The Top Ten album covers

I ask the reader to please keep in mind that this is my personal top ten favorite album covers. In no way am I insisting that these are the best album covers ever, just the ones that are my favorite.

Onward ...

10. London Calling - The Clash: This must rate as one of the most iconoclastic albums of its time. The shot of Joe Strummer about to smash his guitar against the stage floor of the New York Palladium in September 1979 is punk photography par excellence. It also served as a visual aid to the frustration that echoes in the music itself. You only needed to view the cover to London Calling to know what to expect.

9. Ramones - Ramones: Another iconoclastic front cover. Annie Leibovitz' classic shot of the burgeoning punk group attracted as much attention as the music itself. The shot was deceptively simple enough - just line the four dudes in their leather jackets and worn jeans up against a graffiti-marked brick wall. Point taken. This, much like the aforementioned London Calling, was good punk photography. But how come drummer Tommy, barely 5-foot-6, looks nearly as tall as the 6-foot-3 inch Joey? Leibovitz played a classic visual trick: Tommy is standing on a little concrete ridge while Joey is slouched - but this is not apparent to the casual glance. But the photo works brilliantly and is the finest shot of the Ramones ever produced.

8. Turnstiles - Billy Joel: Photographer Jerry Abramovitz sets up a menagerie of city dwellers who crowd around the formal-looking Joel at the subway turnstiles, each one an exaggeration of everyday big-city folk - a flamboyant couple, on their way to the theatre, one would guess; a black man who looks like Reggie Jackson without the shades; a college student juggling several books; a teeny-bopper with huge headphones; a leather jacketed day-tripper; and a dour-faced grandmother-and-grandson duo. You can't help but feel affection for this motley cast of characters - including Joel himself, who stares with arched eyebrows at the camera as if to say, "Yep - these are the people of my city!" A great all-around album cover.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2Page 3Page 4

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for mark-edward-manning

Article Author: Mark Edward Manning

Mark Edward Manning grew up in Boston, MA and now lives in London, England. He wrote commentaries for The Boston Herald in the mid 1990s.

Visit Mark Edward Manning's author pageMark Edward Manning's Blog

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own

Article comments

— go to most recent comments
  • 1 - platinum

    Jun 19, 2004 at 7:29 pm

    Excellent list, just one slight correction. The photo on the cover of London Calling is actually Paul Simonon smashing his bass guitar, not Joe Strummer.

  • 2 - Al Barger

    Jun 19, 2004 at 8:26 pm

    There are so many choices. Let's get a plug in here for Prince's Lovesexy cover. For one thing, it was ballsy, offering himself up for all kinds of attacks.

    It's also good for how uncomfortable in has doubtless made a lot of insecure guys.

    It's also a really good reflection of the actual musical content of the album, the pastel-ness of it both in the actual colors and the emotional content of the music.

  • 3 - Mark Edward Manning

    Jun 20, 2004 at 9:08 am

    Sorry, due to having entered erroneous Amazon number codes, the album covers did not appear at first. I have corrected that.

  • 4 - M. Thau

    Jun 20, 2004 at 9:36 am

    How about the NY Dolls debut album cover? Can you remember any other cover that was as controversial?

  • 5 - Vern Halen

    Jun 20, 2004 at 3:41 pm

    Well, open up a can o' worms, Mr. Manning! I suspect you'll get lots of replies here, and everyone will be right.

    I liked most of your choices. My two cents' worth:

    1) All time fave album cover: Heartbreaker, the last studio album by Free. A high contrast black & white reversal of singer Paul Rodgers in front of Simon Kirke's drum kit.

    2) Close second: Boots by Nancy Sinatra. No explanation necessary.

  • 6 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 5:03 pm

    Those darn subjective worms! Vern, your Nancy Sinatra pick is excellent. No explanation necessary. Mark, I see what you are saying about the late Harry Nilsson. Great album, 'Jump Into the Fire' was always a mind blower. I'm with you on Dark Side of the Moon also.

    Anyway, hhhmmm..., I guess the rule I would use in rating album covers is that the content inside is good also (well, sometimes not). I like the fun factor also.

    Anyway, let me pull a few off the top of my head (no particular order).

    Jethro Tull, "Stand Up". The front cover design is cool, but I like when opening the cover a pop up of the band appears.

    Alice Cooper, "Schools Out". The classic school desk that opens to reveal the album. I bought one of the early releases that had a pair of panties around the disc. OK, I was one of those junior high kids that had to get every album first.

    Rolling Stones, "Sticky Fingers". Another one of those records with something to play with (zipper). Problem is that any album with things to play with usually meant having to return the album due to warping caused by the plaything.

    Jimi Hendrix, "Electric Ladyland" (original cover). Naked ladies? No explanation necessary. Well, i like the group portrait pose instead of doing some sensual thing.

    Rolling Stones, "Exile On Main Street".
    The collage of B&W photos could be hours of fun. The Ubange tribesman with 3 cue balls in his mouth was my favorite.

    Philadelphia Harmonic Orchestra, "Finlandia". One of my earliest musical influences. As a tot I called it the 'black tree' album. Music is great, Eugene Ormandy was the wall of sound for orchestras.

    Life In General, self titled E.P.. A five song E.P. put out independently by a Seattle scene band in '82. A B&W cover that goes from black to white and every shade of grey in between. Looks like a James Turrell installation. OK, some cool obscurities out there also.

    Beatles, "Yesterday and Today" (original butcher cover). The good ol' English humor at work. Need I say more?

    Beatles, "Sgt. Peppers...". It keeps you busy for hours checking out the famous faces in the group picture. Very colorful. I liked the pull out of the stand ups also. I never cut mine up. It got stolen instead...

    Grateful Dead, "Live, Europe '72". Nice art, the boot stepping out of a rainbow on a white background.

    Mothers of Invention, "We're Only In It for the Money". Good parody on Sgt. Peppers.

    And the list goes on...

    peaceloveguidance



  • 7 - Bob A. Booey

    Jun 20, 2004 at 5:44 pm

    Smashmouth? Lame. I hope you were kidding.

    Most of that artwork and most of those bands are truly horrible taste.

    Everyone knows the best cover ever was by an awful band, so awful I don't even remember the name of the album. But it was an album by Ween in the mid to late 1990s with a slut on the cover.

    That is all.

  • 8 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 5:56 pm

    Oh, Led Zeppelin's "Physical Graffiti" and Rolling Stones "Some Girls" for the same reason. The record jacket acting as part of the cover art concept. More fun.

    peaceloveguidance

  • 9 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 6:04 pm

    AND MORE! Grand Funk's "E Pluribus Funk". Round cut and shiney silver. Small Face "Ogden's Nut Gone Flake. Round cut also. PIL's "Metal Box. A round metal box, like a film reel case.

    peaceloveguidance

  • 10 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 6:08 pm

    It's A Beautiful Day (self titled). A pleasent painting...

    peaceloveguidance

  • 11 - JR

    Jun 20, 2004 at 6:58 pm

    Another one to "play with": Led Zeppelin III

  • 12 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:11 pm

    Oh shoot, can't forget the Columbia Records original pressings of Claude Bolling's 'Suites for Flute and Jazz Piano' (and others in that series). I like the Dali influenced art.

    OK, I'll shut up now, unless I think of something else worthy...

    peaceloveguidance

  • 13 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:13 pm

    JR, right on! I forgot about the rotating wheel! Deserves a vote for sure.

    peaceloveguidance

  • 14 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:21 pm

    OK, Jethro Tull "Thick As a Brick". The newspaper concept was fun to read.

    plg

  • 15 - Shark

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:37 pm

    1) West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band Vol. 3 - cover by John Van Hamersveld

    also rans:

    Sgt. Pepper
    Soft Machine (vol 1)
    Axis: Bold as Love
    Matching Mole's "Little Red Record"
    Nice - Ars Longa Vita Brevis
    ELP - Brain Salad Surgery
    Zappa/Mothers - We're Only in it for the Money
    Joe Farrell - Canned Funk
    Doors - Strange Days


  • 16 - Shark

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:39 pm

    #1 pictured

  • 17 - Shark

    Jun 20, 2004 at 7:46 pm

    Honorable Mention:

    Stones - Sticky Fingers (Andrew Warhola)

    Talking Heads -Speaking in Tongues (Robert Rauschenberg)

    Jeff Beck - Beckola (Magritte)

  • 18 - Al Barger

    Jun 20, 2004 at 10:17 pm

    Jefferson Airplane - Long John Silver
    Not so much just the picture on the cover, but it was an elaborate construct that was supposed to fold up into a cigar box.

    Honorable mention also for the gatefold sleeve of Prince's Around the World in a Day with the woman's figure for the landscape, and the little icons for each of the songs.

    Also, props must be given for the cover of Spike, with the image of Elvis Costello's evil smiling head mounted like a rock critic's hunting trophy that might yet climb off the wall and bite you.

  • 19 - BRICKLAYER

    Jun 20, 2004 at 11:00 pm

    Kiss-Love Gun
    Nazareth-Hair of the Dog
    All Molly Hatchet covers
    All Motorhead covers by Joe Patagno, or whatever the dude's name is
    Iron Maiden-Number of the Beast, and Powerslave
    Metallica-Master of Puppets
    Led Zep-4
    The Who-one with the baked beans

    So, so, so many of today's mainstream album covers REALLY suck! It's just a photo of the singer, or the band, or some really lame computer graphic that some nimrod like me could do if he had the time. They look like they put less than ten seconds of thought into the artwork. And if the tiny lyrics were not hard enough to read anyway, they smear or shadow or try some other non-creative, creative technique on them to make it impossible.

  • 20 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 20, 2004 at 11:27 pm

    Oh, and of course, any Yes album with Roger Dean graphics.

    Al, good memory with JA/Long John Silver!

    plg

  • 21 - Douglas Mays

    Jun 21, 2004 at 12:43 am

    BRICKLAYER, you bring up a good point about the lack of quality in today's cover art. A picture with some computer graphics that anyone can buy.

    Back in the days of the LP an artist had 144 square inches to deal with. Now with the CD an artist has 36 square inches to work. The problem is that I have not seen (like BRICKLAYER says) anything that really qualifies as good original art.

    There are some alright covers out there, but the art of a CD cover has a long ways to go.

    I'm with you on that one, BRICKLAYER.

    peaceloveguidance.

  • 22 - Al Barger

    Jun 21, 2004 at 5:27 am

    Though I was the right teen age for it, I never gave a rat's ass about Farrah Fawcett and her famous poster.

    Instead, I was fairly fixated on the cover of Rickie Lee Jones eponymous debut album, with the photo of her in the beret.

    That may be more a personal thing than any indication that it's a particularly great album cover. Also, the fascination was based on this being a picture of the girl who's singing stuff like "The Last Chance Texaco."

    I'll just say it made a big impression on me.

  • 23 - Shark

    Jun 21, 2004 at 6:51 am

    ...and R.Crumb's Big Brother & the Holding Co. cover qualifies as an instantly recognizable icon.


    BTW: I believe the albums WORTH the most these days are the original:

    Beatles "butcher" cover

    Velvet Underground (Warhol's peelable banana)

    Sticky Fingers (Warhol's zippable zipper)

    Rauschenberg's collage on the Talking Head limited edition EP

    ======

    And here's a tip for the collector/investor on some great deals:

    Look for *Family Dog artists' (and other famous **graphic artists') album covers; they will end up being highly collectible pieces of mid-20th century art work a lot of money to your kids and grandkids; you can still get them for next to nothing, and some day, they might attain the "art museum" level of graphic art.

    *Rick Griffin - Eagles ‘On The Border’, Grateful Dead’s ‘Aoxomoxoa’, the first Quicksilver Messenger Service album, Neil Young’s ‘On The Beach’, various albums by the Cult. See also - Victor Moscoso(!!), Mouse Kelly (American Dead cover!!), etc. etc.

    **Gary Burden, Jimmy Wachtel, Rodney Matthews, Ralph Steadman, et al.


    PS: Don't tell anybody. I'd hate to see the prices go up just yet.



  • 24 - Mark Edward Manning

    Jun 21, 2004 at 8:17 am

    I'd have to agree that the Beatles' "butcher" cover to "Yesterday and Today" is a classic.

  • 25 - Eric Olsen

    Jun 21, 2004 at 9:59 am

    All of the Roxy Music "girl" covers up through Siren are classic.

    Lou Reed's Transformer

    Blues For Allah is my favorite, but all of the Kelly Mouse covers are iconic

    Hipgnosis was usually interesting

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for Nov 29, 2009

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for October

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs