20 genuinely horrible albums made by genius musicians: Do you agree?
20 genuinely horrible albums made by genius musicians: Do you agree?
Daniel BukszpanThu, May 7, 2026 at 11:54 AM UTC
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Image Credit: Wikimedia CommonsHorrible albums made by genius musicians: Do you agree?
Making great music is like playing baseball; nobody bats 1000, no matter how good they are. Sure, a few artists have managed the neat trick of never making a bad album, but those artists are, without a doubt, the exception to the rule.
Like the rest of us, even the most brilliant musician will slip on a metaphorical banana peel and release something that amounts to a stubborn stain on their catalog, which can never come out no matter how many great albums they release afterward. Hereâs our list of genuinely crappy albums by great artists, a syndrome that occurs so frequently that weâre doing 20 instead of just 10.
Image Credit: Amazon.1. Aerosmith â âRock in a Hard Placeâ (1982)
The American hard rock band Aerosmith spent the 1970s going from strength to strength, but by the 1980s, they were creatively spent and lost the services of guitarists Joe Perry and Brad Whitford, who were essential to the bandâs sound. Ken Tucker of The Philadelphia Inquirer gave it a one-star review , and the passage of 40 years has done nothing to rehabilitate its reputation.
Image Credit: Amazon.2. The Beatles â âYellow Submarineâ (1969)
Hey, even the Beatles donât have an unblemished catalog. Technically, this is only half a Beatles album anyway, since side two is composed entirely of incidental music written by producer George Martin, and itâs safe to say that album side got played by Beatles fans exactly once. Side one is composed of previously released material and unreleased outtakes, of which only âItâs All Too Muchâ is worth hearing. Other than that song, this album is a complete waste of time.
Image Credit: Amazon.3. Black Sabbath â âForbiddenâ (1995)
After Ozzy Osbourne parted ways with Black Sabbath in 1979, the band suffered years of revolving door lineups with different singers, bassists, and drummers coming and going, with varying degrees of success. Meanwhile, 1995âs âForbiddenâ was hot garbage from top to bottom and easily the bandâs worst release. It had no redeeming qualities, and the less said about it, the better.
Image Credit: AVRO / Creative Commons4. David Bowie â âNever Let Me Downâ (1987)
David Bowie made a career out of crafting music that was ahead of its time, but by the 1980s, he had become much poppier in his output, which is not necessarily a bad thing. Sadly, by 1987âs âNever Let Me Down,â words like âmiddlingâ and âdullâ would apply, a massive step down for an artist whose entire career was built on pushing the envelope. Reviews were mostly mixed, but today, this is still nobodyâs favorite David Bowie album and likely never will be.
Image Credit: Amazon.5. Eric Clapton â âMoney and Cigarettesâ (1983)
1983âs âMoney and Cigarettesâ was Eric Claptonâs first album after being in treatment for alcoholism. While weâre happy he got the monkey off his back, the album itself is massively dull and contains not one note of memorable music. In the New York Times, the guitarist conceded that he could probably do better on his next album than on this one.
Image Credit: Amazon.6. The Clash â âCut the Crapâ (1985)
In their glory days, even people who didnât like punk rock liked the Clash, or at least respected them and recognized them as the genuine article. As their music changed from pure punk rock to incorporate elements of reggae, dub, and other sounds, their fans stayed with them, even as they committed the worst sin of all â making a popular album with 1982âs âCombat Rock.â But the fans could not countenance singer Joe Strummer firing half the band and turning in âCut the Crapâ as a Clash album in 1985, and the reviews were merciless. Strummer disowned the album and broke up the band weeks after its release.
Image Credit: Amazon.7. The Doors â âOther Voicesâ (1971)
When Doors singer Jim Morrison died in July 1971, the smart money would have been on the band breaking up immediately, as it was a loss akin to the Rolling Stones going on without Mick Jagger. At the time of the singerâs death, the remaining band members had been playing together and writing new material, so maybe it seemed like a healthy and life-affirming decision to carry on. Still, the sad fact is that without Morrison, it just didnât work. They recorded another Jimless album, âFull Circleâ in 1972 and then mercifully pulled the plug.
Image Credit: Amazon.8. Led Zeppelin â âCodaâ (1982)
It may not be fair to include âCodaâ on this list since it was a collection of outtakes compiled by the band two years after they broke up and was not intended to stand alongside their regular studio albums. Having said that, âCodaâ fails to clear the very low bar set for it, despite having a couple of songs on it that are not so bad. You will never put it on the same way you put on âHouses of the Holy,â and if you do, you will never listen to it a second time.
Image Credit: Amazon.9. Lynyrd Skynyrd â âSkynyrdâs First and⊠Lastâ (1978)
Just like âCodaâ was for Led Zeppelin, âSkynyrdâs First and⊠Lastâ was a vault-clearing outtakes album released after the band had been in a plane crash that killed two members. The tracks all came from sessions recorded before the bandâs first album, and a couple of the songs are truly outstanding. Then there are another seven songs, which are not. Itâs not unlistenable, but it falls far short of the music released during the bandâs heyday.
Image Credit: Amazon.10. Metallica â âSt. Angerâ (2003)
âSt. Angerâ is the worst album Metallica ever recorded, for several reasons. The sound is awful (drummer Lars Ulrich sounds like heâs hitting a garbage can lid), the songs are terrible from start to finish, and they go on for multiple eternities, with songs that overstay their welcome after two minutes going on for seven or eight. In their 40-year career, Metallica has released several records that challenged fans and didnât offer easy retreads of the stuff fans liked the most, but this album feels like pure punishment, and not the good kind.
Image Credit: Amazon.11. Pink Floyd â âThe Final Cutâ (1983)
Pink Floydâs catalog is wide and varied, and quite honestly, not every record is a winner. In fact, some of them are downright crappy! But when it comes to the album that has no good songs and shows bassist and songwriter Roger Waters at his most dictatorial, 1983âs âThe Final Cutâ has no competition. Waters was primarily responsible for the bandâs previous album, âThe Wall,â which he had written about 95% of and had been a major hit on the charts. He was driven mad with power and decided he was Pink Floyd, but he left the group after the release of âThe Final Cut,â assuming the band would collapse without him. Instead, they went on to make millions and millions of dollars in his absence.
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Image Credit: Amazon.12 Elvis Presley â âHaving Fun with Elvis on Stageâ (1974)
Whatever you think of Elvis Presley, youâd have to agree that he was a singer first, maybe an actor second, and someone who shot at television sets to change the channel third. What he was not was a spoken word artist, but that didnât do anything to stop the release of 1974âs âHaving Fun with Elvis on Stage,â which consisted entirely of the guyâs onstage banter and contained not one note of music. Of course, for some people, the complete absence of Elvis Presleyâs music might be a selling point.
Image Credit: Amazon.13. Queen â âHot Spaceâ (1982)
Queen was never a band that was a criticâs darling, but the fans always loved them, even when they departed from their rock sound to dabble in other styles. The one time this wasnât the case was on 1982âs âHot Spaceâ album, which consisted almost entirely of dance music and not the kind that anyone wanted. The one bright spot on the album was the closing cut, âUnder Pressure,â which featured a guest appearance from David Bowie and is a stone-cold classic. The 40 minutes preceding it uniformly stink.
Image Credit: Amazon.14.Queen + Paul Rodgers â âThe Cosmos Rocksâ (2008)
This may seem like double-dipping since we discussed Queen in the previous entry. Still, we would be shirking our responsibilities as a publication full of actionable knowledge if we let this go. After Freddie Mercury passed away in 1991, Queen became inactive for several years, only to emerge in 2005 with Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers at the microphone. The pairing did not work at all, but fans were so happy to see the band again in any form that the union was tolerated. Then they made the album âThe Cosmos Rocks,âit was awful, and the pairing ended shortly after that.
Image Credit: Man Alive! / Wiki Commons.15 Lou Reed and Metallica â âLuluâ (2011)
This also qualifies as double-dipping since we mentioned Metallica a few entries ago, but we would be remiss to overlook it. Whether you want to see this as a misfire for Lou Reed, Metallica, or both, thereâs no denying that this record is physically painful to listen to from the word go. It lasts over 88 minutes, with some songs going on for almost 20 minutes. Critic Don Kaye called it âa catastrophic failure on almost every levelâ , and he wasnât wrong.
Image Credit: Amazon.16. The Rolling Stones â âTheir Satanic Majesties Requestâ (1967)
When you have as long a career as the Rolling Stones, youâre likely to make at least a couple of subpar albums, and Mick Jagger and co. certainly released their share. While a couple receive regular mention on worst-of lists, such as 1986âs âDirty Work,â weâre going with 1967âs âTheir Satanic Majesties Request,â a blatant attempt at ripping off the Beatlesâ âSgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Bandâ in both look and sound. The faux-psychedelic album cover housed a record full of âfaux-psychedelicâ music, which the Rolling Stones had no talent for. In the 1994 book âKeith Richards: In His Own Words,â the legendary Stones guitarist called the record âa load of crap.
Image Credit: Amazon.17. Rod Stewart â âBlondes Have More Funâ (1978)
In the late 1970s, it seemed like every rock artist was going disco, even artists like KISS and the Rolling Stones, whose rock credentials seemed beyond question. Rod Stewart also couldnât resist participating in the fad, and his âBlondes Have More Funâ album saw him shaking his booty to a disco beat, especially on its lead-off single, âDo Ya Think Iâm Sexy.â Itâs certainly not the worst record ever made, but when it came out, fans of Stewartâs more rock material were livid with rage, and many of them never forgave him.
Image Credit: Amazon.18. Van Halen â âVan Halen IIIâ (1998)
Van Halen could seemingly do no wrong in the 1980s when they dominated the airwaves and were all over MTV. Some worried that it might affect their commercial fortunes when they parted ways with singer David Lee Roth, but when new singer Sammy Hagar took over for Roth, the band went from strength to strength. For reasons too convoluted to go into, they parted ways with Hagar and replaced him with former Extreme singer Gary Cherone, who sang on 1998âs very terrible âVan Halen III.âWhile itâs tempting to blame the new guy for it, the singer described the record as âEddie [Van Halenâs] babyâ in a 2012 interview with Rolling Stone.
Image Credit: Amazon.19. The Who â âItâs Hardâ (1982)
The Who had arguably been in artistic decline in the late 1970s, notably when they released 1978âs subpar âWho Are Youâ album. Then, legendary drummer Keith Moon passed away, and many people took it for granted that was the end of the band, but they drafted the Facesâ Kenney Jones and carried on. Their first album with Jones, âFace Dances,â wasnât terrible, but the next one, 1982âs âItâs Hard,â absolutely was. The band must have agreed because they broke up shortly afterward.
Image Credit: Amazon.20. Yes â âUnionâ (1991)
The British progressive rock band Yes made their name in the 1970s and even had an unlikely career renaissance in the 1980s. But there was trouble in paradise when the Yes lineup that became popular in the 1980s was operating simultaneously with the members who had been in the band in the previous decade. If that doesnât make any sense, thatâs because it doesnât! The record company decided to worsen an incoherent situation by taking songs recorded by both camps, combining them on one album, calling the album âUnion,â and saying it was a Yes album. The music was as incoherent as the backstory, and not one of the albumâs 14 songs is good. Legendary Yes keyboard player Rick Wakeman said that he referred to the âUnionâ album as âOnionâ because it made him cry whenever he listened to it.
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