Cover songs walk a fine line between homage and reinvention. A good rendition must be distinct enough to earn its own identity, yet familiar enough to remind listeners of the original. When artists decide to step far outside the comfort zone, the outcome can be brilliantâor downright baffling. Below, we dive into ten unbelievably strange reinterpretations that left fans scratching their heads.
ten unbelievably strange Covers Unpacked
10 Elton John (originally by Nina Simone)
Peeling back the layers of this track raises more questions than answers. Back in 1970, before Elton John became a household name, he was hired to produce lowâbudget âsoundâalikeâ recordings for bargain labels that churned out knockâoffs of chartâtopping hits. The puzzling part is why a market existed for such cheap imitations, though the practice still lingers in various forms today.
The real mystery lies in why Elton John, of all people, was chosen to tackle a civilârights anthem celebrating Black pride. The twist comes from the version being duplicated: a 1969 UK topâfive rendition by Jamaican duo Bob and Marcia, which turned the original into a maleâfemale duet. To mirror that structure, Elton paired with ClareâŻTorryârenowned for her soaring vocals on Pink Floydâs âThe Great Gig in the Sky.â
Illâadvised.
9 DuranâŻDuran (originally by PublicâŻEnemy)
DuranâŻDuranâs 1995 covers collection Thank You featured several daring picks, but none as bold as this one. Like Eltonâs version, it places a song rooted in the AfricanâAmerican experience into the mouths of white British pop stars. Unlike Johnâs assignment, however, no one commissioned DuranâŻDuran to record itâso the question becomes: what were they thinking?
The track manages to spin the originalâs urgent message into a commentary on affluent Englishmen struggling to summon emergency services abroad. While the choice seems questionable, the band managed to inject fresh energy, shedding their dated â80s sound and proving they could still evolve. Rolling Stone even labeled the effort âdemented genius.â
Still, illâadvised.
8 Jackie Chan and AniâŻDiFranco (originally by NatâŻKingâŻCole and NatalieâŻCole)
The compilation When Pigs Fly curates a handful of wildly unexpected covers, and âUnforgettableâ tops the list. It features martialâarts legend JackieâŻChan, who, despite his global fame, maintains a surprisingly prolific singing career across Cantonese, Mandarin, Taiwanese, Japanese, and English albums since 1984. He frequently provides theme songs for his movies, making his vocal chops less of a surprise in Asia.
The oddity emerges when Chan attempts the classic duet with folkârock singer AniâŻDiFranco. Chanâs broken English and rough delivery clash with the smooth, polished original, prompting DiFranco to step in and smooth over the rough edges. One can only imagine how much more cohesive the piece might have been if Chan sang in his native Cantonese.
Illâadvised (but charming).
7 Devo (originally by Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young)
When Pigs Fly opened its set with Devoâs take on âOhio,â a decision that instantly grabs attention. To understand why it feels so outâofâplace, we need the backstory: NeilâŻYoung penned âOhioâ as a protest anthem after the 1970 Kent State shootings, where four antiâwar demonstrators were killed and nine wounded by the National Guard.
Both Devo members, GeraldâŻCasale and MarkâŻMothersbaugh, attended Kent State, and Casale witnessed the tragedy firsthand. He once told Youngâs biographer that ârich hippies were making money off something horrible they didnât grasp.â Devoâs cold, industrial sound makes it impossible to tell whether their rendition serves as personal catharsis or a detached commentary. In a 2020 interview, Casale recalled the guardâs warning, âThis is an unlawful assembly, you must disperse,â a line that eerily opens their version.
Strange.
6 Lesley Gore (originally by AC/DC)
Rounding out the When Pigs Fly collection, LesleyâŻGore delivers a delightfully unexpected spin on AC/DCâs hardârock staple. Gore, who shot to fame in 1963 with the teen anthem âItâs My Party,â reimagines âDirty Deedsâ as a cheeky, elderlyâwoman perspective, playing the role of a sweetâbutâsassy matriarch whoâs still up for some mischievous funâthink BettyâŻWhite delivering a filthy joke.
The originalâs gritty guitars and thundering bass are replaced with brassy horns and a playful piano arrangement, giving the track an R&Bâflavored vibe reminiscent of OtisâŻRedding. Notably, Gore altered the lyric âhappy to be your backâdoor manâ to better suit her characterâs voice, ensuring the cover feels fresh while retaining the songâs mischievous spirit.
Strange.
5 Charles Bradley (originally by Black Sabbath and Nirvana, respectively)
CharlesâŻBradleyâs journey reads like a Hollywood script. Born in 1948, he spent decades impersonating JamesâŻBrown under the moniker BlackâŻVelvet, only breaking through at ageâŻ53 when Daptone Records coâfounder BoscoâŻMann discovered him. He released his debut album in 2002 and, tragically, passed away in 2017 from stomach cancer.
Bradleyâs brief recording career bookended two astonishing hardârock covers. In 2011, he tackled Nirvanaâs âStay Awayâ for a Spin tribute, delivering a psychedelic reinterpretation that even required a note explaining why the lyric âGod is gayâ was omitted. Six years later, he recorded BlackâŻSabbathâs ballad âChanges,â which found new life as the theme for Netflixâs raunchy animated series BigâŻMouth, showcasing his ability to bridge soul and metal.
Strange.
4 FaithâŻNoâŻMore (originally by the BeeâŻGees)
FaithâŻNoâŻMore, known for their gritty, genreâbending sound, surprised everyone by covering the BeeâŻGeesâ gentle pop classic âIâŻStartedâŻaâŻJoke.â The bandâs history of covering unlikely tracksâlike BlackâŻSabbathâs âWarâŻPigsâ and VanâŻHalenâs âJumpââwas a deliberate move to irritate their artâpunk fanbase. Their most successful single, a faithful rendition of the Commodoresâ âEasy,â proved they could strike gold with a wellâchosen cover.
âIâŻStartedâŻaâŻJokeâ follows that formula: a spotâon recreation with no hint of irony. Frontman MikeâŻPatton adopts a soaring falsetto that mirrors the BeeâŻGeesâ style, but he injects a queer, androgynous edge that recontextualizes the melancholy lyrics. The accompanying video, a swan song after the bandâs 1998 breakup, features drag queen DavidâŻHoyle karaokeâsinging alongside UK actor MartinâŻFreeman, adding an extra layer of eccentricity.
Strange.
3 Kesha (originally by Bob Dylan)
Amnesty Internationalâs 2012 Dylan tribute, Chimes of Freedom, spanned four CDs and 76 tracks, showcasing the sheer breadth of Dylan covers. Among the sea of familiar renditions, Keshaâs aâcapellaâish take on âDonâtâŻThinkâŻTwice,âŻItâsâŻAlrightâ stands out as a bold, unconventional choice.
She delivers the song almost entirely without instrumentation, punctuated only by a brief, eerie string passage. Her vocal delivery oscillates between a sobbing whisper and a spokenâword cadence, creating an intimate, uncomfortable atmosphere. The sparse arrangement forces the listener to confront the raw emotion of a breakup, making the track unforgettable despiteâor because ofâits stark minimalism.
Strange.
2 Tina Turner and David Bowie (originally by Iggy Pop)
While some argue that Bowieâs version of âTonightâ isnât a true coverâsince he coâwrote the song with IggyâŻPopâit remains a perplexing entry. Bowie originally crafted the track for Iggyâs 1977 album The Idiot, and later recorded his own take during the commercial peak of his career, pairing his voice with TinaâŻTurnerâs powerhouse vocals.
The original lyrics describe a fatal drug overdose, complete with Iggyâs spoken intro spelling out the grim narrative. Bowie omitted that spoken segment, opting instead for a languid, calypsoâinfused duet that contrasts sharply with the dark subject matter. Most listeners at the time likely missed the underlying tragedy, focusing instead on the smooth, mainstream vibe.
Strange and illâadvised.
1 Barbra Streisand (originally by David Bowie)
When the original artist publicly denounces a coverâcalling it âbloody awfulâ and âatrociousââthe odds of redemption are slim. DavidâŻBowie lambasted BarbraâŻStreisandâs 1976 rendition of âLifeâŻonâŻMarsâ in a Playboy interview, later reiterating his disdain on VH1âs Storytellers in 1999, joking that her husbandâhairdresser JonâŻPeters produced, arranged, and even blowâdried the track.
Despite the scathing criticism, Streisandâs formidable vocal range lends a certain gravitas to Bowieâs soaring melody. Produced by Petersâwho had no prior experience in music productionâthe arrangement is widely regarded as disastrous, yet Streisandâs voice still manages to shine through the questionable orchestration.
Illâadvised.

