Original Versions of Songs You Didnât Know were Covers
Originally published for Geeks and Beats, August 2017.
https://www.geeksandbeats.com/2017/08/songs-didnt-know-covers/
I love a well-done cover song, and I especially love a well-done cover that deviates from the original. Thereâs something endlessly fascinating about how two different people can arrange such dramatically different interpretations of the same source material. What makes this especially fun is when you discover that a song youâve been enjoying for years is itself a reinterpretation. Sometimes it even goes a step further, and a song that you knew as a cover turns out to be a cover of a cover. Researching this list became a much more involved ârabbit holeâ than I ever anticipated, and I am delighted to share my findings with you. Iâm confident that, like me, youâll have more than a few âwhoa, I didnât know that!â moments.Â
Bruce Springsteen â Blinded by the Light
When a WatchMojo video got me digging into this awhile back, this was the one that surprised me most. This is one of those songs that I feel like Iâve been aware of for as long as Iâve cared about music. So it was a bit of a shock to discover in my 40s that, not only is it a cover, but it was originally by The Boss. There are differences in the arrangement and the lyrics, but the Manfred Mann version is generally considered the definitive rendition.Â
Tina Turner â Donât Turn Around
While âBlinded by the Lightâ was the big surprise on my first dive into this topic, this next one blew me away even moreso. Ace of Baseâs third most successful single was originally a Tina Turner song, the B-side of her 1986 single âTypical Maleâ. Bonnie Tyler, whose repertoire of covers is expansive and impressive, also did her own interpretation on 1988âs Hide Your Heart.Â
Iâve Got My Mind Set On You â James RayÂ
Time for a little history about âWeird Alâ Yankovic. In 1988, Al released his album Even Worse. The title had two meanings. First of all, the lead single was âFatâ, a parody of Michael Jacksonâs âBadâ, and the album cover was also a direct parody of Jacksonâs Bad cover. In other words, since Jackson was declaring himself to be âBadâ, Al decided he was âEven Worseâ. Second, all of the other parodies were of covers that had recently been hit singles, by Tiffany, Billy Idol, Los Lobos, and George Harrison.
The last one was the one that surprised me. Harrisonâs most solid 80s hit was actually a cover. I owned 45s of the originals of all the others, but I had never heard James Rayâs original of âIâve Got My Mind Set On Youâ (which Al turned into â(This Songâs Just) Six Words Longâ).Â
The Tide is High â The ParagonsÂ
One of Blondieâs most distinctive qualities was, and still is, a blending of several sounds and moods. As such, this reggae ditty, which was their third #1 single on the Billboard Hot 100, didnât raise many eyebrows. So, few at the time knew that it was a cover of a 1966 rocksteady song by The Paragons. Although, the fact that the gender-swap screwed up the rhyme scheme could have been a clue.Â
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OoEdfB7l18
This oneâs a little weird. Shortly after Natalie Imbruglia had her breakthrough hit with âTornâ in 1997, there was a short-lived minor controversy. Apparently, some people were upset when they found out that Imbruglia didnât write the song. It was a cover of a 1995 song by a relatively unknown alternative act called Ednaswap. Nobody claimed had that she wrote the song, however, and there was nothing new about singers having a cover be their first hit. So the âcontroversyâ was quickly reduced to a footnote, whose most prominent documentation is a mention on Pop-Up Video.
 Adding to the weirdness, Ednaswapâs âoriginalâ wasnât technically the first recording of the song. Two years before they got around to releasing it, a Danish translation,âBrĂŠndtâ (âBurnedâ), was released by Lis SĂžrensen.Â
Girls Just Wanna Have Fun â Robert HazardÂ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5aLNwOxPsjg
I almost didnât include this one because, quite frankly, the original is awful. And, letâs be real, thereâs something creepy about a guy breathily singing about what girls want. Thankfully, Hazardâs recording never got past the demo stage, so Iâll choose to consider Lauperâs version âtechnically a cover but sort of not reallyâ.Â
Downtown Train â Tom Waits
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLtZKkCIVmI
If you asked a random sampling of people around you, thereâs a good chance that many of them wouldnât be able to name a Tom Waits song. On the other hand, itâs almost a guarantee that theyâre familiar with at least one of his songs, but covered by someone else. The Eagles, Alison Krauss, Sarah McLachlan, Bruce Springsteen, and The Ramones are among the many big names to contribute to this. Heck, actress Scarlett Johansson recorded an entire album of Tom Waits songs (it was kind of awful, but I digress).Â
One of the most successful Waits covers is Rod Stewartâs âDowntown Trainâ. The original was a standout track and minorly-successful single from Waitsâ 1985 masterpiece Rain Dogs. Stewartâs 1991 cover starts off with a similarly restrained sound, but gradually swells into a much âbiggerâ, almost celebratory sound.Â
Piece of My Heart â Erma FranklinÂ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0QAxIKf8G4
First off, the more well-known recording, with Janis Joplin on vocals, is properly credited to her band Big Brother and the Holding Company. Second, covers generally draw from that 1968 version, but the original was by Erma Franklin (Aretha Franklinâs older sister). Faith Hillâs 1994 atrocity seemed to be an attempt to destroy the songâs legacy, but Melissa Etheridge managed to restore it a little bit in 2005, even though it was a clumsy attempt at a comeback for Etheridge.
The First Cut is the Deepest â P.P. ArnoldÂ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1-g5VG2pWg
This is one of my favourites. With many of the entries on this list, itâs fun to play the original for someone and watch their face as they slowly realize what theyâre hearing. P.P. Arnoldâs original recording of âThe First Cut is the Deepestâ (written by Cat Stevens) also happens to be a fantastic song in its own right.Â
In 1977, Rod Stewart (him again?) released what most would consider the definitive version, and in 2003 Sheryl Crow covered it as one of two new songs recorded for her best-of collection.Â
Nothing Compares 2 U â The FamilyÂ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZlzN0Gtpp8
In the 80s, there were a lot of Prince side projects and spin-offs. Morris Day and The Time may be the most memorable, with their mega-hit âJungle Loveâ. Wendy & Lisa, Vanity 6, and Apollonia 5 also enjoyed a little time in the spotlight. One of the lesser-known projects, however, was The Family. The Family was often tasked with bringing life to songs that Prince wrote but wasnât interested in doing himself. So even if you knew that Prince wrote SinĂ©ad OâConnorâs 1990 breakthrough hit âNothing Compares 2 Uâ, you might not have known that The Family had recorded it 5 years prior.Â
Prince would eventually record a live version as a duet with Rosie Gaines, which was included on the various iterations of his 1993 compilation The Hits. Also included on this compilation were Princeâs originals of âI Feel 4 Uâ (covered by Chaka Khan in 1984), and âWhen U Were Mineâ (covered by Cyndi Lauper in 1983).Â
Killing Me Softly â Lori LiebermanÂ
In 1996, the Fugees released their breakthrough mega-hit, âKilling Me Softlyâ. Not everyone knew it was a cover of a 1973 Roberta Flack song, but many did. Even fewer knew, however, that Flackâs rendition was itself a cover. The original, by Lori Lieberman in 1972, was a soft acoustic rendition of a poem. âHis songâ was Don McLeanâs âEmpty Chairsâ.Â
The first cover could have turned out quite differently; according to Wikipedia:Â
Helen Reddy has said she was sent the song, but âthe demo⊠sat on my turntable for months without being played because I didnât like the titleâ.Â
Roberta Flackâs successful 1973 cover is still soft, but with some defining chord changes, and a slightly more soulful sound.
Further mutating the tune, The Fugees laid down their hip-hop version in 1996, to much acclaim.Â
If you poke around YouTube looking for versions of this song, youâll probably find about a dozen copies of a crooner version credited to Frank Sinatra. It does kind of sound like The Chairman, but he never actually recorded it. Thatâs Perry Como, from his 1973 album And I Love You So.Â
Some Guys Have All The Luck â PersuadersÂ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3NWbvFsBVo
First released in 1973 by R&B group The Persuaders, Rod Stewartâs cover of âSome Guys Have All the Luckâ served as one of the important hits of his 80s comeback (and his third time appearing on this list, what is it with this guy and covers?) In between those two versions, Robert Palmer also recorded his own version, with significantly altered lyrics and arrangement. Palmerâs version is probably the strangest, kind of a gritty new wave thing, reminiscent of Pete Shelleyâs âHomosapienâ.Â
There have been several other covers, including a gender swapped country version. Of special note is Maxi Priestâs 1987 rendition, which (mostly) returned to the original lyrics and arrangement, but with Maxiâs signature âreggae fusionâ sound.Â
Tainted Love â Gloria Jones
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSehtaY6k1U
When Marilyn Manson covered âTainted Loveâ in 2001 for the Not Another Teen Movie soundtrack, it was fairly common knowledge that he was covering a Soft Cell song. Soft Cellâs 1981 arrangement, however, was not the original. American soul singer Gloria Jonesâ Motown-influenced version was a B-side for âMy Bad Boyâs Cominâ Homeâ, which failed to make a lasting impression domestically. Jones herself, however, had very much made an impression in England, where she was dubbed the âNorthern Queen of Soulâ.Â
Eventually the song entered the radar of the synth-pop duo Soft Cell. Their 1981 version became their only major hit in North America, and one of the defining songs of the 80s.Â
Side notes and honorable mentions:Â
You might already knew that The Isley Brothers recorded âTwist and Shoutâ a year before The Beatles, but did you know that a group called The Top Notes recorded it a year before that?Â
âI Love Rock n Rollâ by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, arguably one of the most ubiquitous and recognized songs of the modern era, was originally released by The Arrows in 1975.Â
Animotionâs âObsessionâ, unofficial theme song of the fashion world for more than 30 years, was originally recorded by Michael Des Barres & Holly Knight.
Madonnaâs âRay of Lightâ was adapted from âSepherynâ by Curtiss Maldoon, though itâs not a direct cover.Â
Led Zeppelin have a storied history of borrowing, adapting, and straight-up stealing. A cursory Google search will provide many articles and videos discussing this, but the two examples which I think best fit the theme are âDazed and Confusedâ, originally by Jake Holmes, and âStairway to Heavenâ, adapted from âTaurusâ by Spirit.Â
Johnny Cashâs âFolsom Prison Bluesâ was adapted from âCrescent City Bluesâ, written by Gordon Jenkins and sung by Beverly Mahr. Also, more than half the songs on Cashâs 5 American Recordings albums are reinterpretations of a diverse selection of songs.