Lightâ â Manfred Mannâs Earth Band. Originally performed by Bruce Springsteen.
Apparently someone thought that âBlinded by the Lightâ was going to be a big hit for Bruce Springsteen, because it was the first song on his debut album Greetings from Ashbury Park, NJ, and was the first song released as a single. But much like the protagonist of his song, The Boss was left stranded as the song failed to even appear on charts. Fortunately, Manfred Mann and his Earth Band pulled up in their curly-wurly, retooled the lyrics to squeeze in more internal rhyme than an Edgar Allen Poe poem, and gave Bruce and his song a ride all the way up to #1. It was a nice bit of visibility for Springsteen during the long hiatus between Born to Run and Darkness on the Edge of Town, and provided Manfred Mann and his Earth Band with the biggest hit of their career. â Zack Dennis
43. âBlue Suede Shoesâ â Elvis Presley. Originally performed by Carl Perkins.
âBlue Suede Shoesââ is such an early rock song that it seems definitive. It was the first big hit for the first big rocker, Elvis Presley. It was also a cover, written by rockabilly star Carl Perkins. Perkins was always bitter that Presley got the stardom that he wanted, although he was no slouch; the rights were controlled by Sam Perkins, so neither singer made much money off of it. This was my number one pick because itâs fascinating that the earliest rock song was a cover, involved a feud, and had rights that belonged to someone other than the writer. Is there anything more rock and roll? â Annie Logue
42. âMr. Tambourine Manâ â The Byrds. Originally performed by Bob Dylan.
The Byrds most recognizable song, the jingle jangle sound Roger McGuinnâs Rickenbacker and the lovely, folk rock of the band not only broadened Dylanâs popularity, but also set the foundation for future generations of laid back, jangle rock from Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers to R.E.M. to The Jayhawks. The best cover songs build upon the originals and create fresh, unique experiences. With the lovely guitar/bass intro to the pitch perfect harmonies by the band, The Byrds reimagined Dylanâs folk hit and created something wondrous. â Scott Malchus
41. âSmooth Criminalâ â Alien Ant Farm. Originally performed by Michael Jackson.
Letâs try for a moment, if we can, to abandon the inevitable when talking about Michael Jackson. Letâs instead discuss the music, and the songs, because the man was a tremendous pop R&B songwriterâand somewhat underrated in that department, if selling 750 million albums worldwide can be called âunderrated.â Here Alien Ant Farm finds the bones of one of Jacksonâs great paranoid cuts and rebuilds it as incisive pop-punk. Even in this format â even in the hands of a band that probably doesnât deserve its brilliance â itâs almost impossible to listen and sit still; thatâs how powerful Jacksonâs songs are. â Matt Springer
40. âLa Bambaâ â Los Lobos. Originally performed by Ritchie Valens.
âLa Bambaâ brought Ritchie Valens â nĂ©e Ricardo Valenzuela Reyes â into the pantheon of rock ân roll, standing as an inspiration to generations of Mexican Americans and providing him with his best-known, most enduring hit. How fitting then that it should do exactly the same for Los Lobos, Valensâ spiritual successors and possibly the great unsung American rock band. (And how disappointing that, nearly three decades later, this is still the song for which Los Lobos is best known. Sometimes karma is double-edged.) Veterans of the same L.A. club scene that produced X and the Blasters, the Wolves donât even break a sweat tearing into this song, David Hidalgoâs powerful baritone and Cesar Rosasâ vintage tremolo guitar solo both radiating an infectious joy. And just to remind us where it all came from, thereâs a brief acoustic coda linking the song back to its Mexican folk roots. ¥Arriba arriba! â Dan Wiencek
39. âWithout Youâ â Harry Nilsson. Originally performed by Badfinger.
To say that Badfingerâs jaunty, acoustic-based original version of âWithout Youâ differs from Harry Nilssonâs hit 1972 cover is to say a pleasantly bright day at the beach differs from a billion-ton cloud of solar plasma launched by the sun thatâs coming to wipe out life on this planet as we know it. Seriously. Just like it. Itâs aproductionâthe kind of shit nobody makes anymore, cuz they donât have the budget or the time, and ProTools, for all its bits and bytes, cannot graft Harry Nilssonâs throat onto yours. The tension producer Richard Perry builds through two verses, with the piano and strings and Nilssonâs voice, just explodes in the second chorusâa trio of Nilssons crescendo and cascade down with the force and fire and beauty that could stop traffic, change weather, and, best of all, crack the hardest of hearts. Itâs been covered by everyone from Mariah Carey to Shirley Bassey to Donny-fucking-Osmond, and no one can touch Nilsson and Perryâs definitive take. Itâs not just a great songâitâs a monumental record. â Rob Smith
38. âGirl, Youâll Be a Woman Soonâ â Urge Overkill. Originally performed by Neil Diamond.
After a string of his songs were turned into hits by the Monkees, Neil Diamond cemented a reputation as a songwriter well before he was recognized as a performer. And Diamondâs songwriting chops were showcased for an entirely new generation when âGirl, Youâll Be a Woman Soonâ was featured in Quentin Tarantinoâs 1994 film Pulp Fiction. Although surrounded on soundtrack by artists and songs from a different era, Urge Overkill and their version of the song fit in perfectly thanks to a brilliant performance that smooths out the rough edges of Diamondâs original version and cozies up much more credibly with the likes of Al Green, Ricky Nelson, and Dusty Springfield. â Zack Dennis
37. âEverybody Knowsâ â Concrete Blonde. Originally performed by Leonard Cohen.
âDid you ever get the feeling that everything in America is completely fucked up?â If there were ever a perfect summary of Leonard Cohenâs âEverybody Knows,â it would have to be the opening salvo delivered by Christian Slatersâ Happy Harry Hard-On in the 1990 film Pump Up the Volume. While Cohenâs version is heard often in the film, itâs the soaring vocals of Concrete Blondeâs Johnette Napolitano that delivers the knockout punch needed in the filmâs final act. Remember, kids: eat your cereal with a fork, and do your homework in the dark. â Michael Parr
36. âHard to Handleâ â The Black Crowes. Originally performed by Otis Redding.
Perhaps the second-best cover of an Otis Redding original, âHard to Handleâ brilliantly grounded the Black Crowesâ updated Southern Rock in Muscle Shoals tradition, and demolished the last barrier between the Robinson brothers and the pop success their debut album so greatly deserved. It has always seemed blasphemous (apart from âRespectâ) to tinker with Otis, but the Crowes amped up the guitars, dumped the horns, and turned a soul obscurity into a rock classic. â Jon Cummings
35. âNo More I Love Youâsâ â Annie Lennox. Originally performed by The Lover Speaks.
The Lover Speaks was a quirky little English band, and âNo More I Love Youâsâ was a quirky little English single with lead vocals that leapt all over the place and backing vocals that, while interesting, needed to be reined in. Nine years after its first appearance in 1986, Annie Lennox got hold of it, and approached it with all the discipline that the original lacked. She found the ethereal beauty that the original only promised â and by finding a nicely controlled middle ground between the Enya-like backing vocals and her own tendency to belt, she created by far her best work as a solo artist. â Jon Cummings
34. âUnchained Melodyâ â Righteous Brothers. Originally performed by Todd Duncan.
For nearly a half-century now, this dramatic ballad has served as a yardstick by which seemingly every great pop singer feels the need to measure him- or herself. All of them are doomed to fall short, however, in comparison to the righteous Bobby Hatfieldâs ethereal, exquisite 1965 rendering. With Phil Spector tweaking the production knobs and ladeling on the strings, Hatfield took an already much-recorded number (it was written for an obscure 1955 prison film) and attached it permenently to himself. A major hit for the Righteous Brothers on two occasions, âUnchained Melodyâ has been attempted in recent years by U2, Sarah McLachlan, Smashing Pumpkins, Atlas Sound, and pretty much every American Idol contender ever â but every one of their attempts, compared to Hatfieldâs definitive one, has immediately been rendered Ghost like Swayze. â Jon Cummings
33. âKilling Me Softly With His Songâ â The Fugees. Originally performed by Lori Lieberman.
Although Roberta Flackâs 1973 cover of this song was a bigger critical and commercial success, spending four weeks at the top of the Billboard chart and winning three Grammy awards, Lauryn Hillâs 1995 reworking of this oft-covered song was the one that resonated with the authors here at Popdose. Lauryn Hill takes makes this version so memorable by dropping most of the instruments and replacing them with harmonies constructed of her own voice, taking the song out of a dimly lit lounge where it was conceived and out into the streets of the city where it belongs. â Zack Dennis
32. âGot My Mind Set on Youâ â George Harrison. Originally performed by James Ray.
âGot My Mind Set On Youâ wasnât the first time George Harrison tried to scale the charts with an obscure 1950s cover song. He had tried it in 1982 when he released a fairly straight reading of the Stereosâ doo wop classic âI Really Love You,â to little excitement and no serious chart action. However, something about the Jeff Lynne-produced âGot My Mind Set On Youâ really resonated with the American public in 1987, and George found himself with the last number one hit of his career. It could have been how he varied his vocal tones in ways that recalled both his Beatles and solo guises, it could have been those ELO-esque background vocals or those huge sounding drums⊠but really, a big part of it was probably the fact that a taxidermied squirrel plays the honkinâ sax solo in the video, which was one of the most awesome videos of the entire decade of the 1980s. â Michael Fortes
31. âEverybodyâs Talkinââ â Harry Nilsson. Originally performed by Fred Neil.
In its original version, âEverybodyâs Talkinââ was a desperate, one-take manifestation of singer/songwriter Fred Neilâs ambivalent attitude toward his art â he really did want to skip over the ocean like a stone, and wrote the song as a way of placating his manager, who wanted one more track before heâd wrap the album. Harry Nilsson, on the other hand, was one of the most gifted interpreters of the rock era â and he proved it here, taking Neilâs sneering dismissal of the music industry and turning it into a heartbreakingly universal expression of loneliness and longing. If ever a cover song deserved a Grammy, itâs this one. â Jeff Giles
30. â(I Canât Get No) Satisfactionâ â Devo. Originally performed by The Rolling Stones.
If youâre going to cover one of the greatest rock and roll songs ever, playing it straight is not an option. So thatâs why Devoâs take on ââ(I Canât Get No) Satisfactionââ is pure genius. It morphs a pulsing, swaggering guitar anthem into a creepy, herky jerky New Wave classic thanks in large part to Mark Mothersbaughâs frenetic lead vocals and Alan Myersâ robotic percussion. So complete was the transformation that youâd swear the lyrics were written by Devo instead of Mick Jagger, as they sure seem to fit the bandâs well-known de-evolution credo. â Chris Holmes
29. âI Heard It Through the Grapevineâ â Creedence Clearwater Revival.Originally performed by Smokey Robinson & the Miracles.
Thereâs a CCR best-of sitting on my desk that I stole off a guy I used to work with. Three CDs, with liner notes all in German. Now, if four hours seems a bit excessive for any greatest-hits collection, especially one by a foreign band who never sang in your language, well, I had the same thought. Listening to this bludgeoning take on âI Heard It Through the Grapevine,â though, I caught an inkling of what the Germans saw in Creedence. Itâs a drawn-out, radical expansion of the song, but you canât even properly call it a jam; the groove doesnât evolve appreciably over its fourteen-plus minutes, but locks into a repetitive rock-steady pulse that plays like a blueprint for motorikâ that peculiar strain of krautrock perfected by bands like Neu!. Itâs a hypnotic throb precision-tooled to be listened to while driving, optimized for the no-speed-limits straightaways of the autobahn, the Motown slink pared down to a relentless piston-thump as the miles slip away under your wheels. â Jack Feerick
28. âWild Horsesâ â The Sundays. Originally performed by The Rolling Stones.
The end-of-the-prom slow dance, transformed. The Stones original is maudlin late-night country blues, endearingly ragged, wearing its heartbreak on every note. The Sundays, by contrast, play it delicate and precise and very English, the exquisitely-layered guitars and Harriet Wheelerâs cut-glass vocals a gorgeous front that canât quite keep the ache from seeping through. It draws us in more, by giving away less. â Jack Feerick
27. âHound Dogâ â Elvis Presley. Originally performed by Big Mama Thornton.
Elvis Presley was like the Frank Sinatra of rock nâ roll in that his strength wasnât songwriting, but rather interpreting othersâ songs in his own iconic, culture-shifting way. So to single out any one Elvis performance over his others, especially given how prolific he was during his short life, is a huge challenge. âHound Dogâ though is fairly classic. Even those who did not grow up in the 1950s know it as Elvisâ song, and most remarkably we donât seem to care all that much that his version repeats the second verse three times before ending again with the first. Weâd probably bitch and moan if it was someone else, but 1950s Elvis could get away with almost anything, so long as he employed his signature swagger and sneer. â Michael Fortes
26. âWalk This Wayâ â RUN DMC. Originally performed by Aerosmith.
Itâs not all that often that a cover song redefines an entire genre of music but thatâs what happened when Run-DMC teamed up with Aerosmith to remake âWalk This Way.â It marked the first time rap and rock were combined so successfully and helped make Run-DMC a huge act and put Aerosmith back on the map after a couple dead years. Sure, Run-DMC went to the well a few too many times with the rap-rock combo over the years but the first one is always going to be their best. â Dave Steed
25. âMad Worldâ â Gary Jules. Originally performed by Tears for Fears.
Gary who? Everyone knows âMad Worldâ and a good number of people can tell you that the original version was done by Tears for Fears. Even more people probably can tell you that Adam Lambert sung it onAmerican Idol. But ask them who sang the sad â90s version from Donnie Darko and most wonât know. Sometimes it can be sad to see that the only song a songwriter is really known for is one that he covered but in this case itâs a career defining moment delivered with such passion and heartbreak that you canât help but fall in love with it. â Dave Steed
24. âI Will Always Love Youâ â Whitney Houston. Originally performed by Dolly Parton.
If, as William Blake wrote, the Road of Excess leads to the Palace of Wisdom, then Whitney Houston is screaming towards enlightenment in a neon-pink Cadillac, blowing through every toll booth in a shower of hundred dollar bills, tires smoking. Or, to put it plainly, sometimes more is more. â Jack Feerick
23. âMe and Bobby McGeeâ â Janis Joplin. Originally performed by Kris Kristofferson.
Kris Kristofferson was writing some of the grandest songs of his generation at the end of the 1960s, and leave it to the unforgettably fiery Janis Joplin to show us just what Krisâ songs could do. âMe and Bobby McGeeâ has a great title in that the name of the songâs subject could be male or female, so literally anyone can sing it about any type of lover. Janis sung it with far more passionate longing that Kris did, and her brilliant dropping of the resolving chord before the chorus created a form of tension that was a hook in and of itself. This cover may be one of Janisâ greatest achievements, and one of the most flattering gestures Kris ever received. â Michael Fortes
22. âYou Really Got Meâ â Van Halen. Originally performed by The Kinks.
No disrespect to the Kinks, who I love, but the Mighty Van Halenâs cover of this track didnât just overshadow the original â it obliterated it. Released as part of the groupâs 1978 debut album, the full power of the group is on display here. David Lee Roth keeps things relatively restrained on the vocals, but nonetheless oozes machismo. Michael Anthony and Alex Van Halen are completely locked into a groove, and of course Eddie is equally ferocious on lead and rhythm guitar. Legend has it that when the Kinks toured America after 1978, fans told them they did a great job covering Van Halen. Like I said, obliterated. â Chris Holmes
21. âSupermanâ â R.E.M. Originally performed by The Clique.
By 1986 R.E.M. were the supermen of alt-rock â a genre that, ever since the advent of punk, had habitually rejected most of what came before in its perpetual search for the new. Leave it to the Athens crew to find (in somebodyâs record collection, probably) an obscure 1969 B-side that they could make their own. This was a track Mike Mills was born to sing; indeed, his vocals are amazingly similar to those of Clique singer Gary Zekley (who joined R.E.M. onstage one night that summer). By transforming a Tommy James sound-alike into a modern rock rager, and proving (finally) that they didnât always have to be so damn serious, R.E.M. here built a bridge to the mainstream success everyone had been predicting for years. â Jon Cummings
20. âDer Kommissarâ â After the Fire. Originally performed by Falco
When youâre covering foreign-language pop, you can approach the job in one of two ways. You can be a translator, more-or-less replicating the original track with English vocals, maybe even using the original backing tracks, as if you were putting subtitles on Yojimbo. After the Fire choose instead to make A Fistful of Dollars, using Falcoâs skeletal original as a scaffold on which to hang Duran Duran-style sequencers, angular shards of guitar, a clappy folk breakdown, winningly-goofy white rapping and a monstrous gang chorus. Cool formalist black-and-white period piece, blown out into gloriously nutso Cinerama Technicolor epic. Alles klar? â Jack Feerick
19. âCrossroadsâ â Cream. Originally performed by Robert Johnson.
For most people, Creamâs cover of âCrossroadsâ was an introduction to the haunting blues of Robert Johnson, the early 20th Century blues singer who, as legend has it, sold his soul to the devil in exchange for the gift of playing the guitar. While Johnsonâs performance of âCrossroadsâ is just the man and his guitar, Cream opens up the song and turns it into one of the earliest examples of heavy metal. You canât listen to this song, with Eric Claptonâs kick ass solo, Jack Bruceâs driving bass and the madness of Ginger Bakerâs drums, without hearing the influence it would have on Zeppelin, Sabbath and Deep Purple. That makes this version of âCrossroadsâ not only one of the best cover songs of all time, but also one of the most important. â Scott Malchus
18. âI Feel for Youâ â Chaka Khan. Originally performed by Prince.
Kids of the â80s loved it because of the gimmicky rap component, but Chaka Khanâs version of âI Feel for Youâ holds up because itâs so much fun â and so damn soulful â in every other respect. Stevie Wonderâs harmonica bounces against a rubbery bassline, bright synth splashes light up the soundscape, and Chakaâs gloriously untethered vocals glow like sunshine. She was clearly angling for a hit here â but just as clearly, that isnât always a bad thing. â Jeff Giles
17. âI Fought the Lawâ â The Clash. Originally performed by Bobby Fuller Four.
It might as well have been written just for them. The Clash had traded in outlaw cred since Day One, and their supercharged romp through âI Fought the Law,â all galloping drums and roaring guitars, made the song forever theirs while securing their renegade reputation. Who says crime doesnât pay? â Jack Feerick
16. âThe Man Who Sold the Worldâ â Nirvana. Originally performed by David Bowie.
Even Kurt Cobain kept a list of his favorite albums, and he listed David Bowieâs science-fiction tinged, glam-rock spawning effort The Man Who Sold the World as number 45. In tribute, he performed the title song with Nirvana during the bandâs legendary 1993 performance on MTVâs Unplugged. Although itâs inconceivable that Cobain meant to engage in a hostile takeover of the song, legions of Nirvana fans were completely oblivious to the songâs origins and Bowie later expressed his own frustration at the ignorant âtossers.â â Zack Dennis
15. âTainted Loveâ â Soft Cell. Originally performed by Gloria Jones.
âTainted Loveâ is one of those songs you might not even realize is a remake. There are at least a couple dozen covers of the tune out there with everyone from Marilyn Manson to the Pussycat Dolls taking a crack at it. And Iâd bet they would all say they are remaking the Soft Cell song. Thatâs what makes their version so damn good. When you remake a song so well that it essentially becomes your own, youâve hit gold. Iâd bet Gloria Jones canât have too many issues with this as she probably finally gets a check every month for the tune she originally recorded. â Dave Steed
14. âWith a Little Help From My Friendsâ â Joe Cocker. Originally performed by The Beatles.
All great pop songs acquire a certain amount of baggage over the years that obscures their greatness and makes them difficult to appreciate for the fresh, bold statements they often are. In the case of Joe Cockerâs version of âWith a Little Help From My Friends,â you have two associations to contend with: its use as the theme tune of the sentimental boomer comedy The Wonder Years, and the piss-take impersonation of Cocker performed by a seemingly unhinged John Belushi in the early days of Saturday Night Live. Look past it, brothers and sisters, to a song that boldly re-conceives a rock classic and succeeds with flying colors. From a psychedelic shuffle to a loose R&B groove, from a hangdog vocal by rockâs most beloved clown to a volcanic full-throated howl â there is no aspect of the song that Cocker doesnât forcefully make his own. Not many can claim to have recorded the definitive version of a Fabs song. Joe Cocker can. â Dan Wiencek
13. âProud Maryâ â Ike and Tina Turner. Originally performed by Creedence Clearwater Revival.
Ike and Tina liked to do things nice and rough. That included this scorching version of CCRâs hit. Whereas the Creedence original had all of the folk rock signatures of the groupâs sound, Tina Turner digs into the working man lyrics and makes the struggle of the narrator all her own. She teases us in the âniceâ opening, but good golly, when the bands lets loose for the uptempo portion of the song, itâs like a freight train barreling toward you a hundred miles an hour. Both versions of âProud Maryâ are legendary, but this one really gets your heart pumping, standing as one of the best R&B songs of the 70?s. â Scott Malchus
12. âTake Me to the Riverâ â Talking Heads. Originally performed by Al Green.
The gospel according to the Reverend Al was often a bright, sunny, straight-forward and soulful affair. However, in the hands of Talking Heads, âTake Me to the Riverâ became a jittery, strangely confident yet awkwardly funky romp unlike anything else the band had ever attempted. It sticks out like a big red warning sign on the bandâs second LP (to steal a title from another stand-out song on More Songs About Buildings And Food), and it was and still is an irresistible radio brightener at that. â Michael Fortes
11. âPapa Was a Rolling Stoneâ â The Temptations. Originally performed by The Undisputed Truth.
A hi-hat. Six bass notes. Some wah-wah guitar and heavily studio-fied strings and trumpets. One freakinâ chord. From such humble ingredients was made a sweeping, sprawling masterpiece. After a less-then-successful outing with proteges The Undisputed Truth, producer and co-writer Norman Whitfield refashioned âPapa Was a Rollinâ Stoneâ into a funky, avant-garde epic, where the disembodied voices of the Temptations weave a protracted tale of domestic tragedy. Just as the music stubbornly follows a single chord, so does this story repeat the same dour dynamic: the children have heard appalling accusations against their deceased father, and they plead with their mother to âtell them the truthâ â that is, to tell them anything that might redeem their disgraced patriarch. Each time, mama supplies the same unsatisfying answer. Itâs tough and tragic at the same time, and one of the coolest-sounding R&B records ever made. â Dan Wiencek
10. âHazy Shade of Winterâ â The Bangles. Originally performed by Simon & Garfunkel.
Man, Simon & Garfunkel rocked! One could be excused for thinking so after hearing the Bangles execute one of their own most rocking moments on this hit from the âLess Than Zeroâ soundtrack. Repurposing a minor S&G hit, the L.A. ladies vanquished every smidgen of folky preciousness (in part by jettisoning half the second verse), cranked up the Fenders, and fashioned the perfect theme to a story about losing oneself in cocaine â without puttting too fine a point on the âwinterâ and âsnowâ connotations. This summer the estimable Ann Powers ranked the Bangles #3 among L.A. girl groups (behind the Go-Goâs and the Runaways). I donât buy it. For my money, the Bangles are tops, and this awesome Vicki-and-Susanna duet is all the evidence I need. â Jon Cummings
9. âSweet Janeâ â Cowboy Junkies. Originally performed by Velvet Underground.
While a perfect cover can change a song almost beyond recognition, sometimes it takes just a few taps of the chisel, as it were, to turn a great song into a perfect one. Cowboy Junkies donât actually make any radical changes to this Velvet Underground classic â they adopted and essentially copied an earlier version from a 1969 concert, released years after the faster, more lyrically dense studio version came out in 1970. Recorded through a single microphone and drenched in natural reverb, the Cowboy Junkiesâ version proceeds at a sleepy, almost narcotized pace, yet thereâs nothing lazy or offhand about it. Vocalist Margo Timmins adds just enough melodicism to bring out the songâs longing without overselling it, or worse, smothering it under excess prettiness. The result is one of the most distinctive and authentic love songs of the rock era â one that had to wait twenty years to be given its definitive treatment. â Dan Wiencek
8. âPiece of My Heartâ â Big Brother and the Holding Company. Originally performed by Erma Franklin.
Sometimes a cover shows respect for the original; other times, it completely reimagines the song from the ground up. And sometimes, an artist emerges and simply rips a song from whence it came and claims it as her own. Thatâs what happened with Janis Joplinâs version of âPiece of My Heart.â Credited to the band for which she was lead singer, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Joplin devours the material; thereâs some nice guitar work, and backing vocalists, and you are vaguely aware thereâs a backing band involved. But this cut lives and dies by Janisâ raw roar of anguish, pleading for a lover to claim her affections with a desperate rage. Originally recorded by Aretha Franklinâs older sister Erma in 1967, the Big Brother take came just a year later; itâs said that when Franklin heard their version on the radio, she didnât recognize it as the song sheâd taken to the top ten of the U.S. R&B charts. â Matt Springer
7. âTwist and Shoutâ â The Beatles. Originally performed by The Isley Brothers.
While the Beatlesâ performance on âTwist and Shoutâ â released fewer than two years after the Isley Brothers scored a Top 20 hit with it â is perfectly fine, itâs elevated to immortality on the shredded throat of John Lennon. Lennonâs vocals were captured in one take at the end of a marathon ten-hour recording session, and on top of that he was battling a cold. He turned in a performance for the ages just the same, and in the process provided the perfect ending for the Fab Fourâs debut LP. The fact that a whole new generation was turned onto the song thanks to Ferris Buellerâs Day Off â it had a seven-week run in the U.S. Top 40 in the summer of â86 â merely served to reinforce its greatness. â Chris Holmes
6. âNothing Compares 2 Uâ â SinĂ©ad OâConnor. Originally performed by The Family. â Save for the truly hardcore fans of His Royal Badness, I doubt anyone had any idea that SinĂ©ad OâConnorâs âNothing Compares 2 Uâ was originally recorded by The Family â who, for non-Prince fans, was a group formed from the ashes of The Time. Sure there is the tell tale use of numbers and capital letters in place of words, but outside of that, this was as far removed from Prince as you could get. The stark, almost soulless arrangement lends itself to the despair in OâConnorâs voice as she delivers the vocal. The video completed the picture, with OâConnor conveying the heartbreak straight into the camera, with nothing to distract the viewer from the utter pain on her face. While it isnât as soulful as Princeâs take, it definitely holds its own. â Michael Parr
5. âHurtâ â Johnny Cash. Originally performed by Nine Inch Nails.
Trent Reznor is one my favorite artists and to hear âHurtâ close out The Downward Spiral is quite a moving moment. But the Man in Black took the song to a whole new level. The rawness of Cashâs vocals and the video that goes along with it bring a tear to my eye every time I hear his version. Itâs the defining moment of the end of his career without a doubt. If you donât feel anything after listening to it, I hate to tell you but you might be dead. â Dave Steed
4. âHallelujahâ â Jeff Buckley. Originally performed by Leonard Cohen.
Simply magnificent. The original version of this song, as written performed by Leonard Cohen, features a choir of about a dozen voices backing up the singer, diluting his efforts and sapping attention away from his greatest strength â his languid baritone. The Welsh musician John Cale stripped everything else from Cohenâs gospel version until all that remained was a piano and his own voice, and it was this framework that Jeff Buckley used to display his own extraordinary vocal talents. Soaring into a range that Cohen couldnât touch in the feverish falsetto of a 78 rpm dream, Buckley turns this song into something truly magical. Itâs such a beautiful, ethereal piece of music that one could almost believe that Buckley had recorded this song in advance so that it could be played at his own funeral to wring just a few more tears from those who mourned his tragic and desperately premature end. â Zack Dennis
3. â(Whatâs So Funny âBout) Peace, Love and Understandingâ â Elvis Costello. Originally performed by Brinsley Schwarz.
From the start, this was song divided against itself. Nick Lowe has said that he began writing it as a satire of hippie attitudes and platitudes â but that as he worked at it, he began to ponder seriously the rhetorical question heâd set for himself: âWell, really, what is so funny about peace, love, and understanding?â On the one hand, Costelloâs rendition only ramped up those ambiguities; its placement as the capstone of an album as punishing as Armed Forces (whose working title, lest we forget, was Emotional Fascism) might suggest that the titular trinity were just another self-deception. But the bracing fury of his performance goes a long way towards reconciling them, reminding us that compassion and anger come from the same place of a response to injustice, and that the righteous man must be of necessity both tough and kind, both hard-headed and tender-hearted. And so âPeace, Love and Understandingâ becomes, in Costelloâs hands, an anthem in spite of itself. â Jack Feerick
2. âAll Along the Watchtowerâ â Jimi Hendrix. Originally performed by Bob Dylan.
A swirling kaleidoscope of psychedelic stylings as only a genius could dream up. Hendrix took Dylanâs folky little number from 1967 and created the quintessential song from the Vietnam War era. With layers upon layers of mind tripping effects, a vocal performance that lives up to the howling wind mentioned in the lyrics, and a guitar solo that moves, grooves, cries and sings, this song is Hendrixâs masterpiece. To this day is still sounds innovative and otherworldly, making it easy to forget that Bob Dylan, the most important songwriter of the 1960s, wrote it. â Scott Malchus
1. âRespectâ â Aretha Franklin. Originally performed by Otis Redding.
Itâs one thing to claim the definitive version of a song thatâs been covered by Tina Turner and Janis Joplin. Itâs quite another to do it when the song in question was originally written and recorded by Otis Redding. And yet, when nine out of 10 people think of âRespectâ â hell, when they just hear the wordrespect â itâs Arethaâs voice they hear. Through a dizzying blend of flawless technique and raw power, she owns âRespectâ â and itâs just one of many reasons why, even through a string of ill-advised projects in the â70s, â80s, â90s, and aughts, sheâs never lost ours. â Jeff Giles
Bonus: something I realize all too often…