The iconic album cover features a man who is squinting at the camera while smoking a cigarette. He has previously admitted that he wishes he got paid '10p of every album sale', because let's face ...
The seemingly enigmatic marriage between country and punk was first consecrated in the late ‘70s and early’80s with bands like Rosie and the Screamers and The Gun Club, where more adventurous groups ...
Soaking up the punk and disco setting ... kids bludgeoned with the album’s videos’ MTV domination. Encapsulating what made The Rolling Stones so alluring during their mid-1960s pomp, Tattoo You, aided ...
A press statement introducing the album describes Time To Let You Down as "a savage blast of junk shoppe punk that kicks you in the ding ding" and "chock full of fist pumpers, head bumpers ...
The Lambrini Girls’ eminently quotable debut album, Who Let the Dogs Out, has all of these people, and a good deal more in its crosshairs and doesn’t hold back with putting the boot in. Their fiery ...
Producer George Martin's original idea for the cover photo of the Fab Four's debut album was to have the musicians pictured at the insect house at London Zoo, but the ZSL turned him down.
Ever since, the band have striven to reinvent themselves and their sound. The post-punk rock sound of their debut self titled album has since evolved to take on dancier tones and stylings. Although ...
over a danced-up electro-punk whirr that would’ve been right at home on the first Le Tigre album. The sound and message bring to mind the very best of riot grrrl and late-Seventies art-punk ...
fans are now convinced that the album cover holds a deeper, more personal meaning. Many speculate it may be a subtle nod to Bad Bunny's ex, Gabriela Berlingeri. The album cover depicts two white ...
Despite the sunny disposition on the cover, it feels in line with the album’s classic, if solemn tales from the west coast. Ariana Grande has been a music mainstay since 2013. Needless to say ...
and New Jersey post-punk heroes The Feelies happily obliged, releasing their excellent cover of the track in 1990, both as a single and on reissues of their seminal debut album Crazy Rhythms.
Sometimes you don’t need to overcomplicate your album cover. All that is really required is a stunning image that draws a listener in. Carrie Underwood’s Blown Away certainly checks that box.