OT: - The Cover Song is at Least as Good As - or Better - than the Original | Page 2 | The Boneyard

OT: The Cover Song is at Least as Good As - or Better - than the Original

Patti Smith covering an excellent Dylan tune. One of the commenters said, "Dylan treats it as if its prophesy, Patti Smith treats it as dream."

 
Celine Dionne covering an epic Edith Piaf song. (I understand Piaf wrote it after her lover died in an airplane accident). Celine's version has so much going for it: it's the Paris Olympics, she's back from a debilitating illness, she's singing from the Eiffel Tower, it's raining. Plus her stunning gown.

 
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Not a lot of covers of TLC songs, but Blues Traveler did a cover of Waterfall.

Which TLC "borrowed", a little, from Paul McCartney's Waterfall. (lyrically anyway)

Paul - "Don't go jumping waterfalls, please keep to the lake".
TLC - "Don't go chasing waterfalls, stick to the rivers and lakes that you're used ."

But Anyway (another Blues Traveler song) here's Popper's version with Train and Diasha McBride

 
Linda Ronstadt sang many great cover songs. Difficult to pick just one.

Whenever you think of Ronstadt’s legacy, it’s hard not to immediately think about ‘Blue Bayou’. Roy Orbison’s classic is already a perfect version of everything that the song should be. This just adds to the fact that Ronstadt pulled off the impossible, enhancing its heartfelt sentimentality and surpassing the original in terms of timelessness.

 
My favorite is Pearl Jam's cover of "Last Kiss".

I also like Cage the Elephant's cover of "Whole Wide World", Marvin Gaye's cover of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine", Nirvan doing "The Man Who Sold the World", Joe Cocker "With a Little Help From My Friends" and then the Beatles cover of "Twist & Shout"

It's been mentioned, but Cash absolutely owns "Hurt".
 
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If you like soft sultry blues, this David Bromberg cover of the 1959 original by Fenton Robinson is a treat:

 
The Allman Brothers covered (sort of) Donovan's There Is a Mountain, turning it into a 35 minute instrumental tour de force. Recorded at the same Fillmore gigs that produced the Allman's Fillmore East album. Duane's slide guitar will make you cry.

 
"I Shot the Sheriff" is a song written by Jamaican reggae musician Bob Marley and released in 1973 with his band the Wailers.


This is not better than the Bob Marley original. The Bob Marley version seemed real and personal. The Clapton version seemed to be to create a large selling single with a catchy phrase "I shot the Sherriff"

The only positive the Clapton version had was to bring recognition to Bob Marley.
 
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Six Days on the Road is a great trucker song originally done by Dave Dudley in 1963. But I think that the 1969 cover by Taj Mahal with Jessie Ed Davis on guitar is the best version.

 
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