1960s and 1970s Adriano Celentano recorded an Italian version of the song in 1962 titled "Pregherò". It topped the Italian charts on the week ending February 2, 1963, according to the "
Billboard Hits of the World" section.
Muhammad Ali (as Cassius Clay) released a version as a single in 1964, charting on the
Billboard "
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles". Decades later, his cover would be included as a bonus track on re-releases of his 1963 spoken-word/comedy album
I Am the Greatest.
Kenny Lynch's 1964 version stayed on the top 100
UK Singles Chart for seven weeks, peaking at number 39 on the week of May 7–13, 1964, its fourth week.
Spyder Turner's 1967 version climbed to number 3 on the US
Billboard Black Singles chart, number 12 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart, and number 10 in Canada.
David and
Jimmy Ruffin (credited as the Ruffin Brothers) remade the song for their only collaborative album ''
I Am My Brother's Keeper (1970). Released as a single, the version stayed at its peak position number 61 on Billboard
Hot 100 for two weeks on the weeks ending November 28 (its sixth week) and December 5, 1970 (seventh week). It also peaked at number 24 on Billboard''
Soul Singles on the week ending November 21, 1970, its fourth week.
1980s Maurice White's 1985 cover from his album
Maurice White reached No. 6 on the US
Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart
U2 performed the song with
Bruce Springsteen at the
John F. Kennedy Stadium (Philadelphia) concert on September 25, 1987, during
the Joshua Tree Tour.
Anita Mui recorded the Cantonese version for her 1987 Cantonese album
Mung Leui Gung Tseui. In 1988, Mui's version was awarded as one of top ten gold songs by Hong Kong telecommunication stations
RTHK and by
TVB. After Mui's death in 2003, Hong Kong singers and actors
Miriam Yeung,
Denise Ho,
Alex To,
Edmond Leung, band members of
Grasshopper,
Andy Hui, and
William So performed Mui's version at
Anita Mui. 10. Memory. Music. Gather. (), the December 30, 2013, tribute concert for Mui. In 1989,
skate punk band
Pennywise covered the song as the final track of their EP
Wildcard.
Los Angeles Times reviewer Lorraine Ali described the rendition as "joking".
Trouser Press reviewer Jack Rabid described it as "silly, sped-up".
1990s and 2000s In a 1995 music video entitled ''Disney's
Timon & Pumbaa in "Stand by Me"
, Timon performs the song with slightly altered lyrics. Whenever Timon sings the chorus, Pumbaa survives physical mishaps and ferocious creatures. A trio of frogs then finish the song at the end. The music video was theatrically released in December 1995 as the preceding feature to the 1995 film Tom and Huck''. A version of the song was released by American R&B group
4 the Cause as their debut single in 1998. It was a
number-one hit in Switzerland, reached number two of the Austrian and German singles charts and number three in New Zealand, and was a top-ten hit in several other countries. In May 2007 American singer and rapper
Sean Kingston remade and sampled the song, calling it "
Beautiful Girls" for Kingston's
eponymous debut album. "Beautiful Girls" went on to be a smash hit and Kingston's
signature song.
2010s Tracy Chapman performed the song live in 2015 in the final season of
Late Show with David Letterman at
Letterman's request. The critical and popular response was very positive, with James Christopher Monger of
AllMusic praising Chapman's "emotionally pitch-perfect, spotlight-stealing rendition" of the song. Monger further said:With just her voice and an electric guitar, she managed to simultaneously bring the house down and build it back up again, which is no small feat, even for an artist who has proven herself time and again to be a powerful yet always benevolent force of nature. A recording of that live performance was released as the final track of Chapman's
Greatest Hits the same year.
Florence and the Machine recorded the song for the soundtrack and trailer of
Final Fantasy XV in 2016. The band released its EP
Songs from Final Fantasy XV on August 12, containing the band's remake. The cover peaked at number fifteen on the Billboard Hot Rock Singles in December.
Skylar Grey recorded the song which appeared for a Budweiser commercial for
Super Bowl LII, with proceeds for the song to go to the
American Red Cross.
The Kingdom Choir performed the song at the
wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle on May 19, 2018. Their version debuted and peaked at number one on the
Billboard Hot Gospel Songs chart on the week ending June 2, 2018. It also entered the UK Singles Chart and peaked at number 94 on its first and only week, the week of May 25–31, 2018. It is included in their debut album,
Stand by Me, released later that year. In 2018 it was performed by
Maria José, former member of the band
Kabah.
2020s On October 24, 2021,
Snoop Dogg performed the song alongside the audience at a Big Night Live concert in Boston as a tribute to his mother Beverly Tate, who died at age 70 earlier on the same night. Singer-songwriter
Stephen Wilson Jr. performed a version of the song live in memory of his late father. The performance was recorded for a
Live at the Print Shop release. Joseph Hudak of
Rolling Stone noted the audience's "remarkable" response to Wilson's playing of his "slashing acoustic guitar" and "the raspy moan of his voice". A viral video of his live performance received over twenty million views by late December 2024. The performance video on YouTube was viewed over 5.7 million times by mid-November 2025. The English rock band
Def Leppard released a cover of the song on February 10, 2025, with all proceeds being donated to
FireAid.
Charts Maurice White 4 the Cause Certifications (4 the Cause) Florence + the Machine The Kingdom Choir ==See also==