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What are the 20 most controversial album covers of all time?

What are the 20 most controversial album covers of all time?

Yahoo2 days ago
Content warning: This article contains images which some readers may find offensive.
If you're a music lover and enjoy a bit of drama, you must have heard that controversy is brewing over the artwork of Sabrina Carpenter's upcoming album 'Man's Best Friend'.
The suggestive – but hardly sexually explicit - cover features the buzzy 'Espresso' hitmaker on her knees in front of a faceless man who is pulling her hair back. And the release of the image has caused much debate.
Many argue that Carpenter's MO has always been pop-horniness, and that she has every right to express herself and her sexuality – in this case what some may perceive as a submissive kink - in any way she sees fit and crucially, without being policed or harassed; others see this image as degrading, regressive and promoting traditional gender roles.
At the end of the day, it's her album cover and can't we just let her be?
Some hyper-conservative and hyper-progressive corners of the internet clearly disagree, and the reactions have been intense – which is hardly surprising, considering sexuality has always rubbed some people up the wrong way. Plus, scandal is hardly new for musicians, as artists have sparked outrage with their album covers for decades, leading some to be censored or even banned.
From nudity to the open courting of outrage via political statements (and sometimes, downright poor taste), here are 20 provocative covers that rocked the music world and faced the most backlash.
We proceed chronologically.
While hardly controversial compared to some of the other covers in this list, that's a downright unfortunate title to go with this image. And isn't the one on the right an uncanny dead ringer for a young Stephen Fry? Unsettling.
It's not one of the Fab Four's most famous albums, but certainly their most notorious. Photographer Robert Whitaker took a snap of the band in white butcher's coats, surrounded by raw meat and dismembered baby dolls. Paul McCartney claimed it was a comment against the Vietnam War. US retailers were shocked and refused to stock the album, leading to it being withdrawn and reissued with a more vanilla alternative. Today, the 'Butcher cover' is available in pirated form. Those lucky enough to own an original pressing have an expensive and coveted piece of music history.
The cover for the avant-garde 'Two Virgins' captures John Lennon and Yoko Ono completely naked. It sparked outrage, leading distributors to clandestinely sell the album wrapped in brown paper bags.
At the end of the 1960s, Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker founded a supergroup with Steve Winwood and Ric Grech. They released only one album together, and to mark the occasion, they enlisted photographer Bob Seidemann. His image features a young topless girl holding a model spaceship. The image was considered deeply problematic and was promptly banned and replaced with a more classic shot of the band members.
The Stones have had several album cover controversies over the years, including 'Beggar's Banquet''s artwork which featured a graffiti covered bathroom wall. However, it's the band's ninth studio album, designed by Andy Warhol, matched with its inuendo-heavy title, which rubbed censors up the wrong way. It features a suggestive denim-clad crotch and the original pressing of the LP also had a working fly which unzipped to reveal white underwear. The cover was famously banned in Spain, which was under the fascist rule of General Franco at the time.
Photographer Eric Boman's shot of Constanze Karoli and Eveline Grunwald led many US outlets to censor the image, feeling uncomfortable with the sight of scantily clad models. Thankfully, most European distributors weren't irked by the sight of lingerie.
There's misguided and then there's what was going on in the minds of German rockers Scorpions in 1976. The album titled 'Virgin Killer' depicts a naked 10-year-old girl with broken glass covering her genitalia. The controversy led to a bump in sales, but it remains to this day one of the most censored album covers in music history. NB: Euronews Culture has decided to blur the image since this album cover has been deemed by many as child pornography.
Sex Pistols' only studio album caused plenty of pearl clutching when it was released in 1977. A record shop owner in Nottingham, UK, was arrested for displaying the records. This led to an obscenity-related court case, as he was charged for contravening the Indecent Advertisement Act 1889. The charges were eventually dropped. All because of the word 'bollocks'.
All it took was a female-led punk outfit appearing topless and covered in mud for everyone to collectively lose their minds. Considering the sheer amount of topless men on album covers, the only words that come to mind are: deal with it.
With an album title like that, it was pretty obvious that the (cheeky) cover image would cause some outrage.
There are no words.
It's one of the most famous album covers in the world but the artwork for Nirvana's grunge masterpiece proved divisive at the time of its release. It features a photo taken by Kirk Weddle of a four-month-old nude baby named Spencer Elden. Kurt Cobain refused for it to be censored, but did state that he would agree to a sticker covering the penis, reading: 'If you're offended by this, you must be a closet pedophile.' It didn't come to that. However, several decades later, Elden attempted to sue Nirvana for violating US federal child pornography protections with the image, arguing that it resulted in 'lifelong damages'. The suit was eventually dismissed.
Rap pioneer Ice Cube was no stranger to controversy, what with the headline-grabbing lyrics of N.W.A's 'Fuck Tha Police.' But with 'Death Certificate', he sparked further outrage with the image of a corpse identified as Uncle Sam.
The famous rap-metal band's debut album depicts the infamous self-immolation of Vietnamese monk Thích Quảng Đức in 1963, protesting the persecution of Buddhists by South Vietnam's US-backed government. The graphic image caused outrage. Not displeased with the situation, frontman Zach de la Rocha famously burned a US flag at Woodstock '99. The question remains: Could anyone really be surprised with a name like Rage Against The Machine?
Heavy metal has always been a genre that has courted controversy, and there are numerous album covers that have shocked over the years. For their 1994 album, titled 'Youthanasia', Megadeth wanted to comment on the fact that society was euthanizing the young. The visual depiction of this ended up being a woman hanging babies by their feet on her washing line. A bit on-the-nose, but it was enough to get everyone freaking out.
Marilyn Manson has always pushed the envelope when it comes to taste, and the controversial rocker did just that in 2000 for the album 'Holy Wood (In The Shadow Of The Valley Of Death)'. The disturbing cover depicts Manson as a crucified Christ, which led US stores to ban it completely. Considering that the controversial shock rocker's intended purpose was to critique censorship and that the previous albums 'Mechanical Animals' and 'Portrait Of An American Family' also sparked moral panic, the reaction to the artwork must have delighted him.
European fans of New York rockers The Strokes were treated with the original cover of their stunning debut album, featuring a leather gloved hand on a naked hip. The US were quick to call foul, however, disapproving of the suggestive nature of the image. The band had to swap the gorgeous shot by Colin Lane – who spontaneously took a picture of his then-girlfriend after she came out of the shower. The replacement? A psychedelic but far less impactful depiction of subatomic particle tracks.
In 2001, US hip-hop group The Coup, composed of Boots Riley and DJ Pam the Funktress, wanted to make a statement about destroying capitalism. Their idea: pose in front of the World Trade Center on fire. The image was conceived prior to 9/11 and the eerie timing of the album's November release meant that they had to replace the image with a martini glass on fire. Probably for the best.
The cover for Ted Nugent's album was pulled before it hit shelves - and considering the misogynist credentials of this particular image, it might have been for the best.
The sleeve for 'My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy' saw a painting of a naked Kanye West being straddled by a winged female monster with sharp teeth. The controversial rapper refused for the image be pulled, but the record label reached a compromise by pixelating the image in some territories.
Sabrina Carpenter's 'Man's Best Friend' is released on 29 August.
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Whether sharing her partner's physical proclivities — 'Pull me by the ankles to the edge of the bed/ And take me like you do in your dreams' — or her own long-running infatuation — 'I notice everything about you, I can't help it/ It's not a choice, it's been this way since we met' — Dacus tips her hand but doesn't overshare, keeping some details to herself. The album is musically gentler than much of her previous work, though when she finally lets the guitar rip on Forever closer 'Lost Time,' it's a cathartic payoff. — CHRISTINE WERTHMANMuch has been made of Maren Morris' decision to leave the country music industry behind, and how such a departure could affect her future in music at large. Consider Dreamsicle a resounding rebuttal to that speculation, as Morris harnesses her singular power as a versatile singer-songwriter to its full effect. The singer transforms the turbulence of her personal life into a diaristic pop masterpiece, as she crashes out in the privacy of her automobile ('Cry in the Car'), shoos a one-night stand out the door ('Bed No Breakfast') and finds her own sense of self-worth post-divorce ('Too Good'). Dreamsicle, much like its titular treat, offers something sweet and refreshing just when you need it most. — Cyrus has accomplished a tremendous amount in her now-nearly-two-decade-long career in pop music, but the one thing fans still wanted from her was an album that was undeniably more than the sum of its parts, a coherent front-to-back listen that demanded to be ingested in full. Consider that final item checked off the resumé with Something Beautiful, a spellbinding set that flows beautifully from the psych-rock power balladry of its title track to the stomping '70s soul-pop of 'Easy Lover' to the peak disco throwdown of 'Walk of Fame' and 'Reborn,' just getting richer as it goes. It hasn't produced a single anywhere near the size of 2023's culture-conquering 'Flowers,' but it doesn't have to — it's much more important for Cyrus' legacy that she has an album that no one song lives above. — a characteristically robust 37 tracks, I'm the Problem continues to offer a picture window into Wallen's late-night musings about relationships, small-town living and, yes, whiskey. And things feel especially diaristic this time around, with Wallen co-writing 22 of the songs, including the Hot 100-topping Tate McRae duet 'What I Want,' which marks his first collab with a woman and provides a much-needed female perspective to his typically navel-gazing views on love. Oh, and if you're looking for the true pinnacle of situationship songwriting, the brooding 'Just in Case' somehow makes casual dating seem romantic — because he's just keeping his bed warm while he waits for his true love to return. But the jam-packed project's ultimate love interest has to be Tennessee, spotlighted across the album – nowhere better than on the cunning 'TN,' which makes excellent use of a series of abbreviations to spell out just how forever intertwined Wallen is with his beloved home state: 'When I take my last breath, that's the dirt that they gonna bury me in/ TN.' When he takes his last breath, we also have a feeling Wallen will still be singing about women, whiskey and the Volunteer State. — Mexican singer-songwriter always finds a way to strike the perfect balance between reinventing herself without compromising her folk essence, sounding worldly while still honoring her Latin American roots. Cancionera is no exception here: a bold offering of son jarocho, tropical and ranchera music that also integrates natural sounds (courtesy of Soundwalk Collective) for an elevated listening experience. The 14-track set is a rich and nuanced musical landscape that sets up Lafourcade for another potential sweep at this year's Latin Grammys. — Choke Enough, the debut album from French singer-producer Marylou Maniel under her Oklou moniker, recalls the icy pop minimalism of Grimes, the hypnotic New Age tranquility of Enya and the experimental dance-R&B thump of FKA Twigs at different points, the synthesis of its influences is so fully realized that nothing else sounds quite like it. Part of that distinctiveness comes from Oklou's fragile yet warm vocal delivery, which is deployed at different distances — on the title track, for instance, she sounds like an echo from a wholly different song, before being shoved into the front of the mix for a breathtaking refrain. — J. LipshutzAfter a five-year layoff, Ovrkast. doled out his first full-length mixtape since 2020's Try Again with May's While the Iron Is Hot. The East Oakland rhymer dazzles over soul-grabbing samples with elastic precision on the set, shining alongside lyrical heroes Saba ('Dog Days') and Vince Staples ('Strange Ways'). Even when 'Kast is playing iso-ball, he lights up the scoreboard on standout tracks 'Spike Lee' and 'NEW ERA,' proving why he has box-office potential akin to another West Coast messiah by the name of Kendrick Lamar. — CARL LAMARREAs part of Animal Collective, Noah Lennox has spent years challenging listeners with experimental pop sounds — but in his own work as Panda Bear, Lennox's music is more like a watercolor painting, with ideas gently bleeding into each other to create the full soft-focus picture. Lennox has shown a penchant for doing more with less in his solo releases, never overcrowding his songs and letting his melodies shine, and this year's Sinister Grift feels like the pinnacle of this approach. This isn't Jimmy Buffett's beach, but the music is beachy, in the breezy, relaxed, bright sense of the word. The easygoing vibe and Lennox's eternally youthful voice hide lyrical undertones of sorrow, regret and a heavy heart that 'bends before it breaks.' Yet Lennox keeps moving, and ends the album with dukes up on 'Defense,' as he and guest Cindy Lee fight against hard times, with electric guitar becoming their Excalibur. — Glory is Perfume Genius' seventh album in 15 years, it's also his first proper studio album in five, one wrung out of pandemic-era depression. The first-blush assessment that Glory is softer and less abrasive than Mike Hadreas' previous album belies the melancholy, nostalgia, uncertainty and other overcast emotions that make up Glory's core. 'Clean Heart' is a twinkling, fragile indie pop song about what you lose and discover as time passes; 'No Front Teeth' alternates between Aldous Harding's gentle, meditative chorus and a grimy '90s alt-rock flavor; while 'Full On' brings an almost medieval musical flavor to some of his most arresting lyrics: 'I saw every quarterback crying/ Laid up on the grass/ And nodding like a violet.' — JOE LYNCHPinkPantheress polishes her Y2K sonics with carefully curated U.K. pop and dance samples and syncopated beats for her sophomore mixtape Fancy That. From the moment her featherlight vocals greet listeners with 'My name is Pink and I'm really glad to meet you' on the bubbly garage opener 'Illegal' to the thumping bassline and sweet come-ons of the Panic! At the Disco-sampling hit single 'Tonight,' the English singer-songwriter-producer beckons us to the dancefloor with reckless abandon and the alluring fantasy of a budding romance. — HERAN MAMOPlayboi Carti's MUSIC pays tribute to his Atlanta roots, earning him back to back No. 1s on the Billboard 200. Hosted by local legend Swamp Izzo, whose ad-libs echo throughout, the album celebrates Carti's rise to the top of the genre. Fusing gritty influences like Lil Wayne and Future with longtime collaborators Skepta and Lil Uzi Vert — plus huge star turns from contemporary pop A-listers Kendrick Lamar and The Weeknd — MUSIC honors Atlanta's legacy while pushing the culture forward, in true Carti fashion. — be hard pressed to find a rapper and a producer that have more chemistry than these two Griselda stalwarts. With Trainspotting, they spun off on their own to give the game a lesson on how to make a modern-era east coast street rap album, with top-tier rhymes and top-shelf beats that only the truest of aficionados can appreciate. There also may be a conversation to be had about whether or not Rome is the current King of New York, but we'll have to leave that for another day. For now, roll something meticulous and enjoy. — British singer-songwriter's debut — on which she co-wrote all 12 tracks, with collaborators like Uffie, Justin Tranter and Cobra Starship alum Ryland Blackinton — calls to mind bits of other beloved dance-pop princesses: the underground rave energy of Charli xcx, the euphoric choruses of Carly Rae Jepsen, the disco coquette purr of Kylie Minogue. But with her big voice, nonchalant humor ('all the good shit in life is always free,' she sings on explosive single 'Free') and assured approach, it's clear Gray has star power all her own. — steered her way into the hearts and playlists of R&B purists earlier this year with her 14-track set FROM FLORIDA'S FINEST. Delivering confessional-style anthems like 'DOWN BAD' & 'CUT UP,' SAILORR's candor can feel SZA-coded for new ears unfamiliar with her talents. Laced with grit, vulnerability and whimsical one-liners that are catchy but maddening to the opposite sex, the Vietnamese-bred singer issues headshots to cheaters and haters. 'BITCHES BREW' best showcases her pop sensibilities, as she takes lyrical swipes at those looking to tear her down. — U.K. has seen precious few new male rockers win over American audiences in recent years, but Sam Fender is poised to break through on these shores. With its 11 hook-laden, guitar-driven, lyrically rich tracks, People Watching has reached a respectable No. 16 on Billboard's Top Album Sales chart — but in the U.K. it achieved the biggest opening week for a British solo act since Harry's House from Harry Styles in 2022. The album's title song showcases Fender's anthemic sensibility, perfectly crafted for arena singalongs. — THOM DUFFYThe prolific English funk band Sault returned with a new album less than four months after Acts of Faith, and it's one of their most compelling releases to date — full of knubby bass lines, catlike guitar riffs, stairstep horn lines, and delicately stirring vocals from lead singer Cleo Sol. 'K.T.Y.W.S.' evokes the great Deniece Williams soul ballad 'Free' with more punch, while 'I.L.T.S.' serves as a showcase for Sol, whose tricky, intricate runs keep disrupting the track's head-nod beat. 'Be yourself,' Sol sings. 'Don't apologize.' — ELIAS LEIGHTThe lore goes that back in the early 2010s, a laptop was stolen from Skrillex, with the equipment containing a stash of music intended for an album release and thereafter lost. Whether that's entirely true or not, the fact remains that the final track of Skrillex's April LP, the mighty, tear-jerky 'Voltage,' has been floating around the internet since the producer's breakout years — with the metal-bending intensity that defined Skrillex's genre-evolving early output, and vocals that evoke his even-earlier work as frontman for emo band From First to Last. The track is thus an apt closer to F*CK U SKRILLEX YOU THINK UR ANDY WARHOL BUT UR NOT!! <3, a pummeling 34-minute mega-mix of cobbled beats and collaborators that nods to Skrillex's earlier dubstep era and also effectively ends it, a glorious goodbye as the star producer's final album of his long tenure at Atlantic Records. — after Think Later and a top five solo hit ('Greedy'), Tate McRae still found herself on the outside looking in when it came to pop's A-list. Well, the Canadian dancing savant drove her sports car into pole position with So Close to What, joining the next class of stars shaping pop music. McRae's songwriting matured, and she made the most of elevated production to develop a clearer artistic identity with the bionic synths of 'Sports Car' and 'Revolving Door' — both of which reached the Billboard Hot 100's top 25. The 21-year-old is making the leap to performing in arenas across America later this year, and now she has the catalog to match. — great blue-eyed-soul singer began the year with a Grammy nod for best new artist and the release of his sophomore album. The punchy 'Bad Dreams,' Part 2's first single, is one of the prime shoulda-been-bigger hits of 2025. It peaked at No. 30 on the Hot 100, simply because 'Lose Control,' the megahit from Swims' first album, refused to recede. The rest of the album features Givēon (on second single 'Are You Even Real'), Muni Long, Coco Jones and GloRilla, an impressive supporting cast that just further solidifies Swims' current leading-man status. – Tesfaye bids adieu to The Weeknd and caps his final trilogy with its third and last installment, Hurry Up Tomorrow. The Canadian Ethiopian superstar reflects on the afflicting nature of fame on 'Drive,' wanting to die at his peak on the Future-assisted 'Enjoy the Show' and leaving it all on the stage on the existential, epic 'Without a Warning,' over his signature synth-pop/R&B production. With the end of the poignant album-closing title track transitioning into the beginning of 'High For This' – the opening track of his 2011 debut mixtape House of Balloons – Tesfaye brings his legendary catalog full circle. — the anthemic rock songwriting on Turnstile's 2022 album Glow On was too undeniable to be contained to the veteran Baltimore band's hardcore-punk fan base, then the experimental ethos of long-awaited follow-up Never Enough was always destined to inspire frustration from genre purists. Yet the band that mixed rap-rock, samba and cowbell breaks on Glow On has simply been given more runway to refute convention on its follow-up: Never Enough rages when necessary on songs like 'Birds,' 'Sole' and the title track, but the synth-pop of 'I Care' and extended dance groove of 'Look Out for Me' are just as compelling, and offer new shades of a band that's coming into its own on a national stage. — J. LipshutzBy the time Valiant reaches his two-year old smash 'Mad Out' at the end of Prove Them Wrong, his second full-length project, the fast-rising St. Andrew, Jamaica-hailing star has already explored hip-hop, trap-dancehall and Spanish guitar-inflected R&B, without ever sacrificing his Patois tongue or slick wordplay. Whether he's working through relationship woes on 'Selfish' or delivering an unruly anthem in the Tommy Lee Sparta-assisted 'Rapid Up,' Valiant spends Prove Them Wrong flaunting his range and versatility, ultimately giving credence to the project's title. — we're only halfway through the year, Ryan Coogler's box office-topping Sinners is already the definitive film of 2025 — and its bluesy soundtrack remains one of its biggest draws. Curated by Oscar winner Ludwig Göransson, Coogler and Serena Göransson, the Sinners soundtrack bolsters both the film's plot and general narrative of the history and influence of Black music through an exploration of Delta blues, early rock n roll, and Irish music. Anchored by stirring orchestral arrangements, true-to-history blues songwriting and Miles Caton's soaring performances on end-credits anthem 'Last Time (I Seen the Sun)' and the Raphael Saadiq-penned 'I Lied to You,' the Sinners soundtrack has cast a supernatural hold on listeners that's even lasted beyond the film's theatrical run. — her Whatever the Weather alias, English IDM producer Loraine James channels some of her most atmospheric impulses, with the conceit that every track is named after a temperature, and to some degree, reflects that temperature. Whatever the Weather II is immersive and hypnotic, like the best ambient music – but it's never monotonous, from the skittering drum tracks that undergird many of its ethereal compositions to the samples of unintelligible chatter and other sound effects that drift in and out of the mix. That unpredictability – much like the meterological phenomena from which James' project takes its name – is what makes the album endlessly rewarding, from its ruminative opening to its curveball folktronica-infused finish. — great songwriter pays tribute to another, as Nelson exquisitely covers works by Rodney Crowell on this set — released in April, just ahead of Nelson's 92nd birthday. The tracks include Crowell's classic 'Shame on the Moon,' previously a hit for Bob Seger. Above the shuffling beat of an ace studio band, with sweet hints of Nelson's picking on his vintage guitar Trigger, he and Crowell duet on the title track, a gentle reflection on the passing of time. 'It's the first and the last of your days flying past,' they sing, 'oh what a beautiful world.' — T.D. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

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