Dec 192025
 

Follow all our Best of 2025 coverage (along with previous year-end lists) here.

Last year’s unexpected theme was Tom Petty covers. For no obvious reason, he popped up again and again on our 2024 year-end list. And whaddya know, Tom’s back this year, with two more Petty covers on our list. This year, however, he is not the most-covered artist on our list.

That’s a tie between two artists, one extremely of-the-moment, one timeless. With three covers apiece, Chappell Roan and Neil Young share the most-best-covered crown. (Artists with two covers apiece this year, in addition to Petty, are Gillian Welch, John Prine, and—this one’s surprising—Nelly Furtado!)

Spoiler alert: None of those appears in the number-one position. Number one covers an artist who I don’t think has ever appeared on one of our year-end lists. But don’t skip ahead. There are 49 equally (well, almost) as good covers to get through first, spanning genres and sounds and eras and ages. Here we go.

Cover art by Hope Silverman

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Feb 102025
 
casino hearts jesus doesn't want me for a sunbeam cover

“Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam” was originally written by The Vaselines as an answer song to the early 20th century children’s Christian hymn “I’ll Be a Sunbeam.” But everyone knows it as “Jesus Doesn’t Want Me for a Sunbeam,” the name Nirvana gave it when they included it in their MTV Unplugged show. That concert turned into an album that became the most successful album from that series. And so the world knows the song by an incorrect name. Continue reading »