Songs with impressions of other singers/groups

Oh, well, then, BACK IN THE USSR.

Henry Gross’ song “Shannon” was about Beach Boy Carl Wilson’s Irish setter, which is why he sings the chorus in Carl’s trademark falsetto.

Dylan Thomas?

Whoever he was.

Ditto for the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.

I know we’re getting away from the original point of the OP but I can’t resist bringing up The Masked Marauders, a real LP created to fit a fictitious LP review. Check out “I Can’t Get No Nookie”.

There are some great imitations of rock musicians on some of the National Lampoon LPs, such as "Old Maid (Southern California Brings Me Down)"by “Neil Young” (Tony Scheuren) on Good-Bye Pop 1952-1976.

The Bonzo Dog Band’s “Death Cab for Cute*” (note the person introducing it) is an Elvis impersonation.

*Yes, it’s the origin of the band name. And the Bonzos also performed it on the Beatles’ Magical Mystery Tour, too.

Todd Rundgren’s “I Saw The Light” is a stylistic homage, musically and vocally, to Carole King.

Um…Can you tell me how you came up with that?

The best one is Magical Misery Tour with vocals by Tony Hendra. It is all John Lennon’s actual words from his Jann Wenner interview.

In the song Black Country Rock, David Bowie did an imitation of Marc Bolan.

(fangirlishly posted on Bowie’s birthday)

"Todd Rundgren’s best-known songs – the Carole King pastiche "I Saw the Light…"

And along with people who admit that when they first heard the song, they thought it was King herself performing it. I’m proud to say that I have never been amongst those people, but I more than certainly can see/hear the King-esque nuances between the piano and Rundgren’s vocal styling on the track.

A billboard writer saying that doesn’t constitute a cite. It’s the paid verbiage of someone who probably wasn’t born when these people were current. I guess you’ve never read a music writer slinging BS?

Here’s Guttermouth doing a What If… Fred Schneider tried out for the doors

I didn’t recognize this at all back in 1979, but years later, Doug Fieger of the Knack said he was doing a Johnny Cash imitation on “Good Girls Don’t.”

Still not sure I hear it.

I don’t know if this qualifies , as I only know this one song by them, but from the first time I heard / saw the video by The Darkness’s I Believe in a Thing Called Love, my first thought was that they(or the lead singer, anyway) were imitating Freddie Mercury.

The Turtles Present The Battle of The Bands featured a dozen tracks parodying different genres and artists. Each cut had a different “artist” (The Quad City Ramblers, The L.A. Bust '66, Fats Mallard and the Bluegrass Fireball, etc.) and ranged from bluegrass to California surf music to psychedelica to Malibu Canyon folk rock. The roots, especially the Beach Boys in “Surfer Dan” and Van Dyke Parks in “Food,” are pretty obvious.

As a jab at their label, the Turtles actually parodied themselves on two cuts. “Elenore” was supposed to be a spoof follow-up to “Happy Together” (and actually surprised the group when it turned out to be an actual hit) while “Surfer Dan” parodied the group’s own existence as The Crossfires, before they became The Turtles.

“Stuck in the Middle with You” by Stealer’s Wheel was a Bob Dylan parody; many people think it’s Dylan singing it himself.

The Authentic British Blues” by Wilderness Road seems to imitate John Mayall with the harmonica and immediately after.

“Friends of Mine” by The Guess Who has Burton doing his Jim Morrison impersonation. Listen here at 4:00 onward.

Sugarloaf’s song “Don’t Call Us (We’ll Call You)” name-checks John, Paul and George (but sadly, not Ringo), then lifts one of the riffs from “I Feel Fine”.