The idea of putting together a playlist of great Bob Dylan covers came when I listened to Them and their fantastic version of It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue. I have to give credit where credit is due. The impetus to revisit the Northern Irish garage rockers who launched the musical career of Van Morrison came from Max at PowerPop and his post about Them tune Mighty Like a Rose.
With so many artists having covered Dylan tunes, finding examples was very easy. The hard part was to limit the list to ten tracks, even though I deliberately focused on his ’60s albums for all but one track. I just couldn’t help it – Dylan’s early phase is the one I know and like the best!
Stevie Wonder/Blowin’ in the Wind
Kicking off this playlist is the great Stevie Wonder who included Blowin’ in the Wind on his studio album Up-Tight released in May 1966. His cover also came out separately as a single, yielding a No. 9 hit on the Billboard Hot 100. Originally, Dylan recorded the track for his second studio album The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan from May 1963. I love how Wonder took a folk song and turned it into a beautiful soul tune.
Leon Russell/It’s a Hard Rain’s a Gonna Fall
When Leon Russell covers a tune, you just know you gonna get something great. It’s a Hard Rain’s a Gonna Fall was included on his sophomore solo album Leon Russell and the Shelter People that came out in May 1971. The tune is another track from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.
Tracy Chapman/The Times They Are a-Changin’
Tracy Chapman’s version of the title track from Dylan’s third studio album The Times They Are a-Changin’ is one of my favorite renditions in this playlist. This is from a special concert at New York’s Madison Square Garden that took place on October 16, 1992 to celebrate Bob Dylan’s 30th anniversary as a recording artist. It was captured on a live double album appropriately titled The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration and released in August 1993. Dylan’s original recording first appeared in January 1964.
Johnny Cash & June Carter Cash/It Ain’t Me, Babe
I simply couldn’t leave out The Man in Black from this collection. Here’s Johnny Cash’s version of It Ain’t Me, Babe featuring June Carter Cash. It was included on The Essential Johnny Cash, a compilation that appeared in February 2002 to commemorate Cash’s 70th birthday. The original was part of Another Side of Bob Dylan, his fourth studio album from August 1964.
The Byrds/Mr. Tambourine Man
Not many other things get me as excited as the beautiful jingle-jangle sound of a Rickenbacker electric guitar. I also couldn’t think of anyone better in this context than Roger McGuinn and The Byrds who covered various Dylan tunes. My favorite remains Mr. Tambourine Man, their first single released in April 1965. The tune also was the title track of their debut album that came out in June of the same year. Dylan’s original was included on Bringing It All Back Home, his fifth studio album from March 1965.
Them/It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
Now on to the tune that trigged the idea for the entire list. Them’s rendition of It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue has to be one of the best Dylan covers of all time. They included it on their second album Them Again from January 1966, the last to feature Van Morrison who subsequently launched a solo career and remains active to this day. Dylan’s original is another track from Bringing It All Back Home.
Mick Ronson & David Bowie/Like a Rolling Stone
Until today, I had never heard of this version of Like a Rolling Stone, which appeared on Mick Ronson’s final solo album Heaven and Hull from May 1994. For this tune, the ex-Spiders From Mars guitarist teamed up with the former band’s frontman David Bowie. What a cool rendition! Dylan first recorded the track for Highway 61 Revisited released in August 1965. The maestro’s sixth studio album remains my favorite.
Joe Cocker/Just Like a Woman
A covers playlist definitely has to feature who perhaps is the ultimate master of the cover: Joe Cocker. His take of Just Like a Woman was included on his debut With a Little Help From My from My Friends released in May 1969. That album’s title track may well be the ultimate rock cover. As for Dylan, he first recorded the tune for his seventh studio album Blonde on Blonde from June 1966.
Jimi Hendrix/All Along the Watchtower
This next tune was another must to feature. Jimi Hendrix’s version of All Along the Watchtower, which appeared on Electric Ladyland, the third and final studio album by the Jimi Hendrix Experience, just is absolutely killer! No disrespect to Bob Dylan, who after all penned the song, but after listening to Hendrix, one could be forgiven to forget about the original. Admittedly, I had known this cover for many years before I first heard Dylan’s rendition, which he included on his eighth studio album John Wesley Harding released in December 1967.
Indigo Girls/Tangled Up in Blue
I’d like to wrap things up with a beautiful cover of one of my favorite Bob Dylan songs, Tangled Up in Blue. It first appeared on his 15th studio album Blood on the Tracks from January 1975. In October 1995, Atlanta folk rock duo Indigo Girls released a live album titled 1200 Curfews, which features this incredible eight-minute version of the Dylan gem.
Sources: Wikipedia; YouTube
Thank you Christian!
I’ve heard all of these except the Indigo Girls version of Tangled Up In Blue…they do a really good job. The two I like the best are Jimi Hendrix…even Bob said he had the definitive version of All Along The Watchtower and The Byrds Mr. Tambourine Man.
But saying all of that…there is not a version I don’t like on this page. Great post Christian. It’s interesting to hear all of the interpretations.
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It was amazing to me to realize how many Dylan covers exist. While it’s perhaps not surprising, it simply had not occurred to me.
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Bob has released almost 40 studio albums. I would love to know how many people have covered his songs. It’s probably a figure we couldn’t comprehend.
All the ones on small labels etc…
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Lovely to see/hear the Leon Russell song. His nasal voice suits Dylan nicely.
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Thanks! Yep, I really like it and frankly had not known about it!
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Excellent selection of Zimmy covers. Every one sounds good. First time hearing Them’s cover of It’s all Over Now Baby Blue. I think this may even beat the original. Bowie/Ronson cover is really good too. I have that 30th Anniversary double CD album which has a bunch of good ones also. Have you heard Bryan Ferry’s Dylanesque? I haven’t but want to.
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Thanks! Agree, Them’s version of “Baby Blue” is a true gem. Together with Hendrix’s “All Along the Watchtower” and The Byrds’ “Mr. Tambourine Man,” it’s my favorite Dylan cover – at least among the ones I know.
I haven’t heard “Dylanesque” but recall listening to Roxy Music’s cover of “A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall.”
It really did take compiling this playlist to realize how many Dylan covers are out there. I think my little collection doesn’t even scratch the surface!
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Good list – it’s hard to go past Hendrix and The Byrds. I liked the Leon Russell cover, but I also have a soft spot for Bryan Ferry’s ultra-campy take on ‘A Hard Rain’. I have toyed with the idea of doing a post on bad covers of The Times They Are A Changin’ – Simon and Garfunkel and The Seekers both did pretty lame versions IMO.
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Together with Them, Hendrix and The Byrds are my favorite Dylan covers.
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One slightly more obscure one I love is ‘Percy’s Song’ by Fairport Convention. I’ve never heard Dylan’s version, but the Fairport one is a harmony fest.
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Wow, perhaps not surprisingly as a fan of harmony vocals, I really like Fairport Convention’s take of “Percy’s Song.” I also just listened to Dylan’s original. Fairport really kicked it up a few notches, similar to what The Byrds did with Mr. Tambourine Man!
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They kind of are like the UK Byrds in terms of spinning off lots of other acts. They started off sounding like they really liked Jefferson Airplane.
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So many good ones. You must dig Neil and the MG’s ‘Watchtower’?
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Great list. I’d never heard the “Like a Rolling Stone” cover by Mick Ronson & David Bowie. It’s a terrific reimagining of the classic song.
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