Which Artists Covered No More Mr Nice Guy Most Famously?

2025-10-22 13:35:54 176

7 Answers

Ruby
Ruby
2025-10-23 00:32:46
If you ask me in a bar-stool chat, the single most famous cover of 'No More Mr. Nice Guy' is Megadeth’s gritty, thrash-infused version. It’s the one that got radio play in heavier circles and turned the tune into a metal anthem for a younger generation. After that, the song becomes more of a staple that bands throw into live sets or onto tribute records — not every cover hits the same radar, but lots of punk and metal acts have fun with it. I’ve seen it as everything from faithful live recreations to sped-up, snarling workouts that barely resemble the piano-laced original, and that variety is half the joy. For me, Megadeth’s cover is the “famous” flag, and everything else is a lively footnote that proves how flexible the song is. It still sounds great blasted through a car stereo on a long night drive.
Zoe
Zoe
2025-10-23 18:58:04
I still get a grin thinking about how many ways 'No More Mr. Nice Guy' has been reimagined — the original Alice Cooper version is the anchor, but a few later takes really stuck in people’s ears.

If you ask fans of heavier music, Megadeth often comes up as one of the most talked-about reinterpretations. Their take gives the song a thrash edge: faster drums, chunkier guitars, and a kind of snarling delivery that turns Cooper’s sardonic tune into something ferocious for mosh pits. On the other end of the spectrum, Joan Jett and her no-nonsense rock attitude have produced a version that emphasizes the song’s sing-along hooks and streetwise attitude — raw, catchy, and perfect for barroom playlists. Then there are bands like Mötley Crüe and The Donnas who have taken the track live and made it their own, leaning into glam or garage-punk energy depending on the night.

Beyond those headline names, the song pops up on tribute records, live bootlegs, and one-off covers from a wide range of acts — punk bands, shock-rock successors, and female-fronted rock groups all love it because the lyrics are theatrical and the chorus is impossible not to join. For me, the fun is comparing how each artist shifts the mood: some make it meaner, some make it poppier, and some lean into camp — but all of them remind you why the original became such a classic. I usually end up returning to Alice’s version, but those covers are great for freshening the tune.
Declan
Declan
2025-10-23 19:12:22
Scrolling through playlists, I realize how many different faces 'No More Mr. Nice Guy' has worn. The most widely recognized reinterpretation is Megadeth's, which took the Alice Cooper classic and recast it in abrasive, late-80s thrash clothing — the production, the aggression, the pace all made it resonate in metal circles. From there, the tune became a common choice for bands wanting to tip their hat to Cooper: you’ll find it popping up on tribute compilations, as a live cover at punk nights, and occasionally in film or TV when a scene needs that sarcastic, defiant energy. The original from 'Billion Dollar Babies' still carries the theatrical storytelling, but Megadeth’s cut is the one that widened the song’s audience in a big way. Personally, each version tells me something different about how a good hook can be adapted — I flip between the camp and the bite depending on my mood.
Theo
Theo
2025-10-25 01:14:29
Spinning through my collection, the name that always comes up when people ask who famously covered 'No More Mr. Nice Guy' is Megadeth. Their version crystallized the song for metalheads and helped it reach a new crowd beyond Alice Cooper’s theatrical rock scene. After that, it’s less about one famous cover and more about a thousand live and tribute renditions across punk, hard rock, and metal communities; you hear it at gigs, on compilations, and in karaoke rooms where people love its cheeky attitude. I still favor the original for its drama, but Megadeth’s cut is the one that made me smile at how songs travel — it’s a blast either way.
Piper
Piper
2025-10-26 15:11:35
Whenever this song comes up, I think of the way different artists stamp their personality onto it: the thrash-leaning version people often mention from Megadeth, the gritty, sing-along vibe Joan Jett brings, and the live, high-energy takes from bands like Mötley Crüe or The Donnas. Each one highlights different parts of the original — Megadeth emphasizes aggression, Joan Jett the hook and attitude, and the glam/garage crews the party and showmanship.

Beyond names, the pattern is what I love: metal bands amplify the menace, punk/garage acts speed up and rough it out, and female-fronted rockers often bring a fierce, anthemic quality. Those variants are why the song keeps turning up in tribute sets and live shows decades after its release. Personally, I enjoy bouncing between the original and these covers depending on whether I want to headbang, sing along, or just feel mischievous.
Daniel
Daniel
2025-10-27 21:49:37
Caught on a late-night metal radio show years ago, the version that stuck with me most is Megadeth's take on 'No More Mr. Nice Guy'. Their rendition scrubs the original's campy horror-rock vibe and slams it into a thrash-metal engine — tighter riffing, faster tempo, and Dave Mustaine's sneer replacing Cooper's theatrical delivery. That recording showed up around the late '80s/early '90s in soundtrack and compilation circles and quickly became the go-to modern reference for people who knew the Alice Cooper tune but wanted it heavier.

Beyond Megadeth, the song lives a busy afterlife: it's one of those classics that bands across punk, hard rock, and metal cover in clubs and on tribute albums. You’ll hear it as a singalong encore, a soundtrack cue, or a fun studio cover on various compilations. Alice Cooper's original on 'Billion Dollar Babies' remains iconic, but in terms of covers that grabbed attention, Megadeth's version is the one most fans point to — it just translates the attitude so perfectly for a different audience. Still, hearing the original always makes me grin; the theatricality is unbeatable.
Isaac
Isaac
2025-10-28 13:40:06
Call it guilty pleasure analysis: 'No More Mr. Nice Guy' is one of those songs that invites reinterpretation, and a few covers stand out long after the first listen.

Megadeth is frequently named when people talk about famous covers — their approach roughs the edges and turns the cheeky original into straightforward metal, which is why metalheads point to them first. Joan Jett gives the song a different kind of power: gritty, punchy, and built for crowd participation. Her style strips away the theatrical creepiness and leaves you with a kick-ass chorus to scream along to. Then you've got bands like Mötley Crüe and The Donnas who often bring the song into their live sets; those versions aren’t always studio releases, but they circulate as memorable live takes that fans love to trade and rave about.

I also notice that tribute compilations and festival sets are where this song keeps resurfacing — it’s short, catchy, and dramatic, so it fits into many genres easily. So if someone asks which covers are most famous, I’d point to the heavier Megadeth rendition, Joan Jett’s rock-ready twist, and the live glam/garage spins from Crüe-style and Donnas-style acts. It’s a fun exercise to hear the song through each of those lenses; I always end up picking a favorite based on my mood.
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