Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before {Top 50 Covers - NMC}

B

Boards Of Candida

Guest
From The Torygraph - their (surprisingly excellent) top 50 cover versions - unsurprisingly, there are no Smiths or Morrissey covers included.

From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml;sessionid=0YYI3EIM55XSLQFIQMGCM54AVCBQUJVC?xml=/arts/2004/11/20/bmcovercont20.xml&sSheet=/arts/2004/11/20/ixtop.html&secureRefresh=true&_requestid=35206

To celebrate the renaissance of this pop tradition, our team of music writers have chosen their 50 best cover versions of all time. To qualify, a song had to be well established by one artist, then given a new lease of life by another. It was a tough list to make - and we did it our way. We hope you enjoy it. Let us know at [email protected]

50 Don't Leave Me This Way - The Communards, 1986

orig. Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, 1975

It was camp enough to begin with, but Jimi Somerville and Sarah Jane Morris's triumphant falsetto-basso profundo duet on this cover of the 1975 disco classic takes the phrase "row of tents" and flings it in the air like a glittery handbag on an underlit dancefloor. One suspects that the singers swapped voices for a laugh. Key moment: The final, monumental "Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah BABY!" just before the last chorus.

49 Going Back to My Roots - Richie Havens, 1980

orig. Lamont Dozier, 1977

Woodstock star Havens caused barely a ripple in 1980 with his impassioned rendition of a song first recorded by Lamont Dozier. But eight years on, it was rediscovered, becoming an arms-in-the air anthem to a million British ravers. As the battered Havens larynx pours out Dozier's vision of the things that really count in life, the goosebumps take over. Key moment: a truly storming piano intro.

48 Step On - Happy Mondays, 1991

orig. John Kongos, 1971

The Manchester baggy anthem, driven by a trademark acid house piano riff, is a hugely inventive remake of He's Gonna Step on You Again by long-forgotten South African singer-songwriter Kongos. Shaun Ryder added his own inimitable lyrical touch, contributing a new saying to the British pop lexicon with his opening declaration: "You're twisting my melons, man!" Key Moment: When it all breaks down to reverb-drenched female backing vocals singing the spookily threatening chorus line.

47 Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me) - The Wedding Present, 1990

orig. Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel, 1975

John Peel indie favourites the Weddoes gave Harley's classic the angry makeover its sardonic lyric was crying out for. Gone were the acoustic thrummings and sunny Ooooh-la-la-la backing vocals, replaced by thrashing electric guitars over blistering drums, seemingly at twice the original's speed. Key moment: The 15-second mid-song pause, silent except for a wavering note of guitar feedback. Then Dave Gedge's Yorkshire growl returns: "There ain't no more, you've taken everything."

46 The Robots - Señor Coconut & His Orchestra, 2000

Orig. Kraftwerk, 1978

German musician Uwe Schmidt found a little cha-cha-cha in his waters when he moved to Chile, and felt moved to recreate the clinical oeuvre of Kraftwerk with the magical addition of Latin swing. This is the highlight of his wonderful experiment, a sashaying, hip-clicking antidote to the Düsseldorf automatons' metronomic precision. Key Moment: The horn flourish and celebratory "Olé!" before the vocals kick in.

45 Rock el Casbah - Rachid Taha, 2004

orig. The Clash, 1982

Franco-Algerian bad boy Taha idolises Joe Strummer, but sensing something patronising in the original, he recorded this storming Arabic version of the Clash warhorse. Lutes and strings twang and swoop against a thundering rhythm track and exultant chorus. But it's the guttural attack of Taha's vocal that makes your hair prickle – a technique he learnt from records of old and obscure Algerian singers. Key Moment: The plaintive desert flute that kicks it all off.

44 Oops I Did it Again - Richard Thompson, 2003

orig. Britney Spears, 2000

The sparky old folk-rocker toured with a self-explanatory show (and recorded a live album) called 1,000 Years of Popular Music. This was one of his examples of 20th-century songwriting, and in his hands – acoustic guitar, percussion, lots of echo on the voice – Britney's song actually becomes quite scary. Key moment: He tries to get the audience to sing along. Mostly, they laugh.

43 Jolene - One Dove, 1993

orig. Dolly Parton, 1974

To make this song – so completely associated with Dolly herself – their own was no mean feat for Glaswegian trio One Dove, but they pulled it off with style. Dub reggae bass and echo effects, a glistening electronic production and Dot Alison's vulnerable vocal made for another melancholy rave-era classic. Key moment: When the squiggly noises of the intro give way to that bassline.

42 David Bowie - It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City, 1975

Orig. Bruce Springsteen, 1973

The Boss's gruff tale from urban bohemia is recast as an overblown disco classic by a deranged-sounding Thin White Duke in this priceless 1975 cover, in which Bowie succumbs to vocal hysteria over a backing of crunchy rock guitar and silly strings. Four minutes of inspired madness. Key moment: The Dame finds notes he never knew existed to squeal "Don't that man look pretty!"

41 Hazy Shade of Winter - The Bangles, 1987

orig. Simon & Garfunkel, 1966

Who knew that Paul Simon could write a great heavy metal riff? The circling, folky-psychedelic guitar part of the original, turbocharged by legendary producer Rick Rubin for the Less Than Zero soundtrack, rocks hard here. The all-girl Bangles' slick vocal harmonies turn it into a faultless piece of '80s power pop. Key moment: That riff.

40 I Fought the Law - The Clash, 1979

Orig. The Crickets, 1959

In its original version by the Crickets (post-Buddy Holly), it could have been about returning library books late. Merging punk-rock passion with rock and roll swagger, the Clash make it sound like the wailing of ragged outlaws on the run from a chain gang. Key moment: With its thundering tom tom-driven opening, combined with Mick Jones's ripping two-note guitar lead, the record kicks off like a jail break in progress.

39 Ms Jackson - The Vines, 2002

orig. Outkast, 2000

The Australian band took one vaguely insincere hip-hop apology (inspired by Andre 3000's break-up with Erykah Badu) and turned it into an epic lament for love turned sour. Sampled drum beats, a baleful piano motif and Craig Nicholl's icy vocals build into crashing walls of psychedelic sound. Key moment: The layered, echoing cries de coeur of the bridge: "You can plan a pretty picnic but you can't predict the weather."

Nina Simone: covering Jeff Walker at number 10

38 Wichita Lineman - Dennis Brown, 1970

orig. Glen Campbell, 1968

Boy of 15 from Kingston, Jamaica takes on Glen Campbell's lament of a world-weary telephone repairman in the American Midwest? It sounds hare-brained, but the result is haunting. Destined to be a reggae great, the adolescent Brown sings with a choirboy purity that should be incongruous but instead underlines the song's timeless, otherworldly quality. Key moment: The crystal clarity of the opening – "I am a lineman for the county."

37 Heartbreak Hotel - John Cale, 1975

orig. Elvis Presley, 1956

As darkly humorous as anything he did with the Velvets, Cale's homage to Elvis took the blue mood of the rockabilly original and painted it black. The screaming gothic synthesizers, cello-like guitars and funereal pace obscured the fact that Cale's expiring vocal was actually following the melody note-for-note. Key moment: That weird squeaking over the house-of-horror riff at the start.

36 Dear Prudence - Siouxsie & the Banshees, 1983

orig. The Beatles, 1968

Much misunderstood at the time, the Banshees' take on punk was about individuality through experimentation – arty, but with a pop sensibility. Little wonder, then, that they should cover a Beatles song from the White Album, or that it should become their biggest hit. It seemed made for them. Key moment: The mesmerising "look around-around" coda; punk turns into psychedelia.

35 Gloria - Patti Smith, 1975

orig. Them, 1965

Patti Smith's first single was a piano-accompanied meditation on Hey Joe. For her debut album, Horses, she enlisted a full rock band, but, on Gloria, its opening track, the same spirit of poetic licence ran free, as Smith turned Van Morrison's libido-driven beat tune into a hymn of self-determining spirituality. Key moment: The opening line, "Jesus died for somebody's sins, but not mine" – So, not just about getting laid, then.

34 Fell In Love With A Boy - Joss Stone, 2003

orig. the White Stripes, 2001

The big surprise, and best track, on Stone's soul pastiche debut album was a remake of the White Stripes' Fell in Love With a Girl. As great covers can, her smokily jazzed-up vocal discovered unimagined melodic depth in Jack White's scuffed garage lurve song, and rendered it pretty well unrecognisable. Key moment: The suavely saucy pay-off at the end of the first verse: "Sarah says it's cool, she don't consider it cheatin'."

33 Money (That's What I Want) - The Flying Lizards, 1980

orig. The Beatles, 1963 (after barrett strong, 1959)

David Cunningham and some pals from Brixton bashed on a drum, added some electronic peeps and cheesy backing vocals, and stormed the charts with this avant-garde, lo-fi take on the bluesy Beatles number. Deborah Evans speaks the lyrics deadpan, in the style of an upper-class English dominatrix. Key moment: The way Evans sounds as if she's going to come to your house, whip in hand, and retrieve the cash personally.

32 Chimes of Freedom - Youssou N'dour, 1994

orig. Bob Dylan, 1964

The Senegalese singer encountered Dylan's apocalyptic vision of liberty when it became the anthem of 1988's Amnesty Tour with Springsteen, Sting and Peter Gabriel. Feeling that poor English had prevented him doing the song justice, he produced this epic Wolof language version six years later. Key moment: Intoned over cataclysmic ritual percussion, the French chorus makes this a startling example of cultural appropriation in reverse.

31 Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word - Mary J Blige, 2004

orig. Elton John, 1976

If the new Bridget Jones film takes this poignant reading of Elton John's 1976 hit to a wider audience, it may not have been a waste of time. Stripped of accompaniment, Blige's raw vocal manages to sound at once vulnerable, resigned and iron-willed. Where Elton was merely a bit gloomy, Mary uncovers a world of sublime melancholia. Key moment: Her gentle, barely audible "hmmms" and "aahs" between lines.

30 I'm A Believer - Robert Wyatt, 1974

orig. The Monkees, 1966 (written by Neil Diamond)

The Monkees: reimagined by Robert Wyatt and thousands of Sunderland supporters

The Monkees might claim this as the perfect three-minute pop song, but it took Robert Wyatt's plaintive voice and radical transformations of the music to make you really believe in the lyric. Repeating piano chords, bass, drums and violin power it all along. Key moment: The final choruses, where Wyatt's vocals, perhaps intensified by his recent accident and confinement to a wheelchair, are simply heart-rending.

29 Black Steel - Tricky, 1995

orig. Public Enemy, 1988

Tricky claimed that Public Enemy's Chuck D was "my Shakespeare". His tribute replaced the low-end, funky militancy of the hip-hop original with a hyper-agitated mesh of distorted electronica, asthmatic growls and, most daringly, the mellifluous Martina Topley-Bird on lead vocals. Key moment: When Tricky incants "Now you switch on, you switch off" in his Bristol burr and mutates the grammar of rap into a new, entirely English register.

28 Jealous Guy - Roxy Music, 1981

Orig. John Lennon, 1971

Recorded as a tribute to John Lennon after his murder in December 1980, the former Beatle's paean to self-obsession gave Roxy Music their only UK number one single. In the process, they transformed an exquisite but lovelessly produced miniature into a full-blown, six-minute smoocher, while perfectly preserving its intimacy. Key moment: When the mild-mannered solo guitar cedes to a gleaming, sensuous sax.

27 Summertime Blues - The Who, 1968

orig. Eddie Cochran, 1958

More than any of their '60s peers, the Who represented the same young, working-class male disaffection as their '50s American rock and roll forebears. This cover, then (on their hard-rocking Live at Leeds album) is mightily appropriate. Townshend's crashing power chords and Daltrey's libidinous howls add up to pure aggro: the giddy, bracing sound of trouble brewing. Key moment: the first guitar "KLANGGGG" sets the pulse racing splendidly.

26 I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself - The White Stripes, 2003

orig. Dusty Springfield, 1964

Garage rock's first couple are strong on covers, on a mission to keep songwriting traditions from throughout the last century alive. Indeed, the days when everyone had a crack at a Bacharach/David tune are long gone. Their treatment of this one, originally a number three hit for Dusty Springfield, is breathtaking in its emotional intensity. Key moment: The crashing chords, into "Like a summer rose, needs the sun and rain."

25 Wonderwall - Ryan Adams, 2004

orig. Oasis, 1995

With gently picked acoustic guitar and ambient atmospherics, Adams recreates the Britpop anthem as an intimate blues. Oasis delivered it as a declaration; for Adams, it's a heartbreaking plea. Noel Gallagher was so impressed, he now performs Adams's version of his own song in concert. Key moment: The broken-down emotion Adams conjures singing: "Maybe, you're gonna be the one that saves me…"

24 Why Can't We Live Together - Sade, 1985

orig. Timmy Thomas, 1972

At the height of '80s greed and Cold War angst, the young Anglo-Nigerian Sade Adu insinuated into the wine bars of the world this lush, plaintive call for peace, love and understanding. The final track on her huge-selling Diamond Life album, it introduced Timmy Thomas's hit to a whole new generation. It may lack the Hammond organ funk of the original, but her voice never sounded stronger. Key moment: The outro, "Gotta live, gotta live."

23 Caravan of Love - Housemartins, 1986

orig. Isley Jasper Isley, 1985

Hull's finest nabbed their only number one single, at Christmas, with this ingenious a cappella reworking of Ernie and Marvin Isley (and cousin Chris Jasper)'s Christian rallying call. With the bass vocal beating out the "bom bom boms" against a shimmering choral waterfall of "aaaaahs", a defiant Paul Heaton pleads for the world to join in love and peace. And at Christmas, what better message is there? Key moment: "I'm your brother, don't you know?"

22 (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction - Devo, 1978

Rolling Stones, 1965

Who'd have thought that five boiler-suited geeks with flowerpots on their heads could tackle such a monolithic '60s hit and triumph? Somehow these Darwin-opposing robo-punkers twisted Mick Jagger's disaffection for modern consumerism into their own future-retro logic, and the whole Rolling Stones rebel ruckus into an irresistibly funky techno-pop masterpiece. Key moment: Singer Mark Mothersbaugh's seemingly endless "baby-baby" repetition, like a malfunctioning robot.

21 Only Love Can Break Your Heart - St Etienne, 1990

orig. Neil Young, 1970

Acid house was not all about euphoria. The Balearic scene emerging from Ibiza had a penchant for melancholia amid the hedonism, and this record fitted right in the middle of that. Moira Lambert's plaintive indie-style vocal rides a loping hip-hop beat with shimmering synths, giving Neil Young's lost, wistful mood a modernist twist. Key moment: Grown men crying on the dancefloor.

Depeche Mode: at number 18, covered by French pop duo Nouvelle Vague

20 Police and Thieves - The Clash, 1977

orig. Junior Murvin, 1976

At a time when British reggae comprised polite but dull attempts at authenticity, the Clash's stripped-back, garage rock approach came as a glorious revelation. While the ethereal falsetto of the original sounded incongruous on lines about "guns and ammunition", Strummer's gleefully thuggish tones take us straight to an inner city that feels all too real. Key moment: the DM-clad spring in the bass line's step.

19 Sweet Jane - Cowboy Junkies, 1988

orig. Velvet Underground, 1970

Spare, evocative remake of the Velvet Underground's 1970 original. Much moodier and less grungy, it is Margo Timmins' almost whispered vocals, recorded in a church, which reignite Lou Reed's seedy, downtown anthem. The pacing and phrasing are perfect. Key moment: Timmins's longing, languorous bridge: "Heavenly wine and roses seem to whisper to me when you smile."

18 Just Can't Get Enough - Nouvelle Vague, 2004

Orig: Depeche Mode, 1981

Terrific though it is, Depeche Mode's original Just Can't Get Enough can at times evoke stumbling around a suburban nightclub while cradling a warm shandy. Enter Gallic musos Marc Collin and Olivier Libaux, whose sublime bossa-nova reworking, with Rio-born singer Eloisia, whisks one instead straight to the sands of Ipanema, c1965. (Try their Nouvelle Vague album if this sounds your tasse de thé.) Key moment: The glorious pronunciation of, "All the fing ya do ta me, an everyfing ya say…"

17 Mad World - Gary Jules, 2003

Orig. Tears For Fears, 1982

Apparently possessing nothing more than a piano and a voice not unlike Michael Stipe's, unknown singer-songwriter Gary Jules ran away with last year's Christmas number one spot via his haunting and devastatingly simple rendition of Tears for Fears' plinky-plonky electro plodder from 1982. A great example of less equalling more. Key moment: The little wobble in Jules's voice when he first sings "I find it kinda sad."

16 Billie Jean - Shinehead, 1984

orig. Michael Jackson, 1982

Two years after Michael Jackson's global hit came this eerie, dead-slow reworking from Shinehead, aka New York dancehall reggae MC Carl Aiken. Rough & Rugged was the name of the brilliant debut album it appeared on, and that sums it up perfectly, as Aiken's falsetto floats above a vast echo-chamber of dub and stabbed piano chords. Key moment: The whistled "Oo-wee-oo-wee-oo" from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly that opens the song.

15 Wild Horses - The Flying Burrito Bros, 1971

orig. The Rolling Stones, 1970

Country-rock visionary Gram Parsons was on course to self-destruct long before he recorded this exquisitely world-weary version of the Stones ballad. The sincerity and aching fragility of his delivery show up the hamminess of the original to startling effect. Key moment: "Let's do some living, after we'll die" had the feeling of lived reality – within three years Parson was indeed dead.

14 Rocket Man - Kate Bush, 1991

orig. Elton John, 1970

Elton John's lament to the loneliness of space travel (or cocaine addiction, depending on your age group) was vacuous tinny pop until Kate Bush's keening cadences gave it the poignancy it deserved. Her little-girl-lost voice and the bittersweet sound of Uilleann pipes add startling beauty, and a thrilling chill to the Martian air. Key moment: The breathy, pained gasp of "Oh" before the chorus line "No no no I'm a rocket man."

13 My Favourite Things - John Coltrane, 1960

orig. Rodgers and Hammerstein (The Sound of Music), 1959

Cool adventurous jazz was probably the furthest thing from the mind of audiences for The Sound of Music. John Coltrane got hold of this hit song, though, and by adding subtly oriental harmonies and choosing the soprano saxophone as the melody instrument, he was able to create a contemporary jazz masterpiece. Key moment: the first time you recognise the tune, as the sax gleefully skips around the waltz-like rhythms.

The Pet Shop Boys: You Were Always on My Mind comes in at number two

12 One - Johnny Cash, 2002

orig. U2, 1991

Producer Rick Rubin had rescued Cash's career with the American Recordings series of albums, and on Vol 3 Cash had truly hit his stride, especially on this towering acoustic version of the U2 song. There's a lifetime of difference between the two renditions: Bono strains and screeches, Cash just reaches down into his soul. Key moment: Cash sings: "You say love is a temple." There's an organ playing. Spines tingle.

11 Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow - Roberta Flack, 1971

orig. Shirelles, 1960

This Carole King-penned narrative of a woman's questioning of a lover's blithe sweet nothings was sad and beautiful enough in the Shirelles' Spector-produced version. Slowed down to a drifting lament and sung in Roberta Flack's velvet voice, it becomes almost unbearably lovely. Love and loss, trust and betrayal, innocence and experience are blended into a heartbreaking small-hours classic. Key moment: "Tonight the light of love is in your eyes": so slow, but so perfectly sung.

10 Mr Bojangles - Nina Simone, 1971

orig. Jerry Jeff Walker, 1967

Much recorded, often trampled underfoot (hang your head in shame, Bob Dylan, Lulu and Robbie Williams), this strange Jerry Jeff Walker ballad about an itinerant dancer was made famous by Sammy Davis Jnr as a theatrical showstopper. The inimitable Nina Simone gets to the lonely heart of the tale, in an ethereal, understated, drifting, low-key version. Key moment: The whole song. Simone's almost casual delivery de-dramatises the narrative yet ensures the inherent emotion resonates all the louder.

9 Comfortably Numb - Scissor Sisters, 2004

Orig. Pink Floyd, 1979

Only divine inspiration could explain how, or why, New York's bendiest band came to pop Pink Floyd's balloon of pretension by re-recording their most horribly self-regarding song in the style of the Saturday Night Fever-era Bee Gees. At once cold, sexy and relentlessly danceable, it far outshines the original in both concept and execution. Key moment: The flurry of electronic handclaps after the line "You may feel a little sick."

8 Twist and Shout - The Beatles, 1963

Orig. the Isley Brothers, 1960

The Beatles recorded their version in a single take for their debut album Please Please Me – and the world changed. John Lennon's lead vocal sounds as raw and urgent as a live concert, aeons away from the bland, computerised studio sound of today. Key moment: John's barked "Shake it up baby" after Paul and George's aaahs in the middle.

7 Mr Tambourine Man - The Byrds, 1965

orig. Bob Dylan, 1964

Folk and rock were inconceivable bedfellows, respectively too earnest and too thrill-driven to contemplate each other's existence, until these Californian Beatles obsessives fused the two musics in one exquisite, harmony-loaded Bob Dylan cover. The lyrics reflected how Dylan, tiring of polemic, was now consumed by the seduction of pure music. The Byrds completed that transition for him in none-more-beautiful sound, and went to number one. Key moment: That guitar-chiming intro.

6 Tainted Love - Soft Cell, 1981

orig. Gloria Jones, 1964

With Marc Almond's heroically overwrought vocal adding a deliciously deviant twist to Dave Ball's slinky synth-pop backing track, this straight-ahead '60s soul stomper (originally performed by Gloria Jones – later mother of Marc Bolan's son, Rolan) was somehow transformed into the mystical bridge between Northern soul and acid house. Key moment: The syncopated handclap/keyboard lurch combo which launched a million dancefloor forays.

5 Respect - Aretha Franklin, 1967

orig. Otis Redding, 1965

Soul queen Aretha took Redding's original and turned it into a kind of proto-girl power anthem. Redding sang: "All I'm asking is for a little respect when I come home." Franklin changed the "I" to "you", added the r-e-s-p-e-c-t bit, and made the song her own. Key moment: "Sock it to me sock it to me sock it to me sock it to me."

4 Hallelujah - Jeff Buckley, 1993

orig. Leonard Cohen, 1984

If Leonard Cohen has a fault, it's a weakness for ponderous, synth-heavy arrangements, and nowhere was this more so than on his original version of this lyrically magnificent song. Then Jeff Buckley got hold of it, stripped it down, and sang it in his exquisitely pure chorister's voice. Definitive. Key moment: The serene, sustained falsetto note towards the end.

3 My Way - Sid Vicious, 1979

orig. Frank Sinatra, 1969 (after Paul Anka, 1969)

He knifed his girlfriend Nancy Spungen to death and died soon afterwards from an overdose of heroin supplied by his own mother. But Sid Vicious should also be remembered for this riotous version of the song made famous by Sinatra, recorded with the rump of the Sex Pistols following Johnny Rotten's departure. The Pistols rock like demons, and Vicious snarls and sneers his way through the song's valedictory lyric with twisted glee. It's mad, hilarious, and thrilling. Key moment: Vicious sings the first verse in tones of mock-seriousness (inserting obscenities along the way); then the guitars and drums kick in.

2 You Were Always on My Mind - Pet Shop Boys, 1987

orig. Elvis Presley, 1972 (after brenda lee, 1971)

The Boys, on career best form, elevated Elvis's tender elegy – written by Willie Nelson – into a monumental explosion of high pop camp. Chris Lowe conjures an electronic symphony of rumbling drums, swelling strings and glittering synths to underpin Neil Tennant's crystalline vocals. "I'm sorry I treated you wrong," mourned Elvis. "You'd be a fool to lose me, cad though I am," seems to be Tennant's message. Key moment: the stabbing trumpet sample, introduced before the song kicks in: Da! Da-da-da-da-da. Da!

And the greatest cover ever...

1 All Along the Watchtower - Jimi Hendrix Experience, 1968

orig. Bob Dylan, 1967

The greatest cover version of all-time: Hendrix doing a Dylan song

Hendrix's version of a so-so track from Dylan's John Wesley Harding album completely outgunned the original. A light, scampering ballad re-emerged as a mini-epic of foreboding with Hendrix's heavy three-chord intro hanging like a thundercloud and Dylan's lyrics sounding an ominous epitaph for the 1960s. Key moment: The last words – "And the wind began to howl" - before the closing guitar storm.
 
Thank you for sharing.

> From The Torygraph - their (surprisingly excellent) top 50 cover versions
> - unsurprisingly, there are no Smiths or Morrissey covers included.

> From
> http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml;sessionid=0YYI3EIM55XSLQFIQMGCM54AVCBQUJVC?xml=/arts/2004/11/20/bmcovercont20.xml&sSheet=/arts/2004/11/20/ixtop.html&secureRefresh=true&_requestid=35206
> To celebrate the renaissance of this pop tradition, our team of music
> writers have chosen their 50 best cover versions of all time. To qualify,
> a song had to be well established by one artist, then given a new lease of
> life by another. It was a tough list to make - and we did it our way. We
> hope you enjoy it. Let us know at [email protected] 50 Don't Leave
> Me This Way - The Communards, 1986

> orig. Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, 1975

> It was camp enough to begin with, but Jimi Somerville and Sarah Jane
> Morris's triumphant falsetto-basso profundo duet on this cover of the 1975
> disco classic takes the phrase "row of tents" and flings it in
> the air like a glittery handbag on an underlit dancefloor. One suspects
> that the singers swapped voices for a laugh. Key moment: The final,
> monumental "Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah BABY!" just before the
> last chorus.

> 49 Going Back to My Roots - Richie Havens, 1980

> orig. Lamont Dozier, 1977

> Woodstock star Havens caused barely a ripple in 1980 with his impassioned
> rendition of a song first recorded by Lamont Dozier. But eight years on,
> it was rediscovered, becoming an arms-in-the air anthem to a million
> British ravers. As the battered Havens larynx pours out Dozier's vision of
> the things that really count in life, the goosebumps take over. Key
> moment: a truly storming piano intro.

> 48 Step On - Happy Mondays, 1991

> orig. John Kongos, 1971

> The Manchester baggy anthem, driven by a trademark acid house piano riff,
> is a hugely inventive remake of He's Gonna Step on You Again by
> long-forgotten South African singer-songwriter Kongos. Shaun Ryder added
> his own inimitable lyrical touch, contributing a new saying to the British
> pop lexicon with his opening declaration: "You're twisting my melons,
> man!" Key Moment: When it all breaks down to reverb-drenched female
> backing vocals singing the spookily threatening chorus line.

> 47 Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me) - The Wedding Present, 1990

> orig. Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel, 1975

> John Peel indie favourites the Weddoes gave Harley's classic the angry
> makeover its sardonic lyric was crying out for. Gone were the acoustic
> thrummings and sunny Ooooh-la-la-la backing vocals, replaced by thrashing
> electric guitars over blistering drums, seemingly at twice the original's
> speed. Key moment: The 15-second mid-song pause, silent except for a
> wavering note of guitar feedback. Then Dave Gedge's Yorkshire growl
> returns: "There ain't no more, you've taken everything."

> 46 The Robots - Señor Coconut & His Orchestra, 2000

> Orig. Kraftwerk, 1978

> German musician Uwe Schmidt found a little cha-cha-cha in his waters when
> he moved to Chile, and felt moved to recreate the clinical oeuvre of
> Kraftwerk with the magical addition of Latin swing. This is the highlight
> of his wonderful experiment, a sashaying, hip-clicking antidote to the
> Düsseldorf automatons' metronomic precision. Key Moment: The horn flourish
> and celebratory "Olé!" before the vocals kick in.

> 45 Rock el Casbah - Rachid Taha, 2004

> orig. The Clash, 1982

> Franco-Algerian bad boy Taha idolises Joe Strummer, but sensing something
> patronising in the original, he recorded this storming Arabic version of
> the Clash warhorse. Lutes and strings twang and swoop against a thundering
> rhythm track and exultant chorus. But it's the guttural attack of Taha's
> vocal that makes your hair prickle – a technique he learnt from records of
> old and obscure Algerian singers. Key Moment: The plaintive desert flute
> that kicks it all off.

> 44 Oops I Did it Again - Richard Thompson, 2003

> orig. Britney Spears, 2000

> The sparky old folk-rocker toured with a self-explanatory show (and
> recorded a live album) called 1,000 Years of Popular Music. This was one
> of his examples of 20th-century songwriting, and in his hands – acoustic
> guitar, percussion, lots of echo on the voice – Britney's song actually
> becomes quite scary. Key moment: He tries to get the audience to sing
> along. Mostly, they laugh.

> 43 Jolene - One Dove, 1993

> orig. Dolly Parton, 1974

> To make this song – so completely associated with Dolly herself – their
> own was no mean feat for Glaswegian trio One Dove, but they pulled it off
> with style. Dub reggae bass and echo effects, a glistening electronic
> production and Dot Alison's vulnerable vocal made for another melancholy
> rave-era classic. Key moment: When the squiggly noises of the intro give
> way to that bassline.

> 42 David Bowie - It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City, 1975

> Orig. Bruce Springsteen, 1973

> The Boss's gruff tale from urban bohemia is recast as an overblown disco
> classic by a deranged-sounding Thin White Duke in this priceless 1975
> cover, in which Bowie succumbs to vocal hysteria over a backing of crunchy
> rock guitar and silly strings. Four minutes of inspired madness. Key
> moment: The Dame finds notes he never knew existed to squeal "Don't
> that man look pretty!"

> 41 Hazy Shade of Winter - The Bangles, 1987

> orig. Simon & Garfunkel, 1966

> Who knew that Paul Simon could write a great heavy metal riff? The
> circling, folky-psychedelic guitar part of the original, turbocharged by
> legendary producer Rick Rubin for the Less Than Zero soundtrack, rocks
> hard here. The all-girl Bangles' slick vocal harmonies turn it into a
> faultless piece of '80s power pop. Key moment: That riff.

> 40 I Fought the Law - The Clash, 1979

> Orig. The Crickets, 1959

> In its original version by the Crickets (post-Buddy Holly), it could have
> been about returning library books late. Merging punk-rock passion with
> rock and roll swagger, the Clash make it sound like the wailing of ragged
> outlaws on the run from a chain gang. Key moment: With its thundering tom
> tom-driven opening, combined with Mick Jones's ripping two-note guitar
> lead, the record kicks off like a jail break in progress.

> 39 Ms Jackson - The Vines, 2002

> orig. Outkast, 2000

> The Australian band took one vaguely insincere hip-hop apology (inspired
> by Andre 3000's break-up with Erykah Badu) and turned it into an epic
> lament for love turned sour. Sampled drum beats, a baleful piano motif and
> Craig Nicholl's icy vocals build into crashing walls of psychedelic sound.
> Key moment: The layered, echoing cries de coeur of the bridge: "You
> can plan a pretty picnic but you can't predict the weather."

> Nina Simone: covering Jeff Walker at number 10

> 38 Wichita Lineman - Dennis Brown, 1970

> orig. Glen Campbell, 1968

> Boy of 15 from Kingston, Jamaica takes on Glen Campbell's lament of a
> world-weary telephone repairman in the American Midwest? It sounds
> hare-brained, but the result is haunting. Destined to be a reggae great,
> the adolescent Brown sings with a choirboy purity that should be
> incongruous but instead underlines the song's timeless, otherworldly
> quality. Key moment: The crystal clarity of the opening – "I am a
> lineman for the county."

> 37 Heartbreak Hotel - John Cale, 1975

> orig. Elvis Presley, 1956

> As darkly humorous as anything he did with the Velvets, Cale's homage to
> Elvis took the blue mood of the rockabilly original and painted it black.
> The screaming gothic synthesizers, cello-like guitars and funereal pace
> obscured the fact that Cale's expiring vocal was actually following the
> melody note-for-note. Key moment: That weird squeaking over the
> house-of-horror riff at the start.

> 36 Dear Prudence - Siouxsie & the Banshees, 1983

> orig. The Beatles, 1968

> Much misunderstood at the time, the Banshees' take on punk was about
> individuality through experimentation – arty, but with a pop sensibility.
> Little wonder, then, that they should cover a Beatles song from the White
> Album, or that it should become their biggest hit. It seemed made for
> them. Key moment: The mesmerising "look around-around" coda;
> punk turns into psychedelia.

> 35 Gloria - Patti Smith, 1975

> orig. Them, 1965

> Patti Smith's first single was a piano-accompanied meditation on Hey Joe.
> For her debut album, Horses, she enlisted a full rock band, but, on
> Gloria, its opening track, the same spirit of poetic licence ran free, as
> Smith turned Van Morrison's libido-driven beat tune into a hymn of
> self-determining spirituality. Key moment: The opening line, "Jesus
> died for somebody's sins, but not mine" – So, not just about getting
> laid, then.

> 34 Fell In Love With A Boy - Joss Stone, 2003

> orig. the White Stripes, 2001

> The big surprise, and best track, on Stone's soul pastiche debut album was
> a remake of the White Stripes' Fell in Love With a Girl. As great covers
> can, her smokily jazzed-up vocal discovered unimagined melodic depth in
> Jack White's scuffed garage lurve song, and rendered it pretty well
> unrecognisable. Key moment: The suavely saucy pay-off at the end of the
> first verse: "Sarah says it's cool, she don't consider it
> cheatin'."

> 33 Money (That's What I Want) - The Flying Lizards, 1980

> orig. The Beatles, 1963 (after barrett strong, 1959)

> David Cunningham and some pals from Brixton bashed on a drum, added some
> electronic peeps and cheesy backing vocals, and stormed the charts with
> this avant-garde, lo-fi take on the bluesy Beatles number. Deborah Evans
> speaks the lyrics deadpan, in the style of an upper-class English
> dominatrix. Key moment: The way Evans sounds as if she's going to come to
> your house, whip in hand, and retrieve the cash personally.

> 32 Chimes of Freedom - Youssou N'dour, 1994

> orig. Bob Dylan, 1964

> The Senegalese singer encountered Dylan's apocalyptic vision of liberty
> when it became the anthem of 1988's Amnesty Tour with Springsteen, Sting
> and Peter Gabriel. Feeling that poor English had prevented him doing the
> song justice, he produced this epic Wolof language version six years
> later. Key moment: Intoned over cataclysmic ritual percussion, the French
> chorus makes this a startling example of cultural appropriation in
> reverse.

> 31 Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word - Mary J Blige, 2004

> orig. Elton John, 1976

> If the new Bridget Jones film takes this poignant reading of Elton John's
> 1976 hit to a wider audience, it may not have been a waste of time.
> Stripped of accompaniment, Blige's raw vocal manages to sound at once
> vulnerable, resigned and iron-willed. Where Elton was merely a bit gloomy,
> Mary uncovers a world of sublime melancholia. Key moment: Her gentle,
> barely audible "hmmms" and "aahs" between lines.

> 30 I'm A Believer - Robert Wyatt, 1974

> orig. The Monkees, 1966 (written by Neil Diamond)

> The Monkees: reimagined by Robert Wyatt and thousands of Sunderland
> supporters

> The Monkees might claim this as the perfect three-minute pop song, but it
> took Robert Wyatt's plaintive voice and radical transformations of the
> music to make you really believe in the lyric. Repeating piano chords,
> bass, drums and violin power it all along. Key moment: The final choruses,
> where Wyatt's vocals, perhaps intensified by his recent accident and
> confinement to a wheelchair, are simply heart-rending.

> 29 Black Steel - Tricky, 1995

> orig. Public Enemy, 1988

> Tricky claimed that Public Enemy's Chuck D was "my Shakespeare".
> His tribute replaced the low-end, funky militancy of the hip-hop original
> with a hyper-agitated mesh of distorted electronica, asthmatic growls and,
> most daringly, the mellifluous Martina Topley-Bird on lead vocals. Key
> moment: When Tricky incants "Now you switch on, you switch off"
> in his Bristol burr and mutates the grammar of rap into a new, entirely
> English register.

> 28 Jealous Guy - Roxy Music, 1981

> Orig. John Lennon, 1971

> Recorded as a tribute to John Lennon after his murder in December 1980,
> the former Beatle's paean to self-obsession gave Roxy Music their only UK
> number one single. In the process, they transformed an exquisite but
> lovelessly produced miniature into a full-blown, six-minute smoocher,
> while perfectly preserving its intimacy. Key moment: When the
> mild-mannered solo guitar cedes to a gleaming, sensuous sax.

> 27 Summertime Blues - The Who, 1968

> orig. Eddie Cochran, 1958

> More than any of their '60s peers, the Who represented the same young,
> working-class male disaffection as their '50s American rock and roll
> forebears. This cover, then (on their hard-rocking Live at Leeds album) is
> mightily appropriate. Townshend's crashing power chords and Daltrey's
> libidinous howls add up to pure aggro: the giddy, bracing sound of trouble
> brewing. Key moment: the first guitar "KLANGGGG" sets the pulse
> racing splendidly.

> 26 I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself - The White Stripes, 2003

> orig. Dusty Springfield, 1964

> Garage rock's first couple are strong on covers, on a mission to keep
> songwriting traditions from throughout the last century alive. Indeed, the
> days when everyone had a crack at a Bacharach/David tune are long gone.
> Their treatment of this one, originally a number three hit for Dusty
> Springfield, is breathtaking in its emotional intensity. Key moment: The
> crashing chords, into "Like a summer rose, needs the sun and
> rain."

> 25 Wonderwall - Ryan Adams, 2004

> orig. Oasis, 1995

> With gently picked acoustic guitar and ambient atmospherics, Adams
> recreates the Britpop anthem as an intimate blues. Oasis delivered it as a
> declaration; for Adams, it's a heartbreaking plea. Noel Gallagher was so
> impressed, he now performs Adams's version of his own song in concert. Key
> moment: The broken-down emotion Adams conjures singing: "Maybe,
> you're gonna be the one that saves me…"

> 24 Why Can't We Live Together - Sade, 1985

> orig. Timmy Thomas, 1972

> At the height of '80s greed and Cold War angst, the young Anglo-Nigerian
> Sade Adu insinuated into the wine bars of the world this lush, plaintive
> call for peace, love and understanding. The final track on her
> huge-selling Diamond Life album, it introduced Timmy Thomas's hit to a
> whole new generation. It may lack the Hammond organ funk of the original,
> but her voice never sounded stronger. Key moment: The outro, "Gotta
> live, gotta live."

> 23 Caravan of Love - Housemartins, 1986

> orig. Isley Jasper Isley, 1985

> Hull's finest nabbed their only number one single, at Christmas, with this
> ingenious a cappella reworking of Ernie and Marvin Isley (and cousin Chris
> Jasper)'s Christian rallying call. With the bass vocal beating out the
> "bom bom boms" against a shimmering choral waterfall of
> "aaaaahs", a defiant Paul Heaton pleads for the world to join in
> love and peace. And at Christmas, what better message is there? Key
> moment: "I'm your brother, don't you know?"

> 22 (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction - Devo, 1978

> Rolling Stones, 1965

> Who'd have thought that five boiler-suited geeks with flowerpots on their
> heads could tackle such a monolithic '60s hit and triumph? Somehow these
> Darwin-opposing robo-punkers twisted Mick Jagger's disaffection for modern
> consumerism into their own future-retro logic, and the whole Rolling
> Stones rebel ruckus into an irresistibly funky techno-pop masterpiece. Key
> moment: Singer Mark Mothersbaugh's seemingly endless "baby-baby"
> repetition, like a malfunctioning robot.

> 21 Only Love Can Break Your Heart - St Etienne, 1990

> orig. Neil Young, 1970

> Acid house was not all about euphoria. The Balearic scene emerging from
> Ibiza had a penchant for melancholia amid the hedonism, and this record
> fitted right in the middle of that. Moira Lambert's plaintive indie-style
> vocal rides a loping hip-hop beat with shimmering synths, giving Neil
> Young's lost, wistful mood a modernist twist. Key moment: Grown men crying
> on the dancefloor.

> Depeche Mode: at number 18, covered by French pop duo Nouvelle Vague

> 20 Police and Thieves - The Clash, 1977

> orig. Junior Murvin, 1976

> At a time when British reggae comprised polite but dull attempts at
> authenticity, the Clash's stripped-back, garage rock approach came as a
> glorious revelation. While the ethereal falsetto of the original sounded
> incongruous on lines about "guns and ammunition", Strummer's
> gleefully thuggish tones take us straight to an inner city that feels all
> too real. Key moment: the DM-clad spring in the bass line's step.

> 19 Sweet Jane - Cowboy Junkies, 1988

> orig. Velvet Underground, 1970

> Spare, evocative remake of the Velvet Underground's 1970 original. Much
> moodier and less grungy, it is Margo Timmins' almost whispered vocals,
> recorded in a church, which reignite Lou Reed's seedy, downtown anthem.
> The pacing and phrasing are perfect. Key moment: Timmins's longing,
> languorous bridge: "Heavenly wine and roses seem to whisper to me
> when you smile."

> 18 Just Can't Get Enough - Nouvelle Vague, 2004

> Orig: Depeche Mode, 1981

> Terrific though it is, Depeche Mode's original Just Can't Get Enough can
> at times evoke stumbling around a suburban nightclub while cradling a warm
> shandy. Enter Gallic musos Marc Collin and Olivier Libaux, whose sublime
> bossa-nova reworking, with Rio-born singer Eloisia, whisks one instead
> straight to the sands of Ipanema, c1965. (Try their Nouvelle Vague album
> if this sounds your tasse de thé.) Key moment: The glorious pronunciation
> of, "All the fing ya do ta me, an everyfing ya say…"

> 17 Mad World - Gary Jules, 2003

> Orig. Tears For Fears, 1982

> Apparently possessing nothing more than a piano and a voice not unlike
> Michael Stipe's, unknown singer-songwriter Gary Jules ran away with last
> year's Christmas number one spot via his haunting and devastatingly simple
> rendition of Tears for Fears' plinky-plonky electro plodder from 1982. A
> great example of less equalling more. Key moment: The little wobble in
> Jules's voice when he first sings "I find it kinda sad."

> 16 Billie Jean - Shinehead, 1984

> orig. Michael Jackson, 1982

> Two years after Michael Jackson's global hit came this eerie, dead-slow
> reworking from Shinehead, aka New York dancehall reggae MC Carl Aiken.
> Rough & Rugged was the name of the brilliant debut album it appeared
> on, and that sums it up perfectly, as Aiken's falsetto floats above a vast
> echo-chamber of dub and stabbed piano chords. Key moment: The whistled
> "Oo-wee-oo-wee-oo" from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly that
> opens the song.

> 15 Wild Horses - The Flying Burrito Bros, 1971

> orig. The Rolling Stones, 1970

> Country-rock visionary Gram Parsons was on course to self-destruct long
> before he recorded this exquisitely world-weary version of the Stones
> ballad. The sincerity and aching fragility of his delivery show up the
> hamminess of the original to startling effect. Key moment: "Let's do
> some living, after we'll die" had the feeling of lived reality –
> within three years Parson was indeed dead.

> 14 Rocket Man - Kate Bush, 1991

> orig. Elton John, 1970

> Elton John's lament to the loneliness of space travel (or cocaine
> addiction, depending on your age group) was vacuous tinny pop until Kate
> Bush's keening cadences gave it the poignancy it deserved. Her
> little-girl-lost voice and the bittersweet sound of Uilleann pipes add
> startling beauty, and a thrilling chill to the Martian air. Key moment:
> The breathy, pained gasp of "Oh" before the chorus line "No
> no no I'm a rocket man."

> 13 My Favourite Things - John Coltrane, 1960

> orig. Rodgers and Hammerstein (The Sound of Music), 1959

> Cool adventurous jazz was probably the furthest thing from the mind of
> audiences for The Sound of Music. John Coltrane got hold of this hit song,
> though, and by adding subtly oriental harmonies and choosing the soprano
> saxophone as the melody instrument, he was able to create a contemporary
> jazz masterpiece. Key moment: the first time you recognise the tune, as
> the sax gleefully skips around the waltz-like rhythms.

> The Pet Shop Boys: You Were Always on My Mind comes in at number two

> 12 One - Johnny Cash, 2002

> orig. U2, 1991

> Producer Rick Rubin had rescued Cash's career with the American Recordings
> series of albums, and on Vol 3 Cash had truly hit his stride, especially
> on this towering acoustic version of the U2 song. There's a lifetime of
> difference between the two renditions: Bono strains and screeches, Cash
> just reaches down into his soul. Key moment: Cash sings: "You say
> love is a temple." There's an organ playing. Spines tingle.

> 11 Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow - Roberta Flack, 1971

> orig. Shirelles, 1960

> This Carole King-penned narrative of a woman's questioning of a lover's
> blithe sweet nothings was sad and beautiful enough in the Shirelles'
> Spector-produced version. Slowed down to a drifting lament and sung in
> Roberta Flack's velvet voice, it becomes almost unbearably lovely. Love
> and loss, trust and betrayal, innocence and experience are blended into a
> heartbreaking small-hours classic. Key moment: "Tonight the light of
> love is in your eyes": so slow, but so perfectly sung.

> 10 Mr Bojangles - Nina Simone, 1971

> orig. Jerry Jeff Walker, 1967

> Much recorded, often trampled underfoot (hang your head in shame, Bob
> Dylan, Lulu and Robbie Williams), this strange Jerry Jeff Walker ballad
> about an itinerant dancer was made famous by Sammy Davis Jnr as a
> theatrical showstopper. The inimitable Nina Simone gets to the lonely
> heart of the tale, in an ethereal, understated, drifting, low-key version.
> Key moment: The whole song. Simone's almost casual delivery de-dramatises
> the narrative yet ensures the inherent emotion resonates all the louder.

> 9 Comfortably Numb - Scissor Sisters, 2004

> Orig. Pink Floyd, 1979

> Only divine inspiration could explain how, or why, New York's bendiest
> band came to pop Pink Floyd's balloon of pretension by re-recording their
> most horribly self-regarding song in the style of the Saturday Night
> Fever-era Bee Gees. At once cold, sexy and relentlessly danceable, it far
> outshines the original in both concept and execution. Key moment: The
> flurry of electronic handclaps after the line "You may feel a little
> sick."

> 8 Twist and Shout - The Beatles, 1963

> Orig. the Isley Brothers, 1960

> The Beatles recorded their version in a single take for their debut album
> Please Please Me – and the world changed. John Lennon's lead vocal sounds
> as raw and urgent as a live concert, aeons away from the bland,
> computerised studio sound of today. Key moment: John's barked "Shake
> it up baby" after Paul and George's aaahs in the middle.

> 7 Mr Tambourine Man - The Byrds, 1965

> orig. Bob Dylan, 1964

> Folk and rock were inconceivable bedfellows, respectively too earnest and
> too thrill-driven to contemplate each other's existence, until these
> Californian Beatles obsessives fused the two musics in one exquisite,
> harmony-loaded Bob Dylan cover. The lyrics reflected how Dylan, tiring of
> polemic, was now consumed by the seduction of pure music. The Byrds
> completed that transition for him in none-more-beautiful sound, and went
> to number one. Key moment: That guitar-chiming intro.

> 6 Tainted Love - Soft Cell, 1981

> orig. Gloria Jones, 1964

> With Marc Almond's heroically overwrought vocal adding a deliciously
> deviant twist to Dave Ball's slinky synth-pop backing track, this
> straight-ahead '60s soul stomper (originally performed by Gloria Jones –
> later mother of Marc Bolan's son, Rolan) was somehow transformed into the
> mystical bridge between Northern soul and acid house. Key moment: The
> syncopated handclap/keyboard lurch combo which launched a million
> dancefloor forays.

> 5 Respect - Aretha Franklin, 1967

> orig. Otis Redding, 1965

> Soul queen Aretha took Redding's original and turned it into a kind of
> proto-girl power anthem. Redding sang: "All I'm asking is for a
> little respect when I come home." Franklin changed the "I"
> to "you", added the r-e-s-p-e-c-t bit, and made the song her
> own. Key moment: "Sock it to me sock it to me sock it to me sock it
> to me."

> 4 Hallelujah - Jeff Buckley, 1993

> orig. Leonard Cohen, 1984

> If Leonard Cohen has a fault, it's a weakness for ponderous, synth-heavy
> arrangements, and nowhere was this more so than on his original version of
> this lyrically magnificent song. Then Jeff Buckley got hold of it,
> stripped it down, and sang it in his exquisitely pure chorister's voice.
> Definitive. Key moment: The serene, sustained falsetto note towards the
> end.

> 3 My Way - Sid Vicious, 1979

> orig. Frank Sinatra, 1969 (after Paul Anka, 1969)

> He knifed his girlfriend Nancy Spungen to death and died soon afterwards
> from an overdose of heroin supplied by his own mother. But Sid Vicious
> should also be remembered for this riotous version of the song made famous
> by Sinatra, recorded with the rump of the Sex Pistols following Johnny
> Rotten's departure. The Pistols rock like demons, and Vicious snarls and
> sneers his way through the song's valedictory lyric with twisted glee.
> It's mad, hilarious, and thrilling. Key moment: Vicious sings the first
> verse in tones of mock-seriousness (inserting obscenities along the way);
> then the guitars and drums kick in.

> 2 You Were Always on My Mind - Pet Shop Boys, 1987

> orig. Elvis Presley, 1972 (after brenda lee, 1971)

> The Boys, on career best form, elevated Elvis's tender elegy – written by
> Willie Nelson – into a monumental explosion of high pop camp. Chris Lowe
> conjures an electronic symphony of rumbling drums, swelling strings and
> glittering synths to underpin Neil Tennant's crystalline vocals. "I'm
> sorry I treated you wrong," mourned Elvis. "You'd be a fool to
> lose me, cad though I am," seems to be Tennant's message. Key moment:
> the stabbing trumpet sample, introduced before the song kicks in: Da!
> Da-da-da-da-da. Da!

> And the greatest cover ever...

> 1 All Along the Watchtower - Jimi Hendrix Experience, 1968

> orig. Bob Dylan, 1967

> The greatest cover version of all-time: Hendrix doing a Dylan song

> Hendrix's version of a so-so track from Dylan's John Wesley Harding album
> completely outgunned the original. A light, scampering ballad re-emerged
> as a mini-epic of foreboding with Hendrix's heavy three-chord intro
> hanging like a thundercloud and Dylan's lyrics sounding an ominous epitaph
> for the 1960s. Key moment: The last words – "And the wind began to
> howl" - before the closing guitar storm.
 
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