Gold Dust Woman - Cover Versions

Cover Versions

"Gold Dust Woman"
Single by Hole
from the album The Crow: City of Angels
B-side I Wanna Be Your Dog
Spit
Released Summer 1996
Format CD single
Recorded Spring 1996
Genre Alternative rock
Label Geffen
Hole singles chronology
"Softer, Softest"
(1995)
"Gold Dust Woman"
(1996)
"Celebrity Skin"
(1998)
  • A cover version by American alternative rock band Hole was released as their ninth single in 1996 on CD by Geffen. It was also featured on the soundtrack to The Crow: City of Angels and was produced by Ric Ocasek of The Cars.
  • Sister Hazel recorded a cover of the song for the 1998 tribute album Legacy: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac's Rumours
  • The Spill Canvas included a cover of the song on their 2007 EP Denial Feels So Good
  • Country legend Waylon Jennings recorded a country/blues version of the song in 1978 on the LP Waylon & Willie.
  • Sheryl Crow performed the song on her live album Sheryl Crow and Friends: Live from Central Park alongside Stevie Nicks.
  • The song was covered live in 2009 by Grace Potter and The Nocturnals as they opened for Gov't Mule, with occasional performances on the same tour by Gov't Mule with Grace Potter guesting on lead vocals. Grace Potter was a special guest with Allman Brothers in March of 2012 at the Beacon theater NYC, where she shared vocals with Warren Haynes on Gold Dust Woman .
  • Hard-rock band Hydrogyn covered the song on their 2010 album Judgement.
  • Elle Jonas covered this song in 2009, and it can be found on her Myspace page.

Read more about this topic:  Gold Dust Woman

Famous quotes containing the words cover and/or versions:

    Again we have here two distinctions that are no distinctions, but made to seem so by terms invented by I know not whom to cover ignorance, and blind the understanding of the reader: for it cannot be conceived that there is any liberty greater, than for a man to do what he will.
    Thomas Hobbes (1579–1688)

    The assumption must be that those who can see value only in tradition, or versions of it, deny man’s ability to adapt to changing circumstances.
    Stephen Bayley (b. 1951)