50 Banned Album Covers That Shocked the World and Changed Music History – That Eric Alper

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They say don’t judge an album by its cover—but what if the cover’s the reason you can’t find the album in stores? Across decades and genres, artists have pushed the envelope not just with sound, but with imagery that challenged norms, sparked outrage, and forced censors to scramble. From nudity and violence to political statements and religious iconography, these 50 banned or censored album covers didn’t just raise eyebrows—they rewrote the rules of what music looks like. In true Eric Alper fashion, here’s a celebration of when art, rebellion, and a little bit of chaos met the front of an LP jacket. Too bad I can’t show any of them here.
Alice Cooper – Love It to Death
What looked like a normal band photo was far from innocent—Alice’s thumb, strategically placed, gave the illusion of exposed genitals. That illusion led to a reissue where his entire arm was airbrushed out. Who knew shock rock started with subtle thumbs?
Arca – Xen
Meet Xen, Arca’s digital alter ego with rippling skin and ambiguous anatomy. No genitals? No problem—platforms still blurred her breasts and crotch. Experimental music, meet experimental censorship.
The Beatles – Yesterday and Today
Dubbed the “butcher cover,” this notorious sleeve showed the Fab Four with raw meat and decapitated baby dolls. It was swiftly recalled after backlash and replaced with a tamer image. The original now fetches thousands from collectors.
Biffy Clyro – The Vertigo of Bliss
An orgasmic cartoon woman drawn by erotic artist Milo Manara? Yep, and that was just the start. Each single’s artwork amped up the sex, triggering store bans but earning cult praise for boldness.
The Black Crowes – Amorica
A thong, an American flag, and… pubic hair. Ripped from a vintage Hustler magazine, the cover outraged stores and got swapped for a censored version. Rock ‘n’ roll rebellion, one bikini line at a time.
Blind Faith – Blind Faith
A topless preteen holding a futuristic toy spaceship—sound harmless? Not to American audiences, who demanded a band photo instead. Decades later, it’s still one of rock’s most haunting controversies.
Bon Jovi – Slippery When Wet
Originally featuring a wet T-shirt model, this cover was deemed too risqué. A garbage bag with wet lettering became the iconic version instead. Japan, however, got the original—lucky them.
Bow Wow Wow – See Jungle!
A Manet-inspired picnic with a 14-year-old Annabella Lwin posed nude. The UK was not amused, prompting a Scotland Yard investigation and a permanent ban on the image in America.
Cannibal Corpse – Butchered at Birth
Gore, violence, and corpses galore—so offensive it was outright banned in Germany and several U.S. retailers. Metalheads loved it, parents didn’t. It’s arguably the most banned album in death metal history.
Chumbawamba – Anarchy
A baby emerging from a vagina was too raw even for anarcho-punks. Retailers refused to stock it, and a flower cover was used instead. You can’t say they didn’t warn you with that title.
Cradle of Filth – Thornography
It wasn’t the band’s lyrical blasphemy—it was a woman’s bare legs that got the boot. Roadrunner Records vetoed the original image, though some copies had already leaked out.
David Bowie – Diamond Dogs
A half-man, half-dog hybrid with visible genitals? That was Bowie’s vision until label execs freaked out. The canine crotch was airbrushed, but fans still sniffed out the original.
Dead Kennedys – Frankenchrist
Insert a Giger painting called Penis Landscape in your punk LP and you’re bound for court. The band was sued for obscenity, nearly bankrupted, and immortalized as free speech martyrs.
Death Grips – No Love Deep Web
An erect penis, a Sharpie scrawl, and total anarchy. The band dropped it without label permission, sparking shock and a whole new chapter in digital defiance.
The Game – Jesus Piece
Jesus with a red bandana and teardrop tattoo? The religious imagery—filtered through Compton—offended Catholic groups and got the deluxe edition cover shelved.
Guns N’ Roses – Appetite for Destruction
Robots, monsters, and a violated woman. Too graphic for most stores, the original painting was buried inside, replaced by the now-iconic skull cross.
Jane’s Addiction – Nothing’s Shocking
Conjoined nude twins with flaming hair weren’t shocking to Perry Farrell—but they were to distributors. Cue bans and a legacy of pushing visual boundaries.
Jane’s Addiction – Ritual de lo Habitual
A threesome in sculpture form? You bet. Some stores swapped it with a text-only cover featuring the First Amendment. How’s that for a mic drop?
Jimi Hendrix – Electric Ladyland (UK)
A bevy of nude women lounging in the dark made up the UK cover—not Jimi’s choice, but the label’s. He hated it. America got a simple band portrait instead.
John Lennon & Yoko Ono – Two Virgins
Nude from front and back, Lennon and Ono went full vulnerability. Retailers wrapped it in brown paper. Ironically, that probably made more people curious.
Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
A naked West being straddled by a phoenix? Too hot for Walmart. Kanye refused to edit it, but labels compromised by pixelating the image. The art matched the album—unfiltered brilliance.
Kanye West – Vultures 1
Kanye and Bianca Censori stand side-by-side, with her barely dressed. Provocative? Definitely. Offensive? Depends who you ask. But it’s on-brand for a man who made controversy an art form.
Lady Gaga – Artpop
Jeff Koons sculpted Gaga with a gazing ball between her legs. No nudity, yet censored in China and the Middle East. In those markets, the ball grew larger—so did the outrage.
Led Zeppelin – Houses of the Holy
Naked children climbing rocks sounds poetic… until you see it. U.S. and U.K. stores demanded a wraparound band to hide the buttocks. Later reissues airbrushed everything.
Lorde – Solar Power
A bold low-angle shot of Lorde jumping at the beach—bare bottom in view. Some countries added lens flares to hide her, but Lorde left no apologies in the sun-drenched frame.
Marilyn Manson – Mechanical Animals
Manson, nude and alien, with airbrushed genitals. Too weird for Walmart and too much for Kmart. But it perfectly captured the glam-industrial freak show within.
Ministry – Dark Side of the Spoon
A naked obese woman in front of a chalkboard scrawled with “I will be god.” Kmart said nope, and later editions removed both her and the blasphemy.
Mom’s Apple Pie – Mom’s Apple Pie
That pie? Yeah, it’s not cherry. The original cover had subtle female anatomy baked in, plus a suspicious creamy filling. Later pressings added a brick wall—how tasteful.
Nirvana – Nevermind
A naked baby chasing a dollar bill. One of the most iconic covers of all time—also one of the most controversial. Some stores wouldn’t sell it; others called it art. The baby sued 30 years later.
NOFX – Heavy Petting Zoo
A man and a sheep, uh… cuddling. The LP version showed them in a 69 position. Germany banned it outright. Punk rock, everybody.
Pulp – This Is Hardcore
Jarvis Cocker wanted seductive and unsettling. He got both. A dead-eyed model poses in an ambiguous, sexual pose. Graffiti on posters read: “This Offends Women.” Mission accomplished?
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Mother’s Milk
The band poses across a giant naked woman. Chains and roses cover just enough. Retailers revolted, so alternate covers were made with blown-up band photos.
Rob Zombie – Mondo Sex Head
Originally Sheri Moon Zombie’s exposed rear. The backlash? Fierce. The solution? A cat. Subtlety be damned.
Roger Waters – Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking
Linzi Drew, porn actress, posed naked on the side of the road. Some called it art. Others said it promoted violence. Stores covered it with a black box.
Roxy Music – Country Life
Two partially nude women in lingerie. It was cropped, wrapped, and in some cases, swapped for trees and foliage. Sexy… but safe.
Scorpions – Virgin Killer
A naked underage girl behind cracked glass. It’s still one of the most banned images in music history. Even Wikipedia was briefly censored for hosting it.
Sky Ferreira – Night Time, My Time
Topless, damp, and unfiltered. Ferreira’s raw portrait was cropped for iTunes and censored in stores—but it captured the album’s emotional messiness perfectly.
Sonic Youth – Sister
One image featured a pre-teen model. Another showed Disneyland. Both got covered or removed due to lawsuits. Still, the chaos matches the noise within.
Steve Taylor – I Predict 1990
Christian bookstores pulled this satirical album for its cover and song titles. Some thought it was New Age. Others missed the joke entirely. Either way, controversy sold.
The Strokes – Is This It
A leather glove rests on a bare hip. Too sexy for American stores, the band swapped it for a particle trail image. But nothing says indie rebellion like a good banned butt.
Tin Machine – Tin Machine II
Statues of naked men had their junk airbrushed out on U.S. shelves. Bowie’s response? “Only in America!” He wasn’t wrong.
Tool – Undertow
Cows licking genitals, pins in heads, nudity everywhere. The cover was replaced with a bar code for mainstream shelves. Tool fans still found it, of course.
The Velvet Underground – The Velvet Underground & Nico
Eric Emerson’s image on the back cover got the band sued. Labels used a sticker to hide it. Eventually, the image returned, and became part of the album’s mystique.
The Weeknd – House of Balloons
A topless woman surrounded by black balloons? Too risqué for retail in 2015. The censored version arrived quietly—but the buzz was already airborne.
Whitesnake – Lovehunter
A naked woman straddles a massive snake. Interpret that however you like. U.S. versions were stickered, Argentinian ones were airbrushed. Subtlety never was their strong suit.
White Zombie – Supersexy Swingin’ Sounds
The title says it all. A nude woman lounging in a hammock? Too hot for Walmart. A censored version added a blue bikini—because blue makes it wholesome.
Whether wrapped in brown paper, pixelated for digital platforms, or pulled from shelves altogether, these covers tell stories that go beyond the music. They remind us that albums are more than playlists—they’re time capsules of cultural tension, artistic risk, and fearless creativity. In a world of autoplay and thumbnails, they still ask the boldest question of all: Are you ready to look?

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