Cover songs that are better than the originals.


There is an active thread about terrible cover songs so I thought I'd start one about cover songs that are better than or have completely eclipsed the originals. I'll start:

Randy Newman wrote Momma Told Me Not to Come for Eric Burdon who recored it with the Animals and Newman recorded it too. I have the Newman version and like it but Three Dog Night really seem to capture the mood of the song best in my opinion.
n80
I wholeheartedly second OBLGNY's nomination of Joe Cocker's cover of "A Little Help From My Friends".  And, I'll bet, so does Ringo Starr.
+ 3 for Joe Cocker with "A little help from my friends " A true force of nature! A nice guy too. He was on the same ferry I was from Germany to Denmark , gave a liitle concert to about 20 of us on deck .
I have to say, I do not care for the Joe Cocker version of "A Little Help from My Friends.

I also prefer the CCR version of Proud Mary. I like watching Tina perform it but still think the CCR version is a lot better.

I suspect I'm the odd man out on these two.
SRV - Texas Flood
Joe Cocker - Unchain My Heart
Joe Cocker - You Can Leave Your Hat On

"Mystery Train" has been covered by many, Elvis, being the most famous. Here's a couple more that are definitely better than the original,

Junior Wells
Brian Setzer

And how could we overlook, "That's All Right" by Elvis or

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tDWfOSKccLM


For Proud Mary, Ike and Tina Turner vs. CCR, I think Ike Turner's vocal sets the song up so well for Tina Turner.

I like watching Ike and Tina Turner doing Proud Mary but I prefer listening to CCR. 
"Ain't no Sunshine" on the album Midnight Run by Bobby Bland. I have the Guy-Chapman and Bill Withers versions and like them as well. However IMO Bobby's version puts them to shame. Whole album is a stellar recording.
Hard to believe that Sinead O'Conner (or anyone) topped Prince, but she did on "Nothing Compares to You." He recorded that song as if he didn't think it was anything that special, but she poured her soul into it. How about the Who's version of "Young Man Blues"? If you haven't, check out the original by Mose Allison. OMG, never heard a jazz throwaway turned into a rock masterpiece. 
+1 on Hendrix All Along the Watchtower 
Hendrix - Gloria 
Minor Threat's version of Stepping Stone 
Iron & Wine - Such Great Heights from the Postal Service 
Lynyrd Skynyrd- Call Me The Breeze 
Willie Nelson- Wisky River (and about 20 other songs)
Cake - I Will Survive 
Pretenders - Thin Line Between Love and Hate 
+1 Talking Heads - Take Me to the River
Dandy Warhols - Hells Bells
Devo - Satisfaction 
Plenty of others 
Allison Moore's recording of "Both Sides Now" (on her Mockingbird album), which I prefer to those by both Joni and Judy. 
Yes mic ,I have it and talk about Simon n Garfunkle .Thats a close race between them and Bob Dylan over who'a songs have been covered more .I guess the Beatles go in the mix .But as a single songwriter  I would think ,Bob Dylan wins.
Lots of good stuff here. But it seems like we're getting into some esoteric stuff in regard to some covering musicians.

Obviously music is a matter of taste and it is going to be common for someone to hear a cover by a band or artist and like the cover better than the original but other than that there isn't much to support the cover being better than the original. My example of Jerry Lee Lewis doing "Over the Rainbow". That pretty much just comes down to me since not many people have ever heard Lewis's cover of that song including Wikipedia.

So maybe we should narrow the field and rather than saying covers that are better than the original or that eclipsed the original, maybe we should say covers that are better than AND have eclipsed the original in terms of critical reception, sales, popularity etc.

I think the "AND" is important because there are notable covers that eclipsed the original but are still pretty awful..."The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" by Joan Baez being a prime example. She made it a hit song but she also made it an awful song.
No doubt everyone is entitled to their opinion and maybe this "just comes down to me," but I don’t think so, since it was such a mega hit. Sorry, I disagree that Joan Baez "made it an awful song." My opinion is that her version IS better than the original.
I figured someone would say that. It was the most popular rendition after all. And yes, it does all come down to opinion so there are no right or wrong answers. 

My take on that particular song is that she polished a song that, by its nature and lyrics, was intended to be rough around the edges. That smooth polished performance is incongruous with the content.

Also, Baez singing in a voice that is so feminine does not fit either. I don't have a problem with the gender reversal per se. For instance, on Raising Sand I like Krauss singing "Through the Morning, Through the Night."

Maybe if Janice Joplin had done "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" I would have liked it better. It surely would not have been over polished or over produced.

But finally, what really blows it for me is that Baez makes the song over sentimental, almost saccharine. Levon Helms does not. His delivery has pathos and emotion without being sentimental.

Anyway, that's my take. It isn't any more valid than anyone else's.

In two places in the song Baez got the lyrics wrong. She sped up the song, destroying the Southern feel of The Band’s version, which was ideal for the song’s story. The song is about rural people; Baez's version is pure city slicker. And I really miss the horns (trombone, tuba) heard in the original, which were there for a reason. The huge vocal group heard in the chorus of the song in her recording, drenched in reverb, sounds completely out of place. And then there’s her warbling, extreme vibrato, which some people don’t care for. Other than that it’s fine ;-) .

To me there aren't that many covers I like better than originals, I posted a few a ways back. Perhaps those few are because I am more familiar with the cover than the original but for songs where  I am fairly familiar with the original I find I can enjoy covers but very rarely prefer them. I think it has to do with when I listen to the cover in my mind I still "hear" the original if that makes any sense. 
I often initially prefer which ever version I hear first and am most familiar with. The Baez version of "The Night....." was the first version I heard of that song. It got a lot of radio air time. The Band's version got zero air time. The first time I heard the Band version was in high school home room where our nutty teacher was trying to convince us all that the Band was the best band of all time. I hated the Band version of the song. But that only lasted until I got into the Band. After that I'd turn the radio off if the Baez version came on.
@n80, have you seen The Band's performance of the song on Saturday Night Live? Astoundingly great, their best. It was late in The Band's original run, maybe in 1976. While SNL always gave the musical guest time for only one song, Lorne Michaels gave them time for three, the only time I've seen that. THAT'S how much respect The Band commanded from other artists. They had the horn section they later had at The Last Waltz, playing the parts heard in the studio version, absolutely essential to the song. Those horn parts not being in Baez's version renders it unacceptable imo.
I have never seen that footage and in my youth and ignorance probably would have flipped to another channel when they were on SNL. That's right about the time my homeroom teacher was trying to improve the tastes of a room full of Philistines, preppies and Saturday Night Fever wannabes who thought he was nuts. For me it was all Zep, Who, Kinks, etc.

I will see if I can find that footage on YouTube. Would love to see it.
@n80, I got to see/hear both The Kinks and The Who live in '68 and '69, and both were really great live. You expect that of The Who, but not necessarily The Kinks. Ray Davies in one of my favorite writers ("Waterloo Sunset" !), and he was also a great performer, very entertaining. Believe it or not, The Kinks were louder than The Who. Ray's Telecaster was piercingly bright, to the point of painfulness.
slaw, is that the David Lindley "Mercury Blues"? Must be killer, 'cause David's is fantastic. Great recorded quality, too.
@bdp24,

I’ll check it out right now. I was wondering what to play? You post reads like you’ve never heard Steve Miller’s version?

"El Rayo-X", in which "Mercury Blues is found on, to my ears is mostly a reggae influenced record and is what I consider upbeat.  SQ = excellent!

On my MFSL "Fly Like an Eagle" , "Mercury Blues" is presented in a slinky, bluesy fashion that IMO, serves the lyrics and the song as a whole, much better. After all the song's title is mercury blues.

For me, I much prefer the SM version.


bdp24, I'm very jealous. Also surprised you have any hearing left.

I saw Foreigner in the early 80's. So-so show but painfully loud. Ears rang for 12 full days afterwards. 
This one ain’t better than The Who’s,  but check out Alex Chilton’s version of "Summertime Blues".

Wow slaw, two songs I haven't heard. So Steve Miller's "Mercury Blues" is a different song the Lindley's? I admit I haven't heard it. I saw The Steve Miller Blues Band (his original band name) in '67, before the first album came out, with Boz Scaggs playing rhythm guitar (a Gibson ES-335) only, not singing.

I'll bet Chilton's "Summertime Blues" is an interesting version, but haven't heard it. So much music, so little time!

@bdp24,

I’d love to know what you think of SM version of "Mercury Blues"?


Ps. I almost thought we were on the verge of our first argument. Haha.
A very big “DITTO” regarding David Lindley’s version of Mercury Blues - just an unabashed freakin’ love letter to rock n’ roll that needs and deserves to be played LOUDLY.  The rest of the album is damn good, too.  

On the “repeat when necessary” list, “Oh Carol” off Get Yer Ya’s Ya’s Out by the Stones. I can never listen to this just once.  Man, dey was good in them days. 

Linda Ronstadt and Phoebe Snow duetting the living heck outta “The Shoop Shoop Song” on SNL - I remember sitting on the couch and being absolutely 
wowed by the performance.  Made me buy more Linda Ronstadt and Phoebe Snow records. 


Very hard to remake Beatles songs, but Joe Cocker's "Help from my friends" is a masterpiece. I have always believed that a cover should add something to the original and Cocker's version turns the song 180 degrees.
To me, most aren’t but these are...

Beach Boys: California Dreamin’
CCR: I Heard It Through The Grapevine
Spoiler: Electrifying (Grease, ’You’re The One That I want’)
Spoilers’ heavy metal version of this is a hoot & I once caused my best friend’s Daughter to lose her new boyfriend because of it!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1K2N_DYPoZw
It was Yes who did the best remake of a Beatles song, quite literally. "Every Little Thing", 1969. With a riff from "Day Tripper".
It was Jon Anderson & Co. who turned a simple pop song to an epic. Jon Anderson is one of the most emotional singers in rock´s history. And his voice is unique in the business. They proudly honoured their inspiration. Masters at work.

https://youtu.be/XIcpJFQDa64

They also took "America" by Simon & Garfunkel to another level.

https://youtu.be/Q0JkTIKm2iY

Oh how funky Steve Howe gets there : )

Peter Banks & Chris Squire, thanks for your music RIP

Enjoy the music like Yes did almost fifty years ago. 



Julie Driscoll and the Brian Auger Trinity  

Dylans "This Wheels on Fire--"

T212
Widespread Panic "Lawyers, Guns and Money" (written by Warren Zevon).Gov't Mule "Spanish Moon" (Written by Lowell George & Little Feat).Phish "Cross-eyed & Painless" (Written by Talking Heads).Jerry Garcia Band "Tangled Up In Blue" (Bob Dylan).Vinyl "Summertime" (by George & Ira Gershwin).
OK, I may get some negative feedback for this but here goes...As much as I like S & G's Sound of Silence, the sound from the harp guitar rendition by Jamie Dupuis is haunting. Check it out on Youtube...
I'm not a big fan of Stevie Wonder nor the song Isn't She Lovely, but Livingston Taylor did an incredibly sounding remake on Ink (Chesky Records). He converts it from Motown to a smooth, easy acoustic jazz sound. The sound from his acoustic guitar is to die for.
Here are a couple that come to Mind.
With a little help from My Friends Joe Cocker
I don't need no Doctor Humble Pie
All along The Watch tower Hendrix

I prefer the SNL/Belushi version of the Joe Cocker version of With a Little Help from My Friends. Its on youtube. Awesome.
the Animals cover of House of the Rising Sun
Cream cover of Crossroads

Hendrix cover of All along the watchtower
Johnny Winters cover of Highway 61

No insult to Bob Dylan on the last two his originals are great but these two covers have always knocked me out.
+1 on Hendrix's cover of Along The Watchtower -- according to Bob Dylan, the gold standard of his song.  In fact, +1 on all of the songs that Jimi covered, such as Wild Thing, Johnny B. Goode and Like A Rollin' Stone!

Well, I didn't know until now that Mercury Blues by David Lindley was a cover, so now that I do, I'll agree that it is a favorite of mine as well.

SRV - Little Wing

Van Halen - Pretty Woman

Joey Ramone - Wonderful World

Vanessa Fernandez - Be Thankful for what You Got