Which bands became massively popular for covering songs rather than recording originals?
Last Updated: 02.07.2025 00:57

Carly Simon
Procol Harum
Paul Williams wrote three hit songs for The Carpenters and three more for Three Dog Night.
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âKentucky Womanâ was written and originally performed by Neil Diamond. It was Deep Purpleâs second single in 1968 and reached #38 in the USA.
âIâm a Believerâ was written by Neil Diamond.
Eagles
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âI Drove All Nightâ was written by Tom Kelly and Billy Steinberg in the style of Roy Orbison, and Orbison recorded the song in 1987 but did not release it before his death the following year. Orbisonâs demo was later engineered and produced by Jeff Lynne of ELO fame and it became a hit in 1992, reaching number seven in the UK and earning a Grammy in the US. In the meantime âI Drove All Nightâ was covered in 1989 by Cyndi Lauper and it became her last top ten single, reaching number six on the Billboard Hot 100. Celine Dion released her cover in 2003 and it reached number one in Canada, Belgium and Sweden, and number two on the US Dance Club chart. It would be her last number one single.
âMy Wayâ was originally a French song called "Comme dâhabitudeâ composed by Jacques Revaux with French lyrics by Giles Thibaut and Claude Francois. Paul Anka wrote the English lyrics.
âPlay Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)â was written by Allen Toussaint.
âPieces of Aprilâ and âTilâ the World Endsâ were written by Dave Loggins.
âAlready Goneâ was written by Jack Tempchin and Robb Strandlund.
âTumbling Diceâ was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.
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âLalenaâ was written and performed by Donovan.
ABBA
âBlack Night,â the bandâs first original single, was not all that original. According to Roger Glover, it âwas nicked from the bass line in Ricky Nelson's âSummertimeâ and then proceeds to play the bassline riff on his grand piano.â
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"Since I've Been Loving You" is nearly identical to âNeverâ which was written by Bob Mosley and recorded by Moby Grape.
Some of the best songs and biggest hits below were written by professional songwriters like Paul Anka, Chuck Berry, Jackson Browne, Leonard Cohen, Sam Cooke, Neil Diamond, Bob Dylan, Buddy Holly, Holly Knight, Cole Porter, Little Richard, Joni Mitchell, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, Smokey Robinson, Neil Sedaka, Pete Seeger, Paul Simon, J.D. Souther, Jim Vallance, Tom Waits, Diane Warren, Hank Williams Sr., Brian Wilson and Neil Young.
Partridge Family
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âMoney (Thatâs What I Want)â was written by Berry Gordy and Janie Bradford.
âI Wasnât Born To Followâ was written by Carole King and covered by the Byrds in the movie Easy Rider. Suggested by Michael Macbean in the comments.
âIâm Gonna Love You Tooâ was written by Buddy Holly.
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âI Donât Want to Miss a Thingâ was written by veteran songwriter Diane Warren.
âSweet Georgia Brownâ was a jazz standard.
"Try a Little Tenderness" was written by Jimmy Campbell, Reg Connelly, and Harry M. Woods; it had previously been performed by Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and Otis Redding (with an arrangement by Isaac Hayes and backed by Booker T. and the M.G.âs). Three Dog Night used the Isaac Hayes arrangement for its cover of the song.
âTell Himâ was written by David Foster and performed as a duet with Barbara Streisand.
âI Really Want to Know Youâ was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
âPoor Poor Pitiful Meâ was written by Warren Zevon.
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Lynyrd Skynyrd
Paul Revere and the Raiders
âWeâve Only Just Begun,â âLet Me Be the Oneâ and âRainy Days and Mondaysâ were written by Paul Williams.
âMy Back Pagesâ was written by Bob Dylan and suggested by Paul Smith in the comments.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience
âI Write the Songsâ was actually written by Bruce Johnston of the Beach Boys! This dichotomy was mentioned in the comments by Nigyl Nissan.
Jimmy Webb wrote âBy the Time I Get to Phoenixâ and âWichita Linemanâ as noted by Ronny Hoff in the comments.
âRiver Deep, Mountain Highâ was written by Phil Spector, Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich.
âAmazingâ was written by Richard Supa and Steven Tyler.
âBig Yellow Taxiâ was written by Joni Mitchell.
âHallelujahâ was written by Leonard Cohen. âHallelujahâ has also been covered by Andrea Bocelli, Michael Bolton, Bono, Jeff Buckley, John Cale, Neil Diamond, Celine Dion, Bob Dylan, Judith Hill, Jennifer Hudson, K.D. Lang, Willie Nelson, Pentatonix, Elvis Presley, Regina Spektor, Rufus Wainwright, and pretty much every singer under the sun!
âShambalaâ was written by Daniel Moore.
Aretha Franklin
â(I Never Promised You a) Rose Gardenâ was written by Joe South, who was suggested in the comments by Chuck B. To show what a small world it is, when Lynn Anderson appeared on the Johnny Carson show, he asked her the name of a young country artist to keep an eye on. Lynn named Beth Harris, who is now my wife, Beth Harris Burch. Beth moved to Nashville and cut an album, but her manager ripped her off and she decided to retire and become a full-time mom to our son Jeremy.
âYouâve Really Got a Hold on Meâ was written by Smokey Robinson.
Manfred Mann
Most bands have done cover songs, but these famous bands covered more than most: Three Dog Night (never wrote any of their biggest hits), Deep Purple (their first five singles were covers), the worldâs most successful cover band, the Beatles (21 of their first 46 recorded tracks were cover songs), the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin.
Tina Turner
Milli Vanilli (pictured above) gets a dishonorable mention for not actually singing the songs they covered!
Led Zeppelin was mentioned in previous comments by Robert Shirley as âone of the worldâs biggest bands and biggest âborrowers.â Their covers and borrowing have been greatly chronicled.â
âHouse of the Rising Sunâ was a traditional folk/blues song.
âYou Belong to Meâ was co-written by Carly Simon and Michael McDonald.
âLighting Strikesâ was written by Richard Supa.
âOneâ was written by the great Harry Nilsson.
âSuzanneâ was written by Leonard Cohen.
"Blue Bayou" was written by Roy Orbison and Joe Melson and originally performed by Roy Orbison.
Michael Jackson
âChainsâ was written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King.
âEverybodyâs a Masterpieceâ was written by George S. Clinton and Richard Reicheg.
âImmortalityâ was written by the Bee Gees (Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, Maurice Gibb) and performed with the Bee Gees providing backing vocals.
âThis Is Itâ was written by Paul Anka with Michael Jackson. Paul Anka was suggested by T. Stephen Cornelius in the comments.
âYouâve Lost That Lovinâ Feelinââ and âYouâre My Soul and Inspirationâ were written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
In the comments Rick Deguchi mentioned that most of Linda Ronstadtâs hits were covers.
âFive Bridgesâ was a cover of a song by The Nice.
Counting Crows
âI Wanna Be Your Manâ was written by Lennon/McCartney.
Judy Collins
âOn Broadwayâ was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
âLove in Vainâ was written by legendary bluesman Robert Johnson.
âBlack Magic Womanâ was written by Peter Green, the lead guitarist for Fleetwood Mac.
âTake It Easyâ was the Eaglesâ debut hit and it was co-written by Jackson Browne and Glenn Frey.
âPeasant Valley Sundayâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
âDaydream Believerâ was written by John Stuart.
âNever,â âAll Eyes,â âThereâs the Girl,â âTall. Dark, Handsome Stranger,â and âI Love Youâ were written
âEverybodyâs Trying to Be My Baby,â âHoney Donâtâ and âMatchboxâ were written by Carl Perkins.
"I Love Rock 'n' Roll" was written by Alan Merrill and Jake Hooker and first recorded by the Arrows, a British rock band, in 1975. This was suggested in the comments by Geoff Morton.
The Blues Brothers were a cover band comprised of SNL stars John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd.
âHurtâ was written by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails.
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âBring It on Home to Meâ was written by Sam Cooke.
âYou Send Meâ and âGood Timesâ were written by Sam Cooke.
âThe Sound of Silenceâ was written by Paul Simon and first performed by Simon and Garfunkel.
âRed, Red Wineâ was written by Neil Diamond.
Eric Clapton
Deep Purple started out wanting to be a "Vanilla Fudge clone" according to Ritchie Blackmore.
âA Love So Beautifulâ was written by Roy Orbison.
Billy Joe Royal
THREE DOG NIGHT
âWords of Love,â âThatâll Be The Day,â âPeggy Sueâ and âCrying, Waiting, Hopingâ were written by Buddy Holly and originally performed by Holly with his band the Crickets. The Beatles were originally the Beetles, an obvious tip of the cap to the Crickets. John Lennon and Paul McCartney credited Holly with inspiring them to write songs.
Eric Carmen
âCrazyâ was written by Desmond Child with Joe Perry and Steven Tyler.
âTwistinâ the Night Awayâ was written by Sam Cooke.
Jimmy Webb wrote the much-lampooned âMacArthur Parkâ as noted by Ronny Hoff in the comments.
Pentatonix is an a cappella cover band.
âHushâ was written by Joe South and originally performed by Billy Joe Royal. âHushâ was Deep Purpleâs first single in 1968 and reached #4 in the USA. It was the bandâs highest-charting single, along with âSmoke on the Water.â
âLivinâ on the Edgeâ was written by Mark Hudson, Joe Perry and Steven Tyler.
THE BEATLES
âIâve Got You Under My Skinâ was written by Cole Porter.
Pat Benatar
âWe Gotta Get Out of This Placeâ was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil and mentioned by John Aughinbaugh in the comments.
"Speed King" borrows from Haydnâs âString Quartet in C.â
âDonât Bring Me Downâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
âYou Give Love A Bad Name,â âLivinâ On A Prayer,â âBad Medicine,â âIâd Die for Youâ and âKeep The Faithâ were written by professional songwriter Desmond Child in collaboration with Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora
âI Drove All Nightâ was a remarkable song, being the last hit single for Roy Orbison and Cyndi Lauper, and the last number one single for Celine Dion.
âShoutâ was also a hit for the Isley Brothers.
âHungryâ and âKicksâ were written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
âOoh Baby Babyâ was written by Smokey Robinson and Pete Moore, and originally performed by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles.
âHeartbreak Hotel,â his first #1 hit, was written by Mae Boren Axton and Tommy Durden.
âWill You Love Me Tomorrowâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
âHelp!â was the bandâs fourth single, a cover of a Beatles song.
Quiet Riot
Otis Redding
Heart
Linda Ronstadt
âLove is a Roseâ was written by Neil Young.
My Bonnie (Lies Over the Ocean) was the Beatlesâ first single, a traditional song.
Kiss
Animals
Paul Williams wrote three hit songs for Three Dog Night.
And now, without further ado, here are artists who didnât write some of their best songsâŠ
Osmonds
DEEP PURPLE
âMama Told Me Not to Comeâ was written by Randy Newman.
âRock Me on the Waterâ was written by Jackson Browne.
âAll By Myselfâ was written by Eric Carmen.
âSomeone to Watch Over Meâ was written by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin.
âWhat About Loveâ was written by Brian Allen, Sheron Alton and Jim Vallance.
âBaby Itâs Youâ was written by Burt Bacharach, Barney Williams and Mack David.
Monkees
Santana
Grand Funk Railroad
âTurn, Turn, Turnâ was written by Pete Seeger in 1959 and was based on the Bible, specifically the third chapter of Ecclesiastes.
On an amusing note (pardon the pun), Barry Manilow did write songs but didnât write âI Write the Songs,â which was written by Bruce Johnson of the Beach Boys. Forgiving him for writing that song and giving it to Barry Manilow would test the compassion and grace of a saint.
âDays of Future Passedâ was a cover of a Moody Blues song.
âBoth Sides Nowâ was written by Joni Mitchell.
Drifters
âBecause the Nightâ was written by Bruce Springsteen.
Richard Harris
LED ZEPPELIN
Grateful Dead
"Easy to Be Hard" was written by Galt MacDermot, James Rado, and Gerome Ragni for the âHairâ musical.
âNot Fade Awayâ was written by Buddy Holly. It was the first song the Stones performed on The Mike Douglas Show in the US in 1964.
Three Dog Night is a rarity among great rock bands in that it never, to my knowledge, wrote one of its greatest hitsâŠ
âSheâs a Ladyâ remains Tom Jonesâs biggest hit in the United States.
âLucilleâ was a cover of a Little Richard song.
J.D. Souther either wrote or co-wrote a number of Eaglesâ hits, including âHeartache Tonight,â âVictim of Love,â âNew Kid in Town,â âHow Long (Has This Been Going On)â and âBest of My Love.â
âItâs So Easyâ and âThatâll Be the Dayâ were written by Buddy Holly, who performed the songs with his band the Crickets.
Carole King
âJersey Girlâ was written by Tom Waits.
âUp on the Roofâ and âSome Kind of Wonderfulâ were written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
âLove Is a Battlefieldâ was written by Holly Knight and Mike Chapman.
âWar Machineâ was written by professional songwriter Jim Vallance.
âSchool Daysâ was written by Chuck Berry.
"Whole Lotta Love" was nicked from âYou Need Loveâ by Willie Dixon, which Robert Planet later admitted. A court ruled in Dixonâs favor.
âDoh Wah Diddy Diddyâ was written by Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich and originally recorded by The Exciters.
âLike a Rolling Stoneâ was written by Bob Dylan and had the perfect title for the band.
âNot Fade Away,â âOh Boyâ and âRave Onâ were originally performed by Buddy Holly and his band the Crickets. âOh! Boyâ and âRave Onâ were both written by Sonny West and Bill Tilghman.
âSend In the Clownsâ was written by Stephen Sondheim.
AC/DC
âJohnny B. Goodeâ and âLittle Queenieâ were written by Chuck Berry.
âNicky Chinn and Mike Chapman belong here. They wrote songs for a looong list of top names back in the 70s including New World, Sweet, Gary Glitter, Mud, Racey, Suzi Quatro and Smokie. They were instrumental in bringing many bands and solo musicians onto the charts, including Patti Smith and Lita Ford, and they provided number one hits in the US for Toni Basil, Nick Gilder and Pat Benatar.â â Bogdan Kadziola in the comments
âEarly Yes one-upped Vanilla Fudge with long covers of I See You (6:47), Every Little Thing (5:47), Somethingâs Coming (7:09), No Opportunity Necessary (4:45), Everydays (6:05), and America (10:30).â â Don Campbell in the comments.
Sergei Rachmaninoff deserves a credit for âAll By Myself.â
âSpanish Harlem,â one of my all-time favorite songs, was written and first performed by Ben E. King. Aretha changed the lyrics slightly to make the girl a bit darker, if I remember correctly.
Aerosmith
Their album Girl You Know Itâs True went 6x platinum and they not only didnât write the songs, they didnât sing a single note!
âBecause You Loved Meâ was written by Diane Warren.
âT for Texasâ was written by Jimmy Rodgers.
âYouâre No Goodâ was a rock version of the R&B song written by Clint Ballard Jr.
Johnny Cash
Yes
I will furthermore reveal the remarkable song that became the last hit single for both Roy Orbison and Cyndi Lauper, and the last number one single for Celine Dion. Can you guess the title? If so, can you guess who wrote in, and why?
âJoy To The Worldâ and âNever Been to Spainâ were written by Hoyt Axton.
âAlisonâ and âGirls Talkâ were written by Elvis Costello.
âHallelujahâ was written by the famous songwriting team of Roger Greenway and Roger Cook. It was Deep Purpleâs fifth consecutive single to be a cover song.
âYour Songâ was written by Sir Elton John and Bernie Taupin.
"Til There Was You" written by Meredith Wilson for his musical The Music Man.
âAfter Midnightâ and âCocaineâ were written by JJ Cale.
âPuppy Loveâ was written by Paul Anka.
Bon Jovi
Marilyn Manson
There are also great songs penned by songwriting teams like Burt Bacharach and Hal David, the Bee Gees, George and Ira Gershwin, Holland-Dozier-Holland, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, Sir Elton John and Bernie Taupin, Carole King and Gerry Goffin, John Lennon and Sir Paul McCartney, and Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
UB40
âBetter Be Good to Me,â âOne of the Livingâ and â(Simply) The Bestâ were written or co-written by Holly Knight.
Lynn Anderson
âBlinded by the Lightâ was written by Bruce Springsteen.
âHushâ and âDown in the Boondocksâ were written by Joe South.
The Carpenters
âLong Tall Sallyâ was written by Little Richard, Robert "Bumps" Blackwell and Enotris Johnson.
âGood Timesâ was written by Sam Cooke.
Sha Na Na was ever and always a cover band!
âYou Belong to Meâ was written by Carly Simon. âYou Belong to Meâ has also been covered by Chaka Khan (feat. Michael McDonald) and Jennifer Lopez.
HONORABLE MENTION: Alien Ant Farm, Big Bang, Tony Bennett, Bowling for Soup, BTS, Captain & Tennille, Cher, Patsy Cline, Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald, Connie Francis, iKON, KISS, Manfred Mann and The Earth Band, Dean Martin, Johnny Mathis, Ricky Martin, Monsta X, Patti Page, Rascal Flatts, Ratt, Sha Na Na, Stray Kids, Seventeen, Barbra Streisand
Chiffons
Celine Dion
"Liar" was written by Russ Ballard of Argent.
Trivia fans may be interested to know that Three Dog Night introduced Hoyt Axton, John Hiatt, Dave Loggins, Randy Newman and Paul Williams to the larger musical world. Also, that Hoyt Axtonâs mother was Mae Boren Axton, who co-wrote Elvis Presleyâs first #1 hit, âHeartbreak Hotel,â and introduced the 19-year-old Elvis to Col. Tom Parker, his longtime manager.
âNot Fade Awayâ was written by Buddy Holly and became one of the Grateful Deadâs standards.
âDifferent Drumâ was written by Michael Nesmith of the Monkees and it became her first hit.
The Beatles started out as a cover band and never stopped covering songs: 21 of their first 46 recorded tracks were cover songs.
âItâs All Coming Back to Me Nowâ was written by Jim Steinman, who is most famous for his collaborations with Meatloaf.
âI Hate Myself For Loving Youâ was written by professional songwriter Desmond Child with Joan Jett
âRing of Fireâ was written by June Carter. Ironically, in Johnny Cashâs biggest hit, âI Walk the Line,â he promised to always be faithful to his wife. But his second-biggest hit, âRing of Fire,â was written by his mistress at the time, who later became June Carter Cash.
âWonderful Worldâ was written by Sam Cooke, Herb Alpert and Lou Adler. âWonderful Worldâ has also been covered by Hermanâs Hermits, Otis Redding, Johnny Nash and the trio of Paul Simon, Art Garfunkel and James Taylor.
âMr. Tambourine Manâ was written by Bob Dylan.
âA Change Is Gonna Come,â âChain Gang,â âCupidâ and âShakeâ were written by Sam Cooke.
Carole King
Milli Vanilli
âPlease Mr. Postmanâ was written by Robert Bateman, Georgia Dobbins, William Garrett, Freddie Gorman and Brian Holland. The song was a hit for the Marvelettes.
âI Canât Help It (If Iâm Still in Love with Youâ) was written by country legend Hank Williams Sr.
Carole King is one of the worldâs best and most prolific songwriters.
As for major individual artists, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Tom Jones, George Jones, George Strait, Whitney Houston, Celine Dion and Rihanna didnât write any of their major hits, to my knowledge. Elton John wrote music but Bernie Taupin typically composed his lyrics. I have seen the great Janis Joplin included in such lists incorrectly, because she wrote âMercedes Benzâ by herself and âDown on Meâ with Eddy Head, and those are two great songs. Aretha Franklin usually recorded songs written by others, but she wrote the excellent âThinkâ which rose to #7 on the Billboard Hot 100, and âRock Steady,â which reached #9.
Guns âNâ Roses
THE ROLLING STONES
âPinkâ was written by Glen Ballard, Richard Supa and Steven Tyler.
âLove Will Keep Us Aliveâ was written by John Capaldi, Paul Carrack and Peter Vale.
âEliâs Comingâ was written by Laura Nyro.
âWoodstockâ was written by Joni Mitchell.
Elvis Presley
âIt Doesnât Matter Anymoreâ was written by Paul Anka and originally performed by Buddy Holly and the Crickets.
âSomewhere Out Thereâ by Linda Ronstadt and James Ingram was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
Frank Sinatra
Three Dog Night may be the most successful major band that usually covered songs written by others, and theirs was an eclectic ensemble of songwriters.
âDifficult To Cureâ was an uptempo guitar-based reworking of Beethoven's âOde To Joy.â
Elvis was mentioned by T. Stephen Cornelius in the comments as an artist who never wrote his songs, or at least not any famous ones of which I am aware that he wrote on his own.
âCall me the Breezeâ was written by JJ Cale.
âDonât Know Muchâ by Linda Ronstadt and Aaron Neville was written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
âRock Me Babyâ was written by blues legend B. B. King.
Blondie
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
âProud Maryâ was written by John Fogerty of Creedence Clearwater Revival at the time.
Rod Stewart
In the comments Rick Deguchi mentioned that many of Elvisâs biggest hits were covers, including âHound Dog,â âItâs Now or Never,â âBlue Suede Shoes,â âSuspicious Minds,â âAll Shook Up,â âLove Me Tenderâ and âAre You Lonesome Tonight.â
âOne Fine Dayâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
Three Dog Night, circa 1972. Back LâR: Joe Schermie, Floyd Sneed, Michael Allsup and Jimmy Greenspoon. Front LâR: Danny Hutton, Cory Wells and Chuck Negron.
Patti Smith
âDarlinââ and âTime to Get Aloneâ were written by Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys.
âAll Along the Watchtowerâ was written by Bob Dylan.
âHeat Waveâ was written by the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting team.
âDude (Looks Like A Lady)â was written by professional songwriter Desmond Child in collaboration with Joe Perry and Steven Tyler.
âOlâ 55â was written by Tom Waits.
#MUSIC #ROCK #MRBMUSIC #MRBROCK
âGeorgia on My Mindâ was written by Hoagy Carmichael and made popular by Ray Charles.
âPrivate Dancerâ was written by Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits.
My original answer did not include individual singers, but I received so many excellent suggestions in previous comments that I have expanded it. And solo singers do, of course, employ bands. Session musicians form bands, however temporary. Again, I am interpreting the question broadly. If that freaks someone out, no one is forcing them to read â so âno harm, no foulâ as we used to say in pickup basketball games.
Tom Jones
Carly Simon
âDizzy Miss Lizzie,â âBad Boyâ and âSlow Downâ were written by Larry Williams.
Glen Campbell
âRiver Deep, Mountain Highâ was the bandâs third single, a cover of an Ike & Tina Turner classic written by Phil Spector, Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry.
As I go, I will reveal which two famous singers lied like dogs, thanks to their songwriters!
The band also borrowed from Bach, Rossini, Strauss and Tchaikovsky.
âKnockinâ on Heavenâs Doorâ was written by Bob Dylan.
âTwist and Shoutâ was written by Phil Medley and Bert Russell. It was a hit for the Top Notes and the Isley Brothers.
Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman
âKansas City/Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey!â was written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. It was originally performed by Little Willie Littlefield.
âPaint it Blackâ was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richard and originally performed by the Rolling Stones.
Michael Bolton
âMama Mia,â âDancing Queen,â âFernando,â âSOS,â âKnowing Me, Knowing Youâ, âRing Ring,â âHoney Honey,â âI Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do,â âThe Name of the Gameâ and âWaterlooâ were either written primarily by Stig Anderson or he contributed and was credited as a songwriter. Anderson contributed so much to the group that heâs been called âthe fifth member of ABBA.â It should be noted that other members of the band also contributed to the songs in question.
âPeaceful Easy Feelingâ was written by Jack Tempchin.
Please note that I am not âcondemningâ anyone for recording songs they didnât write, as someone suggested in previous comments. I am simply answering a question that I find interesting. Some of the best songs ever recorded were covers, including the magnificent âWithout Youâ by Harry Nilsson (originally written and recorded by Badfinger) and any number of covers by Elvis, Whitney, Celine, et al.
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
The Who
âI Was Made For Loving Youâ was written by songwriter pros Desmond Child and Vini Poncia.
Sam Cooke had his start as the lead singer of the Soul Stirrers, recording gospel songs like âPeace in the Valley.â Aretha Franklin also had her start in gospel and was influenced by Sam Cooke to pursue a career in mainstream popular music.
"The Flame" was a power ballad written by British songwriters Bob Mitchell and Nick Graham.
âI Get a Kick Out of Youâ was written by Cole Porter.
âBaby Please Donât Goâ was written by legendary blues guitarist Big Joe Williams.
âA Whiter Shade of Paleâ was credited to singer Gary Brooker, lyricist Keith Reid and organist Matthew Fisher but the melody is unmistakably Bachâs âAir on the G-Stringâ!
âSummertime Bluesâ was written and recorded by Eddie Cochran (and covered by many other artists). Suggested by Michael Gibbs in the comments.
Bruce Springsteen
âLong, Long Timeâ was written by Gary White.
Righteous Brothers
âHound Dogâ was written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller and recorded in 1952 by Big Mama Thornton.
âThink Twiceâ was co-written by Peter Sinfield of King Crimson and Bucks Fizz producer Andy Hill.
The English version of âRing Ringâ was translated by Neil Sedaka and Phil Cody.
Disturbed
âCum On Feel The Noizeâ was written by Slade members Noddy Holder and Jim Lea.
âWhen Will I Be Lovedâ was a country-rock version of a song written by Phil Everly of the Everly Brothers. It became Ronstadtâs first #1 song on the country charts.
âThe Lemon Songâ was directly lifted from âKilling Floorâ by Chester Burnett aka Howling Wolf. Although Led Zep's version did insert Robert Plant's not-so-subtle double entendre involving the dispersal of lemon juice. â James Raines in the comments
âGo Away Little Girlâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
Cheap Trick
Barry Manilow
âRag Dollâ was written by Holly Knight, Richard Vallance, Joe Perry and Steven Tyler.
âBlack and Whiteâ was a 1954 folk song written by David I. Arkin (the father of actor Alan Arkin) and Earl Robinson.
âBack in the U.S.Aâ was written by Chuck Berry.
âRoll Over Beethoven,ââRock & Roll Musicâ and âSweet Little Sixteenâ were written by Chuck Berry, the Shakespeare of early rock ânâ roll.
âYouâre So Vainâ was written by Carly Simon. âYouâre So Vainâ has also been covered by Liza Minnelli and Faster Pussycat
"Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" was written by Anne Bredon and originally recorded by Joan Baez.
The songs above were suggested by Geoff Morton in the comments.
âThe Loco-Motionâ was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.
"Out in the Country" was written by Paul Williams and Roger Nichols.
Doobie Brothers
Home Free is an a cappella cover band.
Shirelles
âThe Show Must Go Onâ was written by Leo Sayer.
Paul Carrack wrote âLove Will Keep Us Alive.â
âAn Old-Fashioned Love Song,â âThe Family of Manâ and âOut in the Countryâ were written by Paul Williams.
Byrds
âThe Tide Is Highâ was written by John Holt and performed by his Jamaican group The Paragons.
"Sure as I'm Sitting Here" was written by John Hiatt.