

It’s a villainous incursion on the peaceful pastures of good taste.


This is an antagonistic statement of war against decency. It seems like a universal oversight that somehow fate decreed that some of the greatest pop-rock songs of all time could be served up with this ClipArt catastrophe.
#Early 2000s backdrop mac
(Credit: Columbia) Greatest Hits – Fleetwood Mac It was a cover that offered up roughly the same level of assurance for the quality of music therein as a Prince Andrew interview. The album itself is amongst his worse, but even one of his many masterpieces would struggle to redeem this shambolic showing. There is no finer symbolism for a man at ends with an era than Dylan’s artwork’s insistence to focus on the worst of everything that 1985 sadly had to offer. The cover of Empire Burlesque is hell enough to make the Pope turn atheist on the off chance that his indiscretions might condemn him to a lifetime with the creator of this defecation on the face of decency. (Credit: Virgin) Empire Burlesque – Bob Dylanĭylan emerged from his rather crass-looking Born Again era covers into the garish light of ungodly design. It is, without doubt, one of his greatest attributes as an artist that he wasn’t unhinged by his own sense of individualism and was happy to celebrate the artistic vision of others. But here, he was a little too liberated in letting others loose on early photoshop, and the result deserves to be cast into the sea. One of the greatest aspects of Bowie’s celestial stardom was that despite being discreetly singular, he welcomed so many people into his oeuvre that he created his own little bohemian world. With David Bowie, the artwork takes the Dickensian route of either being the best of times or the worst of times, and he somehow gave this East 17-inspired death of the self (and taste) outing a run for its money with the cover for Reality a few years later. Which spooky mind-bent pervert sailed across the Incorrect Sea on HMS Clownshoe to offer up this abomination? It’s a disordered mess akin to the beleaguered top shelf of Warwick Davis’ fridge. The 10 worst album covers for great musicians: Hours – David Bowie
