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    10 Surprising Bette Midler Cover Songs

    Over the years, Bette Midler's music has often been dismissed for being too schmaltzy or because she tends to go way, way old school with her cover choices, and while the former might be relative, as to the latter, she tackled the Rosemary Clooney songbook in 2003, then followed it in 2005 by covering the Peggy Lee songbook. Not that there's anything wrong with tackling standards, but there was a time not so long ago when Midler was turning in versions of some pretty awesome contemporary tunes.

    1. Tom Waits, "Shiver My Timbers"

    2. Bob Dylan, "Buckets of Rain"

    3. Neil Young, "Birds"

    In the intro to her version of "Birds," which originally appeared on Neil Young's 1970 album, After the Gold Rush, Midler teases Young a bit, calling him "mellow and laid back," then tries so hard to get into the same mindset that she can't remember if she's actually performed the song or not, asking the audience, "Did I sing the ballad yet? Was it wonderful?"

    4. Sammy Hagar, "Red"

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    The more casual Midler fans are likely aware of her second Sammy Hagar cover, "Keep On Rockin'," since it appeared on the multi-platinum-selling soundtrack to her 1980 film, The Rose. The diehards, however, will recall that she tackled the song that helped secure the Red Rocker his longtime nickname on 1977's Broken Blossom.

    5. Bob Seger, "Fire Down Below"

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    Speaking of The Rose, Midler can be heard covering Bob Seger's "Fire Down Below" in the film, yet the track never actually made its way onto the soundtrack. Fortunately, she decided to add the song to her setlist, resulting in its appearance on her 1980 concert album, Divine Madness.

    6. Marshall Crenshaw, "You're My Favorite Waste of Time"

    Although Midler's cover of Marshall Crenshaw's most memorable B-side was released as the second single from her 1983 album, No Frills, it was ultimately overshadowed by the third single, her version of the Rolling Stones' "Beast of Burden," which got more attention as a result of Mick Jagger appearing in the video.

    7. Bruce Springsteen, "Pink Cadillac"

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    Years before Natalie Cole had a hit with it, Midler recorded her own take on "Pink Cadillac," ostensibly for inclusion on 1983's No Frills, but it's said that Springsteen decided that the song wasn't appropriate for a woman to sing. Obviously, he changed his mind at some point, but even if he didn't want Midler to release her studio version, it didn't stop her from continuing to sing the song in concert: you can find "Pink Cadillac" opening her 1984 concert video, Art or Bust.

    8. Ben Folds Five, "Boxing"

    Possibly the most left field cover choice on this list, the reasons behind Midler's decision to tackle the closing number from Ben Folds Five's self-titled debut remain a mystery - perhaps because of her lingering regret that she turned down the role of Adrian in Rocky? - but Folds himself was thrilled that she did. "Delusionally, I expected that, when I set off down the yellow brick road of musicianship, I'd be a covered writer...and I wasn't," Folds told the Wisconsin Gazette in 2011. "It didn't happen until Bette did that."

    9. Kirsty MacColl, "In These Shoes?"

    Although Midler's take on the Kirsty MacColl classic song was decidedly campier than the original, it still managed to make its way to #8 on Billboard's Hot Dance Club Songs chart. (Plus, if it introduced even a few listeners to MacColl's back catalog, that's a win by any estimation.)

    10. David Bowie, “Young Americans”