Shuffle Sundays is a weekly feature in which we feature a cover chosen at random by my iTunes shuffle. The songs will usually be good, occasionally be bad, always be interesting. All downloads will only be available for one week, so get them while you can.

I remember when I first got 1971’s Randy Newman Live I got a huge kick out of his cover of Three Dog Night’s “Mama Told Me Not to Come.” I couldn’t believe he turned the soul blast into a minor-key lament. Well, he didn’t, but it was months before I found out the cover went the other way.

Newman originally wrote the song in 1966 for Eric Burdon and the Animals, but the record label withdrew it before release. Big mistake. Four years later Three Dog Night made it a number-one hit (the only Newman song to ever accomplish that, incidentally).

A year after that, rhythm and blues sensation Wilson Pickett got his hands on the tune, releasing it as his final single for Atlantic in 1972. It comes from the same horn-fueled mold as the Three Dog Night version, which is ironic because the b-side was George Jackson’s “Covering the Same Old Ground.” With Wilson’s sonic boom of voice and an understated guitar solo by Steve Cropper (I think) though, it bursts forward with a vigor all its own.

Wilson Pickett – Mama Told Me Not To Come (Randy Newman) [more]

What do you think? Discuss this song in the comments section below.

Jan 162010

Cover News is a weekly feature keeping you up to date on the goings-on in the world of cover tunes, tribute albums, etc. Plus, at the bottom we post the array of cover tunes we’ve been sent in the past week. Have you recorded a cool cover? Send an mp3 to the email address on the right and we’ll post it!






This Week’s News


Jay Reatard died this past week at age 29. While he never lead the healthiest lifestyle, it was still a shock. Here’s one of his final recordings, covering Nirvana’s “Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle”. [Jay Reatard]

It’s a new year, but the John Hughes tributes keep coming. For a guy who never recorded a song in his life, musicians do love him. Here’s Death Cab. [VH1]

To help New Zealand punk and recent stroke victim Chris Knox with his medical bills, 33 indie musicians have banded together to cover his songs for the slightly morbidly-titled Stroke tribute album. First up: reclusive Neutral Milk Hotel singer Jeff Magnum. [Stereogum]

Supergrass side project the Hot Rats are coming out with their debut LP, and it’s all random quasi-ironic covers! Here’s them on Letterman (remember him? the one not on NBC?) fighting for their right to wear red dresses or something. [YouTube]

Also in the late night world, “Neil Young” stopped by Jimmy Fallon to lament all those people looking like fools with their pants…you know. [Late Night with Jimmy Fallon]

Fifty covers by My Morning Jacket. ‘Nuff said. [You Ain’t No Picasso]

One of these days I’ll do a set of DEVO covers. Until then: Harlem covering “Come Back Jonee.” [Aquarium Drunkard]

Ted Leo tweets covers of female popstars for no good reason Why not? [Tweet 1, 2, 3]

When Johnny Cash died a few years back, rumors swirled about more recording sessions with Rick Rubin. One set was released in 2006 and now the final album, American VI: Ain’t No Grave is coming next month. [Pitchfork]

Who’s Benjamin Durdle? I don’t know either. But a new tribute album may help teach the world. Or at least the few people who would listen to a tribute album to someone they’ve never heard of. [PopMatters]

This Week’s Submissions

Julian Shah-Tayler – Darling Nikki (Prince) [more]

Send your cover to the email address on the right!

The first post of the month features covers of every track on a famous album. Got an idea for a future pick? Leave a note in the comments!


In 1967 Jimi Hendrix exploded on the scene with his debut Are You Experienced. It only took about twenty seconds into “Purple Haze” to realize rock and roll wasn’t going to be the same. Though Hendrix covers tend to be an excuse for self-indulgent guitar wankery, approaching Jimi’s compositions from other angles reveals an underappreciated songwriting talent.

Edit 1/16: Links removed by request of the RIAA.

RDM – Purple Haze
If Hendrix had lived longer, maybe he would have experimented with mariachi. Since he didn’t, RDM explores the possibilities. [Buy]

Will Phalen – Manic Depression
The number one test of a good song: being able to withstand the transition to solo acoustic. [Buy]

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds – Hey Joe (Billy Roberts)
After he blew up in Britain, Jimi brought the Experience to perform on lame variety show It’s Lulu (hosted by the “To Sir With Love” singer). After her inane introduction, Hendrix dutifully makes it through about two minutes of the song before declaring “We’re going to stop playing this rubbish” and busting into Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love.” The show quickly pulls the plug, but the video lives on. [Buy]

Screaming Trees – Love or Confusion
Grunge pioneers Screaming Trees never achieved the fame of fellow Northwest residents Nirvana and Pearl Jam, but before the label blew up Sub Pop released this song on a 1988 compilation. The guitars are just as loud as ever, but crunch and noise take the place of soloing. [Buy]

Emmylou Harris – May This Be Love
When Emmylou Harris released her acclaimed Wrecking Ball in 1995, she brought her sound over to a new generation of alternative radio listeners with the help of a non-country producer (Daniel Lanous in this case). It set the prototype for Johnny Cash’s American Recordings. [Buy]

Beauty Pill – I Don’t Live Today
Some of Hendrix’s hardest rocking songs are also his saddest. [Buy]

Jamie Cullum – The Wind Cries Mary
Jazz-pop pianist Jamie Cullum’s 2003 album Twentysomething featured covers of “Singing in the Rain” and “I Could Have Danced All Night.” Needless to say, this swinging choice came out of left field. [Buy]

Joan As Police Woman – Fire
We named Joan As Police Woman’s simply-titled Cover the sixth-best cover album of the year. Here’s another reason why. [Buy]

Pat Metheny – Third Stone from the Sun
This song has a similar title as the awful ’90s television show 3rd Rock from the Sun (responsible for the cardinal sin of bringing French Stewart into our lives). Try not to hold that against it. [Buy]

Giant Sand – Foxy Lady
Attending the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 25th Anniversary show in October (my review), I saw Jeff Beck bring out Billy Gibbons for a faithful version of this one (video). As anyone familiar with their work will guess, Giant Sand takes it in a different direction. Dissonance meets spoken-word recitation in this blast of atonal noise. [Buy]

Patti Smith – Are You Experienced?
Patti released this on her 2007 covers album Twelve. While good, it paled next to more ambitious takes on “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and “Gimme Shelter.” In live performances like this one though, she stretched it out to a blistering twelve minutes complete with free-form poetry and dissonant clarinet solos. [Buy]

Shuffle Sundays is a weekly feature in which we feature a cover chosen at random by my iTunes shuffle. The songs will usually be good, occasionally be bad, always be interesting. All downloads will only be available for one week, so get them while you can.



Elvis Presley’s pink 1955 Cadillac Fleetwood may be the most famous car in rock and roll. Originally purchased as a gift for his mother (who didn’t even have a driver’s license), Elvis reclaimed it after a previous vehicle went up in flames. Though the King had many cars come and go in his life, he always held onto that Caddy, which since his death has enjoyed a quiet retirement at Graceland.

The celebrated sedan has made many pop culture cameos, most notably in Bruce Springsteen’s “Pink Cadillac.” The rockabilly feel of the original coupled with the innuendo-laden lyrics drew straight from the Presley tradition, but at the last minute Bruce dropped it from Born in the U.S.A. in favor of “I’m Going Down.” Live performances from the era helped introduce the tune to his audience, including this ten-minute version from a Philadelphia show where he introduces it with his version of the Garden of Eden story.


Sadly, the song didn’t achieve wider fame until from a cheesy R&B cover by Natalie Cole three years later. It sounds like Donna Summer attempting “That’s All Right Mama,” belting this overproduced schlockfest oblivious to any hint of sexual suggestion.

Graham Parker manages better. Best known for his late ‘70s work with the Rumour, Parker’s relationship with Springsteen goes back to the latter’s guest vocals on 1980 song “Endless Night,” which Rolling Stone characterized as “just-singing-along irrelevance.”

For 2003 tribute album Light of Day Parker delivered this acoustic “Pink Cadillac,” returning the song to its original incarnation as a solo performance recorded for Springsteen’s stark 1982 Nebraska. The driving strumming sounds sincere, but the wink in Parker’s voice shows he knows exactly what the Boss is talking about. And it’s not a car.

Graham Parker – Pink Cadillac (Bruce Springsteen) [Buy]

What do you think? Discuss this song in the comments section below.

Jan 092010

Cover News is a weekly feature keeping you up to date on the goings-on in the world of cover tunes, tribute albums, etc. Plus, at the bottom we post the array of cover tunes we’ve been sent in the past week. Have you recorded a cool cover? Send an mp3 to the email address on the right and we’ll post it!






This Week’s News


New Facebook Discussion: Favorite Elvis Cover. [Facebook]

In honor of the King’s birthday, indie-dance troubadour Lightspeed Champion covers Presley’s “Devil in Disguise.” The song’s pretty good, but the video may be the greatest thing you’ll see all year. [NME]

The New Years Eve covers keep rolling in. Up first: Amanda Palmer’s devastating “Hurt” with the Boston Pops. [YouTube]

Chicago favorites Local H started 2010 with seven space-themed covers tackling everyone from Daft Punk to KISS. [Archive.org]

Heading to Vancouver in February? Skip the Olympics and check out a Neil Young tribute concert featuring Lou Reed, Broken Social Scene, Mark Kozelek and more. [Exclaim]

The new movie Old Dogs (by the same visionaries who brought you Wild Hogs) features John Travolta covering Bobby Brown. No way that’ll be bad! [YouTube]

A lot can be said about Nick Jonas’ new band, but one thing’s for sure: they’re better than the JoBros. At the first show of their new tour they slammed out some Michael Jackson. [Ace Showbiz]

The ever-productive folks at CLLCT have put together a new tribute album to Jonathan Richman for your downloading pleasure. Worth it for the name alone. [CLLCT]

Emo screamers Thrice go all mellow on a gospel-tinged Tom Waits cover. [Daytrotter]

Journeyman musician Jack White’s latest project: Producing Queen of Rockabilly Wanda Jackson in covers of Amy Winehouse and Johnny Kidd and the Pirates. [Rolling Stone]

Willie Nelson’s latest album features covers of songs from the 1920s through ‘60s, including the country classic “Dark As a Dungeon.” [Willie Nelson]

Nada Surf’s churning out a covers record too, tackling slightly more modern tunes from Kate Bush to the Moody Blues. There’s already a demo of their take on Depeche Mode’s “Enjoy the Silence” streaming on their MySpace. [MySpace]

This Week’s Submissions

Brian Grosz – Lick My Love Pump (Spinal Tap) [more]

Natubella – N.I.B. (Black Sabbath) [more]

Jan 042010

Seems like everyone made more resolutions than usual this year. It’s easy to see why. After what everyone but China agrees was a decidedly crappy decade, the opportunity for a fresh start, however artificial, feels revitalizing. The individual New Years Resolutions will quickly fade as always, but hopefully the collective optimism towards a new decade has more staying power.


OK Go – This Will Be Our Year (The Zombies)
The Zombies released this single early in 1968, but sadly their optimism was misplaced — by the time it hit stores the band had already broken up. [Buy]

The Dresden Dolls – New Years Day (U2)
The tag says “12/31/03,” but the 10-9-8 countdown leading into this performance suggests that’s a few seconds out of date. This apt (if slightly clichéd) song turns romantic potential into rejuvenating possibility, Amanda Palmer singing “I will begin again” like an emotional cleansing. [Buy]

Easy Star All Stars – Fitter Happier (Radiohead)
A reggae Radiohead tribute album seems a shaky proposition, but it’s hard to deny the naming potential: Radiodread. Actually this cover is about as reggae as the original is pop, but that doesn’t stop the All Stars from translating the list of resolutions into Rasta-speak. [Buy]

The Flaming Lips – (Just Like) Starting Over (John Lennon)
This 1980 single hit number-one two weeks after Lennon’s death, persevering despite the fact that its b-side was Yoko Ono simulating orgasm in Japanese. [Buy]

Lyle Lovett – Blue Skies (Irving Berlin)
Irving Berlin wrote this as a last-minute addition to the obscure Rodgers and Hart musical Betsy in 1926, three years before the Great Depression hit. Though the show was a flop, the song was an instant success. On opening night the audience demanded star Belle Baker reprise the song a stunning twenty-four times. [Buy]

Elton John – Don’t Stop (Fleetwood Mac)
Rumours is one of the most depressing breakup albums in history, but “Don’t Stop” brings a rare glimmer of hope. The lyrics seem almost too cheery taken on their own, but in the context of such a painful album the forced positivity takes on all sorts of narrative nuances. [Buy]

Joe K’s Kid – Changes (David Bowie)
Featuring the best stutter since “My Generation,” the “Changes” single came smack in the middle of Bowie promoting his significantly weirder album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust (last month’s Full Album). While the chorus seems optimistic on first listen, some strange lyrical twists make you wonder. [Buy]

Goldspot – Float On (Modest Mouse)
“Float On” comes off the aptly-titled Good News for People Who Love Bad News. “I was just kind of fed up with how bad shit had been going and how dark everything was, with bad news coming from everywhere,” songwriter Issac Brock told The A.V. Club. “I just want to feel good for a day.” [Buy]

Elliott Murphy – Better Days (Bruce Springsteen)
Bruce Springsteen has complained that when he made happy music in the early ‘90s, audiences turned away. He’s got a point. While righteous average-Joe indignation has always been a part of his appeal though, the fact that the two “happy” albums he refers to were his first without the E Street Band didn’t help matters. [Buy]

Muse – Feeling Good (Newley/Bricusse)
Another huge hit from a semi-obscure musical, “Feeling Good” comes from 1965’s The Roar of the Greasepaint – the Smell of the Crowd. The song gained prominence through a recording by Nina Simone, but rendition ain’t too shabby either — Total Guitar magazine named it the fifth best cover of all time. [Buy]

The next Full Album set, traditionally Cover Me’s first major post of the month, will go up next week.

Shuffle Sundays is a weekly feature in which we feature a cover chosen at random by my iTunes shuffle. The songs will usually be good, occasionally be bad, always be interesting. All downloads will only be available for one week, so get them while you can.


Well, it was bound to happen eventually. Ladies and gentlemen, Cover Me is ashamed to present: A truly awful Shuffle Sundays cover.

Due to a desire to keep tribute albums complete, not every cover song in the old iTunes library is a gem. To its credit, the blandly-titled The Duran Duran Tribute Album has some good tunes. Eve’s Plum does a seductive “Save a Prayer” while Home Grown puts a smooth ska swing to “Planet Earth.” Unfortunately, it also contains Gob’s merciless assault on “A View to a Kill.”

The original “View to a Kill” holds several historical distinctions. It is the only James Bond theme to hit number one on the charts. It was the final song Duran Duran recorded with their original lineup before their 2001 reunion. Plus, the video features one of the cheesiest closing lines ever committed to tape.


If Gob’s cover never quite lifts off, it’s not for lack of trying. The British Columbia quartet put their three-chord punk spin on the ’80s anthem, changing what was a mediocre movie theme to something far more aggressive…and unpleasant.

The quickest way a cover song can fail is by imitating the original, so give Gob credit for avoiding that on this 87-second blast. In fact, they bastardize the song so thoroughly it’s unclear if they’ve even heard the original. M would not approve.

Gob – A View to a Kill (Duran Duran) [Buy]

What do you think? Am I being too harsh? Discuss this song in the comments section below.

Jan 022010

Cover News is a weekly feature keeping you up to date on the goings-on in the world of cover tunes, tribute albums, etc. Plus, at the bottom we post the array of cover tunes we’ve been sent in the past week. Have you recorded a cool cover? Send an mp3 to the email address on the right and we’ll post it!





Vic Chessnut (R.I.P.)


This Week’s News



The Best Cover Songs of 2009 post may have gotten lost in the holiday shuffle for some people. If you missed it…25 downloads counting down the best of the year! [Cover Me]

Christmas is over. The fat goose was slaughtered, the boughs of holly are starting to smell, and the ten lords a-leaping have died from exhaustion. As many of you know, we posted a new Christmas tune every day of Advent to Twitter. Follow us on Twitter so you don’t miss out on the next Twit-sclusive (almost to 500 followers…exciting stuff coming when we hit the mark). First though, catch up on all the Christmas covers at once. [Box.net]

The year of entertainer deaths claimed one final victim in songwriter in Vic Chesnutt. Boyhowdy pays tribute with some nice words and cover tunes. [Cover Lay Down]

Blue moon last night, an optimistic open to a new decade. Seems like there’s a certain song one might play… [I Am Fuel, You Are Friends]

The Flaming Lips ushered in 2010 by covering the complete Dark Side of the Moon. As with anything they do, it sounds…interesting. [Rolling Stone]

Good cover / Bad cover: Ain’t No Sunshine [My Old Kentucky Blog]

In honor of the just-passed thirtieth anniversary of Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk, a couple covers. [The Days of Lore]

FBI releases Michael Jackson tribute album! All proceeds go to keeping an eye on Bono. [The Spoof]

If you didn’t happen to celebrate your new years eve at a Katerine concert in Belgium, see what you missed with her Beyoncé/Pointer Sisters mash-up. [Belgovision]

New Joe Strummer tribute album, released for free on his charity’s website. [Strummerville]

This Week’s Submissions

Donna Beasley – Love My Way (Psychedelic Furs) [more]

David Bennett – Still Still Still [more]

The Crown Vandals – Idioteque (Radiohead) [more]

Railcars – Dreams (The Cranberries) [more]

Betty Steeles – What a Wonderful World (Louis Armstrong) [more]

Via Tania – Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood (Nina Simone) [more]

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