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  1. Jul 21, 2023 · Jesus Culture's anticipated new release Why Not Right Now? features anthems of revival that bring about a heart cry to see God move in this generation. Visit JesusCulture.com for more information.

    • The Beatles: Yesterday and Today
    • The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Electric Ladyland
    • John Lennon & Yoko Ono: Unfinished Music No.1: Two Virgins
    • The Rolling Stones: Beggars Banquet
    • Blind Faith: Blind Faith
    • The Rolling Stones: Sticky Fingers
    • David Bowie: Diamond Dogs
    • Roxy Music: Country Life
    • Scorpions: Virgin Killer
    • Lynyrd Skynyrd: Street Survivors

    A far cry from the Mamas and the Papas “indecent” album cover for If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears, which seemed to generate controversy because a bathroom had a toilet in it, this Beatles compilation album featured a bizarre sleeve shot of the Fab Four clad in butcher’s coats, draped in slabs of meat and dismembered doll parts. Intended as po...

    The original UK edition of Jimi’s landmark, Billboardchart-topping third album originally appeared sporting a contentious sleeve featuring 19 nude women. It was changed when Hendrix himself expressed displeasure.

    The sleeve for Johnand Yoko’s avant-garde classic was shot using a time-delay camera allowing them to take nude photographs of themselves. Predictably, the resulting artwork provoked outrage, prompting distributors to sell the album in a plain brown wrapper. Only 5,000 copies were originally pressed in the UK.

    The original “banned” sleeve The Rolling Stones submitted for their classic Beggars Banquetalbum featured a sleazy-looking bathroom wall covered in graffiti and was rejected by their record label. Initially, the album came out in an almost plain white sleeve designed like an invitation card.

    Photographer Bob Seidemann’s cover image of a topless pubescent girl holding a car hood ornament was intended to symbolize the achievement of human creativity in the summer that man walked on the moon, but it caused a furor instead. For the US edition of Blind Faith, the image was replaced with a photo of the band.

    The legendary Andy Warhol had a hand in conceiving the artwork for the Stones’ formidable Sticky Fingers. Reflecting the innuendo-laden title, the image featured a close-up of a jeans-clad male crotch – and the original vinyl pressing even featured a working zipper. Retailers, however, complained that the zipper was actually causing damage to the v...

    David Bowie’s eighth studio LP featured a gatefold sleeve which, when – when seen in full – literally depicted the star with dog’s bollocks. The image was intended to represent Bowie’s own George Orwell-influenced vision of a post-apocalyptic world, but the offending genitalia was subsequently airbrushed until the 1990 EMI/Rykodisc CD reissue reins...

    The candid sleeve artwork for Roxy Music’s acclaimed fourth album featured two scantily-clad models, one of whom was the cousin of Can guitarist Michael Karoli. Predictably, it caused outrage and was censored in several countries, including the US, though the album still cracked the Top 40 of the Billboard200.

    The fourth LP from hard-rockin’ German outfit Scorpionsfeatured an image of a nude pubescent girl, apparently intended to reflect time as the killer of innocence, but it ended up on the receiving end of moral outrage. It was eventually sold in sealed black plastic in some territories.

    This famous cover is only controversial due to tragic coincidence: The Skynyrd plane crash happened only days after the album’s release, so the cover image of the band engulfed in flames was now dramatic in all the wrong ways. It was replaced by a somber-looking cover of the same photo against a dark background, but the original cover has since bee...

  2. Jan 9, 2024 · I’ve compiled over 50 collections of awful album covers, terrible t-shirts, bad book covers, trauma-inducing tattoos and more. And they rarely fail to garner plenty of reads, comments and...

  3. Jesus Culture Music is the music label and Grammy-nominated worship music band of the Jesus Culture organization. Its albums feature the worship of the Jesus Culture Sacramento, performing a mix of original and cover songs.

  4. Emerging Voices is a live album by Jesus Culture, featuring Mary Kat Ehrenzeller, Justin Jarvis, Derek Johnson, and Nate Ward. Jesus Culture Music released the album on July 31, 2012. They worked with Jeremy Edwardson and Banning Liebscher in the production of this album.

  5. This category contains albums by Jesus Culture.

  6. Jul 13, 2010 · Jesus Culture Consumed CD/DVD Artist Info: Discography Album length: 10 tracks: 74 minutes Street Date: 2009 / July 13, 2010

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