Songs you would have sworn were sung by somebody else.

Thought Aerosmith’s “Dream On” was by Led Zeppelin or Robert Plant or something.

Actually Elvis recorded “Suspicion” first, on his 1962 album Pot Luck. When Terry Stafford’s cover was a hit two years later, Elvis’s own recording was released as a single, but it flopped.

I meant the song by Coldplay (?), is that their name? I just think of them as those “watered-down U2 clones.”

When I saw Donnie Darko I was sure the Gary Jules version of Mad World was actually Michael Stipe of R.E.M…

And count me as another who thought Rescue Me was sung by Aretha Franklin.

Just to make you feel better, the song was written by Paul Williams and he recorded his own version of it the same year that TDN’s version was released.

Yeah, it was a friend of mine who gave me a burnt copy of the Sopranos soundtrack. When I saw the Rolling Stones next to the song’s title, I figured she probably just got it mixed up. But then, like you, I Googled the lyrics, and sure enough, I realized it was indeed the Rolling Stones. I was flabbergasted, because it’s nothing like what you would think a Rolling Stone tune would sound like. I was almost certain that they had to have had Springsteen guesting on that.

I always thought “Lightning Strikes” was by the Four Seasons. It’s actually by Lou Christie.

Oh yeah, Lou Christie is a good one. He wasn’t called the poor man’s Frankie Valli for nothing! :smiley:

A long time ago, I thought “If I can’t have you” was by Diana Ross, not Yvonne Elliman.

Surf City sounds like the Beach Boys except it’s Jan and Dean.

What do you mean, “Rescue Me” isn’t by Aretha Franklin? :wink:

cochrane said:

Wow, and here I was thinking Neil Young was a member of America. :smack:

“Horse With No Name” is a big part of that, but also “Ventura Highway”, and “Sandman”. Apparently Dewey Bunnell sounds a lot like Neil Young.

thelurkinghorror said:

Count me in on that one.

The New and Improved Superman said:

The Coldplay vocalist, Chris Martin, sounds a lot like Bono. Found this:

I was sure that “Poker Face” was “that new Madonna song”. Probably because of the Autotuner.

“Cat’s in the Cradle” is by Harry Chapin and not Cat Stevens (or Yusuf Islam).

Me too. I was familiar with The Hollies’ Bus Stop, and I still find it hard to believe these two songs are by the same band.

This was the one I came in to post. The fact I never even heard the name “Van Morrison” until I was well into my 20s didn’t help.

Not helping matters is the fact that Pizza Hut featured Aretha singing a variation of that song in commercials advertising their then-new delivery service (“Come on Pizza Hut, deliver me!”)

That and putting both artists in your CD rack can give the rest of your music syphilis.

Why on earth would anybody have thought that? Harry Chapin, known for “Cat’s in the Cradle” as well as “Taxi”, sounds absolutely nothing like Cat Stevens.

I’m not even saying how many of these I have been wrong about!

Sure he does, at least as much as many of these other examples. It’s not like Chapin has a Barry White bass and Stevens/Islam sings in a falsetto. They have similar enough voices to make the mistake. Throw in the ‘Cat’ business and Steven’s larger presence and the mistake was almost inevitable.

I’ve told this story before, but… back in 1978 or 1979, when Bonnie Tyler came out with her first hit single, “It’s A Heartache,” I probably heard it dozens of times before I realized it wasn’t Rod Stewart.

And the Commodores’ first big hit, “Machine Gun,” sounded exactly like the kind of synthesizer instrumental Billy Preston was famous for (“Outa Space,” “Space Race,” etc.). It took me a while to catch on that wasn’t Billy Preston.

Yeah, I think at some point I confused the two. Plus on top of that I think Cat Stevens has done a version of “Cat’s in the Cradle,” but not the version.

When I first heard “Gemini Dream”, by the Moody Blues, I was convinced that it was the Electric Light Orchestra.

I was under that impression for some time as well.