Covers
The song was covered in the following years:
- 1967 – by the jazz guitarist Gábor Szabó and The California Dreamers
- 1971 – by the jazz guitarist George Benson
- 1980 – by the punk band The Last Words
- 1980 – by the punk / gothic rock band The Damned
- 1981 – by the post punk band The Mo-Dettes in a Peel Session
- 1985 – by the punk band The Zarkons (Formerly known as The Alley Cats)
- 1987 – by the heavy metal band Sanctuary
- 1987 – by the heavy metal band Lizzy Borden
- 1987 – by the synth-pop band Act
- 1987 – by the Avant–garde jazz classical band Durutti Column
- 1989 – by the hardcore punk band Slapshot
- 1989 – by the comedy rock band The Frogs
- 1990 – by the house music duo David Diebold and Kim Cataluna
- 1995 – by The Murmurs (MCA Records)
- 1995 – by Mephisto Walz
- 1996 – by the Icelandic singer-songwriter Emilíana Torrini, later used in the soundtrack for 2011 film Sucker Punch
- 1996 – by the Norwegian heavy metal band In the Woods... for their White Rabbit EP and later (2000) included in their Three Times Seven on a Pilgrimage album
- 1996 – by the American Black Metal band Wind of the Black Mountains (albeit slightly altered and renamed 'Black Goat') on their Sing Thou Unholy Servants album
- 1997 – by Born for Bliss
- 1998 – by Ed & Denyze Alleyne-Johnson
- 1999 – by the Cincinnati-based Gothic/Garage Rock band Stop the Car for their final album Crash, after having featured the song regularly in their live set lists since the 1980s
- 2001 – by the industrial band Collide. A remix version appears in the ending credits of the 2007 film, Resident Evil: Extinction
- 2002 – by Sleater-Kinney at the Majestic Theater in Detroit, Michigan
- 2002 – by Enon for Don't Know When I'll Be Back Again VVA Benefit Compilation
- 2003 – by the performance art / experimental rock group Blue Man Group with vocals by Esthero
- 2003 – by June Tabor and the Oysterband
- 2004 – by My Morning Jacket
- 2005 – by Siobhan Fahey for The Best of Shakespears Sister album
- 2006 – remixed by the psychedelic trance act Fuzzion as Little Girl on the album Black Magic.
- 2006 – by the Brechtian punk cabaret duo The Dresden Dolls at the Bonnaroo Music Festival
- 2006 – by The Cadets Drum and Bugle Corps in their show Volume 2: Through the Looking Glass
- 2006 – by Lana Lane for Gemini album.
- 2007 – by Stan Ridgway as an encore song during his summer tour celebrating the 25th anniversary of Wall of Voodoo's album Call of the West.
- 2007 – by Patti Smith on her cover album Twelve.
- 2007 – by The Vincent Black Shadow at the Warped Tour, later recorded in the studio for the 2008 EP "Head In A Box"
- 2007 – by Trinidad & Tobago rock band, Rango Tango.
- 2007 – by The Crüxshadows on their Birthday EP.
- 2008 – by The Spectacles at the Bowery Ballroom
- 2008 – by Alternative band The Smashing Pumpkins as a tease in Heavy Metal Machine.
- 2009 – by Russian rock-musician Nike Borzov in the soundtrack for his audio-book "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" (Russian translation of Hunter S. Thompson's novel) as "Black Rabbit" and "Funky Rabbit".
- 2010 – by Grace Potter and the Nocturnals on the Alice in Wonderland soundtrack "Almost Alice".
- 2010 -- by The Indecent on their debut album Her Screwed Up Head.
- 2011 – by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, performing live on the NPR show "Fresh Air"
- 2011 – by Australian group Floating Me, as a part of their live sets (fans voted on the band's Facebook page for a song for them to cover).
- 2011 – by Emilíana Torrini on the soundtrack Sucker Punch
Read more about this topic: White Rabbit (song)
Famous quotes containing the word covers:
“Wishing to get a better view than I had yet had of the ocean, which, we are told, covers more than two thirds of the globe, but of which a man who lives a few miles inland may never see any trace, more than of another world, I made a visit to Cape Cod.... But having come so fresh to the sea, I have got but little salted.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Here a pretty Baby lies
Sung asleep with Lullabies:
Pray be silent, and not stirre
Th easie earth that covers her.”
—Robert Herrick (15911674)
“Whatever an author puts between the two covers of his book is public property; whatever of himself he does not put there is his private property, as much as if he had never written a word.”
—Gail Hamilton (18331896)