Posted on 09/30/2006 12:53:24 PM PDT by Mr. Brightside
Best Cover Versions Ever Named
A new poll of the Top 50 best cover versions of all time has just been published with Jimi Hendrix's version of Bob Dylan's All Along the Watchtower topping the list, while the Top 10 includes The Beatles, Sid Vicious and Scissor Sisters.
The list of the Top 50 cover versions was chosen by Daily Telegraph music critics and includes well known favourites such as Johnny Cashs version of U2s One, Ryan Adams reworking of Oasis Wonderwall and The Vines take on Outkasts Ms Jackson.
Topping the list though was All Along the Watchtower by The Jimi Hendrix Experience as recorded by the guitar legend in 1968, only one year after Bob Dylan wrote and recorded the original on his album John Wesley Harding.
Also in the Top 10 were Soft Cells legendary Tainted Love from 1981, which has totally eclipsed the success of the 1964 Gloria Jones original, The Byrds version of another Dylan song, Mr Tambourine Man and from this year Comfortably Numb by the Scissor Sisters, which turned Pink Floyds 1979 ode to isolation and fear into a rather peppy glam disco track.
Many other entries in the Top 50 are far less well-know, though no less interesting sounding, including bearded folky Richard Thompsons Oops I Did it Again, Brazilian samba combo Señor Coconut & His Orchestra take on Krafwerks The Robots and Rock el Casbah - Rachid Tahas version of The Clash classic.
The full top 10 was:
All Along the Watchtower Jimi Hendrix Experience, 1968 (orig. Bob Dylan, 1967)
You Were Always On My Mind Pet Shop Boys, 1987 (orig. Elvis Presley, 1972 - after Brenda Lee, 1971)
My Way Sid Vicious, 1979 (orig. Frank Sinatra, 1969 - after Paul Anka, 1969)
Hallelujah Jeff Buckley, 1993 (orig. Leonard Cohen, 1984)
Respect Aretha Franklin, 1967 (orig. Otis Redding, 1965)
Tainted Love Soft Cell, 1981 (orig. Gloria Jones, 1964)
Mr Tambourine Man The Byrds, 1965 (orig. Bob Dylan, 1964)
Twist and Shout The Beatles, 1963 (orig. the Isley Brothers, 1960)
Comfortably Numb Scissor Sisters, 2004 (orig. Pink Floyd, 1979)
Mr Bojangles Nina Simone, 1971 (orig. Jerry Jeff Walker, 1967)
Hard to argue with number one, although I would probably put Jeff Buckley's Hallalujah at number 2. Where is Johnny Cash's Hurt and Rusty Cage both much better than the originals.
Excellent choice for #1, although Aretha Franklin's RESPECT is arguably just as good and should have ranked higher, imho.
I thought Rob Zombie did a great version of BLITZKRIEG BOP by the REMONES.
good pick for Hendrix.
Really though, Aretha Franklin should be #2, she really made that song....
I am listening to Dave Matthews's cover of All Along the Watchtower right now.
Personally, I like his version much better.
I'm more into the rock and roll type of things anyway though :)
For those who like covers, there is a podcast dedicated to covers. "Coverville" by Brian Ibbitt. These are usually very good shows (6 cover songs about three times a week).
I'll take Johnny Cash's version of Hurt any day of the week - one of the most haunting songs ever recorded.
And how in the HELL can you have a top 50 cover list that does not include Zep's version of When the Levee Breaks - IMO their finest song, and probably the most subsequently ripped-off drum riff in history.
Who compiled this list, anyway?
And I like U2's. Seems like everyone and their cousin has done a cover of that tune. :)
I thought they wrote that themselves. Who did it originally?
When the Levee Breaks" is a blues song written and first recorded by husband and wife Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie in 1929. The song is in reaction to the upheaval caused by the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.
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Absolutely. It still sounds fantastic today.
I don't know why, but that version popped into my head this morning and just stuck there. Must've been on a TV commercial.
Dave Mason did an awesome cover of "All Along the Watchtower" when I saw him live many years ago. I wasn't even a fan of his and I had gone to see the headliner(who I forget), but I remember thinking Mason's version was closer to Hendrix than Dylan.
bump
And it's redone again, in a fun way by a young singer now.
I'll get back to you on this...(it's a great re-re-make).
L
"Mr Tambourine Man The Byrds, 1965 (orig. Bob Dylan, 1964) "
Now there's an outrage.
The best cover of "Mr. Tambourine Man" isn't mentioned.
Heck, it's even been remastered and reissued.
And also a killer cover of "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"...
(/sarc)
http://www.amazon.com/Transformed-Man-William-Shatner/dp/B0006J2G9I/ref=pd_sim_m_2/002-8069878-1180809?ie=UTF8
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