Wednesday, December 29, 2021

The Wrongful Owners

 

A few weeks back, while writing up my rave of the new Robert Plant/Alison Krauss record, I mentioned their cover of Randy Weeks' "Can't Let Go" and how I thought Lucinda Williams owned that song. Last night, while listening  to "Shades Of Deep Purple," I thought the same regarding their take on Joe South's "Hush."

So, since not much else is happening in the world of music, I thought you might enjoy coming up with cover versions that are not necessarily superior to the originals, though that is what I am thinking with the three I've posted here, but songs that made you think, "Really? That's a cover?"







65 comments:

Keith35 said...

Since Three Dog Night were basically a covers band, a couple of their tunes comes to mind. Their version of "Easy to be Hard" is definitive. Also since you posted Harry Nilsson; I think their version of "one" is better

Unknown said...

Steve Earle does a good job on The Beatles "I'm Looking Through You"

Sal Nunziato said...

Yes Unknown, he sure does. But I'm not looking for good covers. No one would ever think "I'm Looking Through You" wasn't a Beatles song.

Anonymous said...

Bonnie Raitt owns several songs - Angel from Montgomery, Cry Like a Rainstorm and Paul Siebel's Louise.

Joe said...

The Band - Don't Do It

Shriner said...

Harry obviously owns Badfinger's "Without You"

And practically anybody that had a hit song from "Hair" (The Cowsills, Three Dog Night, 5th Dimension, etc) -- owns those as the original broadway cast album is...meh.

Because I'm a Detroit-area homer, I always thought Mitch Ryder owned Prince's "When You Were Mine" and especially Lou Reed's "Rock N Roll"

And speaking of Prince: Sinead O'Connor owns "Nothing Compares 2 U". Full stop.

daudder said...

Twist and Shout by, The Beatles.

Sal Nunziato said...

Please Mr. Postman- The Beatles
You Really Got A Hold On Me- The Beatles

Jim G said...

Just reread the post and some people seem to be posting their choices for good covers instead of covers that are not better than the originals, which is what Sal asked for.

With that in mind, I'll throw in a recent one, Bruce's cover of Rhinestone Cowboy, which to me seems tossed off and not different enough from Glen Campbell's original. Big Bruce fan here, like the Western Stars album and love the song, but his version adds nothing to it and the vocal seems perfunctory, almost like a run through.

Sal Nunziato said...

Okay, I reread what I wrote, too. I can see the confusion.

Deep Purple's "Hush," The Beatles' "Twist & Shout," Nilsson's "Without You," all make you forget they were covers.

Who owns the song written by someone else?

You might like Fred Neil's original "Everybody's Talkin'" more than Nilsson's, but there is no question who had the memorable hit. Nilsson owns it.

Wrong answers:
good covers
bad covers
covers you like
covers you think are better

Anonymous said...

Connecting to yesterday's Ry Cooder post, when I started picking up his albums, I didn't really look at the credits that much, so I thought maybe Ry had written most of the songs. His version of Go Home Girl from Bop Til You Drop definitely owns. And I love Arthur Alexander.

And I think Costello's version of Peace, Love, and Understanding own's Nick's/Brinsley's original.

Bill

Sal Nunziato said...

"And I think Costello's version of Peace, Love, and Understanding own's Nick's/Brinsley's original."

Yes! Exactly.

itsok2beright said...

"Really? That's a cover?"

Judas Priest: The Green Manalishi
Led Zeppelin: Basically, half of their catalog.
Santana: Black Magic Woman

With some 80's nostalgia, I'll add
Joan Jett: I Love Rock and Roll
Bananarama: Venus

No commentary on the relative merits of the covers.

jonder said...

Dang, I didn't know that Lucinda Williams didn't write "Can't Let Go"!

I would second the nomination of Bonnie Raitt's "Angel from Montgomery" (her version of "Song About The Midway" on the same LP is another personal favorite), as well as The Band's version of "Don't Do It" (especially the live performance on Rock Of Ages with Allen Toussaint's horn arrangements).

Would it be safe to say that The Pretenders own "Stop Your Sobbing"?

pp said...

"That's a cover?"


This Flight Tonight by Nazareth, cover of the Joni Mitchell song

Sal Nunziato said...

"Would it be safe to say that The Pretenders own "Stop Your Sobbing"?"

Hell yeah. Good pick.

heartsofstone said...

I assume we are not putting Respect by Aretha and All Along the Watchtower by Jimi Hendrix on this list as they are always son the list.

I would suggest that Johnny Cash owns Hurt.

M_Sharp said...

Dave Edmunds - From Small Things (Big Things One Day Come)
Neko Case- Runnin' Out Of Fools
Rod Stewart - Tomorrow Is Such A Long Time
Go To Blazes - For Lovin' Me

Scottdammit! said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Sal Nunziato said...

This was not a difficult assignment.

mauijim said...

Rod’s Never a Dull Moment has a bunch of great covers, now better than Sam? Not so much but Bob and Jimi, yes imo.
Angel
Mama, you’ve been…
I’d rather go blind
Twistin the Night Away

FD13NYC said...

Rosalie by Thin Lizzy
Paul Simon Anji
Bobby Fuller I Fought The Law
Led Zeppelin Nobody's Fault But Mine
Linda Ronstadt Poor Poor Pitiful Me
Woodstock CSN&Y
Cyndi Lauper Girls Just Want To Have Fun
Shadows Of Knight Gloria
Eric Clapton I Shot The Sheriff

Could go on, but I'll stop here.

Sal Nunziato said...

Great list, FD13NYC!
One question--Did Bobby Fuller not write "I Fought The Law," or did you mean to say The Clash own it? I thought that was a BF4 song.

jonder said...

I respectfully disagree on "I'd Rather Go Blind". I don't think Rod bettered Etta James' original.

Eric Clapton goes on a dreadlock holiday and owns "I Shot The Sheriff"? Clapton himself disagrees:

https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/eric-clapton-admitted-didnt-get-i-shot-sheriff.html/

jonder said...

PS to Sal re. "I Fought The Law":

Written by Sonny Curtis, and first recorded by The Crickets in 1960.

https://secondhandsongs.com/performance/3932/versions

Sal Nunziato said...

I did not know I Fought The Law was a Crickets tune. Wow.

jmills said...

The Band - When I Paint My Masterpiece
Bonnie Raitt - Thing Called Love

Marc said...

The Rascals definitely own "Good Lovin". Blondie own Hangin' on the Telephone. I wouldn't say the Clash own "I Fought the Law," but they sure as hell own "Brand New Cadillac." And as great as Erma Franklin's version was, Janis Joplin owns "Piece of My Heart."

Marc

Dave C said...

Glen Campbell--Gentle on my Mind
Ramones -- Surfin Bird
NY Dolls-- Pills
Talking Heads--Take Me to the River
Dream Syndicate--See that my Grave is Kept Clean (Live)
Rod Stewart--Downtown Train
Detroit Cobras--all albums

neal t said...

same guy who wrote IFTLATLW wrote MTM theme song!

Sal Nunziato said...

I did know that Sonny Curtis wrote MTM theme. Somehow I just assumed IFTL was Bobby Fuller's.

While I'm here:
Elvis- Suspicious Minds
Moody Blues-Go Now (though I prefer Bessie Banks)

M_Sharp said...

Ricky Nelson - Hello Mary Lou ...written by Gene Pitney for Johnny Duncan
Blind Faith - Well All Right ...not co-written by Sonny Curtis
Allman Brothers - Statesboro Blues
Wilson Pickett - Mustang Sally
The Kingsmen - Louie Louie

Northing said...

Shriner...always felt Prince recreated Joni Mitchell's 'Case of You' beautifully, tho, returning the vibe? And Brittany Howard doing 'Both Sides Now' at the Kennedy Center Honors was unreal!

Todd said...

Soft Cell's "Tainted Love" would fit I imagine, in so much as I didn't realize it was a cover until decades later.

philo said...

This Magic Moment- Jay & The Americans
Louie Louie - Rockin' Robin Roberts
Mustang Sally - The Young Rascals
I'm Not Your Stepping Stone - Paul Revere & The Raiders
Wild One (Real Wild Child) - Jerry Lee Lewis

Anonymous said...

I Do Not Want What I Have Not Got -- Bettye LaVette

Sal Nunziato said...

"I Do Not Want What I Have Not Got -- Bettye LaVette"

I'm confused, Anon.

neal t said...

Silence is Golden Tremeloes do 4 Seasons

kodak ghost said...

Several Bettye Lavette (as already mentioned) and I'll throw in another Bonnie Raitt Dimming of the Day... And now (this could be sacrilege)Liz Simmons Who knows where the Time Goes.

Anonymous said...

Her a cappella cover of Sinéad maybe
https://youtu.be/7BJzq7BsmLk

big bad wolf said...

Nightlife B.B. King owns

Don't Leave Me This Way Communards own

Junco Partner Dr. John owns

Superstar, actually Karen Carpenter owns.

Gloria. Patti Smith removed from earthly discussion of who owns. Van's version was great. and then SNL Patti happened and all we talked about on the basketball courts that week was that performance. that intro. that presence. that intensity. that something we would never ever ever ever be though we wished we could.

Jim G said...

Sorry I misunderstood Sal's original post. Think I have it now.

I'll go with: The Band- Atlantic City. Bruce's is fine, but the Band flesh out the arrangement and yes, make it their own IMO.

Crab Devil said...

1. "Rock Around the Clock," amirite? (The original's
by Sonny Dae and His Knights.)

2. Although it's debatable as to who actually owns "The
Train Kept A-Rollin'," it's probably safe to say the
answer isn't Tiny Bradshaw.

3. The song above might possibly illustrate an
additional category as well, something like, "How the hell
could anybody have derived THIS from THAT?" A case in
point would be Wilson Pickett's "Teardrops Will Fall,"
which over the years has given rise to a slew of pretty
decent covers: Ry Cooder, Linda Ronstadt, John
Mellencamp. But the first version of all was by Dickie
Doo and the Don'ts. And now, in retrospect, it appears
that each and every one of the covers can make the
original itself sound improbable.

Jeff in Denton TX said...

Kiss - King of the Nighttime World (Hollywood Stars/Kim Fowley original)
Naked Eyes - Always Something There to Remind Me (Bacharach/David song - several earlier versions)
Frank Sinatra - It Was a Very Good Year (The Kingston Trio found it first)



Anonymous said...

Sal, you don't strike me as a man who confuses easily! Or perhaps its me who's confused. Either way, with the assignment of "Who owns the song written by someone else?", Bettye LaVette's spellbinding a capella version of Sinead is, in my estimation, Exhibit A.

Regardless, onward to a safer, saner, healthier New Year.

Sal Nunziato said...

Anonymous,
With respect, I wasn't asking for amazing cover versions. Sinead's "I Do Not Want" was not a hit. It wasn't even a single. Sure, Bettye Lavette took it to new heights, but my definition of "owning" something was made clearer in the comment section. Sorry, but Lavette's cover does not qualify. It's not a hit. No one thought it was a Lavette original.

Sal Nunziato said...

For the record, here are the suggestions I believe qualify:
Three Dog Night- Easy To Be Hard
Badfinger- Without You
Sinead- Nothing Compares 2 U
The Beatles- Twist & Shout
Elvis Costello- Peace, Love & Understanding
Santana: Black Magic Woman
Joan Jett- I Love RNR
The Pretenders "Stop Your Sobbing"
Aretha- Respect
Jimi- Watchtower
Glen Campbell--Gentle on my Mind
Talking Heads--Take Me to the River
Bobby Fuller I Fought The Law
Linda Ronstadt Poor Poor Pitiful Me
Woodstock CSN&Y
Cyndi Lauper Girls Just Want To Have Fun
Shadows Of Knight Gloria
Eric Clapton I Shot The Sheriff
The Rascals "Good Lovin"
Blondie - Hangin' on the Telephone
Janis- Piece Of My Heart
Elvis- Suspicious Minds
Moody Blues-Go Now
Soft Cell's "Tainted Love"
Superstar-Carpenters
Frank Sinatra - It Was a Very Good Year



Anonymous said...

I sent some in earlier, but they didn't post, so here's try number 2; I've left off the ones that showed up after my first attempt.
Janis Joplin - Ball And Chain
Elvis - Mystery Train
Elvis - That's Alright Mama
Animals - House Of The Rising Sun
Animals - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
Toni Basil - Mickey
Cyndi Lauper - Money Changes Everything
Buggles - Video Killed The Radio Star
Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Blinded By The Light
Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Spirits In The Night
Clash - Police On My Back
Nick Lowe - Switchboard Susan
Byrds - Mr. Tambourine Man
Hendrix - Hey Joe
Bowie - China Girl (yes, I know he's co-writer of the version Iggy did first)
Toots & Maytals - Take Me Home, Country Road
Linda Ronstadt - Blue Bayou
Stones - Time Is On My Side (and I love Irma!)
Stones - It's All Over Now
Dwight Yoakam - This Thing Called Love
ELO- Roll Over Beethoven
Humble Pie - I Don't Need No Doctor
Eno - You Don't Miss Your Water
James Taylor - Handyman
Willie - Always On My Mind
C in California

Anonymous said...

Frank Sinatra, "New York, New York."
Amii Stewart, "Knock on Wood."
Carpenters, "Close to You"

Bruce H

bing stills said...

I Can't Let Go - The Hollies
My Little Red Book - Love

Anonymous said...

EDIT
*Crazy Little Thing Called Love (for Dwight Y.)
C in California

Gene Oberto said...

Has everyone forgotten the lilting tones of William Shatner singing "Rocket Man?"

Anonymous said...

Brothers Johnson, "Strawberry Letter 23"
Byrds, "Turn Turn Turn"
Elvis P., "Hound Dog"
Nat "King" Cole, "The Christmas Song"
Dave Edmunds, "I Hear You Knocking"
Janis Joplin, "Me and Bobby McGee"
Sammy Davis Jr., "The Candy Man"
Barry Manilow, "I Write the Songs"

Bruce H

neal t said...

seeing the great Tracy Allman on Curb reminded me of "They Don't Know"

Whattawino said...

And speaking of Three Dog Night, I’ll submit Eli’s Coming…

Todd said...

I heard "Bad Case of Lovin' You" on the radio and thought, "This is perfect for Sal's list!"

Sal Nunziato said...

Brothers Johnson, "Strawberry Letter 23"
Byrds, "Turn Turn Turn"
Elvis P., "Hound Dog"
Nat "King" Cole, "The Christmas Song"
Dave Edmunds, "I Hear You Knocking"
Janis Joplin, "Me and Bobby McGee"
Sammy Davis Jr., "The Candy Man"
Barry Manilow, "I Write the Songs"

All excellent, Bruce.

And yes Todd, assuming you heard the Robert Palmer version.

And Neal T, totally forgot the Kirsty Version. I knew she wrote it, but totally forgot she recorded it.

Anonymous said...

Marvin Gaye and ‘I Heard It Through The Grapevine’.
I read that Gladys’ version was the biggest single in Motown history - until Marvin released his version
Eric

Chris Collins said...

Damn! Sorry I missed this one. Aretha owning "Respect" is probably the ultimate answer. Although Otis owns "Try A Little Tenderness".

I think Bruce owns "Jersey Girl".
I bet most people think "To Make You Feel My Love" is an Adele song.
Soft Cell owns "Tainted Love".

Will try to think of more

Todd said...

C'mon Sal. No one is gonna hear Moon Martin's version on the radio.

And Barry Manilow didn't write "I Write the Songs"? What kind of weird multiverse level of crazy is that?

Sal Nunziato said...

"C'mon Sal. No one is gonna hear Moon Martin's version on the radio."

Good point.

Anonymous said...

Though I am sure there are others, the one omission I see is CCR's Proud Mary covered by Ike & Tina Turner.




GOOML

neal t said...

scrolled thru 2 make sure not here but we missed a biggie Arlo's "city of New Orleans"

edward rogers said...

Hey Sal,

Tryin to reconnect with you n burning shed but having problems setting up account?

Can you help?

Have a brill 22

Ed

Sal Nunziato said...

Ed,
The blog doesn't need a subscription or account.
You should have all access at all times.
Many moons ago, I would send out an email blast, but that annoyed more people than helped.
Maybe bookmark the site and when you're having a cuppa tea, checking e-mails, you can stop by here a few times a week, as well.

Have a brill new year, too!
xo
Sal