• In November 2003, music critics for the British newspaper
The Daily Telegraph placed the single at the #1 spot on their 50 Best Duets Ever list. • In August 2006, music critic Rob Mitchum placed the song at #49 spot on
Pitchforks list of the 200 greatest songs of the 1960s, saying "Even after thousands of listens, I still don’t know quite what to make of this bizarre, creepy song. A country-outlaw singer drowning in a pool of reverb, constantly interrupted by dazed-hippie interludes, and haunted by a storm cloud orchestra." • In December 2015,
Rolling Stone ranked the song at #9 in its 20 Greatest Duos of All Time retrospective. • In 2017, Britain's
Financial Times recalled the recording as "part rugged country, part fey folk, cloaked in psychedelia by Billy Strange’s haunting orchestration, will echo down the years." The article also mentioned that Hazlewood had recorded the song again shortly before his death: "On his 2005 swansong LP
Cake or Death, he duets it with his grand-daughter ... Phaedra is her name." ==Selective list of cover versions==