Which Artists Covered Juice Newton Angel Of The Morning Successfully?

2025-08-30 19:40:12 327
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4 Answers

Xander
Xander
2025-08-31 20:16:37
I still get a little thrill when 'Angel of the Morning' starts — such a deceptively simple melody that different singers keep finding new colors in. If you’re asking who covered it successfully, there are a few standouts I always point people toward. The original studio effort that first put the song out there was by Evie Sands in 1967, but it didn’t get the push it deserved. The version that really broke through was by Merrilee Rush in 1968 — her take is the one people first think of from the 60s, polished and soulful in that era’s pop way.

Juice Newton’s 1981 version is the other big one everyone cites. Her arrangement leaned into country-pop and brought the song into adult contemporary playlists and country radio — it’s the rendition that many younger listeners know from the early 80s. Beyond those two, the song has been a favorite for cover versions across genres and languages: you’ll hear it in acoustic sets, country covers, and theatrical interpretations. I like comparing the Rush and Newton versions back-to-back; it’s wild how production choices change the song’s emotional center, from tender vulnerability to a more assertive, cinematic mood.

If you want a listening path, start with Evie Sands to feel the origin, then Merrilee Rush to hear the 60s hit vibe, and finish with Juice Newton to appreciate the country-pop crossover that reintroduced the track to radio decades later. Each one is successful in its own context, and that’s part of what makes the song enduring for me.
Zane
Zane
2025-08-31 20:27:22
I’m the kind of person who notices how a song morphs across decades, and with 'Angel of the Morning' the two big successful covers that always come up are Merrilee Rush’s late-60s version and Juice Newton’s early-80s remake. Merrilee Rush gave it that blue-eyed soul/pop sheen that fit radio at the time, while Juice Newton retooled it into a country-pop crossover that made the lyrics land differently — a bit more grown-up, a little more cinematic.

Evie Sands recorded it first, and that original has a cult following because it captures the songwriter’s raw intent, but record-company troubles limited its reach. After Merrilee and Juice had hits with it, the song became one of those standards everyone loves to reinterpret. I’ve heard it in stripped-down acoustic sets, in theatrical covers, and on compilation albums; different artists emphasize either the heartbreak or the sweetness. So if your bar for "successful" is chart impact, Rush and Newton are the clear examples; if your bar is longevity and influence, the fact that so many performers keep covering it says plenty about its success.
Mila
Mila
2025-09-02 10:52:44
When folks ask me which artists covered 'Angel of the Morning' successfully, I immediately name Merrilee Rush (the late-60s hit) and Juice Newton (the early-80s country-pop crossover). Evie Sands recorded the song first, and while her version didn’t get big commercial traction, it’s important historically. Beyond those, many musicians have covered it live or in studio — the song’s structure just invites reinterpretation. If you want a quick listen: check Evie Sands for origin, Merrilee Rush for the classic 60s hit sound, and Juice Newton for the version most people remember from radio; each succeeded in its own setting and keeps the song alive in different musical communities.
Quincy
Quincy
2025-09-03 10:48:34
I hear 'Angel of the Morning' at coffee shops, in playlists, and in late-night covers, and I get why musicians keep revisiting it. There are three versions I point friends to: Evie Sands’ original studio cut (a fascinating listen for collectors), Merrilee Rush’s 1968 hit that brought the song into mainstream pop, and Juice Newton’s 1981 interpretation that turned it into a country-pop staple. Those last two are the genuinely "successful" covers in terms of public recognition and radio play — they both reshaped the song to fit their era.

What fascinates me is how arrangement choices change the emotional weight: Merrilee’s version feels fragile and immediate, while Juice’s brings reverb, steel guitars, and an adult contemporary polish that gives the narrator a sort of steely warmth. After those, lots of artists have done tasteful live or studio versions — sometimes indie singers slow it down for intimacy, sometimes country acts bring in fiddles and twang. If you like comparing covers, queue up all three versions and listen for small differences: phrasing, backing harmony, and production decisions tell you why some covers land better with certain audiences. Personally, I keep discovering new interpretations that make the song feel fresh again.
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I get strangely sentimental about tiny music-history threads, and this one’s a neat rabbit hole. Chip Taylor wrote 'Angel of the Morning' and the very first recording was cut by Evie Sands in 1967 in New York — it’s the song’s original studio birth even if it didn’t break big at the time. The version most people remember from the late ’60s was Merrilee Rush’s 1968 take, which was tracked at American Sound Studio in Memphis and became the hit. Juice Newton’s smooth, country-pop revival of the tune came much later: she recorded it for her 1981 album 'Juice', during sessions in Los Angeles with producer Richard Landis. So if you’re asking where the song was first recorded, it was New York with Evie Sands; if you mean the famous 1968 hit, that’s Memphis; and Newton’s well-known cover was laid down in L.A.

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