Submitted by sbprasad t3_10q4g4h in Music

Often a cover version will be better known or at least more highly regarded than the original, even if the original is by a notable artist, e.g. The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s cover of Bob Dylan’s All Along the Watchtower.

Which originals do you think are unfairly less acclaimed or are less well known than one of their covers? For me, it’s Al Green’s Take Me to the River, a recording far, far better than David Byrne’s weirdness on the Talking Heads cover of it.

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Bluesummers76 t1_j6nr5bz wrote

Tom Waits' Downtown Train and Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah. I don't like the cover versions.

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sbprasad OP t1_j6nrcjo wrote

LC’s Hallelujah’s synths hit so hard. To some they sound cheesy/dated but they really have an emotional resonance for me.

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Positive_T_DnB t1_j6oowii wrote

Unpopular opinion: I Will Always Love You by Dolly Parton is a soft-spoken sweet minimal love song that is more powerful than Whitney Houston's version. While Whiteney may be the most talented pop singer of all time, Dolly's sweet little voice really conveys the quiet and personal pain that is needing to leave someone you love.

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Opus-the-Penguin t1_j6pb3vl wrote

Good choice! Dolly sounds like she means it, or at least she's trying to behind the tears. Whitney sounds like it's all about her. You want to know who will always love you? ME, that's who! MemememememememememeMEEEEEE!!!!

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Opus-the-Penguin t1_j6ob9zh wrote

GREAT question! It so often gets asked the other way. (It's a good question that way too, just overdone.) Disturbed's cover of "The Sound of Silence" got a lot of attention 7 or 8 years ago. Like a lot of people, I was blown away. It was powerful and raw. People said it had replaced the original. But for me it ended up being a one-play wonder. Once I'd heard it, I didn't need to hear it again. The unexpectedness was the hook. Once that was gone, the cover was much less interesting. I kept being drawn back to the Simon and Garfunkel original. It was quiet and gentle and yet somehow so powerful that it pushed the newer version aside and re-asserted itself as the ur-text.

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Opus-the-Penguin t1_j6p06t3 wrote

I'll throw in a vote for The Kinks' original of "You Really Got Me". I like the Van Halen version but when I compare it to The Kinks, I think they're overdoing it a bit.

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Trobus t1_j6nwahq wrote

Bill Withers - Lean on Me, infinitely better then the Club Nouveau version that always gets radio play.

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sbprasad OP t1_j6nwlj4 wrote

I am such a sucker for the arrangements/production on golden era Bill Withers… it’s just so tasteful.

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MikeHatSable t1_j6nssxw wrote

Stevie Wonder's Higher Ground is so much better than RHCP's cover, but I do like both.

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sbprasad OP t1_j6ntjct wrote

I love both for different reasons but agree that Stevie’s version is better.

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RZAxlash t1_j6p0drs wrote

Just here to say NIN hurt is the better version

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SirCuddlywhiskers t1_j6nr3yz wrote

Mountain Dew - Grateful Dead

Mountain Dew - Gregg and Duane Allman

Both are amazing covers

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rondonjon t1_j6ntczn wrote

Morning*

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SirCuddlywhiskers t1_j6nuebw wrote

Embarrassing. Been working all day and my brain doesn’t function properly anymore lol

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rondonjon t1_j6nuxoi wrote

It would be a great name for a song if it wasn’t so associated with a soft drink lol.

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Kvothetheraven603 t1_j6p8b3z wrote

Sound of Silence. I can’t stand the Disturbed version.

Black Magic Woman - Original by Fleetwood Mac is my preferred version.

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micbac t1_j6pgoxa wrote

NIN Hurt > Johnny Cash Hurt

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SoMoHiker t1_j6nrwh0 wrote

Mnemic’s cover of Duran Duran’s Wildboys

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MikeHatSable t1_j6nt46r wrote

What about Annie Lennox's cover of Take Me to the River?

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sbprasad OP t1_j6ntnpe wrote

I’m going to have to listen to it, I’ve been on a bit of a Eurythmics binge lately!

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Ron_Maiden69420 t1_j6o7ub5 wrote

Literally any song that Nirvana covered. D7 by Wipers is 100x better than nirvana version

Kurt's version of Where's Did You Sleep Last Night is absolute shit compared to Leadbellys OG recording

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sbprasad OP t1_j6o8817 wrote

Nirvana’s version of Man Who Sold the World was pretty good but Mick Ronson’s arrangements on Bowie’s original are 👌

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db6796 t1_j6ou2ev wrote

I thought the way Kurt let his voice crack was a nice subtle thing to add compared to how just naturally weird Leadbelly’s voice was. Not saying either is better, but just thought I’d add something to the conversation.

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Rekordkollector t1_j6onger wrote

Al Green ruined How do you mend a broken heart what a pathetic version. That woman who died in the bath did an awful version of the Dolly Parton song. Brandy by Scott English was brilliant Mandy by that long nosed freak was not.

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