<P> The recording features Bobby Ray on bass and "Fast" Eddie Hoh on drums . The hauntingly eerie guitar is provided by Jimmy Page, then a noted session guitarist working in England . </P> <P> The song has been covered by many artists: </P> <Ul> <Li> Julie Driscoll covered the song in 1967 along with Brian Auger and the Trinity on their album Open . </Li> <Li> Al Kooper and Stephen Stills covered the song on their album Super Session in 1968; the album's other featured guitarist, Mike Bloomfield, performed a version with Kooper at a New York "Super Session" concert eventually released on disc in 2003 as The Lost Fillmore Concert Tapes 12 - 13 - 68, though a subsequent bootleg concert recording features Bloomfield declining requests for the song saying he disliked the song . The Kooper - Stills version has been sampled in a number of hip - hop songs . This version also features "Fast" Eddie Hoh on drums, who played on Donovan's original recording . </Li> <Li> Sam Gopal covered the song on their album Escalator . </Li> <Li> The acid rock band Vanilla Fudge achieved mild success with a cover of "Season of the Witch" on their album Renaissance in 1968 . </Li> <Li> Terry Reid performed a ten - minute cover of this song on his 1968 debut album, Bang Bang, You're Terry Reid . </Li> <Li> South - African psychedelic band Suck recorded a version of the song on their album Time to Suck in 1970 . </Li> <Li> Hole covered "Season of the Witch" during their MTV Unplugged session . </Li> <Li> The alternative rock band Luna released it as a single (1996). </Li> <Li> The phony' supergroup' The Masked Marauders performed the song on their lone LP, with vocals by Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger impersonators . </Li> <Li> A demo of the song appears on Jellyfish's Bellybutton & Spilt Milk Deluxe Reissues as well as the Fan Club (From the Rare to the Unreleased...And Back Again) box set . </Li> <Li> Covered by Robert Plant several times live . The first was in the medley "That's Why I'm In The Mood" in 1993, and in 1999 when he toured with his short lived project Priory of Brion . </Li> <Li> Covered By Dr. John on the Blues Brothers 2000 Soundtrack; Dr. John's version plays during the scene in which the band arrives at the swamp lands, and is featured on the soundtrack album . </Li> <Li> Lou Rawls recorded the song for his 1999 album Brotherman!: Lou Rawls Sings the Hits . </Li> <Li> Covered by Joan Jett on her released - in - Japan album Naked . </Li> <Li> Covered by Richard Thompson on the Crossing Jordan soundtrack album Jordan Crossing; this version was used in opening sequence of an episode of the television series, Crossing Jordan . </Li> <Li> Covered by Jenny Devivo on the Hed Kandi Nu Cool 4 album in 2000 . </Li> <Li> Covered by Vanilla Fudge on the album The Return from 2002 . </Li> <Li> Covered by Lovewood on the album Halloween (Live at the Kings Arms) from 2001 </Li> <Li> The Strangelings included a cover of "Season of the Witch" on their album of the same name in 2007 . </Li> <Li> Covered by Karen Elson as a b - side to her first single from her 2010 debut album </Li> <Li> Covered by poet and musician, Alan Pizzarelli as "Boneyard, Ghoul of the Blues" on his 2010 debut album, Voices from the Grave . </Li> <Li> Covered by Mundy . </Li> <Li> Covered by the folk singer Cindy Lee Berryhill on Straight Out of Marysville in 1996 . </Li> <Li> Covered by the Minneapolis - based alternative hip hop artist Astronautalis on the album Gazing with Tranquility: A Tribute to Donovan . </Li> <Li> Covered by The Stone Coyotes on their album Situation Out Of Control in 2000 . </Li> <Li> Covered often by Buzzy Linhart live, as part of "That's the Bag I'm In" as on his album Live at The Cafe Au GoGo (1971). </Li> </Ul> <Li> Julie Driscoll covered the song in 1967 along with Brian Auger and the Trinity on their album Open . </Li>

Donovan season of the witch other recordings of this song
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