The song was first recorded by popular Austin performer Allen Wayne Damron during a live performance at the Chequered Flag folk club in Austin in 1967. Jerry Jeff Walker recorded his single version (with Bobby Woods, Charlie Freeman,
Sandy Rhodes, Tommy McClure,
Sammy Creason, and a string orchestra) at
Phillips Recording Other artists who covered "Mr. Bojangles" include
Harry Nilsson on his album
Harry, and
Neil Diamond on his album
Touching You, Touching Me, both released in 1969.
John Denver recorded the song and released it on his 1970 album
Whose Garden Was This?,
Nina Simone covered it on her 1971 cover album
Here Comes The Sun,
Robbie Williams covered it in 2001 on ''
Swing When You're Winning'', and
John Holt covered it in 1973 on '
1000 Volts of Holt'.
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band The US country rock band
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band recorded the song in 1969 for the 1970 album
Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy. The song was issued as a single and rose to No. 9 on the
Billboard Hot 100 in November 1971. The band's single version begins with the Uncle Charlie interview (subtitled "Prologue: Uncle Charlie and his Dog Teddy") that also precedes the song on the
Uncle Charlie album. It was originally backed with another interview with Uncle Charlie, also taken from the album. When "Mr. Bojangles" started climbing the charts, the B-side was re-pressed with the same song without the interview. NGDB guitarist
Jeff Hanna performed most of the lead vocals on the track, with bandmate
Jimmy Ibbotson performing harmony vocals; the two switched these roles on the last verse.
Sammy Davis Jr. The song became one of
Sammy Davis Jr.'s signature performances, which he recorded for his 1972 album
Portrait of Sammy Davis Jr. and sang at President
Richard Nixon's invitation at a concert at the White House the following year.
Al Cherny Canadian fiddler
Al Cherney (recording as Al Cherny) reached number 45 on the Canadian
RPM Top Country Singles charts in December 1972 with his recording of the song. ==Chart history==