In the Style Of: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
<div style="float:right; margin-left:5px; margin-bottom:3px; padding:0px; border:1px solid #ffffff; font-size:100%; line-height:120%; padding:0.4em; background-color:#eeeeee; border-bottom:1px solid #ffffff"><youtube width="450">u909_O6CqYc</youtube><br />Yes, this ''[[Pokémon]]'' short ''is'' supposed to look like ''[[Looney Tunes]]''.</div>
{{quote|"''Now I can't stop wondering what other Urasawa-d manga classics might be like. Grim, angsty ''[[Doraemon]]''. With serial killers! [[Sailor Nothing|Grim, angsty]] ''[[Sailor Moon]]''. With serial killers!...''" |[http://community.livejournal.com/scans_daily/ Scans_Daily], commenting on ''[[Pluto]]''}}
{{quote|"''Now I can't stop wondering what other Urasawa-d manga classics might be like. Grim, angsty ''[[Doraemon]]''. With serial killers! [[Sailor Nothing|Grim, angsty]] ''[[Sailor Moon]]''. With serial killers!...''"
|[http://community.livejournal.com/scans_daily/ Scans_Daily], commenting on ''[[Pluto]]''}}


Taking a work that's a member of a certain genre, and doing it just the same, except as a different genre. For example, taking a rap song and getting a barbershop quartet to sing it; or showing a comedy-adventure from the [[Sympathetic POV]] of the villain, making it a tragic drama; or just taking a page from a famous novel and adding in the stylistic quirks of a completely different writer.
Taking a work that's a member of a certain genre, and doing it just the same, except as a different genre. For example, taking a rap song and getting a barbershop quartet to sing it; or showing a comedy-adventure from the [[Sympathetic POV]] of the villain, making it a tragic drama; or just taking a page from a famous novel and adding in the stylistic quirks of a completely different writer.


Can be applied to any form of art that can be categorized.
Can be applied to any form of art that can be categorized.


[[Recycled in Space]] ''can'' be this, but usually isn't. Generally [[The Cover Changes the Meaning|changes the meaning]]. For music, contrast with [[Suspiciously Similar Song]], where the intention is to resemble the original as closely as possible while still avoiding copyright-breaking. This is one form of [[X Meets Y]].
[[Recycled in Space]] ''can'' be this, but usually isn't. Generally [[The Cover Changes the Meaning|changes the meaning]]. For music, contrast with [[Suspiciously Similar Song]], where the intention is to resemble the original as closely as possible while still avoiding copyright-breaking. This is one form of [[X Meets Y]]. If specific settings and characters are combined, it's probably a [[Fusion Fic]] or some other sort of [[crossover]].

{{examples|Examples}}
{{examples}}
== Anime and Manga ==
* ''[[Pluto]]'' is ''[[Astro Boy (manga)|Astro Boy]]'' in the style of ''[[Monster (manga)|Monster]]''. Yes, really. And, if that weren't enough, it's actually ''really good''.
* An omake chapter of the ''[[Keroro Gunso]]'' manga shows the series as a chapter of ''[[Monster (manga)|Monster]]''. The Keronians are somehow even sillier-looking when drawn in the style of Naoki Urasawa.
* The (strange, twisted) folks at [[Gainax]] put in the time and effort to recreate the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpX-9Dy-uvs first] and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjSyKX-hpQs second] season opening credits for tween-aged [[Slice of Life]] comedy/drama ''[[Kodomo no Omocha]]'' with characters and imagery from ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]''. Naturally, the results are called "Kodomo no Evangelion".
* A ''[[Pokémon]]'' anime as a classic short, with a style crossed between ''[[Silly Symphonies]]'' and ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' - [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u909_O6CqYc it's real, it's ''official'', and it's hilarious!]

== Comic Books ==
* R. Sikoryak's ''Masterpiece Comics'' is a collection of famous works of literature in the style of classic newspaper comics, including Kafa's ''Metamorphosis'' in the style of ''[[Peanuts]]'', ''[[Wuthering Heights (novel)|Wuthering Heights]]'' in the style of ''[[Tales from the Crypt]]'', an abridged version of ''Waiting For Godot'' staring [[Beavis and Butthead]], and other weirdness.

== Fan Works ==
* [[Fan Vid]] "trailers" for movies that make them out to be an entirely different genre became popular in the early 2000s and still have a dedicated following. For some years such works had a home on the Web at [https://web.archive.org/web/20150906210830/http://www.thetrailermash.com/ The Trailer Mash]. ([[Wayback Machine]] link; the URL is currently occupied by a spam squatter.)
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfout_rgPSA Shining],'' [[Stephen King]]'s ''The Shining'' as a family comedy.
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T5_0AGdFic Scary Mary],'' Disney's ''Mary Poppins'' as a horror movie.
** ''[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=z7baCckh-XE David Lynch's A Goofy Movie],'' the Disney film, as directed by David Lynch.
** ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131118050506/http://www.thetrailermash.com/10-things-i-hate-about-commandments-comedy/ Ten Things I Hate About Commandments]'' -- ''The Ten Commandments'' as a classic teen movie.
** ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131118231555/http://www.thetrailermash.com/must-love-jaws-comedy-drama/ Must Love Jaws]'' -- ''Jaws'' as a romantic comedy.
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_mW8mBzmHo The Wicker Man]'' -- ''[[The Wicker Man]]'' as a comedy.
** There were also numerous "Brokeback" fake trailers to make other films look homoerotic in the vein of ''[[Brokeback Mountain]]'', such as ''Broke [[Back to the Future (film)|Back to the Future]]''.
** In 2015, gamer/SF website IGN produced an alleged trailer for [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLazRt8s8Wc "Fast to the Future"], which presented a ''[[Back to the Future (film)|Back to the Future]]'' sequel in the style of ''[[Fast and Furious]]''.
* Safebooru has a [[Fan Art]] collection called [https://safebooru.donmai.us/pools/1338 Popular Artists Draw Other Copyrights]. There are some pieces by professional mangaka in the collection, including:
** [https://safebooru.donmai.us/posts/2663419 Alicia Florence] from ''[[Aria]]'' drawn by Masahiro Anbe, using the same style that he uses when drawing ''[[Squid Girl]]''
** [https://safebooru.donmai.us/posts/696591?pool_id=1338 The main characters] from ''[[A Certain Scientific Railgun]]'' as drawn by Naruko Hanaharu in the style he used for the ''[[Kamichu!]]'' manga
** [https://safebooru.donmai.us/posts/629347?pool_id=1338 Asuka] of the ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' [[Rebuild of Evangelion|''Rebuild'' movies]] drawn by Mizukami Satoshi, creator of ''[[Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer]]''

== Film ==
* A hybrid film-music example appears in one scene of ''[[Amadeus]]'', in which Mozart, as a party entertainment, plays "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" in the styles of various composers suggested by onlookers, with a humiliating [[Take That]] at Salieri.
** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZaLo0JfT6E Victor Borge] must have seen that play.
** Mozart did, in fact, write a series of piano variations on the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star," though the words we know hadn't been written yet. Don't remember if they're meant to be imitating specific composers, or just different musical styles.
*** Just a standard set of Mozart variations on a theme. "Standard" for Mozart being "Masterwork" for anyone else, but there you have it.
* At the end of ''[[The Hangover]]'', a soft rock band at a wedding does a cover of 50 Cent's "Candy Shop."
* The surrealist [[Bob Dylan]] biopic ''[[I'm Not There]]'' uses five actors (and [[Cate Blanchett|one actress]]) to portray different characters inspired by Dylan's ever-changing persona, each of whom is in a separate storyline shot in a different, sometimes self-consciously imitative style:
** [[Christian Bale]]'s segment is a [[Faux Documentary]]
** [[Cate Blanchett]]'s is shot in the style of [[Federico Fellini]]'s ''[[8½]]''.
** Richard Gere's was inspired by Sam Peckinpah's "hippie westerns" of the 1960s.
** [[Heath Ledger]]'s was inspired by the films of Jean-Luc Godard.
* Does anyone notice that the second opening song that accompanies "Bella Notte" in the intro to ''[[Lady and the Tramp]]'' ("Peace on Earth") sounds like a harmony for "Silent Night" by Joseph Mohr and Franz Xaver Gruber?

== Literature ==
* G. K. Chesterton wrote a set of [http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~mward/gkc/books/kingcole.html three variations on Old King Cole,] in the styles of Tennyson, [[William Butler Yeats|Yeats]], and [[Walt Whitman|Whitman]].
* Rudyard Kipling produced an entire book of <s> poetry</s> verse, ''The Muse Among the Motorcars'' in which various classical poets wrote about their experiences with automobiles, in their characteristic styles. For instance, "Horace" wrote an ode entitled ''[[Genius Bonus|Carmen Circulare]]'' and "Chaucer" came up with ''The Engineer's Tale'' in rhyming couplets in [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]; and of course there is a scene from "Shakespeare" complete with footnotes from ''all'' of his commenters.
* [[Bill Bailey]] delivers a classic pub gag [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qod7nSGKag0 In the Style of Geoffrey Chaucer].{{dead link}}

=== Periodicals ===
* Early 90s Amiga game magazine [[Amiga Power]] had frequent sections called 'In The Style Of', normally depicting Amiga games in the style of other Amiga games.
* ''New York'' magazine used to have competitions for the readers which often featured this trope. One famous example asked the readers to retell a joke (about a kangaroo getting overcharged in a bar) in the style of a famous writer. Contributions included Poe's "The Raven" ("At these prices? Nevermore.") and Ingmar Bergman ("The action is set in a bar or any spiritual wasteland. The bartender is underlining in a copy of Hegel when a kangaroo enters ...") And then there was the [[Henny Youngman]] version, which simply retold the original joke provided by the competition editor, word-for-word.

== Live-Action TV ==
* ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O]]'''s "Double-Action" has nine different versions, each in a different musical style; Eurobeat, ska, enka, hip-hop, pop music, death rock, piano instrumental, Arabian-sounding and a remix for the Reunion Show. One can only wonder what "Double-Action Plat Form" might have been like...
** Not to mention the remixes of the show's opening "Climax Jump" centered around each of the Imagin -- [[Boisterous Bruiser|Momotaros]] gets rock, [[The Casanova|Urataros]] gets ska, [[Mighty Glacier|Kintaros]] gets enka, and [[Dance Battler|Ryutaros]] gets hip-hop, the last of which is actually used in show when Ryuta is busting moves.
* A regular feature of ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?]]'', in which the genres would be suggested by the audience, immediately before (or during) the skit.
* A regular feature of ''Shooting Stars'', in which Vic Reeves would sing a song in the "Club Style", to be guessed by the panellists. The resulting lyrics would be unintelligible, and only slightly less so when sung in the "correct" manner.
* Not exactly this, but ''[[Jeopardy!]]'' occasionally has a category of song lyrics, which are read in regular speaking fashion by Alex Trebek or Johnny Gilbert. It's harder than you'd think.
** It's also ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1UaC0ceVXNg hilarious]''.
* Bill Bailey delivers a classic pub gag [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qod7nSGKag0 In the Style of Geoffrey Chaucer].
** He's also done the theme to ''[[Doctor Who]]''
* In early seasons of ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' (not to be confused with Howard Cosell's failed show of the same name), Bill Murray would play "Nick Silver", a lounge singer who would 'loungify' anything - even the theme to [[Star Wars]] , making up lyrics if there were none.
* On ''[[Late Night With Jimmy Fallon]]'', Fallon as Neil Young covered ''[[The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]]'''s theme song as a moody travel song.


== Music ==
== Music ==
* ''[[Homestar Runner]]'' probably has the silliest possible example: Two [[Fake Band|Fake Bands]], each already a [[Satire Parody Pastiche|pastiche]] of a different genre (hair metal and alternative), doing this to each other's songs. Available for listening [http://www.homestarrunner.com/limozloshy.html here]; it has the "original" versions of the songs as well, for comparative purposes.
* ''[[Homestar Runner]]'' probably has the silliest possible example: Two [[Fake Band]]s, each already a [[Satire, Parody, Pastiche|pastiche]] of a different genre (hair metal and alternative), doing this to each other's songs. Available for listening [https://web.archive.org/web/20131103185505/http://www.homestarrunner.com/limozloshy.html here]; it has the "original" versions of the songs as well, for comparative purposes.
* Every [[Weird Al Yankovic]] album (with the exceptions of his self-titled first album, and ''Even Worse'', his fifth album) contains a polka [[Medley]] , doing snippets of these for many contemporary songs. These are basically his equivalent to Jeff Foxworthy's trademark "You Might Be A Redneck" bits; the audience feels cheated if they don't get [[Once an Episode|one per album]].
* Every [["Weird Al" Yankovic]] album (with the exceptions of his self-titled first album, and ''Even Worse'', his fifth album) contains a polka [[Medley]] , doing snippets of these for many contemporary songs. These are basically his equivalent to Jeff Foxworthy's trademark "You Might Be A Redneck" bits; the audience feels cheated if they don't get [[Once an Episode|one per album]].
** He also did "Bohemian Polka", the entirety of [[Queen]]'s "Bohemian Rhapsody" polka-fied.
** He also did "Bohemian Polka", the entirety of [[Queen]]'s "Bohemian Rhapsody" polka-fied.
** Weird Al says that he tends to pick songs that sound better as polka tunes. He's right.
** Weird Al says that he tends to pick songs that sound better as polka tunes. He's right.
** To add an additional layer, his polka style uses traditional instruments, but draws much of its presentation from the style of comedic orchestration found in such things as the works of Spike Jones. Common comedic elements in his polkas include the [[Minsky Pickup]], the traditional vaudeville ending riff (does it have a name?), "Shave and a Haircut", and even a direct reference to Jones via the opening riff of his version of "[[Der Fuehrers Face]]".
** To add an additional layer, his polka style uses traditional instruments, but draws much of its presentation from the style of comedic orchestration found in such things as the works of [[Spike Jones]]. Common comedic elements in his polkas include the [[Minsky Pickup]], the traditional vaudeville ending riff (does it have a name?), "[[Shave and a Haircut]]", and even a direct reference to Jones via the opening riff of his version of "[[Der Fuehrer's Face]]".
** He also occasionally writes pastiches or "style parodies" of specific bands, the most famous probably being his [[Devo]] parody/tribute, "Dare To Be Stupid", which Mark Mothersbaugh called, "the perfect Devo song". Mothersbaugh was interviewed for Weird Al's ''[[Behind The Music]]''' special and said the song was "beautiful ... and I hate him for it, basically."
** He also occasionally writes pastiches or "style parodies" of specific bands, the most famous probably being his [[Devo]] parody/tribute, "Dare To Be Stupid", which Mark Mothersbaugh called, "the perfect Devo song". Mothersbaugh was interviewed for Weird Al's ''[[Behind the Music]]'' special and said the song was "beautiful ... and I hate him for it, basically."
*** Occasionally? At least half of any given Weird Al record will typically be originals (6 or so songs), plus a polka medley and four or five parodies.
*** Occasionally? At least half of any given Weird Al record will typically be originals (6 or so songs), plus a polka medley and four or five parodies.
*** As further evidence, his online release ''Internet Leaks'' consists of one parody and four pastiches. While the exact inspiration for "Skipper Dan" has been debated (it's likely either [[Weezer]] or [[Fountains Of Wayne]], [[Take a Third Option|possibly]] [[X Meets Y|both]]), there's no doubt that "Craigslist" is [[The Doors]] (see below), "CNR" is [[The White Stripes]], and "Ringtone" is [[Queen]].
*** As further evidence, his online release ''Internet Leaks'' consists of one parody and four pastiches. While the exact inspiration for "Skipper Dan" has been debated (it's likely either [[Weezer]] or [[Fountains Of Wayne]], [[Take a Third Option|possibly]] [[X Meets Y|both]]), there's no doubt that "Craigslist" is [[The Doors]] (see below), "CNR" is [[The White Stripes]], and "Ringtone" is [[Queen]].
** In June 2009, Al released his newest song, "Craigslist", which is a Doors pastiche. (Just to add verisimilitude, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek plays on it.)
** In June 2009, Al released "Craigslist", which is a [[The Doors|Doors]] pastiche. (Just to add verisimilitude, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek plays on it.)
*** "Genius in France" is a pastiche of [[Frank Zappa]]. Frank's son Dweezil (who has spent the last few years touring the world playing his father's music with painstaking accuracy) provided a guitar solo and backing vocals.
*** "Genius in France" is a pastiche of [[Frank Zappa]]. Frank's son Dweezil (who has spent the last few years touring the world playing his father's music with painstaking accuracy) provided a guitar solo and backing vocals.
*** Oh, there are way more examples. It's actually somewhat harder to find originals of his that aren't some sort of pastiche or tribute (and some are apparently cleverly hidden so that nobody but Al knows exactly which band he was going for). Here are some more:
*** Oh, there are way more examples. It's actually somewhat harder to find originals of his that aren't some sort of pastiche or tribute (and some are apparently cleverly hidden so that nobody but Al knows exactly which band he was going for). Here are some more:
**** "Mr. Popeil" = The B-52's, "Velvet Elvis" = [[The Police]], "Dog Eat Dog" = [[Talking Heads]], "Trigger Happy" = [[The Beach Boys/Jan And Dean|Jan And Dean]], "You Make Me" = [[Oingo Boingo]], "Everything You Know Is Wrong" = [[They Might Be Giants]], "Pancreas" = [[Brian Wilson]], "Frank's 2000" TV" = [[REM]], "Germs" = [[Nine Inch Nails]]... The list goes on.
**** "Mr. Popeil" = The B-52's, "Velvet Elvis" = [[The Police]], "Dog Eat Dog" = [[Talking Heads]], "Trigger Happy" = [[Jan and Dean]], "You Make Me" = [[Oingo Boingo]], "Everything You Know Is Wrong" = [[They Might Be Giants]], "Pancreas" = [[Brian Wilson]], "Frank's 2000" TV" = [[REM]], "Germs" = [[Nine Inch Nails]]... The list goes on.
** A more occasional habit of his is to take an existing work and adapt it into a parody of another song. His most famous example is setting the theme of ''[[The Beverly Hillbillies]]'' to [[Dire Straits]]' "Money For Nothing". He's also set the theme of ''[[The Brady Bunch]]'' to "The Safety Dance", ''[[Green Eggs and Ham]]'' to [[U 2]]'s "Numb", and in more of a stretch, an ad for the board game Twister became a [[Beastie Boys]] song.
** A more occasional habit of his is to take an existing work and adapt it into a parody of another song. His most famous example is setting the theme of ''[[The Beverly Hillbillies]]'' to [[Dire Straits]]' "Money For Nothing". He's also set the theme of ''[[The Brady Bunch]]'' to "The Safety Dance", ''[[Green Eggs and Ham]]'' to [[U2]]'s "Numb", and in more of a stretch, a jingle for the board game ''Twister'' was sung to [[Run DMC]]'s "Tricky".
* A popular trend around the Disney offices is to take classic songs from the [[Disney Animated Canon]] and redo them as pop rock. They're usually included as [[DVD Bonus Content|special features]] in [[Limited Special Collectors Ultimate Edition|Platinum/Diamond Edition]] DVDs.
* A popular trend around the Disney offices is to take classic songs from the [[Disney Animated Canon]] and redo them as pop rock. They're usually included as [[DVD Bonus Content|special features]] in [[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition|Platinum/Diamond Edition]] DVDs.
* A recurring segment on the Australian TV show ''The Money or the Gun'' (written by Andrew Denton) was the singing of Stairway to Heaven in various other styles, including [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPOIy4Kb9M4 Rolf Harris singing "Stairway to Heaven" in the style of "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport"], and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WfoccRna6I the version sung in the style of the Beatles by the Beatnix].
* A recurring segment on the Australian TV show ''The Money or the Gun'' (written by Andrew Denton) was the singing of "Stairway to Heaven" in various other styles, including [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPOIy4Kb9M4 Rolf Harris singing "Stairway to Heaven" in the style of "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport"], and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WfoccRna6I the version sung in the style of the Beatles by the Beatnix]. There were so many that they released an album of the covers, ''[https://www.amazon.com/Stairways-Heaven-Various-Artists/dp/B000005J65 Stairways to Heaven]''.
** [[Rolf Harris]] has also performed a cover of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8Yxmz-csB4 I Touch Myself]" by the Divinyls. [[Squick|The result is what you'd expect]].
** [[Rolf Harris]] has also performed a cover of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8Yxmz-csB4 I Touch Myself]" by the Divinyls. [[Squick|The result is what you'd expect]].
** Andrew Denton seems to be fond of this trope, as he also got [[Willie Nelson]] to sing "[[Nirvana|Smells Like Teen Spirit]]" in the style of somebody with an intelligible singing voice.
** Andrew Denton seems to be fond of this trope, as he also got [[Willie Nelson]] to sing "[[Nirvana|Smells Like Teen Spirit]]" in the style of somebody with an intelligible singing voice.
* This was basically the entire purpose of [[Richard Cheese]] and Lounge Against The Machine, who perform pop, rock, metal, and rap hits in lounge-lizard style.
* This was basically the entire purpose of [[Richard Cheese]] and Lounge Against The Machine, who perform pop, rock, metal, and rap hits in lounge-lizard style.
* Paul Anka does the same thing, taking popular music (Eye of the Tiger, Mister Brightside, etc.) and doing it in a "lounge-lizard" style. But unlike Cheese, he's serious about it (covering [[Bon Jovi]]'s "It's My Life", he even changes a lyric into a Shout Out to himself: "Like Frankie said, ''he'' did it 'My Way'").
* Paul Anka does the same thing, taking popular music ("Eye of the Tiger", "Mister Brightside", etc.) and doing it in a "lounge-lizard" style. But unlike Cheese, he's serious about it (covering [[Bon Jovi]]'s "It's My Life", he even changes a lyric into a [[Shout-Out]] to himself: "Like Frankie said, ''he'' did it 'My Way'").
* Nouvelle Vague is a French band that does excellent bossanova covers of songs from the 80s -- from [[Bauhaus]]' "Bela Lugosi's Dead" to [[The Clash]]'s "Guns of Brixton".
* Nouvelle Vague is a French band that does excellent bossanova covers of songs from the 80s—from [[Bauhaus]]' "Bela Lugosi's Dead" to [[The Clash]]'s "Guns of Brixton".
** The band's name, by the way, is a fairly brilliant [[Bilingual Bonus]]: "Nouvelle Vague" is French for "New Wave" (the genre of the original songs), and "Bossa Nova" is Portuguese for "New Wave" or "New Beat".
** The band's name, by the way, is a fairly brilliant [[Bilingual Bonus]]: "Nouvelle Vague" is French for "New Wave" (the genre of the original songs), and "Bossa Nova" is Portuguese for "New Wave" or "New Beat".
* [[Madness]] recently did an album of ska/reggae covers of songs like "Lola" and "You Keep Me Hanging On".
* [[Madness]] recently did an album of ska/reggae covers of songs like "Lola" and "You Keep Me Hanging On".
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* Public radio program ''Performance Today'' has a weekly feature called "Piano Puzzler", in which composer Bruce Adolph would play an arrangement of a popular song in the style of a classical composer, and a listener on the phone had to guess both the song and the composer being imitated.
* Public radio program ''Performance Today'' has a weekly feature called "Piano Puzzler", in which composer Bruce Adolph would play an arrangement of a popular song in the style of a classical composer, and a listener on the phone had to guess both the song and the composer being imitated.
* Dynamite Hack's folk-rock version of [[N.W.A.]]'s "Boyz N The Hood".
* Dynamite Hack's folk-rock version of [[N.W.A.]]'s "Boyz N The Hood".
* The East Coast folk group [http://www.modernman3.com/ Modern Man] do this in their bit "Inappropriate Song Styles", in which they demonstrate why Pavarotti should not sing [[Bob Dylan]] and vice versa, why rap groups shouldn't do [[The Musical|Rodgers and Hammerstein]], and why the [[Bee Gees]] should stay away from folk music.
* The East Coast folk-comedy group [[Modern Man]] do this in their bit "Inappropriate Song Styles", in which they demonstrate why Pavarotti should not sing [[Bob Dylan]] and vice versa, why rap groups shouldn't do [[The Musical|Rodgers and Hammerstein]], why the [[Bee Gees]] should stay away from folk music, and why maybe [[Neil Young]] shouldn't sing anything at all.
** They've also done more straightforward pastiches, such as "Channel Surfin'" ([[The Beach Boys]]), "Very Little Like a Train" ([[Bob Dylan]]) and "The Worst Dominatrix in L.A." ([[Leon Redbone]]).
* [[Lore Sjoberg]] did [http://badgods.com/nineinchnoels.html Nine Inch Noëls], a medley of [[Nine Inch Nails]] songs to the tune of traditional Christmas music.
* [[Lore Sjoberg]] did [https://web.archive.org/web/20130120223434/http://badgods.com/nineinchnoels.html "Nine Inch Noëls"], a medley of [[Nine Inch Nails]] songs to the tune of traditional Christmas music.
* [[Tom Lehrer]] once did a version of "Clementine" done with each verse in a different style: [[Cole Porter]], Italian opera, Beatnik, and Gilbert & Sullivan.
* [[Tom Lehrer]] once did a version of "Clementine" done with each verse in a different style: [[Cole Porter]], Italian opera, Beatnik, and Gilbert & Sullivan.
** He's also done other songs in various styles, co-opting their lyrical formula as well as their musical ones. ''The Irish Ballad'' ("[[Refrain From Assuming|Rickety Tickety Tin]]") is probably the best example, capturing the often-morbid storytelling done in actual Irish ballads and setting it to very Irish music.
** He's also done other songs in various styles, co-opting their lyrical formula as well as their musical ones. ''The Irish Ballad'' ("[[Refrain From Assuming|Rickety Tickety Tin]]") is probably the best example, capturing the often-morbid storytelling done in actual Irish ballads and setting it to very Irish music.
* Before ''[[Portal (Video Game)|Portal]]'' came out, indie rocker [[Jonathan Coulton]] was perhaps best known for his [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gW6yQZyx5w acoustic rock cover] of the Sir Mix-a-Lot classic "Baby Got Back".
* Before ''[[Portal (series)|Portal]]'' came out, indie rocker [[Jonathan Coulton]] was perhaps best known for his [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gW6yQZyx5w acoustic rock cover] of the Sir Mix-a-Lot classic "Baby Got Back".
* Similarly, mphtower.com's [[Gilbert and Sullivan]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkJdEFf_Qg4 rendering] of "Baby Got Back".
* Similarly, mphtower.com's [[Gilbert and Sullivan]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkJdEFf_Qg4 rendering] of "Baby Got Back".
* [[William Shatner]] has done a handful of [[So Bad Its Good]] lounge covers of pop songs over the years, most famously [[Elton John]]'s ''Rocket Man''. ''[[Futurama]]'' took this to its natural extreme, when they got Shatner to parody himself by performing a spoken word version of Eminem's ''The Real Slim Shady''. To anticipate your next question:
* [[William Shatner]] has done a handful of [[So Bad It's Good]] lounge covers of pop songs over the years, most famously [[Elton John]]'s ''Rocket Man''. ''[[Futurama]]'' took this to its natural extreme, when they got Shatner to parody himself by performing a spoken word version of Eminem's ''The Real Slim Shady''. To anticipate your next question:
{{quote| '''[[Chekhov's Gun|Walter Koenig]]:''' How can you do a spoken word version of a rap song?<br />
{{quote|'''[[Chekhov's Gun|Walter Koenig]]:''' How can you do a spoken word version of a rap song?
'''Melllvar:''' ''He found a way.'' }}
'''Melllvar:''' ''He found a way.'' }}
* [[Scissor Sisters]] released a disco cover of [[Pink Floyd]]'s "Comfortably Numb" in 2004, which got mixed reactions from Floyd fans -- while some considered it a butchering of the work, others found that the disco beat fits the song's lyrics pretty well.
* [[Scissor Sisters]] released a disco cover of [[Pink Floyd]]'s "Comfortably Numb" in 2004, which got mixed reactions from Floyd fans—while some considered it a butchering of the work, others found that the disco beat fits the song's lyrics pretty well.
** The members of Floyd themselves liked the version according to reports.
** The members of Floyd themselves liked the version according to reports.
* [[Alanis Morissette]]'s [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W91sqAs-_-g slow, soulful version] of the [[Black Eyed Peas]]' "My Humps".
* [[Alanis Morissette]]'s [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W91sqAs-_-g slow, soulful version] of the [[Black Eyed Peas]]' "My Humps".
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* The Puppini Sisters perform various pop songs such as The Smiths' "Panic" and Beyonce's "Crazy In Love" in the style of [[The Andrews Sisters]].
* The Puppini Sisters perform various pop songs such as The Smiths' "Panic" and Beyonce's "Crazy In Love" in the style of [[The Andrews Sisters]].
* ''Every'' cover performed by [[Type O Negative]] is a perfect example of this. The medley of [[The Beatles]] covers at the end of ''[[Creator Breakdown|World Coming Down]]'', in particular, must be heard to be believed.
* ''Every'' cover performed by [[Type O Negative]] is a perfect example of this. The medley of [[The Beatles]] covers at the end of ''[[Creator Breakdown|World Coming Down]]'', in particular, must be heard to be believed.
** Not to mention their cover of "[[Neil Young|Cinnamon Girl]]''.
** Not to mention their cover of [[Neil Young|"Cinnamon Girl"]].
* California punk band [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me_First_and_the_Gimme_Gimmes Me First and the Gimme Gimmes] has made their entire career out of only doing punk covers of... less-than-rockin' songs. Examples include R Kelly's "I Believe I Can Fly", "Tomorrow" from the musical ''[[Annie (Theatre)|Annie]]'', and "Hava Nagila". Each of their albums has a different theme: ''Have a Ball'' is all '60s/'70s radio hits, ''Are a Drag'' is showtunes, ''Blow in the Wind'' is songs from the '60s, ''Take a Break'' is R&B, ''Love Their Country'' is country & western, and their live album, ''Ruin Jonny's Bar Mitzvah'', was recorded at an actual bar mitzvah. Yeah.
* California punk band [[wikipedia:Me First and the Gimme Gimmes|Me First and the Gimme Gimmes]] has made their entire career out of only doing punk covers of... less-than-rockin' songs. Examples include R Kelly's "I Believe I Can Fly", "Tomorrow" from the musical ''[[Annie]]'', and "Hava Nagila". Each of their albums has a different theme: ''Have a Ball'' is all '60s/'70s radio hits, ''Are a Drag'' is showtunes, ''Blow in the Wind'' is songs from the '60s, ''Take a Break'' is R&B, ''Love Their Country'' is country & western, and their live album, ''Ruin Jonny's Bar Mitzvah'', was recorded at an actual bar mitzvah. Yeah.
** Their cover of "The Rainbow Connection" was actually used in the end credits of ''Kermit's Swamp Years''.
** Their cover of "The Rainbow Connection" was actually used in the end credits of ''Kermit's Swamp Years''.
* British comedian [[Bill Bailey]]'s version of the "Hokey Cokey" done in the style of [[Kraftwerk (Music)|Kraftwerk]], which has sadly been removed from [[YouTube]].
* British comedian [[Bill Bailey]]'s version of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwaxWoJPUC0 the "Hokey Cokey"] done in the style of [[Kraftwerk]].
** Witness the ''true'' meaning of ''[[The Magic Roundabout]]'', complete with [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARBajLHHCHs secret middle section!]
** Witness the ''true'' meaning of ''[[The Magic Roundabout]]'', complete with [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARBajLHHCHs secret middle section!]
** Style parodies form a significant part of Bailey's routines. Various rock and pop songs are done in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4GdZ_gBxH8 cockney piano style] (which is musically very similar to Weird Al's polka medleys); ''God Save The Queen'' is given a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mkScM-necA jazz overhaul]; and ''Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah'' is [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WktxIqbGAj0 done in the style of Portishead].
** Style parodies form a significant part of Bailey's routines. Various rock and pop songs are done in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4GdZ_gBxH8 cockney piano style] (which is musically very similar to Weird Al's polka medleys); ''God Save The Queen'' is given a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mkScM-necA jazz overhaul]; and ''Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah'' is [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WktxIqbGAj0 done in the style of Portishead]. And then there's his version of the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' theme as [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68wJIQbCtlI slow Belgian jazz].
* Hayseed Dixie ([[ACDC (Music)|say it out loud five times fast]]) and The Pigs both cover other genres in hillbilly/country style. Hayseed Dixie specializes in bluegrass versions of heavy metal and other harder rock genres; their first album, "A Hillbilly's Tribute to AC/DC" was entirely AC/DC covers -- from which they drew their punning name.
* Hayseed Dixie ([[ACDC|say it out loud five times fast]]) and The Pigs both cover other genres in hillbilly/country style. Hayseed Dixie specializes in bluegrass versions of heavy metal and other harder rock genres; their first album, "A Hillbilly's Tribute to AC/DC" was entirely AC/DC covers—from which they drew their punning name.
** They also have an album called ''Kiss My Grass''. It's an entire album of covers of [[Kiss]] songs. Christine Sixteen manages to get even creepier.
** They also have an album called ''Kiss My Grass''. It's an entire album of covers of [[Kiss]] songs. Christine Sixteen manages to get even creepier.
* Similarly, Luther Wright and the Wrongs did an entire country/bluegrass version of Pink Floyd's ''The Wall'', entitled ''Rebuild The Wall''. It is surprisingly good.
* Similarly, Luther Wright and the Wrongs did an entire country/bluegrass version of Pink Floyd's ''The Wall'', entitled ''Rebuild The Wall''. It is surprisingly good.
** Poor Man's Whiskey did a similar version of ''Dark Side of the Moon'', entitled ''Dark Side of the Moonshine''. Also surprisingly good.
** Poor Man's Whiskey did a similar version of ''Dark Side of the Moon'', entitled ''Dark Side of the Moonshine''. Also surprisingly good.
* Would you believe [[Judas Priest (Music)|Judas Priest]] did this to a [[Joan Baez]] song? [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLDazyvMMGw They really did].
* Would you believe [[Judas Priest]] did this to a [[Joan Baez]] song? [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLDazyvMMGw They really did].
* [[Devo]] were quite fond of this; the best-known example is probably their cover of ''[[Rolling Stones|Satisfaction]].''
* [[Devo]] were quite fond of this; the best-known example is probably their cover of ''[[Rolling Stones|Satisfaction]].''
* Nina Gordon took the NWA song "Straight Outta Compton" and turned it into a coffee-house style soft rock song.
* Nina Gordon took the NWA song "Straight Outta Compton" and turned it into a coffee-house style soft rock song.
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* [http://youtube.com/watch?v=MZ3lXZT7PFY The opera version] of "Dragosta din Tei", AKA [http://youtube.com/watch?v=60og9gwKh1o the Numa Numa song].
* [http://youtube.com/watch?v=MZ3lXZT7PFY The opera version] of "Dragosta din Tei", AKA [http://youtube.com/watch?v=60og9gwKh1o the Numa Numa song].
* Moby's punk rock and country renditions of his own song "Porcelain" can be viewed [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FbKOQNkc60 here].
* Moby's punk rock and country renditions of his own song "Porcelain" can be viewed [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FbKOQNkc60 here].
* [[Yes]] has turned both [[Simon and Garfunkel]]'s "America" and [[The Beatles (Music)|The Beatles]]' "Every Little Thing" into [[Epic Rocking|jammed out prog rock epics]].
* [[Yes]] has turned both [[Simon and Garfunkel]]'s "America" and [[The Beatles (band)|The Beatles]]' "Every Little Thing" into [[Epic Rocking|jammed out prog rock epics]].
* [[Ben Folds (Music)|Ben Folds]] has a recurring live song, "Rock This Bitch", where he asks the audience genres or styles to play the same short song.
* [[Ben Folds]] has a recurring live song, "Rock This Bitch", where he asks the audience genres or styles to play the same short song.
** Folds himself did an excellent piano-ballad cover of "Bitches Ain't Shit".
** Folds himself did an excellent piano-ballad cover of "Bitches Ain't Shit".
* [http://rockabyebabymusic.com/ Rockabye Baby] offers rock songs by e.g. [[Radiohead]], [[Metallica (Music)|Metallica]], [[Nine Inch Nails]], [[The Cure]] and [[The Smashing Pumpkins (Music)|The Smashing Pumpkins]] as soothing (and oddly compelling) bedtime lullaby versions for babies.
* [http://rockabyebabymusic.com/ Rockabye Baby] offers rock songs by e.g. [[Radiohead]], [[Metallica]], [[Nine Inch Nails]], [[The Cure]] and [[The Smashing Pumpkins]] as soothing (and oddly compelling) bedtime lullaby versions for babies.
** Which produces an [[Ominous Music Box Tune]] with certain songs. Tool's "Schism"? Musical [[Nightmare Fuel]].
** Which produces an [[Ominous Music Box Tune]] with certain songs. Tool's "Schism"? Musical [[Nightmare Fuel]].
* Much of the music in ''[[Super Smash Bros]]. Brawl'' are classic [[Nintendo]] tunes done in different styles. For example, "Gourmet Race" from ''[[Kirby]]'' gets turned into a metal song.
* Much of the music in ''[[Super Smash Bros.]] Brawl'' are classic [[Nintendo]] tunes done in different styles. For example, "Gourmet Race" from ''[[Kirby]]'' gets turned into a metal song.
** The version of the ''[[Super Mario Bros]]'' Underwater theme also gets an extreme makeover ''twice'' in one track. It goes from the original 8-Bit form, to a fully orchestrated version, to a ''bluegrass arrangement''.
** The version of the ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' Underwater theme also gets an extreme makeover ''twice'' in one track. It goes from the original 8-Bit form, to a fully orchestrated version, to a ''bluegrass arrangement''.
* Social Distortion's punk rock cover of "Ring of Fire" (Johnny Cash).
* Social Distortion's punk rock cover of "Ring of Fire" (Johnny Cash).
** German hard-rock band H-Blockx did a similar one, with a bit of ska thrown in, courtesy of guest star Doctor Ring-Ding.
** German hard-rock band H-Blockx did a similar one, with a bit of ska thrown in, courtesy of guest star Doctor Ring-Ding.
* Hard & Phirm's "Rodeohead" is a medley of Radiohead songs, performed in a country style. No, seriously.
* Hard & Phirm's "Rodeohead" is a medley of Radiohead songs, performed in a country style. No, seriously.
* Señor Coconut is an artist who performs covers of '80s electronica, such as the works of [[Kraftwerk (Music)|Kraftwerk]] and Yellow Magic Orchestra, in traditional Latin American styles.
* Señor Coconut is an artist who performs covers of '80s electronica, such as the works of [[Kraftwerk]] and Yellow Magic Orchestra, in traditional Latin American styles.
** And you should hear his samba version of Deep Purple's "Smoke On The Water" -- it's glorious!
** And you should hear his samba version of Deep Purple's "Smoke On The Water"—it's glorious!
* Animetal is a Japanese heavy metal band who [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|perform heavy metal covers]] of classic and not-so-classic [[Anime]] and [[Tokusatsu]] [[Anime Theme Song|theme songs]].
* Animetal is a Japanese heavy metal band who [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|perform heavy metal covers]] of classic and not-so-classic [[Anime]] and [[Tokusatsu]] [[Anime Theme Song|theme songs]].
* The [[Marilyn Manson]] version of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6VojYGrnpg Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)]".
* The [[Marilyn Manson]] version of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6VojYGrnpg Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)]".
** And "Tainted Love".
** And "Tainted Love".
** And "I Put A Spell On You," and "[[The Nightmare Before Christmas|This is Halloween]]." He seems to have a fondness for this.
** And "I Put A Spell On You," and "[[The Nightmare Before Christmas|This is Halloween]]." He seems to have a fondness for this.
* The unplugged [[Korn (Music)|Korn]] cover of [[Radiohead]]'s "[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=tv7zuDsns9w Creep]".
* The unplugged [[Korn]] cover of [[Radiohead]]'s "[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=tv7zuDsns9w Creep]".
* Johnny Cash's famous cover of NIN's "Hurt" as a stripped down country song.
* Johnny Cash's famous cover of NIN's "Hurt" as a stripped down country song.
** It's actually a very straight cover, barely introducing stylistic changes (it's pretty much how a regular acoustic performance by Reznor would sound).
** It's actually a very straight cover, barely introducing stylistic changes (it's pretty much how a regular acoustic performance by Reznor would sound).
** Another Johnny Cash example is his cover of Soundgarden's "Rusty Cage," putting a country/folk spin on a hard rock/grunge song.
** Another Johnny Cash example is his cover of Soundgarden's "Rusty Cage," putting a country/folk spin on a hard rock/grunge song.
* Death Metal group [http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile=45074267 Ten Masked Men] do nothing but pop songs. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXvQ94Z1oDM Their version of "Blue" has to be heard to be believed.]
* Death Metal group [https://web.archive.org/web/20210930034210/https://myspace.com/ Ten Masked Men]{{Dead link}} do nothing but pop songs. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXvQ94Z1oDM Their version of "Blue" has to be heard to be believed.]
* [[Ozzy Osbourne (Music)|Ozzy Osbourne]] and Dweezil Zappa did a metal cover of the Bee Gees' hit song "Staying Alive", which you can view [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_D4QhevNPw here].
* [[Ozzy Osbourne]] and Dweezil Zappa did a metal cover of the Bee Gees' hit song "Staying Alive", which you can view [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_D4QhevNPw here].
* [[Peter Gabriel]] of ''[[Genesis (Music)|Genesis]]'' fame got the heavy metal treatment at least twice.
* [[Peter Gabriel]] of ''[[Genesis (band)|Genesis]]'' fame got the heavy metal treatment at least twice.
** First, [[Coal Chamber]] and [[Ozzy Osbourne (Music)|Ozzy Osbourne]] did a cover of "Shock The Monkey" for the "Chamber Music" album.
** First, [[Coal Chamber]] and [[Ozzy Osbourne]] did a cover of "Shock The Monkey" for the "Chamber Music" album.
** Then, [[Disturbed (Music)|Disturbed]] recorded their version of "Land of Confusion".
** Then, [[Disturbed]] recorded their version of "Land of Confusion".
* Sonata Arctica did a cover of "Wind Beneath My Wings" in their power metal style.
* Sonata Arctica did a cover of "Wind Beneath My Wings" in their power metal style.
* Gregorian is a group that, well, does faux-Gregorian Chant style covers. Amongst their re-works are [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuS2jGBFgMM "Engel" by Rammstein] and Belinda Carlisle's [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MwFdf5Nb2I "Heaven Is A Place On Earth"].
* Gregorian is a group that, well, does faux-Gregorian Chant style covers. Amongst their re-works are [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuS2jGBFgMM "Engel" by Rammstein] and Belinda Carlisle's [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MwFdf5Nb2I "Heaven Is A Place On Earth"].
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** Similarly, a group calling itself The Benzedrine Monks of Santo Domonica released a CD called "Chantmania" which redid a number of pop and rock songs as Gregorian chant, among them "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana.
** Similarly, a group calling itself The Benzedrine Monks of Santo Domonica released a CD called "Chantmania" which redid a number of pop and rock songs as Gregorian chant, among them "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana.
* While we're on the subject, Rammstein themselves did a cover of The Ramones' ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCaxa2xS3pU Pet Sematary]'' and ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WX3fn5wrXuY Stripped]'' by Depeche Mode. Odd, but they work.
* While we're on the subject, Rammstein themselves did a cover of The Ramones' ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCaxa2xS3pU Pet Sematary]'' and ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WX3fn5wrXuY Stripped]'' by Depeche Mode. Odd, but they work.
* The CD ''[http://www.pigsflycd.com/ When Pigs Fly]'' is composed entirely of songs sung by people you'd never expect, and many of them hit this trope flat on the head -- like Devo's version of CSNY's "Ohio", "Shock The Monkey" by Don Ho, Herman's Hermits doing Billy Idol's "White Wedding" and the Oak Ridge Boys doing "Carry On Wayward Son". (And don't miss Lesley "It's My Party And I'll Cry If I Want To" Gore singing "[[ACDC (Music)|Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap]]", if only for the wonderful cognitive dissonance it induces.)
* The CD ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20170531201858/http://pigsflycd.com/ When Pigs Fly]'' is composed entirely of songs sung by people you'd never expect, and many of them hit this trope flat on the head—like Devo's version of CSNY's "Ohio", "Shock The Monkey" by Don Ho, Herman's Hermits doing Billy Idol's "White Wedding" and [[The Oak Ridge Boys]] doing "Carry On Wayward Son". (And don't miss Lesley "It's My Party And I'll Cry If I Want To" Gore singing "[[ACDC|Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap]]", if only for the wonderful cognitive dissonance it induces.)
* Canadian punk rock group The Diodes recorded a cover of the Cyrkle's "Red Rubber Ball" (written by Paul Simon) for their 1977 debut album. According to liner notes on a later album, they did so because of Paul Simon's vocal disapproval of punk rock.
* Canadian punk rock group The Diodes recorded a cover of the Cyrkle's "Red Rubber Ball" (written by Paul Simon) for their 1977 debut album. According to liner notes on a later album, they did so because of Paul Simon's vocal disapproval of punk rock.
* Doowop group Big Daddy is known for redoing songs from the 1960s onwards in the style of specific ''other'' songs from the 1950s. Perhaps the epitome of this would be their 1992 CD ''Sgt. Pepper's'', in which they completely recreate [[The Beatles]]' ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' in 1950s musical styles. Some examples of their work:
* Doowop group Big Daddy is known for redoing songs from the 1960s onwards in the style of specific ''other'' songs from the 1950s. Perhaps the epitome of this would be their 1992 CD ''Sgt. Pepper's'', in which they completely recreate [[The Beatles]]' ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' in 1950s musical styles. Some examples of their work:
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** From a different CD, Dire Straits' "Money For Nothing" in the style of "Sixteen Tons"
** From a different CD, Dire Straits' "Money For Nothing" in the style of "Sixteen Tons"
* The Estonian early music group Rondellus has a CD, ''Sabbatum'', which consists entirely of Black Sabbath songs sung in various medieval styles. [[Translated Cover Version|In]] [[Altum Videtur|Latin]]! For example, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AX2y51ixsu8 here's] "Verres Militares".
* The Estonian early music group Rondellus has a CD, ''Sabbatum'', which consists entirely of Black Sabbath songs sung in various medieval styles. [[Translated Cover Version|In]] [[Altum Videtur|Latin]]! For example, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AX2y51ixsu8 here's] "Verres Militares".
* [[Tori Amos (Music)|Tori Amos]] performed a cover of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit," and released ''Strange Little Girls'', a cover album of songs such as Slayer's "Raining Blood" and Eminem's "'97 Bonnie and Clyde" in her signature style of batshit crazy.
* [[Tori Amos]] performed a cover of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit," and released ''Strange Little Girls'', a cover album of songs such as Slayer's "Raining Blood" and Eminem's "'97 Bonnie and Clyde" in her signature style of batshit crazy.
** Tori is known to cover anything in her signature style of batshit crazy. She covered [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ozt1Uf-UBPc Baby One More Time] for crying out loud!
** Tori is known to cover anything in her signature style of batshit crazy. She covered [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ozt1Uf-UBPc Baby One More Time] for crying out loud!
* ''Dub Side of the Moon'' is a dub reggae cover of ''Pink Floyd'''s ''Dark Side of the Moon''.
* ''Dub Side of the Moon'' is a dub reggae cover of ''Pink Floyd'''s ''Dark Side of the Moon''.
** ''Radiodread'' is Easy Star All-Stars' follow-up, a dub reggae treatment of Radiohead's ''OK Computer''.
** ''Radiodread'' is Easy Star All-Stars' follow-up, a dub reggae treatment of Radiohead's ''OK Computer''.
* How can anyone forget Travis's famous cover of Britney Spears' ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRHZqg8yVXQ Hit Me Baby One More Time]''?
* How can anyone forget Travis's famous cover of Britney Spears' ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRHZqg8yVXQ Hit Me Baby One More Time]''?
** Even more extreme: An [http://supermasterpiece.com/music/oops.html alleged "original" version of Spears' "Oops! I Did It Again"] -- by ''[[Louis Armstrong]]''. This is a parody, of course, but the recreation of Armstrong's voice and style is uncanny.
** Even more extreme: An [http://supermasterpiece.com/music/oops.html alleged "original" version of Spears' "Oops! I Did It Again"]—by ''[[Louis Armstrong]]''. This is a parody, of course, but the recreation of Armstrong's voice and style is uncanny.
** Also: [[Children of Bodom]]'s death metal cover of ''[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=D1sguF2D1UA Oops! I Did it Again]''.
** Also: [[Children of Bodom]]'s death metal cover of ''[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=D1sguF2D1UA Oops! I Did it Again]''.
** Scottish guitarist [[Richard Thompson]], of all people, also has a great cover of [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAS4ltt7DzI Oops! I Did it Again.]
** Scottish guitarist [[Richard Thompson]], of all people, also has a great cover of [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAS4ltt7DzI Oops! I Did it Again.]
* 8-bit remixes have become something of a [[YouTube]] fad. You have stuff like [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9c9TzWO8eqk 8-bit Halo theme], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb9vyOlY6qk at least two 8-bit] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpz6Ah60S64 versions of Motteke! Sailor Fuku], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcrqBkRfjVU 8-bit Through The Fire And Flames]... As with all fan-made things, [[Sturgeons Law|some are better than others]].
* 8-bit remixes have become something of a [[YouTube]] fad. You have stuff like [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9c9TzWO8eqk 8-bit Halo theme], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb9vyOlY6qk at least two 8-bit] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpz6Ah60S64 versions of Motteke! Sailor Fuku], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcrqBkRfjVU 8-bit Through The Fire And Flames]... As with all fan-made things, [[Sturgeon's Law|some are better than others]].
* Klaus Nomi's cover of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfGmWzmWweQ The Twist]," also listed in the [[Paranoia Fuel]] article.
* Klaus Nomi's cover of "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfGmWzmWweQ The Twist]," also listed in the [[Paranoia Fuel]] article.
* The Kuricorder Quartet, the group behind the ''[[Azumanga Daioh (Manga)|Azumanga Daioh]]'' soundtrack, did an entire album of cover songs in the exact same style used for that soundtrack. Highlights include the ''[[Ultra Seven]]'' theme, "Bohemian Rhapsody", and the Imperial March from ''[[Star Wars]]''. Alas, it's only available as a pricey Japanese import, but at least you can hear [http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=GNCL-1069 samples].
* The Kuricorder Quartet, the group behind the ''[[Azumanga Daioh]]'' soundtrack, did an entire album of cover songs in the exact same style used for that soundtrack. Highlights include the ''[[Ultra Seven]]'' theme, "Bohemian Rhapsody", and the Imperial March from ''[[Star Wars]]''. Alas, it's only available as a pricey Japanese import, but at least you can hear [http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=GNCL-1069 samples].
* Snoop Dogg's "Gin and Juice" as done by The Gourds in [http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=wCAM3C3dpIA&feature=related Country Western/Bluegrass style].
* Snoop Dogg's "Gin and Juice" as done by The Gourds in [http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=wCAM3C3dpIA&feature=related Country Western/Bluegrass style].
* The band Frisky and Mannish make their act on this basis, including a "cheeky cockney" version of Pussycat Dolls' song "[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=fnAWbAed5u8 Beep]"
* The band Frisky and Mannish make their act on this basis, including a "cheeky cockney" version of Pussycat Dolls' song "[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=fnAWbAed5u8 Beep]"
* Another [[YouTube]] fad is redoing music in G Major, which lends a pseudo-demonic air. Among the many examples are perennial favourites-or-not [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jwj0gLriTnk Scaryroll] (''Never Gonna Give You Up''), ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2z0jJCqecvg&feature=related You Are A Pirate]'' from ''[[Lazy Town]]'' and ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8Vv-c618qA Satan Knows]'' (aka ''God Knows'' from ''[[Suzumiya Haruhi|The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya]]'').
* Another [[YouTube]] fad is redoing music in G Major, which lends a pseudo-demonic air. Among the many examples are perennial favourites-or-not [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jwj0gLriTnk Scaryroll] (''Never Gonna Give You Up''), ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2z0jJCqecvg&feature=related You Are A Pirate]'' from ''[[LazyTown]]'' and ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8Vv-c618qA Satan Knows]'' (aka ''God Knows'' from ''[[Suzumiya Haruhi|The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya]]'').
* ''Heigh-Ho! Mozart'' has tunes from the [[Disney Animated Canon]] redone in the style of famous composers of classical music.
* ''Heigh-Ho! Mozart'' has tunes from the [[Disney Animated Canon]] redone in the style of famous composers of classical music.
** There's also ''Mozart TV'', with various TV show themes treated in the same manner. You might recognize the [[X-Files]] theme in the style of Hovhannes as background music in some of Rocketboom's episodes.
** There's also ''Mozart TV'', with various TV show themes treated in the same manner. You might recognize the [[X-Files]] theme in the style of Hovhannes as background music in some of Rocketboom's episodes.
* The 2005 compilation album ''Policia!: A Tribute to The Police'' has various contemporary bands performing songs by The Police in their own styles. Some are good, some not so much, and some are just odd.
* The 2005 compilation album ''Policia!: A Tribute to The Police'' has various contemporary bands performing songs by The Police in their own styles. Some are good, some not so much, and some are just odd.
* [http://www.beatallica.org/ Beatallica]: Beatle songs in the style of Metallica. Including ''Hey Dude'' and ''Blood is All You Need''.
* [http://www.beatallica.org/ Beatallica]: Beatle songs in the style of Metallica. Including ''Hey Dude'' and ''Blood is All You Need''.
* [[Guns N' Roses (Music)|Guns N' Roses]] covered Bob Dylan's song "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," as well as [[Paul McCartney]]'s "[[Live and Let Die (Film)|Live and Let Die]]".
* [[Guns N' Roses]] covered Bob Dylan's song "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," as well as [[Paul McCartney]]'s "[[Live and Let Die (film)|Live and Let Die]]".
** Axl Rose says that Sweet Child of Mine was intended to be In The Style Of [[Lynyrd Skynyrd]].
** Axl Rose says that "Sweet Child of Mine" was intended to be In The Style Of [[Lynyrd Skynyrd]].
* [[Roy Zimmerman]]'s track ''What If The Beatles Were Irish?'' is [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin]]. And ''hilarious''.
* [[Roy Zimmerman]]'s track ''What If The Beatles Were Irish?'' is [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin]]. And ''hilarious''.
* The Butthole Surfers have actually done this to one of their ''own'' songs: "Something" (not the Beatles song) originally appeared on their first EP in their typical noise-punk style, then was unexpectedly revisited 7 years later and turned into a melodic [[Shoegazing]] song (a deliberate Jimmy Hart Version of [[The Jesus and Mary Chain]]'s "Never Understand" in fact).
* The Butthole Surfers have actually done this to one of their ''own'' songs: "Something" (not the Beatles song) originally appeared on their first EP in their typical noise-punk style, then was unexpectedly revisited 7 years later and turned into a melodic [[Shoegazing]] song (a deliberate Jimmy Hart Version of [[The Jesus and Mary Chain]]'s "Never Understand" in fact).
* The Moog Cookbook covered rock songs entirely on moog synthesizers, in an [[Affectionate Parody]] of the kitschy moog cover records of the 70's, tackling 90's alternative rock with their self-titled album and classic rock staples on the followup ''Ye Olde Space Bande''. Notably, their version of [[Soundgarden (Music)|Soundgarden]]'s "Black Hole Sun" gets a bossa nova arrangement very reminiscent of "[[The Elevator From Ipanema|The Girl From Ipanema]]".
* The Moog Cookbook covered rock songs entirely on moog synthesizers, in an [[Affectionate Parody]] of the kitschy moog cover records of the 70's, tackling 90's alternative rock with their self-titled album and classic rock staples on the followup ''Ye Olde Space Bande''. Notably, their version of [[Soundgarden]]'s "Black Hole Sun" gets a bossa nova arrangement very reminiscent of "[[The Elevator From Ipanema|The Girl From Ipanema]]".
* Pick any cover song by [[The Residents]]. Any of them.
* Pick any cover song by [[The Residents]]. Any of them.
* [[Ray Stevens]] had a big hit with a country/bluegrass version of the jazz standard "Misty", and later covered Sammi Smith's "Help Me Make It Through the Night" [[In the Style Of]] Spike Jones.
* [[Ray Stevens]] had a big hit with a country/bluegrass version of the jazz standard "Misty", and later covered Sammi Smith's "Help Me Make It Through the Night" In the Style Of Spike Jones.
** He also did a bluegrass cover of "Bad". Yes, the Michael Jackson song.
** He also did a bluegrass cover of "Bad". Yes, the Michael Jackson song.
* [[Blind Guardian (Music)|Blind Guardian]] seems to enjoy doing metal covers of old pop songs, including "Surfin' USA", "Mr. Sandman," and "Dream A Little Dream of Me."
* [[Blind Guardian]] seems to enjoy doing metal covers of old pop songs, including "Surfin' USA", "Mr. Sandman," and "Dream A Little Dream of Me."
* German comedy band Excrementory Grindfuckers does it frequently by covering many popular songs like "The Final Countdown" and "Stayin' Alive," grindcore style. Interestingly enough, their cover of Metallica's "Enter Sandman" sounds entirely blues.
* German comedy band Excrementory Grindfuckers does it frequently by covering many popular songs like "The Final Countdown" and "Stayin' Alive," grindcore style. Interestingly enough, their cover of Metallica's "Enter Sandman" sounds entirely blues.
* All of Richard Thompson's self-released live album ''1000 Years of Popular Music'' is him doing songs ranging from 11th century ballads to Prince tunes in his own unique folk-rock style (the concept of the album is [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin]], a sampling of the prior 1000 years of song), but for the coup de grace he introduces "Marry, Ageyn Hic Hev Donne Yt," supposedly a "medieval ballad from [[Incredibly Lame Pun|Brittany]]" but actually {{spoiler|a medieval-styled version of "Oops, I Did It Again", complete with lyrics in Old English}}.
* All of Richard Thompson's self-released live album ''1000 Years of Popular Music'' is him doing songs ranging from 11th century ballads to Prince tunes in his own unique folk-rock style (the concept of the album is [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin]], a sampling of the prior 1000 years of song), but for the coup de grace he introduces "Marry, Ageyn Hic Hev Donne Yt", supposedly a "medieval ballad from [[Incredibly Lame Pun|Brittany]]" but actually {{spoiler|a medieval-styled version of "Oops, I Did It Again", complete with lyrics in Old English}}.
** He's also performed it ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAS4ltt7DzI straight]''.
** He's also performed it ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAS4ltt7DzI straight]''.
* Dolly Parton and Nickel Creek collaborated on a bluegrass cover of Collective Soul's "Shine". Many accolades ensued.
* Dolly Parton and Nickel Creek collaborated on a bluegrass cover of Collective Soul's "Shine". Many accolades ensued.
** Parton also released a bluegrass cover of ''Stairway to Heaven''.
** Parton also released a bluegrass cover of ''Stairway to Heaven''.
* On their ''Aenima'' album, [[Tool (Music)|Tool]] takes the guitar riffs from their own song "Jimmy", plays them on a cheesy, ballpark-esque organ, and uses it as the "Intermission" that segues directly into the original song.
* On their ''Aenima'' album, [[Tool]] takes the guitar riffs from their own song "Jimmy", plays them on a cheesy, ballpark-esque organ, and uses it as the "Intermission" that segues directly into the original song.
* Jenny Owen Young's [http://www.last.fm/music/Jenny+Owen+Youngs/+videos/2813527 folk-rock version] of Nelly's "Hot In Herre".
* Jenny Owen Young's [http://www.last.fm/music/Jenny+Owen+Youngs/+videos/2813527 folk-rock version] of Nelly's "Hot In Herre".
* Joey + Rory did a bluegrass version of "Free Bird".
* Joey + Rory did a bluegrass version of "Free Bird".
* Big & Rich did a straight-up country cover of AC/DC's "You Shook Me All Night Long".
* Big & Rich did a straight-up country cover of AC/DC's "You Shook Me All Night Long".
* Pat Boone's 1997 album, ''In a Metal Mood: No More Mr. Nice Guy'', in which he performed various hard rock and metal songs big band/jazz style. One of his songs, [[Ozzy Osbourne (Music)|Ozzy Osbourne]]'s "Crazy Train", became the theme song for ''[[The Osbournes (TV)|The Osbournes]]''.
* Pat Boone's 1997 album, ''In a Metal Mood: No More Mr. Nice Guy'', in which he performed various hard rock and metal songs big band/jazz style. One of his songs, [[Ozzy Osbourne]]'s "Crazy Train", became the theme song for ''[[The Osbournes]]''. (As it happens, Boone is Osbourne's next-door neighboor, and they're good friends.)
* The Mike Flowers Pops, a tongue-in-cheek easy listening/lounge revival group, released a cover of Oasis' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vy1ueZf1WMQ "Wonderwall"], which actually reached #2 in the UK Singles Charts months after the Oasis version did the same. A BBC DJ jokingly announced it as the original version when it was first released, and subsequently Noel Gallagher was asked by a record executive if he'd actually written it. They have also done similar covers of The Doors, The Velvet Underground, and Bjork.
* The Mike Flowers Pops, a tongue-in-cheek easy listening/lounge revival group, released a cover of Oasis' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vy1ueZf1WMQ "Wonderwall"], which actually reached #2 in the UK Singles Charts months after the Oasis version did the same. A BBC DJ jokingly announced it as the original version when it was first released, and subsequently Noel Gallagher was asked by a record executive if he'd actually written it. They have also done similar covers of The Doors, The Velvet Underground, and Bjork.
* [[Dwight Yoakam]] has done this a ''lot'', most notably with a rockabilly cover of "I Want You to Want Me" and alt-country take on "Suspicious Minds".
* [[Dwight Yoakam]] has done this a ''lot'', most notably with a rockabilly cover of "I Want You to Want Me" and alt-country take on "Suspicious Minds".
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* The Kentucky Headhunters have been doing this for ages. Their first three albums included edgy, country-rock versions of Bill Monroe songs (as well as a cover of Don Gibson's late 1950s hit "Oh Lonesome Me"), as well as a Beatles cover ("You've Got to Hide Your Love Away"). Later on, they released a covers album that included Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Roger Miller, Bob Dylan, and the Beatles, all done just as amped-up as their early work.
* The Kentucky Headhunters have been doing this for ages. Their first three albums included edgy, country-rock versions of Bill Monroe songs (as well as a cover of Don Gibson's late 1950s hit "Oh Lonesome Me"), as well as a Beatles cover ("You've Got to Hide Your Love Away"). Later on, they released a covers album that included Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Roger Miller, Bob Dylan, and the Beatles, all done just as amped-up as their early work.
* On ''[[The Muppet Show]]'', the show's band, Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem rendered Chopin's ''Polonaise in A flat major''... in funk, much to the dismay of Sam the Eagle.
* On ''[[The Muppet Show]]'', the show's band, Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem rendered Chopin's ''Polonaise in A flat major''... in funk, much to the dismay of Sam the Eagle.
{{quote| KERMIT: You can't beat the classics; you can only destroy 'em.}}
{{quote|'''Kermit:''' You can't beat the classics; you can only destroy 'em.}}
* Reel Big Fish have a schtick of playing their own song "Suburban Rhythm" live, but multiple times in many different styles, such as punk rock, country, garage rock, death metal, emo, old school rap and disco.
* Reel Big Fish have a schtick of playing their own song "Suburban Rhythm" live, but multiple times in many different styles, such as punk rock, country, garage rock, death metal, emo, old school rap and disco.
** Funnily enough the 'country' mosh pit is just about the most riotous of the lot.
** Funnily enough the "country" mosh pit is just about the most riotous of the lot.
** They also did a euro-dance-style version of "Gigantic" for a [[The Pixies]] tribute album.
** They also did a euro-dance-style version of "Gigantic" for a [[The Pixies]] tribute album.
* Mark Kozelek does this for every non-original song he touches. He released a solo EP of deconstructed acoustic AC/DC covers, and his band Sun Kil Moon released an entire * album* of acoustic Modest Mouse covers. Red House Painters did the same with "Silly Love Songs", "I Am A Rock", and The Cars' "All Mixed Up".
* Mark Kozelek does this for every non-original song he touches. He released a solo EP of deconstructed acoustic AC/DC covers, and his band Sun Kil Moon released an entire ''album'' of acoustic Modest Mouse covers. Red House Painters did the same with "Silly Love Songs", "I Am A Rock", and The Cars' "All Mixed Up".
* [[Great Big Sea]] (a Canadian East Coast band who play a cross between pop and traditional Newfoundland songs) redid R.E.M's "It's [[The End of the World As We Know It]] And I Feel Fine" in a super-fast-paced, upbeat folk style. It's really good.
* [[Great Big Sea]] (a Canadian East Coast band who play a cross between pop and traditional Newfoundland songs) redid R.E.M's "It's [[The End of the World as We Know It]] And I Feel Fine" in a super-fast-paced, upbeat folk style. It's really good.
* [http://cmt.com/videos/studio-330-sessions/cadillac-sky/203651/basket-case.jhtml Cadillac Sky's] Bluegrass version of Green Day's "Basket Case"
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20150429160122/http://www.cmt.com/videos/studio-330-sessions/cadillac-sky/203651/basket-case.jhtml Cadillac Sky's] Bluegrass version of Green Day's "Basket Case"
* Jagpanzer's power metal cover of Gordon Lightfoot's "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELf3vePl-vo The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald]".
* Jagpanzer's power metal cover of Gordon Lightfoot's "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELf3vePl-vo The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald]".
* ''[[Ace Combat]]'' uses the Agnus Dei as BGM in the final mission of its fourth game, ''Shattered Skies'', but the "Megalith" mix is different enough that you have to strain your ears to recognise it. "Zero" from ''Belkan War'' also reused the lyrics from the eponymous song of ''Unsung War'', but given that the former re-rendered the latter with Hispanic guitar and castanets, it's a bit hard to tell.
* ''[[Ace Combat]]'' uses the Agnus Dei as BGM in the final mission of its fourth game, ''Shattered Skies'', but the "Megalith" mix is different enough that you have to strain your ears to recognise it. "Zero" from ''Belkan War'' also reused the lyrics from the eponymous song of ''Unsung War'', but given that the former re-rendered the latter with Hispanic guitar and castanets, it's a bit hard to tell.
* The Boss Hoss. Famous for country and western covers of various songs, among them Eminem's "Without Me", Outkast's "Hey Ya" and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdFyn8u85sQ&feature=related The Cardigans' "My Favorite Game"].
* The Boss Hoss. Famous for country and western covers of various songs, among them [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYuQWO3NsFI Cameo's "Word Up"], Eminem's "Without Me", Outkast's "Hey Ya" and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdFyn8u85sQ&feature=related The Cardigans' "My Favorite Game"].
* Beatles tribute band the Fab Four have issued a couple of Christmas albums, in which they perform popular carols in a Beatlesque manner.
* Beatles tribute band the Fab Four have issued a couple of Christmas albums, in which they perform popular carols in a Beatlesque manner.
** Sweden's Rubber Band also did the "Christmas a la Beatles" thing with their 1996 release ''Christmas! The Beatmas''.
** Sweden's Rubber Band also did the "Christmas a la Beatles" thing with their 1996 release ''Christmas! The Beatmas''.
* Mark Ronson (of [[Amy Winehouse]] producer fame) released "Version" comprising various pop covers in his distinctive brass-led arrangements.
* Mark Ronson (of [[Amy Winehouse]] producer fame) released "Version" comprising various pop covers in his distinctive brass-led arrangements.
* Thin Lizzy and, subsequently, Metallica covered the traditional Irish folk song, "Whiskey in the Jar."
* Thin Lizzy and, subsequently, Metallica covered the traditional Irish folk song, "Whiskey in the Jar."
* White Stripes performed the traditional English-Scots ballad "Black Jack Davey."
* White Stripes performed the traditional English-Scots ballad "Black Jack Davey."
* A number of Celtic Punk groups -- Pogues, Dropkick Murphys, etc. -- perform their share of traditional Irish folk music in a punk style.
* A number of Celtic Punk groups—Pogues, Dropkick Murphys, etc. -- perform their share of traditional Irish folk music in a punk style.
* Similarly, Celtic-Rock band [[Tempest (music)|Tempest]] does rock-styled covers of English, Scottish, Irish and occasionally Scandinavian folk songs.
* Uncle Tupelo recorded at least two versions of The Stooges' "I Wanna Be Your Dog" -- a country/punk version and a folk version.
* Uncle Tupelo recorded at least two versions of The Stooges' "I Wanna Be Your Dog"—a country/punk version and a folk version.
* [[Anya Marina]]'s cover of [[Ice T]]'s "Whatever you Like" is performed in her typical style, that of a singer songwriter, creating hilarious levels of [[Lyrical Dissonance]] when one factors in the original's blatant [[Intercourse With You]] lyrics.
* [[Anya Marina]]'s cover of [[Ice T]]'s "Whatever you Like" is performed in her typical style, that of a singer songwriter, creating hilarious levels of [[Lyrical Dissonance]] when one factors in the original's blatant [[Intercourse with You]] lyrics.
* The ''[[Spider Man]]'' theme song got reworked a few times, by Joe Perry of [[Aerosmith (Music)|Aerosmith]] for the 1994 cartoon, the band as a whole for [[The Movie]] (it's on the soundtrack), [[The Distillers]] for the game based on the movie sequel, The Ramones for an album of alternative covers of Saturday Morning Cartoon theme songs, and by [[Michael Buble]] for fun.
* The ''[[Spider-Man]]'' theme song got reworked a few times, by Joe Perry of [[Aerosmith]] for the 1994 cartoon, the band as a whole for [[The Movie]] (it's on the soundtrack), [[The Distillers]] for the game based on the movie sequel, The Ramones for an album of alternative covers of Saturday Morning Cartoon theme songs, and by [[Michael Bublé]] for fun.
* American heavy metal band Prong recorded a heavy metal version of [[The Doors]]' "Strange Days" for ''[[Strange Days]]'' movie, with Ray Manzarek (Doors' keyboardist) on keyboard.
* American heavy metal band Prong recorded a heavy metal version of [[The Doors]]' "Strange Days" for ''[[Strange Days]]'' movie, with Ray Manzarek (Doors' keyboardist) on keyboard.
* Would you believe that there's a techno cover of [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5WeIJQ4fRs Fear of the Dark]? And that it's actually good?
* Would you believe that there's a techno cover of [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5WeIJQ4fRs "Fear of the Dark"]? And that it's actually good?
* J. S. Bach had such a distinctive style that a common exam question for high school music students is: here is a totally random melody. Orchestrate it in the style of J.S. Bach.
* J. S. Bach had such a distinctive style that a common exam question for high school music students is: here is a totally random melody. Orchestrate it in the style of J.S. Bach.
* Robert Newman had a routine where Robert Smith of [[The Cure]] tried to sing various cheerful songs, all of which came out as ''Girlfriend in a Coma'' style dirges.
* Robert Newman had a routine where Robert Smith of [[The Cure]] tried to sing various cheerful songs, all of which came out as ''Girlfriend in a Coma'' style dirges.
* [[Sepultura]]'s cover of [[Public Enemy|Public Enemy's]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeeKpZ0GwNM "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos]. There are covers of [[Massive Attack|"Angel"]], [[Janes Addiction|"Mountain Song"]], and [[U 2|"Bullet the Blue Sky"]] on the same EP, ''Revolusongs''.
* [[Sepultura]]'s cover of [[Public Enemy|Public Enemy's]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeeKpZ0GwNM "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos]. There are covers of [[Massive Attack|"Angel"]], [[Jane's Addiction|"Mountain Song"]], and [[U2|"Bullet the Blue Sky"]] on the same EP, ''Revolusongs''.
* An [[Elvis Presley]] impersonator named "The King" recorded several albums with song by other bands and artists, usually with the main criteria being that the original singer also had to be dead. such as [[Nirvana]]'s "Come as You Are" and Queen's "Crazy Little Thing Called Love". The latter song was already an homage to 1950s Rock 'n' Roll in its original version, but the King version Elvis-i-fied it even more.
* An [[Elvis Presley]] impersonator named "The King" recorded several albums with song by other bands and artists, usually with the main criteria being that the original singer also had to be dead. such as [[Nirvana]]'s "Come as You Are" and Queen's "Crazy Little Thing Called Love". The latter song was already an homage to 1950s Rock 'n' Roll in its original version, but the King version Elvis-i-fied it even more.
* Four German comedians perform as a Queen tribute "band" named "Burger Queen", with very... unique interpretations of their songs, such as a Bruce Springsteen version of "Hammer to Fall" (including a brief "Born in the UK" outro), a reggae version of "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", a country version of "Fat Bottomed Girls", a polka version of "We Will Rock You", a bellydance version of "Mustapha" and an AC/DC version of "I Want to Break Free" (using the bassline of "Under Pressure").
* Four German comedians perform as a Queen tribute "band" named "Burger Queen", with very... unique interpretations of their songs, such as a Bruce Springsteen version of "Hammer to Fall" (including a brief "Born in the UK" outro), a reggae version of "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", a country version of "Fat Bottomed Girls", a polka version of "We Will Rock You", a bellydance version of "Mustapha" and an AC/DC version of "I Want to Break Free" (using the bassline of "Under Pressure").
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HECF_RHAYo The Shins' version of The Postal Service's "We Will Become Silhouettes".]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HECF_RHAYo The Shins' version of The Postal Service's "We Will Become Silhouettes".]
* [http://pottymouth.org/mcpt/ Matthew's Celebrity Pixies Tribute] is a collection of [[Pixies]] covers done by one person in the style of various unlikely artists, such as [[Prince]], [[The Bee Gees]], and [[The Beach Boys]]. The results are generally more silly than convincing, but apparently the [[Jimi Hendrix]] version of "Vamos" had a few people fooled up until it quoted [[The Simpsons]] theme during the solo.
* [http://pottymouth.org/mcpt/ Matthew's Celebrity Pixies Tribute] is a collection of [[Pixies]] covers done by one person in the style of various unlikely artists, such as [[Prince]], [[The Bee Gees]], and [[The Beach Boys]]. The results are generally more silly than convincing, but apparently the [[Jimi Hendrix]] version of "Vamos" had a few people fooled up until it quoted [[The Simpsons]] theme during the solo.
* ''Merry Gear Solid 2'' uses various backings made up of Christmas songs In The Style Of ''[[Metal Gear]]'' songs:
* ''Merry Gear Solid 2'' uses various backings made up of Christmas songs In The Style Of ''[[Metal Gear]]'' songs:
** "Sleigh Drive" is a cover of "Sleigh Ride" in the style of "Old Snake" from ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 4''.
** "Sleigh Drive" is a cover of "Sleigh Ride" in the style of "Old Snake" from ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 4''.
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** "You Gave My Position Away" is a cover of "Last Christmas You Gave Me Your Heart" in the style of ''Intruder 3'' from ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]''.
** "You Gave My Position Away" is a cover of "Last Christmas You Gave Me Your Heart" in the style of ''Intruder 3'' from ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]''.
* The Alex Skolnick Trio primarily performs jazz versions of hard rock and heavy metal songs.
* The Alex Skolnick Trio primarily performs jazz versions of hard rock and heavy metal songs.
* [http://www.sotb.se/ Slaughter of the Bluegrass] performs country/bluegrass covers of [[Melodic Death Metal]] songs
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090831072150/http://www.sotb.se/ Slaughter of the Bluegrass] performs country/bluegrass covers of [[Melodic Death Metal]] songs
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM2177pHMT0 The Baseballs] is a German group that does 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs. ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpWAl8C0H0A Really] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McO2ckRO4AY excellent]'' 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs.
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM2177pHMT0 The Baseballs] is a German group that does 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs. ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpWAl8C0H0A Really] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McO2ckRO4AY excellent]'' 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs.
* Toots and the Maytals did a reggae verson of John Denver's "Take Me Home, Country Roads", even substituting "West Jamaica" for "West Virginia".
* Toots and the Maytals did a reggae verson of John Denver's "Take Me Home, Country Roads", even substituting "West Jamaica" for "West Virginia".
** They may also be responsible for "Jamaican In New York", which surely needs no explanation.
** They may also be responsible for "Jamaican In New York", which surely needs no explanation.
* The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain have performed "God Save The Queen" by the Sex Pistols at least once.
* The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain have performed "God Save The Queen" by the Sex Pistols at least once, as well as [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLgJ7pk0X-s the theme to ''The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly'']. Oh, and like so many others, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KZjnFZvCNc "Smells Like Teen Spirit"].
* Bim Skala Bim once did a ska version of Pink Floyd's "Brain Damage" (aka "Dark Side Of The Moon").
* Bim Skala Bim once did a ska version of Pink Floyd's "Brain Damage" ([[Refrain From Assuming|aka "Dark Side Of The Moon"]]).
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcRlBQF2AYc Here] is a video of Swedish ''a cappella'' band The Real Group singing a couple songs in unrelated styles: "[[The Beatles|Yesterday]]" as a samba, and the [[Opera|operatic]] version of "Take The "A" Train". Even better, they are evidently improvising these on the spot.
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcRlBQF2AYc Here] is a video of Swedish ''a cappella'' band The Real Group singing a couple songs in unrelated styles: "[[The Beatles|Yesterday]]" as a samba, and the [[opera]]tic version of "Take The "A" Train". Even better, they are evidently improvising these on the spot.
* Adrian Edmondson's act [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Aulos-NGsk The Bad Shepherds] is based on the idea of playing punk songs with folk arrangements. It's played totally seriously and surprisingly well.
* Adrian Edmondson's act [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Aulos-NGsk The Bad Shepherds] is based on the idea of playing punk songs with folk arrangements. It's played totally seriously and surprisingly well.
* Mindless Self Indulgence has a speed metal version of Rush's "Tom Sawyer", that's barely more than half the running time of the original, but still a complete cover.
* Mindless Self Indulgence has a speed metal version of Rush's "Tom Sawyer", that's barely more than half the running time of the original, but still a complete cover.
* Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street", noted for its sax lines (a favorite of [[The Simpsons|Lisa Simpson]]'s), has been redone a few times in different styles, usually without a saxophone. The Foo Fighters version uses an electric guitar in place of the sax, with a bass guitar replacing the "whistling" synthesizer opening/bridge.
* Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street", noted for its sax lines (a favorite of [[The Simpsons (animation)|Lisa Simpson]]'s), has been redone a few times in different styles, usually without a saxophone. The Foo Fighters version uses an electric guitar in place of the sax, with a bass guitar replacing the "whistling" synthesizer opening/bridge.
* Each of Edward Ballantine's variations for piano on "Mary Had A Little Lamb" was written in the style of a different famous composer.
* Each of Edward Ballantine's variations for piano on "Mary Had A Little Lamb" was written in the style of a different famous composer.
* The entire purpose of power metal supergroup [[Northern Kings]], who cover mostly 80s pop songs, but a range of other material, in power metal style.
* The entire purpose of power metal supergroup [[Northern Kings]], who cover mostly 80s pop songs, but a range of other material, in power metal style.
* ''[[Amanda Palmer]] Performs the Popular Hits of [[Radiohead]] on her Magical Ukelele,'' which is [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin]].
* ''[[Amanda Palmer]] Performs the Popular Hits of [[Radiohead]] on her Magical Ukelele,'' which is [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin]].
* [[Todd Rundgren]] did this with [[Self Parody|his own songs]] on the album ''With a Twist,'' which offered bossa nova tiki lounge versions of his most familiar hits.
* [[Todd Rundgren]] did this with [[Self-Parody|his own songs]] on the album ''With a Twist,'' which offered bossa nova tiki lounge versions of his most familiar hits.
* Patti Smith has a cover of "Smells Like Teen Spirit". With banjos.
* Patti Smith has a cover of "Smells Like Teen Spirit". With banjos.
* Apocalyptica is a heavy-metal cello quartet whose first album consists entirely of all-cello Metallica covers.
* Apocalyptica is a heavy-metal cello quartet whose first album consists entirely of all-cello Metallica covers.
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* The [[Talking Heads]] song "The Overload" was an attempt to imitate the style of [[Joy Division]]. However, none of the members had heard any of Joy Division's music; they were basing it on how they thought they might sound based on descriptions in the press. Because "The Overload" isn't a Joy Division song, it's not strictly this trope, but it's very close.
* The [[Talking Heads]] song "The Overload" was an attempt to imitate the style of [[Joy Division]]. However, none of the members had heard any of Joy Division's music; they were basing it on how they thought they might sound based on descriptions in the press. Because "The Overload" isn't a Joy Division song, it's not strictly this trope, but it's very close.
* Friday the way [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vmbtua21uzM MeatLoaf] or [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FISHEO3gsM&feature=related Bob Dylan] might have done it.
* Friday the way [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vmbtua21uzM MeatLoaf] or [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FISHEO3gsM&feature=related Bob Dylan] might have done it.
* [[YouTube]] user [http://www.youtube.com/user/CakeJarey#g/c/E514D154C42AFFC0 CakeJarey] played this trope with ''[[Final Fantasy]]'' songs... ''in the style of other Final Fantasy games''. Now, given the series' [[Final Fantasy (Franchise)/Awesome Music|usual pattern]], what could the result be? ''Still awesome.''
* [[YouTube]] user [http://www.youtube.com/user/CakeJarey#g/c/E514D154C42AFFC0 CakeJarey] played this trope with ''[[Final Fantasy]]'' songs... ''in the style of other Final Fantasy games''. Now, given the series' [[Final Fantasy/Awesome Music|usual pattern]], what could the result be? ''Still awesome.''
* Clara Moroni, better known for Eurobeat, recently did a metal cover of A-ha's "Take on Me".
* Clara Moroni, better known for Eurobeat, recently{{when}} did a metal cover of A-ha's "Take on Me".
* Dudley Moore did "Little Miss Muffet" as Benjamin Britten would have composed it for Peter Pears to sing, and, on ''[[Not Only but Also]]'', Tom Jones songs in a classical style.
* Dudley Moore did "Little Miss Muffet" as Benjamin Britten would have composed it for Peter Pears to sing, and, on ''[[Not Only... But Also]]'', Tom Jones songs in a classical style.
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJEtRtlmidk Rap Is A Man's Soul]'', better known as "That rap from ''[[Gurren Lagann]]'' that goes 'Row Row Fight the Pow-wah!'" gets a couple of versions throughout the series. There exists a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbNmi9qpMAM&feature=related heavy fanfare version], a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GeQK0fOAew sadder, somewhat contemplative version], and perhaps most memorably, an [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAlztMvvNkk epic opera version] whereupon [[Ominous Latin Chanting|Dies Irae]] is sung as a [[One Woman Wail]].
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJEtRtlmidk Rap Is A Man's Soul]'', better known as "That rap from ''[[Gurren Lagann]]'' that goes 'Row Row Fight the Pow-wah!'" gets a couple of versions throughout the series. There exists a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbNmi9qpMAM&feature=related heavy fanfare version], a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GeQK0fOAew sadder, somewhat contemplative version], and perhaps most memorably, an [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAlztMvvNkk epic opera version] whereupon [[Ominous Latin Chanting|Dies Irae]] is sung as a [[One-Woman Wail]].
* As mentioned above, [[Paul and Storm]], formerly part of the a cappella quartet DaVinci's Notebook, did a medley of various hip-hop songs in barbershop style. They called it [[Incredibly Lame Pun|Hip-Shop]].
* As mentioned above, [[Paul and Storm]], formerly part of the a cappella quartet DaVinci's Notebook, did a medley of various hip-hop songs in barbershop style. They called it [[Incredibly Lame Pun|Hip-Shop]].
** Prior to their split, DaVinci's Notebook also had a medley of heavy metal songs in barbershop style called Metal Shop.
** Prior to their split, DaVinci's Notebook also had a medley of heavy metal songs in barbershop style called Metal Shop.
* [[The Aquabats]] did a cover of Operation Ivy's "Knowledge" in the style of an acoustic campfire singalong (complete with backup vocals imitating little kids) for a tribute album. It may now be [[Hilarious in Hindsight]] since much later one of their members would co-create ''[[Yo Gabba Gabba]]''.
* [[The Aquabats!]] did a cover of Operation Ivy's "Knowledge" in the style of an acoustic campfire singalong (complete with backup vocals imitating little kids) for a tribute album. It may now be [[Hilarious in Hindsight]] since much later one of their members would co-create ''[[Yo Gabba Gabba!]]''.
* [[Beck (Music)|Beck]] has had fun doing this to his own songs a few times: "Burro" is "Jackass" in the style of mariachi (complete with Spanish lyrics), "Saxx Laws (Night Flight to Ojai)" is "Sexx Laws" in the style of Kenny G, and "MTV Makes Me Wanna Smoke Crack (Lounge Version)" is self-explanatory.
* [[Beck (musician)|Beck]] has had fun doing this to his own songs a few times: "Burro" is "Jackass" in the style of mariachi (complete with Spanish lyrics), "Saxx Laws (Night Flight to Ojai)" is "Sexx Laws" in the style of Kenny G, and "MTV Makes Me Wanna Smoke Crack (Lounge Version)" is self-explanatory.
* The Ramonetures are a band that covers [[Punk Rock]] songs in the style of instrumental [[Surf Rock]] (their name being a mashup of [[The Ramones]] and The Ventures, of course). Their self-titled first album covered [[The Ramones]], while their second, ''Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene'', covered X. ''Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene'' even has contributions by X members Billy Zoom and D.J. Bonebrake.
* The Ramonetures are a band that covers [[Punk Rock]] songs in the style of instrumental [[Surf Rock]] (their name being a mashup of [[The Ramones]] and The Ventures, of course). Their self-titled first album covered [[The Ramones]], while their second, ''Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene'', covered X. ''Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene'' even has contributions by X members Billy Zoom and D.J. Bonebrake.
* [[Puffy AmiYumi]] did this a LOT on their early albums, thanks to the influence of producer Andy Sturmur. "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6JLm0M4_7M Asia no Junshin]" is an homage to [[Electric Light Orchestra]], "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sT3nsU4CmPA Kore Ga Watashi no Ikiru Michi]" does [[The Beatles]], "Jet Keisatsu" is [[The Who]], "Tokyo Nights" is The Buggles, and more.
* [[Puffy AmiYumi]] did this a ''lot'' on their early albums, thanks to the influence of producer Andy Sturmur. "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6JLm0M4_7M Asia no Junshin]" is an homage to [[Electric Light Orchestra]], "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sT3nsU4CmPA Kore Ga Watashi no Ikiru Michi]" does [[The Beatles]], "Jet Keisatsu" is [[The Who]], "Tokyo Nights" is The Buggles, and more.
* [[A Hawk and A Hacksaw (Music)|A Hawk and A Hacksaw]] did a particularly obtuse version: they took "Foni Tu Argile", a Greek Rembetika song (i.e. traditionally performed on bouzouki and other string instruments), and recorded it as an accordion-and-brass ensemble.
* [[A Hawk and a Hacksaw]] did a particularly obtuse version: they took "Foni Tu Argile", a Greek Rembetika song (i.e. traditionally performed on bouzouki and other string instruments), and recorded it as an accordion-and-brass ensemble.
* [[Orbital]] wanted a remix of "Style" (a song originally performed almost entirely on a Stylophone synthesizer) by [[Stereolab]], in their unique style. When they couldn't get ahold of Stereolab in time, Orbital just did a Stereolab-esque remix themselves (which they named "New Style").
* [[Orbital]] wanted a remix of "Style" (a song originally performed almost entirely on a Stylophone synthesizer) by [[Stereolab]], in their unique style. When they couldn't get ahold of Stereolab in time, Orbital just did a Stereolab-esque remix themselves (which they named "New Style").
* An amateur cover of [[A Flock of Seagulls]]' "I Ran (So Far Away)" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=A0pBhoJY3Ws#! in the style of] ''American Recordings''-era [[Johnny Cash]] has been making the [[YouTube]] rounds.
* An amateur cover of [[A Flock of Seagulls]]' "I Ran (So Far Away)" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=A0pBhoJY3Ws#! in the style of] ''American Recordings''-era [[Johnny Cash]] has been making the [[YouTube]] rounds.
* Iron Horse are a bluegrass band who have put out a couple of albums of original material, but are mainly known for their [[Cover Album|Cover Albums]] - they have two albums of bluegrass [[Metallica (Music)|Metallica]] covers, as well as albums that take on [[Modest Mouse]], [[Ozzy Osbourne (Music)|Ozzy Osbourne]] (including a few Ozzy-era [[Black Sabbath (Music)|Black Sabbath]] songs), and [[Guns N' Roses (Music)|Guns N' Roses]].
* Iron Horse are a bluegrass band who have put out a couple of albums of original material, but are mainly known for their [[Cover Album]]s - they have two albums of bluegrass [[Metallica]] covers, as well as albums that take on [[Modest Mouse]], [[Ozzy Osbourne]] (including a few Ozzy-era [[Black Sabbath]] songs), and [[Guns N' Roses]].
* The English Beat did a [[Lyrical Dissonance|lyrically dissonant]] ska cover of The Miracles' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjnYRD2vm8E "Tears of a Clown"].
* The English Beat did a [[Lyrical Dissonance|lyrically dissonant]] ska cover of The Miracles' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjnYRD2vm8E "Tears of a Clown"].
* In the early 2010s, channels hosting [[Heavy Metal]] versions of just about any song you can think of became popular on [[YouTube]] -- look for names like [[331Erock]] and [[Leo Moracchioli]]/Frog Leap Studios.

* In 1978, at his 40th anniversary concert at Carnegie Hall, [[Benny Goodman]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YL0ird4rm_Y covered "Rocky Raccoon" by the Beatles] in a style that was a curious mix of the original and Goodman's trademark swing.

* [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCORIeT1hk6tYBuntEXsguLg Postmodern Jukebox] is a musical project which performs pop and rock music from the 1950s onward in big band, swing, 60s Motown-style soul and other vintage styles. Some of their work is simply amazing, such as their version of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6RD6mjiIZE Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun"] and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3lF2qEA2cw Radiohead's "Creep"]. Their work can be summed up in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q7ExHaKt2M this decades-spanning cover] of the ''[[Friends]]'' theme song.
== Anime & Manga ==
* An Italian duo on YouTube calling themselves [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuLr0QmdN899rTMCpAveJaw "Melodicka Bros"] are, as of early 2020, making a name for themselves doing covers of famous songs in styles wildly different from the originals.
* ''[[Pluto (Manga)|Pluto]]'' is ''[[Astro Boy (Manga)|Astro Boy]]'' in the style of ''[[Monster (Anime)|Monster]]''. Yes, really. And, if that weren't enough, it's actually ''really good''.
* [[Billy Joel]]'s album ''An Innocent Man'' is made up entirely of original songs in the styles of various 50s and 60s artists whom he considered influences on his music.
* An omake chapter of the ''[[Keroro Gunso]]'' manga shows the series as a chapter of ''[[Monster (Anime)|Monster]]''. The Keronians are somehow even sillier-looking when drawn in the style of Naoki Urasawa.
* Ooedo no Hikeshi, an orchestra composed of traditional Japanese instruments and chorus, made a small splash on the net in the late 2000s and early 2010s with their (very traditional) covers of [[Deep Purple]]'s "Smoke on the Water" and Queen's "We Will Rock You".

== Comics ==
* R. Sikoryak's ''Masterpiece Comics'' is a collection of famous works of literature in the style of classic newspaper comics, including Kafa's ''Metamorphosis'' in the style of ''[[Peanuts]]'', ''[[Wuthering Heights (Literature)|Wuthering Heights]]'' in the style of ''[[Tales From the Crypt]]'', an abridged version of ''Waiting For Godot'' staring [[Beavis and Butthead]], and other weirdness.


== Film ==
* [[Fan Vid]] "trailers" for movies that make them out to be an entirely different genre have become popular lately. Such works have a home on the Web at [http://www.thetrailermash.com/ The Trailer Mash].
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfout_rgPSA Shining],'' [[Stephen King]]'s ''The Shining'' as a family comedy.
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T5_0AGdFic Scary Mary],'' Disney's ''Mary Poppins'' as a horror movie.
** ''[http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=z7baCckh-XE David Lynch's A Goofy Movie],'' the Disney film, as directed by David Lynch.
** ''[http://www.thetrailermash.com/10-things-i-hate-about-commandments-comedy/ Ten Things I Hate About Commandments]'' -- ''The Ten Commandments'' as a classic teen movie.
** ''[http://www.thetrailermash.com/must-love-jaws-comedy-drama/ Must Love Jaws]'' -- ''Jaws'' as a romantic comedy.
** ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_mW8mBzmHo The Wicker Man]'' -- ''[[The Wicker Man]]'' as a comedy.
** There were also numerous "Brokeback" fake trailers to make other films look homoerotic in the vein of ''[[Brokeback Mountain]]'', such as ''Broke [[Back to The Future]]''.
* A hybrid film-music example appears in one scene of ''[[Amadeus]]'', in which Mozart, as a party entertainment, plays "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" in the styles of various composers suggested by onlookers, with a humiliating [[Take That]] at Salieri.
** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZaLo0JfT6E Victor Borge] must have seen that play.
** Mozart did, in fact, write a series of piano variations on the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star," though the words we know hadn't been written yet. Don't remember if they're meant to be imitating specific composers, or just different musical styles.
*** Just a standard set of Mozart variations on a theme. "Standard" for Mozart being "Masterwork" for anyone else, but there you have it.
* At the end of ''[[The Hangover]]'', a soft rock band at a wedding does a cover of 50 Cent's "Candy Shop."
* The surrealist [[Bob Dylan]] biopic [[I'm Not There]] uses five actors (and [[Cate Blanchett|one actress]]) to portray different characters inspired by Dylan's ever-changing persona, each of whom is in a separate storyline shot in a different, sometimes self-consciously imitative style:
** [[Christian Bale]]'s segment is a [[Faux Documentary]]
** [[Cate Blanchett]]'s is shot in the style of [[Federico Fellini]]'s [[Eight and A Half (Film)|Eight and A Half]]
** Richard Gere's was inspired by Sam Peckinpah's "hippie westerns" of the 1960s
** [[Heath Ledger]]'s was inspired by the films of Jean-Luc Godard.
* Does anyone notice that the second opening song that accompanies "Bella Notte" in the intro to ''[[Lady and The Tramp (Disney)|Lady and The Tramp]]'' ("Peace on Earth") sounds like a harmony for "Silent Night" by Joseph Mohr and Franz Xaver Gruber?


== Live Action TV ==
* ''[[Kamen Rider Den O]]'''s "Double-Action" has seven different versions, each in a different musical style; Eurobeat, ska, enka, hip-hop, pop music, death rock, piano instrumental, Arabian-sounding and a remix for the Reunion Show. One can only wonder what "Double-Action Plat Form" might have been like...
** Not to mention the remixes of the show's opening "Climax Jump" centered around each of the Imagin -- [[Boisterous Bruiser|Momotaros]] gets rock, [[The Casanova|Urataros]] gets ska, [[Mighty Glacier|Kintaros]] gets enka, and [[Dance Battler|Ryutaros]] gets hip-hop, the last of which is actually used in show when Ryuta is busting moves.
* A regular feature of ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway]]'', in which the genres would be suggested by the audience, immediately before (or during) the skit.
* A regular feature of ''Shooting Stars'', in which Vic Reeves would sing a song in the "Club Style", to be guessed by the panellists. The resulting lyrics would be unintelligible, and only slightly less so when sung in the "correct" manner.
* Not exactly this, but ''[[Jeopardy (TV)|Jeopardy]]'' occasionally has a category of song lyrics, which are read in regular speaking fashion by Alex Trebek or Johnny Gilbert. It's harder than you'd think.
** It's also ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1UaC0ceVXNg hilarious]''.
* Bill Bailey delivers a classic pub gag [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qod7nSGKag0 In the Style of Geoffrey Chaucer]
* In early seasons of [[Saturday Night Live]] (not to be confused with Howard Cosell's failed show of the same name), Bill Murray would play "Nick Silver", a lounge singer who would 'loungify' anything - even the theme to [[Star Wars]] , making up lyrics if there were none.
* On ''[[Late Night With Jimmy Fallon]]'', Fallon as Neil Young covered ''[[The Fresh Prince of Bel Air]]'''s theme song as a moody travel song.


== Radio ==
== Radio ==
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue (Radio)|I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue]]'', as well as having its One Song to the Tune of Another round, has also taken various topics and performed them in the style of various types of music (e.g. blues, calypso, even madrigals). They've also taken songs and performed them as a duet, with one team member singing normally and the other playing a role and commenting on the action. For example:
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'', as well as having its One Song to the Tune of Another round, has also taken various topics and performed them in the style of various types of music (e.g. blues, calypso, even madrigals). They've also taken songs and performed them as a duet, with one team member singing normally and the other playing a role and commenting on the action. For example:
{{quote| '''Barry (as Lee Marvin)''': #I was born under a wand'ring star#<br />
{{quote|'''Barry (as Lee Marvin)''': #I was born under a wand'ring star#
'''Graeme (as his hairdresser)''': No! ''I'' was born under a wand'ring star!<br />
'''Graeme (as his hairdresser)''': No! ''I'' was born under a wand'ring star!
'''Barry''': #Wheels are made for rolling#<br />
'''Barry''': #Wheels are made for rolling#
'''Graeme''': Mules are made to pack, always pop a pair in me suitcase... }}
'''Graeme''': Mules are made to pack, always pop a pair in me suitcase... }}
** There's also a rarer round in which they sing a singer's song in the style of "his distant relative", with the same surname. For example, Louis Armstrong's ''What A Wonderful World'' in the style of Neil Armstrong:
** There's also a rarer round in which they sing a singer's song in the style of "his distant relative", with the same surname. For example, Louis Armstrong's ''What A Wonderful World'' in the style of Neil Armstrong:
{{quote| '''Barry''': I see trees of green (mike scratch) red roses too (beep) I see them bloom (mike scratch) loving you (beep) and I think to myself, what a wonderful moon...}}
{{quote|'''Barry''': I see trees of green (mike scratch) red roses too (beep) I see them bloom (mike scratch) loving you (beep) and I think to myself, what a wonderful moon...}}
** There's also the round ''Stars In Their Ears'', where one panellist sings a song in the style of a celebrity. Willie Rushton once sang a song in the style of Eartha Kitt, mixing in snatches of "Santa Baby" and an impression of [[Orson Welles]].
** There's also the round ''Stars In Their Ears'', where one panellist sings a song in the style of a celebrity. Willie Rushton once sang a song in the style of Eartha Kitt, mixing in snatches of "Santa Baby" and an impression of [[Orson Welles]].



== Tabletop Games ==
== Tabletop Games ==
* ''[http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtgcom/feature/391 Space: The Convergence]'' is ''[[Magic the Gathering|Magic: The Gathering]]'' <small>[[Recycled in Space|IN SPACE]]</small>! Note that every card in the article is an actual ''Magic'' card In The Style Of science fiction.
* ''[http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtgcom/feature/391 Space: The Convergence]'' is ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]'' <small>[[Recycled in Space|IN SPACE]]</small>! Note that every card in the article is an actual ''Magic'' card In The Style Of science fiction.
* /tg/ likes to do it about as much as [[Fusion Fic]]:
** [https://1d4chan.org/wiki/Scrollhammer Scrollhammer] (''[[Elder Scrolls]]'', as if it were a ''[[Warhammer]]''-style wargame).
** ''Fallout 40k'' - ''[[Fallout]]'' converted all the way into ''[[Warhammer 40,000 Roleplay]]'' format.
** Gorkken Morkann - orkified ''[[Gurren Lagann]]'' ( [http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/19926436/#p19930204 in thread], [https://1d4chan.org/wiki/File:Gorkken_Morkann_by_Jaekyu.jpg 1d4chan])
** Miniatures: [[Monty Python]] style Imperial [https://imgur.com/gallery/Yqt0Mvv Inquisition], ''[[Bob the Angry Flower]]'' style [https://imgur.com/JcRbjWZ Necrons], ''[[Hello Kitty]]'' style [https://imgur.com/Wd0FuhZ Necrons].
** Introductions to TG critters, [[Steve Irwin]] style: ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'' ([http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/27756548/#p27801805 Swarmlord]), D&D ([http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/31502134/#p31517981 Elf], Dwarf and Orc below, also Halfling and Red Dragon entries from another guy).


== Theater ==
== Theater ==
* There exists a one-act play entitled ''De-LEAR-ium'' which replays the opening scene of Shakespeare's ''King Lear'' multiple times -- the first time as written, and each subsequent time in the style of an entirely different work or genre, including ''[[Star Wars]]'' (featuring the evil Kingth Learder) and ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'' (with Lear as Frank N. Furter, and Gloucester and Cordelia as Brad and Janet).
* There exists a one-act play entitled ''De-LEAR-ium'' which replays the opening scene of Shakespeare's ''King Lear'' multiple times—the first time as written, and each subsequent time in the style of an entirely different work or genre, including ''[[Star Wars]]'' (featuring the evil Kingth Learder) and ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'' (with Lear as Frank N. Furter, and Gloucester and Cordelia as Brad and Janet).
* This troper once worked as a stage manager for a play called "American Ma(u)l" (sic). The show opens on Thomas Jefferson's plantation, with all of his slaves at work in the fields, singing a mournful-sounding work song...and after a moment, it becomes apparent that what they're singing is actually a re-do of Nelly's "Hot In Here." (The original cast worked out the arrangement themselves...it sounded surprisingly good!)
* This troper once worked as a stage manager for a play called "American Ma(u)l" (sic). The show opens on Thomas Jefferson's plantation, with all of his slaves at work in the fields, singing a mournful-sounding work song...and after a moment, it becomes apparent that what they're singing is actually a re-do of Nelly's "Hot In Here." (The original cast worked out the arrangement themselves...it sounded surprisingly good!)
* ''The Musical of Musicals'' takes a classic theatre plot (a woman can't pay her rent) and presents it in the styles of Rogers & Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Kander & Ebb.
* ''The Musical of Musicals'' takes a classic theatre plot (a woman can't pay her rent) and presents it in the styles of Rogers & Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Kander & Ebb.
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== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qzk_53CNL9U Bigfoot]'' from [[Maple Story]] sounds quite a bit like Kevin Schilder's work from the Heretic and Hexen games. This would count as a Jimmy Hart Version except that while it fits the style of Schilder's music, it does not seem to sound like any specific song.
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qzk_53CNL9U Bigfoot]'' from [[Maple Story]] sounds quite a bit like Kevin Schilder's work from the Heretic and Hexen games. This would count as a Jimmy Hart Version except that while it fits the style of Schilder's music, it does not seem to sound like any specific song.
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZP-tDsblgM Pursuit of Truth] from ''[[Halo 2]]'' is more or less [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgdnu_G0rzo Leela] from ''[[Marathon (Video Game)|Marathon]]'' (Bungie's previous FPS) rearranged in the style of [[Kraftwerk]]'s [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXa9tXcMhXQ The Robots].
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZP-tDsblgM Pursuit of Truth] from ''[[Halo 2]]'' is more or less [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgdnu_G0rzo Leela] from ''[[Marathon Trilogy|Marathon]]'' (Bungie's previous FPS) rearranged in the style of [[Kraftwerk]]'s [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXa9tXcMhXQ The Robots].


== Web Comics ==

* T-Rex of ''[[Dinosaur Comics]]'' [https://web.archive.org/web/20090501011239/http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000967.html loves these].
== Webcomics ==
* T-Rex of ''[[Dinosaur Comics (Webcomic)|Dinosaur Comics]]'' [http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000967.html loves these].
* Ray of ''[[Achewood]]'' has a watch that auto-documents his activities in various authors' narrative voices. [http://achewood.com/index.php?date=06092003 It can do Hemingway.]
* Ray of ''[[Achewood]]'' has a watch that auto-documents his activities in various authors' narrative voices. [http://achewood.com/index.php?date=06092003 It can do Hemingway.]
* ''[[Wonderella]]'' [http://nonadventures.com/2006/12/09/sin-derella/ in the style of] ''[[Sin City]].'' ''[[VG Cats]]'' [http://www.vgcats.com/comics/?strip_id=180 in the style of] ''[[Sin City]].'' ''[[Sinfest]]'' [http://www.sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=3429 in the style of...]
* ''[[Wonderella]]'' [http://nonadventures.com/2006/12/09/sin-derella/ in the style of] ''[[Sin City]].'' ''[[VG Cats]]'' [http://www.vgcats.com/comics/?strip_id=180 in the style of] ''[[Sin City]].'' ''[[Sinfest]]'' [https://web.archive.org/web/20140209164407/http://sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=3429 in the style of...]
* Some [[Omake|side stories]] from ''[[Girl Genius]]'', like a somewhat [[Noir]] story of a "private Jäger".


== Web Original ==
== Web Original ==
* At a concert commemorating the anniversary of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Fire_of_Meireki Great Fire of Meireki] which devastated the city of Tokyo in 1657, a Japanese orchestra performed [http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=03e_1201105234 Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water" in Japanese, using traditional instruments].
* At a concert commemorating the anniversary of the [[wikipedia:Great Fire of Meireki|Great Fire of Meireki]] which devastated the city of Tokyo in 1657, a Japanese orchestra performed [http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=03e_1201105234 Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water" in Japanese, using traditional instruments].
* A number of articles on the [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Main_Page Transformers Wiki] are written specifically with their characters in mind: The [[Transformers Generation 1|Wheelie]] article is entirely in rhyme, much like his speaking pattern, while the articles of the various Starscream clones in ''[[Transformers Animated]]'' are written to reflect the character, so the Liar's page is made to be entirely contradictory, the sycophant sucks up to everybody, etc...
* A number of articles on the [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Main_Page Transformers Wiki] are written specifically with their characters in mind: The [[Transformers Generation 1|Wheelie]] article is entirely in rhyme, much like his speaking pattern, while the articles of the various Starscream clones in ''[[Transformers Animated]]'' are written to reflect the character, so the Liar's page is made to be entirely contradictory, the sycophant sucks up to everybody, etc...
** Special note must go to the page for [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Angry_Archer the Angry Archer], which is entirely in [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]], including (hilariously) the ''episode titles'' of the story references.
** Special note must go to the page for [http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Angry_Archer the Angry Archer], which is entirely in [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]], including (hilariously) the ''episode titles'' of the story references.
** [[Uncyclopedia]] does the same, including categories such as "Articles that look like the thing they're about" and "Articles about a person written [[In the Style Of]] that person".
** [[Uncyclopedia]] does the same, including categories such as "Articles that look like the thing they're about" and "Articles about a person written In the Style Of that person".
* Since The Straight Dope Message Board often provides links to us in its Cafe Society section, it's only fair to reference an awesome thread over there. What if ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' was written [[In the Style Of]] [http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=138905 different authors]?
* Since The Straight Dope Message Board often provides links to us in its Cafe Society section, it's only fair to reference an awesome thread over there. What if ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' was written In the Style Of [http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=138905 different authors]?
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4PvHmqvQko Super Mario / Harry Potter / Star Wars InTheStyleOf 30's ragtime piano medleys]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4PvHmqvQko Super Mario / Harry Potter / Star Wars InTheStyleOf 30's ragtime piano medleys]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9tbhTL3yxU Las Ketchup's Asereje InTheStyleOf chiptunes]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9tbhTL3yxU Las Ketchup's Asereje InTheStyleOf chiptunes]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaGHVWKrcpQ Abbott and Costello's Who's On First in Shakespearean English]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaGHVWKrcpQ Abbott and Costello's Who's On First in Shakespearean English]
* [[That Guy With the Glasses|Doug Walker]] [http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/nostalgia-critic/10470-wereback reviewed] ''[[Were Back a Dinosaurs Story|We?re Back! A Dinosaur?s Story]]'' as a [[Hunter S Thompson]] pastiche, "Raoul Puke, creator of Fozzie journalism".
* [[That Guy With The Glasses|Doug Walker]] [https://web.archive.org/web/20130925052240/http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/nostalgia-critic/10470-wereback reviewed] ''[[We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story]]'' as a [[Hunter S. Thompson]] pastiche, "Raoul Puke, creator of Fozzie journalism".
* ''[[Twila the Girl Who Waz In Luv With A Vampyre (Fanfic)|Twila the Girl Who Waz In Luv With A Vampyre]]'' (sic) is ''[[Twilight (Literature)|Twilight]]'' in the style of [[My Immortal|Tara Gilesbie]].
* ''[[Twila the Girl Who Waz In Luv With A Vampyre]]'' (sic) is ''[[Twilight (novel)|Twilight]]'' in the style of [[My Immortal|Tara Gilesbie]].
* [[TV Tropes]] itself has written the summary of ''[[A Case of Spring Fever]]'' in the style of a horror story.
* Here at All The Tropes, we have the summary of ''[[A Case of Spring Fever]]'' in the style of a horror story.
** Also a number of [[Self-Demonstrating Article]]s on [[This Very Wiki]], including those for ''[[Finnegans Wake]]'' and [[Adam West]].

== Literature ==
* G. K. Chesterton wrote a set of [http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~mward/gkc/books/kingcole.html three variations on Old King Cole,] in the styles of Tennyson, [[William Butler Yeats|Yeats]], and [[Walt Whitman|Whitman]].
* Rudyard Kipling produced an entire book of <s> poetry</s> verse, ''The Muse Among the Motorcars'' in which various classical poets wrote about their experiences with automobiles, in their characteristic styles. For instance, "Horace" wrote an ode entitled ''[[Genius Bonus|Carmen Circulare]]'' and "Chaucer" came up with ''The Engineer's Tale'' in rhyming couplets in [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]; and of course there is a scene from "Shakespeare" complete with footnotes from ''all'' of his commenters.


== Magazines ==
* Early 90s Amiga game magazine [[Amiga Power]] had frequent sections called 'In The Style Of', normally depicting Amiga games in the style of other Amiga games.
* ''New York'' magazine used to have competitions for the readers which often featured this trope. One famous example asked the readers to retell a joke (about a kangaroo in a bar) in the style of a famous writer. Contributions included Poe's "The Raven" ("At these prices? Nevermore.") and Ingmar Bergman ("The action is set in a bar or any spiritual wasteland. The bartender is underlining in a copy of Hegel when a kangaroo enters ...") And then there was the [[Henny Youngman]] version, which simply retold the original joke provided by the competition editor, word-for-word.


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Latest revision as of 20:26, 8 December 2023


Yes, this Pokémon short is supposed to look like Looney Tunes.

"Now I can't stop wondering what other Urasawa-d manga classics might be like. Grim, angsty Doraemon. With serial killers! Grim, angsty Sailor Moon. With serial killers!..."

Scans_Daily, commenting on Pluto

Taking a work that's a member of a certain genre, and doing it just the same, except as a different genre. For example, taking a rap song and getting a barbershop quartet to sing it; or showing a comedy-adventure from the Sympathetic POV of the villain, making it a tragic drama; or just taking a page from a famous novel and adding in the stylistic quirks of a completely different writer.

Can be applied to any form of art that can be categorized.

Recycled in Space can be this, but usually isn't. Generally changes the meaning. For music, contrast with Suspiciously Similar Song, where the intention is to resemble the original as closely as possible while still avoiding copyright-breaking. This is one form of X Meets Y. If specific settings and characters are combined, it's probably a Fusion Fic or some other sort of crossover.

Examples of In the Style Of include:

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • R. Sikoryak's Masterpiece Comics is a collection of famous works of literature in the style of classic newspaper comics, including Kafa's Metamorphosis in the style of Peanuts, Wuthering Heights in the style of Tales from the Crypt, an abridged version of Waiting For Godot staring Beavis and Butthead, and other weirdness.

Fan Works

Film

  • A hybrid film-music example appears in one scene of Amadeus, in which Mozart, as a party entertainment, plays "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" in the styles of various composers suggested by onlookers, with a humiliating Take That at Salieri.
    • Victor Borge must have seen that play.
    • Mozart did, in fact, write a series of piano variations on the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star," though the words we know hadn't been written yet. Don't remember if they're meant to be imitating specific composers, or just different musical styles.
      • Just a standard set of Mozart variations on a theme. "Standard" for Mozart being "Masterwork" for anyone else, but there you have it.
  • At the end of The Hangover, a soft rock band at a wedding does a cover of 50 Cent's "Candy Shop."
  • The surrealist Bob Dylan biopic I'm Not There uses five actors (and one actress) to portray different characters inspired by Dylan's ever-changing persona, each of whom is in a separate storyline shot in a different, sometimes self-consciously imitative style:
  • Does anyone notice that the second opening song that accompanies "Bella Notte" in the intro to Lady and the Tramp ("Peace on Earth") sounds like a harmony for "Silent Night" by Joseph Mohr and Franz Xaver Gruber?

Literature

Periodicals

  • Early 90s Amiga game magazine Amiga Power had frequent sections called 'In The Style Of', normally depicting Amiga games in the style of other Amiga games.
  • New York magazine used to have competitions for the readers which often featured this trope. One famous example asked the readers to retell a joke (about a kangaroo getting overcharged in a bar) in the style of a famous writer. Contributions included Poe's "The Raven" ("At these prices? Nevermore.") and Ingmar Bergman ("The action is set in a bar or any spiritual wasteland. The bartender is underlining in a copy of Hegel when a kangaroo enters ...") And then there was the Henny Youngman version, which simply retold the original joke provided by the competition editor, word-for-word.

Live-Action TV

  • Kamen Rider Den-O's "Double-Action" has nine different versions, each in a different musical style; Eurobeat, ska, enka, hip-hop, pop music, death rock, piano instrumental, Arabian-sounding and a remix for the Reunion Show. One can only wonder what "Double-Action Plat Form" might have been like...
    • Not to mention the remixes of the show's opening "Climax Jump" centered around each of the Imagin -- Momotaros gets rock, Urataros gets ska, Kintaros gets enka, and Ryutaros gets hip-hop, the last of which is actually used in show when Ryuta is busting moves.
  • A regular feature of Whose Line Is It Anyway?, in which the genres would be suggested by the audience, immediately before (or during) the skit.
  • A regular feature of Shooting Stars, in which Vic Reeves would sing a song in the "Club Style", to be guessed by the panellists. The resulting lyrics would be unintelligible, and only slightly less so when sung in the "correct" manner.
  • Not exactly this, but Jeopardy! occasionally has a category of song lyrics, which are read in regular speaking fashion by Alex Trebek or Johnny Gilbert. It's harder than you'd think.
  • Bill Bailey delivers a classic pub gag In the Style of Geoffrey Chaucer.
  • In early seasons of Saturday Night Live (not to be confused with Howard Cosell's failed show of the same name), Bill Murray would play "Nick Silver", a lounge singer who would 'loungify' anything - even the theme to Star Wars , making up lyrics if there were none.
  • On Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, Fallon as Neil Young covered The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air's theme song as a moody travel song.

Music

  • Homestar Runner probably has the silliest possible example: Two Fake Bands, each already a pastiche of a different genre (hair metal and alternative), doing this to each other's songs. Available for listening here; it has the "original" versions of the songs as well, for comparative purposes.
  • Every "Weird Al" Yankovic album (with the exceptions of his self-titled first album, and Even Worse, his fifth album) contains a polka Medley , doing snippets of these for many contemporary songs. These are basically his equivalent to Jeff Foxworthy's trademark "You Might Be A Redneck" bits; the audience feels cheated if they don't get one per album.
    • He also did "Bohemian Polka", the entirety of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" polka-fied.
    • Weird Al says that he tends to pick songs that sound better as polka tunes. He's right.
    • To add an additional layer, his polka style uses traditional instruments, but draws much of its presentation from the style of comedic orchestration found in such things as the works of Spike Jones. Common comedic elements in his polkas include the Minsky Pickup, the traditional vaudeville ending riff (does it have a name?), "Shave and a Haircut", and even a direct reference to Jones via the opening riff of his version of "Der Fuehrer's Face".
    • He also occasionally writes pastiches or "style parodies" of specific bands, the most famous probably being his Devo parody/tribute, "Dare To Be Stupid", which Mark Mothersbaugh called, "the perfect Devo song". Mothersbaugh was interviewed for Weird Al's Behind the Music special and said the song was "beautiful ... and I hate him for it, basically."
      • Occasionally? At least half of any given Weird Al record will typically be originals (6 or so songs), plus a polka medley and four or five parodies.
      • As further evidence, his online release Internet Leaks consists of one parody and four pastiches. While the exact inspiration for "Skipper Dan" has been debated (it's likely either Weezer or Fountains Of Wayne, possibly both), there's no doubt that "Craigslist" is The Doors (see below), "CNR" is The White Stripes, and "Ringtone" is Queen.
    • In June 2009, Al released "Craigslist", which is a Doors pastiche. (Just to add verisimilitude, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek plays on it.)
      • "Genius in France" is a pastiche of Frank Zappa. Frank's son Dweezil (who has spent the last few years touring the world playing his father's music with painstaking accuracy) provided a guitar solo and backing vocals.
      • Oh, there are way more examples. It's actually somewhat harder to find originals of his that aren't some sort of pastiche or tribute (and some are apparently cleverly hidden so that nobody but Al knows exactly which band he was going for). Here are some more:
    • A more occasional habit of his is to take an existing work and adapt it into a parody of another song. His most famous example is setting the theme of The Beverly Hillbillies to Dire Straits' "Money For Nothing". He's also set the theme of The Brady Bunch to "The Safety Dance", Green Eggs and Ham to U2's "Numb", and in more of a stretch, a jingle for the board game Twister was sung to Run DMC's "Tricky".
  • A popular trend around the Disney offices is to take classic songs from the Disney Animated Canon and redo them as pop rock. They're usually included as special features in Platinum/Diamond Edition DVDs.
  • A recurring segment on the Australian TV show The Money or the Gun (written by Andrew Denton) was the singing of "Stairway to Heaven" in various other styles, including Rolf Harris singing "Stairway to Heaven" in the style of "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport", and the version sung in the style of the Beatles by the Beatnix. There were so many that they released an album of the covers, Stairways to Heaven.
  • This was basically the entire purpose of Richard Cheese and Lounge Against The Machine, who perform pop, rock, metal, and rap hits in lounge-lizard style.
  • Paul Anka does the same thing, taking popular music ("Eye of the Tiger", "Mister Brightside", etc.) and doing it in a "lounge-lizard" style. But unlike Cheese, he's serious about it (covering Bon Jovi's "It's My Life", he even changes a lyric into a Shout-Out to himself: "Like Frankie said, he did it 'My Way'").
  • Nouvelle Vague is a French band that does excellent bossanova covers of songs from the 80s—from Bauhaus' "Bela Lugosi's Dead" to The Clash's "Guns of Brixton".
    • The band's name, by the way, is a fairly brilliant Bilingual Bonus: "Nouvelle Vague" is French for "New Wave" (the genre of the original songs), and "Bossa Nova" is Portuguese for "New Wave" or "New Beat".
  • Madness recently did an album of ska/reggae covers of songs like "Lola" and "You Keep Me Hanging On".
  • Polka Floyd is a band that does polkafied covers of Pink Floyd.
  • Public radio program Performance Today has a weekly feature called "Piano Puzzler", in which composer Bruce Adolph would play an arrangement of a popular song in the style of a classical composer, and a listener on the phone had to guess both the song and the composer being imitated.
  • Dynamite Hack's folk-rock version of N.W.A.'s "Boyz N The Hood".
  • The East Coast folk-comedy group Modern Man do this in their bit "Inappropriate Song Styles", in which they demonstrate why Pavarotti should not sing Bob Dylan and vice versa, why rap groups shouldn't do Rodgers and Hammerstein, why the Bee Gees should stay away from folk music, and why maybe Neil Young shouldn't sing anything at all.
    • They've also done more straightforward pastiches, such as "Channel Surfin'" (The Beach Boys), "Very Little Like a Train" (Bob Dylan) and "The Worst Dominatrix in L.A." (Leon Redbone).
  • Lore Sjoberg did "Nine Inch Noëls", a medley of Nine Inch Nails songs to the tune of traditional Christmas music.
  • Tom Lehrer once did a version of "Clementine" done with each verse in a different style: Cole Porter, Italian opera, Beatnik, and Gilbert & Sullivan.
    • He's also done other songs in various styles, co-opting their lyrical formula as well as their musical ones. The Irish Ballad ("Rickety Tickety Tin") is probably the best example, capturing the often-morbid storytelling done in actual Irish ballads and setting it to very Irish music.
  • Before Portal came out, indie rocker Jonathan Coulton was perhaps best known for his acoustic rock cover of the Sir Mix-a-Lot classic "Baby Got Back".
  • Similarly, mphtower.com's Gilbert and Sullivan rendering of "Baby Got Back".
  • William Shatner has done a handful of So Bad It's Good lounge covers of pop songs over the years, most famously Elton John's Rocket Man. Futurama took this to its natural extreme, when they got Shatner to parody himself by performing a spoken word version of Eminem's The Real Slim Shady. To anticipate your next question:

Walter Koenig: How can you do a spoken word version of a rap song?
Melllvar: He found a way.

  • Scissor Sisters released a disco cover of Pink Floyd's "Comfortably Numb" in 2004, which got mixed reactions from Floyd fans—while some considered it a butchering of the work, others found that the disco beat fits the song's lyrics pretty well.
    • The members of Floyd themselves liked the version according to reports.
  • Alanis Morissette's slow, soulful version of the Black Eyed Peas' "My Humps".
  • Dread Zeppelin, a band that takes Led Zeppelin songs and rerecords them in reggae style (and no, we're not talking about "D'yer Mak'er" here). With an Elvis Impersonator in vocals.
  • The Puppini Sisters perform various pop songs such as The Smiths' "Panic" and Beyonce's "Crazy In Love" in the style of The Andrews Sisters.
  • Every cover performed by Type O Negative is a perfect example of this. The medley of The Beatles covers at the end of World Coming Down, in particular, must be heard to be believed.
  • California punk band Me First and the Gimme Gimmes has made their entire career out of only doing punk covers of... less-than-rockin' songs. Examples include R Kelly's "I Believe I Can Fly", "Tomorrow" from the musical Annie, and "Hava Nagila". Each of their albums has a different theme: Have a Ball is all '60s/'70s radio hits, Are a Drag is showtunes, Blow in the Wind is songs from the '60s, Take a Break is R&B, Love Their Country is country & western, and their live album, Ruin Jonny's Bar Mitzvah, was recorded at an actual bar mitzvah. Yeah.
    • Their cover of "The Rainbow Connection" was actually used in the end credits of Kermit's Swamp Years.
  • British comedian Bill Bailey's version of the "Hokey Cokey" done in the style of Kraftwerk.
  • Hayseed Dixie (say it out loud five times fast) and The Pigs both cover other genres in hillbilly/country style. Hayseed Dixie specializes in bluegrass versions of heavy metal and other harder rock genres; their first album, "A Hillbilly's Tribute to AC/DC" was entirely AC/DC covers—from which they drew their punning name.
    • They also have an album called Kiss My Grass. It's an entire album of covers of Kiss songs. Christine Sixteen manages to get even creepier.
  • Similarly, Luther Wright and the Wrongs did an entire country/bluegrass version of Pink Floyd's The Wall, entitled Rebuild The Wall. It is surprisingly good.
    • Poor Man's Whiskey did a similar version of Dark Side of the Moon, entitled Dark Side of the Moonshine. Also surprisingly good.
  • Would you believe Judas Priest did this to a Joan Baez song? They really did.
  • Devo were quite fond of this; the best-known example is probably their cover of Satisfaction.
  • Nina Gordon took the NWA song "Straight Outta Compton" and turned it into a coffee-house style soft rock song.
  • Much of what the people on Overclocked Remix do is take tunes from video games and do them in different styles.
  • The opera version of "Dragosta din Tei", AKA the Numa Numa song.
  • Moby's punk rock and country renditions of his own song "Porcelain" can be viewed here.
  • Yes has turned both Simon and Garfunkel's "America" and The Beatles' "Every Little Thing" into jammed out prog rock epics.
  • Ben Folds has a recurring live song, "Rock This Bitch", where he asks the audience genres or styles to play the same short song.
    • Folds himself did an excellent piano-ballad cover of "Bitches Ain't Shit".
  • Rockabye Baby offers rock songs by e.g. Radiohead, Metallica, Nine Inch Nails, The Cure and The Smashing Pumpkins as soothing (and oddly compelling) bedtime lullaby versions for babies.
  • Much of the music in Super Smash Bros. Brawl are classic Nintendo tunes done in different styles. For example, "Gourmet Race" from Kirby gets turned into a metal song.
    • The version of the Super Mario Bros. Underwater theme also gets an extreme makeover twice in one track. It goes from the original 8-Bit form, to a fully orchestrated version, to a bluegrass arrangement.
  • Social Distortion's punk rock cover of "Ring of Fire" (Johnny Cash).
    • German hard-rock band H-Blockx did a similar one, with a bit of ska thrown in, courtesy of guest star Doctor Ring-Ding.
  • Hard & Phirm's "Rodeohead" is a medley of Radiohead songs, performed in a country style. No, seriously.
  • Señor Coconut is an artist who performs covers of '80s electronica, such as the works of Kraftwerk and Yellow Magic Orchestra, in traditional Latin American styles.
    • And you should hear his samba version of Deep Purple's "Smoke On The Water"—it's glorious!
  • Animetal is a Japanese heavy metal band who perform heavy metal covers of classic and not-so-classic Anime and Tokusatsu theme songs.
  • The Marilyn Manson version of "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)".
    • And "Tainted Love".
    • And "I Put A Spell On You," and "This is Halloween." He seems to have a fondness for this.
  • The unplugged Korn cover of Radiohead's "Creep".
  • Johnny Cash's famous cover of NIN's "Hurt" as a stripped down country song.
    • It's actually a very straight cover, barely introducing stylistic changes (it's pretty much how a regular acoustic performance by Reznor would sound).
    • Another Johnny Cash example is his cover of Soundgarden's "Rusty Cage," putting a country/folk spin on a hard rock/grunge song.
  • Death Metal group Ten Masked Men [dead link] do nothing but pop songs. Their version of "Blue" has to be heard to be believed.
  • Ozzy Osbourne and Dweezil Zappa did a metal cover of the Bee Gees' hit song "Staying Alive", which you can view here.
  • Peter Gabriel of Genesis fame got the heavy metal treatment at least twice.
  • Sonata Arctica did a cover of "Wind Beneath My Wings" in their power metal style.
  • Gregorian is a group that, well, does faux-Gregorian Chant style covers. Amongst their re-works are "Engel" by Rammstein and Belinda Carlisle's "Heaven Is A Place On Earth".
    • Can't forget their version of REM's "Losing My Religion", either.
    • Similarly, a group calling itself The Benzedrine Monks of Santo Domonica released a CD called "Chantmania" which redid a number of pop and rock songs as Gregorian chant, among them "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana.
  • While we're on the subject, Rammstein themselves did a cover of The Ramones' Pet Sematary and Stripped by Depeche Mode. Odd, but they work.
  • The CD When Pigs Fly is composed entirely of songs sung by people you'd never expect, and many of them hit this trope flat on the head—like Devo's version of CSNY's "Ohio", "Shock The Monkey" by Don Ho, Herman's Hermits doing Billy Idol's "White Wedding" and The Oak Ridge Boys doing "Carry On Wayward Son". (And don't miss Lesley "It's My Party And I'll Cry If I Want To" Gore singing "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap", if only for the wonderful cognitive dissonance it induces.)
  • Canadian punk rock group The Diodes recorded a cover of the Cyrkle's "Red Rubber Ball" (written by Paul Simon) for their 1977 debut album. According to liner notes on a later album, they did so because of Paul Simon's vocal disapproval of punk rock.
  • Doowop group Big Daddy is known for redoing songs from the 1960s onwards in the style of specific other songs from the 1950s. Perhaps the epitome of this would be their 1992 CD Sgt. Pepper's, in which they completely recreate The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1950s musical styles. Some examples of their work:
    • "With A Little Help From My Friends" in the style of Johnny Mathis' "Misty"
    • "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" in the style of Jerry Lee Lewis' "Great Balls of Fire"
    • "Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite" in the style of Freddie "Boom-Boom" Cannon's "Palisades Park"
    • "When I'm Sixty-four" in the style of Billy Ward and His Dominoes' "Sixty-Minute Man"
    • From a different CD, Dire Straits' "Money For Nothing" in the style of "Sixteen Tons"
  • The Estonian early music group Rondellus has a CD, Sabbatum, which consists entirely of Black Sabbath songs sung in various medieval styles. In Latin! For example, here's "Verres Militares".
  • Tori Amos performed a cover of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit," and released Strange Little Girls, a cover album of songs such as Slayer's "Raining Blood" and Eminem's "'97 Bonnie and Clyde" in her signature style of batshit crazy.
    • Tori is known to cover anything in her signature style of batshit crazy. She covered Baby One More Time for crying out loud!
  • Dub Side of the Moon is a dub reggae cover of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon.
    • Radiodread is Easy Star All-Stars' follow-up, a dub reggae treatment of Radiohead's OK Computer.
  • How can anyone forget Travis's famous cover of Britney Spears' Hit Me Baby One More Time?
  • 8-bit remixes have become something of a YouTube fad. You have stuff like 8-bit Halo theme, at least two 8-bit versions of Motteke! Sailor Fuku, 8-bit Through The Fire And Flames... As with all fan-made things, some are better than others.
  • Klaus Nomi's cover of "The Twist," also listed in the Paranoia Fuel article.
  • The Kuricorder Quartet, the group behind the Azumanga Daioh soundtrack, did an entire album of cover songs in the exact same style used for that soundtrack. Highlights include the Ultra Seven theme, "Bohemian Rhapsody", and the Imperial March from Star Wars. Alas, it's only available as a pricey Japanese import, but at least you can hear samples.
  • Snoop Dogg's "Gin and Juice" as done by The Gourds in Country Western/Bluegrass style.
  • The band Frisky and Mannish make their act on this basis, including a "cheeky cockney" version of Pussycat Dolls' song "Beep"
  • Another YouTube fad is redoing music in G Major, which lends a pseudo-demonic air. Among the many examples are perennial favourites-or-not Scaryroll (Never Gonna Give You Up), You Are A Pirate from LazyTown and Satan Knows (aka God Knows from The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya).
  • Heigh-Ho! Mozart has tunes from the Disney Animated Canon redone in the style of famous composers of classical music.
    • There's also Mozart TV, with various TV show themes treated in the same manner. You might recognize the X-Files theme in the style of Hovhannes as background music in some of Rocketboom's episodes.
  • The 2005 compilation album Policia!: A Tribute to The Police has various contemporary bands performing songs by The Police in their own styles. Some are good, some not so much, and some are just odd.
  • Beatallica: Beatle songs in the style of Metallica. Including Hey Dude and Blood is All You Need.
  • Guns N' Roses covered Bob Dylan's song "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," as well as Paul McCartney's "Live and Let Die".
    • Axl Rose says that "Sweet Child of Mine" was intended to be In The Style Of Lynyrd Skynyrd.
  • Roy Zimmerman's track What If The Beatles Were Irish? is Exactly What It Says on the Tin. And hilarious.
  • The Butthole Surfers have actually done this to one of their own songs: "Something" (not the Beatles song) originally appeared on their first EP in their typical noise-punk style, then was unexpectedly revisited 7 years later and turned into a melodic Shoegazing song (a deliberate Jimmy Hart Version of The Jesus and Mary Chain's "Never Understand" in fact).
  • The Moog Cookbook covered rock songs entirely on moog synthesizers, in an Affectionate Parody of the kitschy moog cover records of the 70's, tackling 90's alternative rock with their self-titled album and classic rock staples on the followup Ye Olde Space Bande. Notably, their version of Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun" gets a bossa nova arrangement very reminiscent of "The Girl From Ipanema".
  • Pick any cover song by The Residents. Any of them.
  • Ray Stevens had a big hit with a country/bluegrass version of the jazz standard "Misty", and later covered Sammi Smith's "Help Me Make It Through the Night" In the Style Of Spike Jones.
    • He also did a bluegrass cover of "Bad". Yes, the Michael Jackson song.
  • Blind Guardian seems to enjoy doing metal covers of old pop songs, including "Surfin' USA", "Mr. Sandman," and "Dream A Little Dream of Me."
  • German comedy band Excrementory Grindfuckers does it frequently by covering many popular songs like "The Final Countdown" and "Stayin' Alive," grindcore style. Interestingly enough, their cover of Metallica's "Enter Sandman" sounds entirely blues.
  • All of Richard Thompson's self-released live album 1000 Years of Popular Music is him doing songs ranging from 11th century ballads to Prince tunes in his own unique folk-rock style (the concept of the album is Exactly What It Says on the Tin, a sampling of the prior 1000 years of song), but for the coup de grace he introduces "Marry, Ageyn Hic Hev Donne Yt", supposedly a "medieval ballad from Brittany" but actually a medieval-styled version of "Oops, I Did It Again", complete with lyrics in Old English.
  • Dolly Parton and Nickel Creek collaborated on a bluegrass cover of Collective Soul's "Shine". Many accolades ensued.
    • Parton also released a bluegrass cover of Stairway to Heaven.
  • On their Aenima album, Tool takes the guitar riffs from their own song "Jimmy", plays them on a cheesy, ballpark-esque organ, and uses it as the "Intermission" that segues directly into the original song.
  • Jenny Owen Young's folk-rock version of Nelly's "Hot In Herre".
  • Joey + Rory did a bluegrass version of "Free Bird".
  • Big & Rich did a straight-up country cover of AC/DC's "You Shook Me All Night Long".
  • Pat Boone's 1997 album, In a Metal Mood: No More Mr. Nice Guy, in which he performed various hard rock and metal songs big band/jazz style. One of his songs, Ozzy Osbourne's "Crazy Train", became the theme song for The Osbournes. (As it happens, Boone is Osbourne's next-door neighboor, and they're good friends.)
  • The Mike Flowers Pops, a tongue-in-cheek easy listening/lounge revival group, released a cover of Oasis' "Wonderwall", which actually reached #2 in the UK Singles Charts months after the Oasis version did the same. A BBC DJ jokingly announced it as the original version when it was first released, and subsequently Noel Gallagher was asked by a record executive if he'd actually written it. They have also done similar covers of The Doors, The Velvet Underground, and Bjork.
  • Dwight Yoakam has done this a lot, most notably with a rockabilly cover of "I Want You to Want Me" and alt-country take on "Suspicious Minds".
  • Garth Brooks re-wrote Aerosmith's "Fever" as a country-rock song about a rodeo star. He also had hits with countrified versions of two Billy Joel songs: "Shameless" and "To Make You Feel My Love", the latter of which was written by Bob Dylan.
  • The Kentucky Headhunters have been doing this for ages. Their first three albums included edgy, country-rock versions of Bill Monroe songs (as well as a cover of Don Gibson's late 1950s hit "Oh Lonesome Me"), as well as a Beatles cover ("You've Got to Hide Your Love Away"). Later on, they released a covers album that included Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Roger Miller, Bob Dylan, and the Beatles, all done just as amped-up as their early work.
  • On The Muppet Show, the show's band, Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem rendered Chopin's Polonaise in A flat major... in funk, much to the dismay of Sam the Eagle.

Kermit: You can't beat the classics; you can only destroy 'em.

  • Reel Big Fish have a schtick of playing their own song "Suburban Rhythm" live, but multiple times in many different styles, such as punk rock, country, garage rock, death metal, emo, old school rap and disco.
    • Funnily enough the "country" mosh pit is just about the most riotous of the lot.
    • They also did a euro-dance-style version of "Gigantic" for a The Pixies tribute album.
  • Mark Kozelek does this for every non-original song he touches. He released a solo EP of deconstructed acoustic AC/DC covers, and his band Sun Kil Moon released an entire album of acoustic Modest Mouse covers. Red House Painters did the same with "Silly Love Songs", "I Am A Rock", and The Cars' "All Mixed Up".
  • Great Big Sea (a Canadian East Coast band who play a cross between pop and traditional Newfoundland songs) redid R.E.M's "It's The End of the World as We Know It And I Feel Fine" in a super-fast-paced, upbeat folk style. It's really good.
  • Cadillac Sky's Bluegrass version of Green Day's "Basket Case"
  • Jagpanzer's power metal cover of Gordon Lightfoot's "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald".
  • Ace Combat uses the Agnus Dei as BGM in the final mission of its fourth game, Shattered Skies, but the "Megalith" mix is different enough that you have to strain your ears to recognise it. "Zero" from Belkan War also reused the lyrics from the eponymous song of Unsung War, but given that the former re-rendered the latter with Hispanic guitar and castanets, it's a bit hard to tell.
  • The Boss Hoss. Famous for country and western covers of various songs, among them Cameo's "Word Up", Eminem's "Without Me", Outkast's "Hey Ya" and The Cardigans' "My Favorite Game".
  • Beatles tribute band the Fab Four have issued a couple of Christmas albums, in which they perform popular carols in a Beatlesque manner.
    • Sweden's Rubber Band also did the "Christmas a la Beatles" thing with their 1996 release Christmas! The Beatmas.
  • Mark Ronson (of Amy Winehouse producer fame) released "Version" comprising various pop covers in his distinctive brass-led arrangements.
  • Thin Lizzy and, subsequently, Metallica covered the traditional Irish folk song, "Whiskey in the Jar."
  • White Stripes performed the traditional English-Scots ballad "Black Jack Davey."
  • A number of Celtic Punk groups—Pogues, Dropkick Murphys, etc. -- perform their share of traditional Irish folk music in a punk style.
  • Similarly, Celtic-Rock band Tempest does rock-styled covers of English, Scottish, Irish and occasionally Scandinavian folk songs.
  • Uncle Tupelo recorded at least two versions of The Stooges' "I Wanna Be Your Dog"—a country/punk version and a folk version.
  • Anya Marina's cover of Ice T's "Whatever you Like" is performed in her typical style, that of a singer songwriter, creating hilarious levels of Lyrical Dissonance when one factors in the original's blatant Intercourse with You lyrics.
  • The Spider-Man theme song got reworked a few times, by Joe Perry of Aerosmith for the 1994 cartoon, the band as a whole for The Movie (it's on the soundtrack), The Distillers for the game based on the movie sequel, The Ramones for an album of alternative covers of Saturday Morning Cartoon theme songs, and by Michael Bublé for fun.
  • American heavy metal band Prong recorded a heavy metal version of The Doors' "Strange Days" for Strange Days movie, with Ray Manzarek (Doors' keyboardist) on keyboard.
  • Would you believe that there's a techno cover of "Fear of the Dark"? And that it's actually good?
  • J. S. Bach had such a distinctive style that a common exam question for high school music students is: here is a totally random melody. Orchestrate it in the style of J.S. Bach.
  • Robert Newman had a routine where Robert Smith of The Cure tried to sing various cheerful songs, all of which came out as Girlfriend in a Coma style dirges.
  • Sepultura's cover of Public Enemy's "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos. There are covers of "Angel", "Mountain Song", and "Bullet the Blue Sky" on the same EP, Revolusongs.
  • An Elvis Presley impersonator named "The King" recorded several albums with song by other bands and artists, usually with the main criteria being that the original singer also had to be dead. such as Nirvana's "Come as You Are" and Queen's "Crazy Little Thing Called Love". The latter song was already an homage to 1950s Rock 'n' Roll in its original version, but the King version Elvis-i-fied it even more.
  • Four German comedians perform as a Queen tribute "band" named "Burger Queen", with very... unique interpretations of their songs, such as a Bruce Springsteen version of "Hammer to Fall" (including a brief "Born in the UK" outro), a reggae version of "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", a country version of "Fat Bottomed Girls", a polka version of "We Will Rock You", a bellydance version of "Mustapha" and an AC/DC version of "I Want to Break Free" (using the bassline of "Under Pressure").
  • The Shins' version of The Postal Service's "We Will Become Silhouettes".
  • Matthew's Celebrity Pixies Tribute is a collection of Pixies covers done by one person in the style of various unlikely artists, such as Prince, The Bee Gees, and The Beach Boys. The results are generally more silly than convincing, but apparently the Jimi Hendrix version of "Vamos" had a few people fooled up until it quoted The Simpsons theme during the solo.
  • Merry Gear Solid 2 uses various backings made up of Christmas songs In The Style Of Metal Gear songs:
    • "Sleigh Drive" is a cover of "Sleigh Ride" in the style of "Old Snake" from Metal Gear Solid 4.
    • "Jungle Bells" is a cover of "Jingle Bells" in the style of "Caution (Jungle)" from Metal Gear Solid 3.
    • "You Gave My Position Away" is a cover of "Last Christmas You Gave Me Your Heart" in the style of Intruder 3 from Metal Gear Solid.
  • The Alex Skolnick Trio primarily performs jazz versions of hard rock and heavy metal songs.
  • Slaughter of the Bluegrass performs country/bluegrass covers of Melodic Death Metal songs
  • The Baseballs is a German group that does 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs. Really excellent 50s rockabilly covers of modern pop songs.
  • Toots and the Maytals did a reggae verson of John Denver's "Take Me Home, Country Roads", even substituting "West Jamaica" for "West Virginia".
    • They may also be responsible for "Jamaican In New York", which surely needs no explanation.
  • The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain have performed "God Save The Queen" by the Sex Pistols at least once, as well as the theme to The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly. Oh, and like so many others, "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
  • Bim Skala Bim once did a ska version of Pink Floyd's "Brain Damage" (aka "Dark Side Of The Moon").
  • Here is a video of Swedish a cappella band The Real Group singing a couple songs in unrelated styles: "Yesterday" as a samba, and the operatic version of "Take The "A" Train". Even better, they are evidently improvising these on the spot.
  • Adrian Edmondson's act The Bad Shepherds is based on the idea of playing punk songs with folk arrangements. It's played totally seriously and surprisingly well.
  • Mindless Self Indulgence has a speed metal version of Rush's "Tom Sawyer", that's barely more than half the running time of the original, but still a complete cover.
  • Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street", noted for its sax lines (a favorite of Lisa Simpson's), has been redone a few times in different styles, usually without a saxophone. The Foo Fighters version uses an electric guitar in place of the sax, with a bass guitar replacing the "whistling" synthesizer opening/bridge.
  • Each of Edward Ballantine's variations for piano on "Mary Had A Little Lamb" was written in the style of a different famous composer.
  • The entire purpose of power metal supergroup Northern Kings, who cover mostly 80s pop songs, but a range of other material, in power metal style.
  • Amanda Palmer Performs the Popular Hits of Radiohead on her Magical Ukelele, which is Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
  • Todd Rundgren did this with his own songs on the album With a Twist, which offered bossa nova tiki lounge versions of his most familiar hits.
  • Patti Smith has a cover of "Smells Like Teen Spirit". With banjos.
  • Apocalyptica is a heavy-metal cello quartet whose first album consists entirely of all-cello Metallica covers.
  • Trance duo Mythos 'n DJ Cosmo did this with several tunes, including "Heart of The Ocean" (the Titanic theme tune), Real Life's "Send Me an Angel", and "Unchained Melody" from Unchained.
  • DJ Sakin & Friends's trance rendition of the Braveheart theme.
  • The South African rock band Seether did a heavy metal cover of George Michael's "Careless Whisper".
  • Pet Shop Boys did dance-pop covers of such things as the slow ballad "Always On My Mind", the very much rock "Where The Streets Have No Name" by U2 (medleyed with "Can't Take My Eyes Off of You" by Frankie Valli), "Somewhere" from West Side Story, and the Madness ska track "My Girl". And then, just for fun, they did a swing version of their own hit "Can You Forgive Her?".
  • Max Raabe is a German singer who, with his orchestra, remake pop songs to sound like 1920's Weimar Republic Jazz. Covers include "Lucky" by Britney Spears, "Kiss" by Prince, and "Sex Bomb" by Tom Jones.
  • Liquid 360 turned Erasure's mellow synthpop track "Chains of Love" into a bouncy Euro-house tune.
  • Front Line Assembly's Darker and Edgier take on Madonna's Justify My Love, featuring Kristy Thirsk of FLA's side project Delerium.
  • The Talking Heads song "The Overload" was an attempt to imitate the style of Joy Division. However, none of the members had heard any of Joy Division's music; they were basing it on how they thought they might sound based on descriptions in the press. Because "The Overload" isn't a Joy Division song, it's not strictly this trope, but it's very close.
  • Friday the way MeatLoaf or Bob Dylan might have done it.
  • YouTube user CakeJarey played this trope with Final Fantasy songs... in the style of other Final Fantasy games. Now, given the series' usual pattern, what could the result be? Still awesome.
  • Clara Moroni, better known for Eurobeat, recently[when?] did a metal cover of A-ha's "Take on Me".
  • Dudley Moore did "Little Miss Muffet" as Benjamin Britten would have composed it for Peter Pears to sing, and, on Not Only... But Also, Tom Jones songs in a classical style.
  • Rap Is A Man's Soul, better known as "That rap from Gurren Lagann that goes 'Row Row Fight the Pow-wah!'" gets a couple of versions throughout the series. There exists a heavy fanfare version, a sadder, somewhat contemplative version, and perhaps most memorably, an epic opera version whereupon Dies Irae is sung as a One-Woman Wail.
  • As mentioned above, Paul and Storm, formerly part of the a cappella quartet DaVinci's Notebook, did a medley of various hip-hop songs in barbershop style. They called it Hip-Shop.
    • Prior to their split, DaVinci's Notebook also had a medley of heavy metal songs in barbershop style called Metal Shop.
  • The Aquabats! did a cover of Operation Ivy's "Knowledge" in the style of an acoustic campfire singalong (complete with backup vocals imitating little kids) for a tribute album. It may now be Hilarious in Hindsight since much later one of their members would co-create Yo Gabba Gabba!.
  • Beck has had fun doing this to his own songs a few times: "Burro" is "Jackass" in the style of mariachi (complete with Spanish lyrics), "Saxx Laws (Night Flight to Ojai)" is "Sexx Laws" in the style of Kenny G, and "MTV Makes Me Wanna Smoke Crack (Lounge Version)" is self-explanatory.
  • The Ramonetures are a band that covers Punk Rock songs in the style of instrumental Surf Rock (their name being a mashup of The Ramones and The Ventures, of course). Their self-titled first album covered The Ramones, while their second, Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene, covered X. Johny Walk Don't Run Paulene even has contributions by X members Billy Zoom and D.J. Bonebrake.
  • Puffy AmiYumi did this a lot on their early albums, thanks to the influence of producer Andy Sturmur. "Asia no Junshin" is an homage to Electric Light Orchestra, "Kore Ga Watashi no Ikiru Michi" does The Beatles, "Jet Keisatsu" is The Who, "Tokyo Nights" is The Buggles, and more.
  • A Hawk and a Hacksaw did a particularly obtuse version: they took "Foni Tu Argile", a Greek Rembetika song (i.e. traditionally performed on bouzouki and other string instruments), and recorded it as an accordion-and-brass ensemble.
  • Orbital wanted a remix of "Style" (a song originally performed almost entirely on a Stylophone synthesizer) by Stereolab, in their unique style. When they couldn't get ahold of Stereolab in time, Orbital just did a Stereolab-esque remix themselves (which they named "New Style").
  • An amateur cover of A Flock of Seagulls' "I Ran (So Far Away)" in the style of American Recordings-era Johnny Cash has been making the YouTube rounds.
  • Iron Horse are a bluegrass band who have put out a couple of albums of original material, but are mainly known for their Cover Albums - they have two albums of bluegrass Metallica covers, as well as albums that take on Modest Mouse, Ozzy Osbourne (including a few Ozzy-era Black Sabbath songs), and Guns N' Roses.
  • The English Beat did a lyrically dissonant ska cover of The Miracles' "Tears of a Clown".
  • In the early 2010s, channels hosting Heavy Metal versions of just about any song you can think of became popular on YouTube -- look for names like 331Erock and Leo Moracchioli/Frog Leap Studios.
  • In 1978, at his 40th anniversary concert at Carnegie Hall, Benny Goodman covered "Rocky Raccoon" by the Beatles in a style that was a curious mix of the original and Goodman's trademark swing.
  • Postmodern Jukebox is a musical project which performs pop and rock music from the 1950s onward in big band, swing, 60s Motown-style soul and other vintage styles. Some of their work is simply amazing, such as their version of Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun" and Radiohead's "Creep". Their work can be summed up in this decades-spanning cover of the Friends theme song.
  • An Italian duo on YouTube calling themselves "Melodicka Bros" are, as of early 2020, making a name for themselves doing covers of famous songs in styles wildly different from the originals.
  • Billy Joel's album An Innocent Man is made up entirely of original songs in the styles of various 50s and 60s artists whom he considered influences on his music.
  • Ooedo no Hikeshi, an orchestra composed of traditional Japanese instruments and chorus, made a small splash on the net in the late 2000s and early 2010s with their (very traditional) covers of Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water" and Queen's "We Will Rock You".

Radio

  • I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, as well as having its One Song to the Tune of Another round, has also taken various topics and performed them in the style of various types of music (e.g. blues, calypso, even madrigals). They've also taken songs and performed them as a duet, with one team member singing normally and the other playing a role and commenting on the action. For example:

Barry (as Lee Marvin): #I was born under a wand'ring star#
Graeme (as his hairdresser): No! I was born under a wand'ring star!
Barry: #Wheels are made for rolling#
Graeme: Mules are made to pack, always pop a pair in me suitcase...

    • There's also a rarer round in which they sing a singer's song in the style of "his distant relative", with the same surname. For example, Louis Armstrong's What A Wonderful World in the style of Neil Armstrong:

Barry: I see trees of green (mike scratch) red roses too (beep) I see them bloom (mike scratch) loving you (beep) and I think to myself, what a wonderful moon...

    • There's also the round Stars In Their Ears, where one panellist sings a song in the style of a celebrity. Willie Rushton once sang a song in the style of Eartha Kitt, mixing in snatches of "Santa Baby" and an impression of Orson Welles.

Tabletop Games

Theater

  • There exists a one-act play entitled De-LEAR-ium which replays the opening scene of Shakespeare's King Lear multiple times—the first time as written, and each subsequent time in the style of an entirely different work or genre, including Star Wars (featuring the evil Kingth Learder) and The Rocky Horror Picture Show (with Lear as Frank N. Furter, and Gloucester and Cordelia as Brad and Janet).
  • This troper once worked as a stage manager for a play called "American Ma(u)l" (sic). The show opens on Thomas Jefferson's plantation, with all of his slaves at work in the fields, singing a mournful-sounding work song...and after a moment, it becomes apparent that what they're singing is actually a re-do of Nelly's "Hot In Here." (The original cast worked out the arrangement themselves...it sounded surprisingly good!)
  • The Musical of Musicals takes a classic theatre plot (a woman can't pay her rent) and presents it in the styles of Rogers & Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Kander & Ebb.

Video Games

  • Bigfoot from Maple Story sounds quite a bit like Kevin Schilder's work from the Heretic and Hexen games. This would count as a Jimmy Hart Version except that while it fits the style of Schilder's music, it does not seem to sound like any specific song.
  • Pursuit of Truth from Halo 2 is more or less Leela from Marathon (Bungie's previous FPS) rearranged in the style of Kraftwerk's The Robots.

Web Comics

Web Original