I remember when rock was young

I often wonder whether those in their teens today are willing (or able) to acknowledge the debt they pay to the pioneers of the music they love.

I’m speaking, of course, about Elvis, and Little Richard, and Chuck Berry, and Buddy Holly, and Fats Domino, and Jerry Lee Lewis, and a couple dozen more.  Their impact goes well beyond their big hits, although those seismic tracks obviously played an important part in it all.  I’m talking more specifically about the very cool recordings from those early albums that received almost no airplay at all.  It’s a crime that virtually no one today has heard these songs that contributed significantly to the major shift in 1950s popular music from gooey ballads to hip-shaking, three-chord, blues-based rock and roll.

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Because, let’s face it — without these rebels and their dedication and passion, there may very well have been no Beatles, nor Stevie Wonder, nor Pink Floyd, nor Metallica, nor Michael Jackson, nor Oasis, nor Lady Gaga, nor Bruno Mars, nor anyone else you’ve come to love in the rock music pantheon.

The singers and songwriters who embraced the insatiable rhythms and fun-loving, teen-angst lyrics that helped create what became known as rock and roll played an unquantifiable yet (apart from their big hits) too often neglected part in the development of the popular music scene ever since.

So today, class, we’re going to have a little history lesson that, I hope, will help you all appreciate just how much these trailblazers of the ’50s did for all of us rock music lovers who came along in the decades since.

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To be a completist about the evolution of rock music, you really must go back to the 1930s and 1940s, when the best dance music was played by the fabulous swing bands of Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman, and irresistible “jump blues” artists like Louis Jordan, Big Joe Turner, Louis Prima and Cab Calloway.  Songs like Jordan’s “Choo Choo Ch’Boogie” and Prima’s “Jump, Jive and Wail” are arguably the blueprints for the rock and roll standards that followed.

Many people point to Bill Haley & His Comets’ “Rock Around the Clock” (1954) as the first rock and roll hit, followed closely by Chuck Berry’s “Maybellene” (1955) and Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti” (1955). These are all vital, iconic tunes that deserve their place in the earliest moments of rock’s recorded history.  A convincing case can be made, however, that Fats Domino’s “The Fat Man” or Ike Turner and His Rhythm Kings’ “Rocket 88,” both released in 1951, were really the debut of rock and roll.  Frankly, it’s a grey area; boogie-woogie and jump blues were in the process of evolving into rock, so who’s to say when it truly began?

This column strives to dig deep to highlight lesser known songs by 20 of rock’s pioneers.  The million-selling hits still get airplay from time to time, but here at Hack’s Back Pages, I’m offering the opportunity to hear the major artists performing great early rock songs you’ve probably never been exposed to before.  Whether you’re a dedicated student of rock or just a casual listener who would like to expand your horizons, I urge you to crank up the Spotify playlist found at the end of this piece.  I’m confident you won’t be disappointed.

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“Boppin’ the Blues,” Carl Perkins, 1956

Perkins, perhaps the king of rockabilly, came through Sam Phillips’ Sun Records studio just as Elvis Presley had, and when Elvis left for RCA and superstardom, Perkins became Phillips’ primary artist.  Perkins’ “Blue Suede Shoes” and Presley’s “Heartbreak Hotel” competed for the #1 spot for months in early 1956.  A severe auto accident hurt Perkins’ momentum, and he never quite regained it during rockabilly’s heyday, although he was widely revered up to and beyond his death in 1998 (he made a praised guest appearance on Paul McCartney’s 1982 LP, “Tug of War”).  “Boppin’ the Blues” reached #7 on the country charts upon its release in 1956, but stiffed at #70 on the pop charts.  Me, I love this track as much as his hits.

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“She’s Got It,” Little Richard, 1956

Have you ever seen the early rock film “The Girl Can’t Help It,” starring Jayne Mansfield? If not, put it on your bucket list — it’s a load of fun, filled with performances and recordings of classic early rock and roll tunes.  Little Richard’s “She’s Got It” plays in the background in one scene when Mansfield is putting on her makeup in the powder room. It’s a sexy, upbeat number that you’ll have trouble getting out of your head once you’ve heard it. Little Richard, born Richard Penniman, died in 2020 at age 87.

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“Mean Woman Blues,” Elvis Presley, 1957

Claude Demetrius was a staff songwriter for Gladys Music, owner of the publishing rights to Elvis’s records.  Demetrius wrote “I Was The One,” the B-side of the breakthrough “Heartbreak Hotel” single, and his biggest success came in 1958 with Presley’s big #2 hit “Hard Headed Woman” from the “Kid Creole” soundtrack LP.  Demetrius also penned “Mean Woman Blues,” which ended up as the leadoff track on Presley’s 1957 chart-topping film soundtrack LP “Lovin’ You.”  Elvis never sounded better than he did on tracks like this one. The King died in 1977 at age 42.

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“Birth of the Boogie,” Bill Haley & His Comets, 1955

Everyone knows Haley for “Rock Around the Clock,” actually first released in late 1954 as a B-side and then re-released in May 1955 after its use in the film “The Blackboard Jungle” made it a sensation.  In between, Haley and His Comets recorded and released the uptempo original “Birth of the Boogie,” which reached a respectable #17 on the pop charts in April 1955, although it’s mostly overlooked these days. Haley died at age 55 in 1981.

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“Ooh! My Head,” Ritchie Valens, 1959

Talk about tragic.  Valens, an American with Venezuelan roots, had taken a Mexican folk song, given it a rock ‘n roll beat, and came up with “La Bamba,” a milestone hit in rock history.  He was on tour with Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper and others when their plane crashed in February 1959.  He wasn’t yet 18 years old.  His only album, “Ritchie Valens,” was released a month later and included a dozen examples of his huge potential, perhaps most notably “Ooh! My Head,” which has been cited as the inspiration for “Boogie With Stu,” one of the tracks on Led Zeppelin’s 1975 LP “Physical Graffiti.”

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“Crazy Arms,” Jerry Lee Lewis, 1956

Before “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On” and “Great Balls of Fire” put him on the map in 1957, a young Jerry Lee Lewis chose “Crazy Arms,” a traditional country song by Ray Price that had just reached #1 on the country charts, gave it a funky Texas shuffle arrangement, and made it his first single.  It stiffed badly.  Listening to it now, it’s a natural for Lewis, a fine example of his earthy rock piano/vocal, but perhaps it came too hard on the heels of Price’s honky-tonk original.  It’s been recorded by dozens of artists, mostly as a pure country tune, but Lewis’s version strikes me as the most vibrant. The controversial singer died in 2022 at age 87.

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“(Ain’t That) Good News,” Sam Cooke, 1960

Hailed by many as one of the top R&B singers of all time, Cooke got his start in gospel, and had hits like “You Send Me,” “Chain Gang” and even the standard “I Love You For Sentimental Reasons” before he branched out into more rock/soul material in the ’60s.  “Twistin’ the Night Away” was featured in the “Animal House” film soundtrack, and Cooke’s take on the Willie Dixon blues song “Little Red Rooster” remains the definitive version.  But take a listen to “(Ain’t That) Good News,” written in 1960 and eventually a #11 hit on the 1964 pop charts before Cooke’s untimely shooting death that year at the hands of a motel night manager.

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“If You Can’t Rock Me,” Ricky Nelson, 1957

Nelson, son of the radio-the-TV stars Ozzie and Harriet, was bit by the rock and roll bug early and, with his father’s help, secured a record contract that resulted in 15 Top Ten hits between his 1957 debut and 1963.  His first LP, “Ricky,” was popular enough to knock the latest Elvis LP from the #1 spot and earned him rave reviews as a smooth interpreter of rock songs “in every way that Pat Boone was not,” as one critic put it.  “If You Can’t Rock Me,” a deep album track from the debut LP, is a perfect example of his fine vocal delivery. Nelson died in a plane crash in 1985 at age 45.

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“Hello Little Boy,” Ruth Brown, 1957

Brown, “The Queen of R&B” from 1950-1960, never did better than the mid-20s on the pop charts, but she racked up more than 20 Top Ten hits on the R&B charts during that ten-year spell.  Some of them, like “Lucky Lips” and “This Girl’s Gone Rockin’,” may be familiar to you, but my favorite is a relatively obscure track from 1954 called “Hello Little Boy,” a frenetic, double-time rock prototype that, if released ten years later, would’ve put her at the top of the pop charts for sure.  Whew, what a workout! Brown died in 2006 at age 78.

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“You’re So Square (Baby, I Don’t Care),” Buddy Holly, 1958

A product of West Texas, Holly was essentially a country-western artist who switched to rock and roll after he and his band, The Crickets, opened for Elvis Presley three times in 1955 and became devotees.  He managed only three Top Ten hits (the #1 “That’ll Be the Day,” “Peggy Sue” and “Oh Boy”) before he perished along with Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper in the infamous plane crash in February 1959 (“the day the music died,” as Don McLean put it in “American Pie” a dozen years later).  He was barely 23.  Holly’s influence was enormous (The Beatles’ name was a play on Holly’s Crickets), and Linda Ronstadt and others had hits decades later with their revival versions of his songs.  “You’re So Square (Baby I Don’t Care)” is a beauty that has been covered by artists like Bryan Ferry and Joni Mitchell.

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“Domino,” Roy Orbison, 1959

Orbison began recording in 1955 but didn’t really hit his stride until 1960 when he was paired with top-flight Nashville musicians and producers who encouraged the stylistic inclinations that made his hits (“Only the Lonely,” “Running Scared,” “Crying,” “In Dreams,” “Oh Pretty Woman”) so distinctive.  Despite his tendency toward dark romantic ballads, Orbison knew his way around a great rock and roll song like “Domino.” He died in 1988 at age 52 not long after his return to fame as a member of The Traveling Wilburys.

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“I Found a Million Dollar Baby,” Bobby Darin, 1958

Before classics like “Mack the Knife,” “Dream Lover” and “Beyond the Sea” made him a successful pop vocalist star in 1959-1960, Darin showed he was plenty comfortable with rawer rock and roll material like “I Found a Million Dollar Baby,” which went nowhere on the charts but, in retrospect, gives a great deal of credibility to his overall reputation and his rock credentials.  Although he had a million-dollar voice, he wasn’t always regarded as a true rock and roll guy, but gutsy songs like this one offer a very convincing case. Darin died at only 37 following open heart surgery in 1973.

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“Hey Sexy,” The Coasters, 1958

Originally known as an LA-based vocal group called The Robins, only two members were willing to move from coast to coast and sign with New York-based Atlantic Records, consequently calling themselves The Coasters.  The group had a half-dozen Top Ten hits in the 1957-1959 period (“Young Blood,” “Searchin’,” “Yakety Yak,” “Charlie Brown,” “Along Came Jones” and “Poison Ivy”), and their songs and smooth style were emulated by the doo-wop groups of the era.  Less known is the wonderful “Hey Sexy,” which showed up as a deep track on their debut LP, “The Coasters.”

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“Teenage Heaven,” Eddie Cochran, 1959

When it comes to teenage angst and frustration, no one came up with better stuff than Eddie Cochran, who, like too many of the folks on this list, died way too young (age 21, in a car crash in England).  He had only two Top 20 hits — “Sittin’ in the Balcony” and the iconic “Summertime Blues”– but he also gets a huge credit for writing “Twenty-Flight Rock” (a song John Lennon admired, which Paul McCartney played as an audition of sorts that convinced Lennon to add him to his band).  Among the great rock tunes in Cochran’s repertoire worth exploring are “Somethin’ Else,” “C’Mon Everybody” and the wonderful “Teenage Heaven,” which features a smokin’ sax solo.

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“You Can’t Judge a Book By Its Cover,” Bo Diddley, 1959

Elias McDaniel, known better as Bo Diddley, originated the signature “five-accent hambone rhythm” that went on to influence Elvis Presley, The Rolling Stones and The Clash, among others. He had no Top 40 pop hits, but his songs — “Bo Diddley,” “I’m a Man,” “Who Do You Love,” “Road Runner” — were covered by everyone from Chicago and The Doors to Fleetwood Mac and George Thorogood.  In 1962, he reached #48 with “You Can’t Judge a Book By Its Cover,” a song he’d written and recorded in 1959, which I find among his greatest tracks. Diddley died at age 79 in 2008.

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“Brown-Eyed Handsome Man,” Chuck Berry, 1956

Finding a “crossover” act — a black man who could merge R&B with country and make it suitable for white audiences — was the goal of Chess Records mogul Leonard Chess, and he found it in Chuck Berry, who became a sensation in 1955-1958 with huge, important songs like “Maybellene,” “School Days,” “Sweet Little Sixteen” and “Johnny B. Goode.”  He wrote and recorded more than a hundred vintage rock and roll songs including lesser known beauties like “Too Much Monkey Business” and the autobiographical “Brown-Eyed Handsome Man” (originally “brown-skinned” but deemed too provocative for its time). Berry died in 2017 at age 90.

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“Race With the Devil,” Gene Vincent, 1956

Vincent Eugene Craddock hailed from Norfolk, Virginia, and he burst forth in the rock and roll arena in 1956 with his monumental “Be-Bop-a-Lula,” which peaked at #7 on the pop charts and has only grown in stature ever since.  (It’s the only song recorded by both Lennon and McCartney on their solo records.)  Sadly, he couldn’t seem to follow it up with any more hits, and his career petered out, but not before releasing dozens of great rockabilly tracks like “Five Feet of Lovin'” and “Race With the Devil,” which had inexplicably stiffed at #70 on the charts. Vincent died of heart failure in 1971 at age 36.

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“Hey, Doll Baby,” The Everly Brothers, 1958

Everyone from Simon & Garfunkel to Hall & Oates have emulated these brothers from Kentucky who mesmerized audiences and radio listeners with their amazing harmonies during their peak period (1957-1962), when they had more than a dozen Top Ten hits, including three #1s (“Wake Up Little Susie,” “All I Have to Do is Dream” and “Cathy’s Clown”).  They were influenced by country styles but ended up singing mostly rock ‘n’ roll and ballads, and their 1958 debut LP included rock songs like “Bye Bye Love,” Little Richard’s “Keep a-Knockin'” and the simple rocker “Hey, Doll Baby.”

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“All By Myself,” Fats Domino, 1955

Hard on the heels of the pivotal hit “Ain’t That a Shame” in August 1955 (#10 on the pop charts and #1 on R&B charts) came Domino’s “All By Myself” (obviously in NO way related to the melodramatic 1975 Eric Carmen hit).  The snappy Domino tune also went to #1 on the R&B charts but for some reason never even charted in the pop world.  Go figure.  I really love this track and its irresistible 12-bar-blues structure, and the fine sax solo in the middle break.  Antoine “Fats” Domino, a New Orleans native, died in 2017 at 89, a true rock and roll giant.

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“Etcetera,” Jackie Wilson, 1958

You could almost call “Etcetera” a progenitor to rap music with its half-spoken introduction.  Wilson had a phenomenal four-octave voice capable of singing R&B, rock, pop, doo-wop and easy listening genres.  His dozen Top 20 pop hits — from 1958’s “Lonely Teardrops” to 1967’s “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher” — showcase a rare talent that won him inclusion in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in only its second year.  “Etcetera” is an example of the fun R&B/rock merger he was so good at. Wilson died of a heart attack while on stage at age 49 in 1984.

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A small sliver of something bigger

If you were an album buyer in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, I’d be willing to bet there were times you bought, or were very tempted to buy, a new record based almost solely on the captivating cover art.

In the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s, album cover art — be it arresting portrait photography, surreal landscape drawings, erotic paintings or highly stylized logos, to name a few — was an integral, vital component of each new release.  In some cases, the art was so striking that it became almost as important as the music on the album within.

There have been so many great album covers displaying fantastic works of art over the years.  Trying to list the best of them is a fool’s errand.  It’s like trying to list the proverbial “Best 50 Albums of All Time.”  Very subjective, and very limiting.  It would be easier to list the best photo album covers, the best art covers, the best illustration covers, and so on.

Some album covers from the classic rock era are so recognizable, I think, that many folks will be able to identify them even if they see only a small cropped section of the full cover. Below are “puzzle pieces” that give you just a small glimpse of the complete artwork from 25 well-known albums. How many can you identify in this Album Art Quiz #2?

As you scan down to learn the answers, you’ll also get some details about who created the covers and what went into their design. There’s also a Spotify playlist at the end with one song pulled from each of the 25 albums. 

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ANSWERS:

#1

“Tug of War,” Paul McCartney, 1982

Famed British painter and architectural artist Brian Clarke, known for his large-scale stained glass and mosaic projects, conceived of and executed the pointillism-inspired painting of a photograph of McCartney under the headphones, taken by his wife Linda. The deep blues and reds made the cover of 1982’s “Tug of War” eye-catching in the record stores, which served to complement the ear-catching sounds he came up with for this, his most consistent LP since 1973’s “Band on the Run.”

#2

“Mystery to Me,” Fleetwood Mac, 1973

If you’re looking for a definitive explanation of the strange artwork that graces the cover of Fleetwood Mac’s eight LP, 1973’s “Mystery to Me,” you won’t find it here. Credited to an artist who went by the moniker Modula, it depicts an animal that appears to be part mandrill, part gorilla, crying as he eats both a cake and a book. The back cover (which is part of the same artwork) shows a guru-type wise man apparently trying to impart wisdom to the ape. No one from the band has ever commented on the meaning behind it, so it’s still, um, a mystery to me…and to all of you as well.

#3

“Year of the Cat,” Al Stewart, 1976

The cover is another in the impressive portfolio of designs by the British design studio known as Hipgnosis, known for their work with Pink Floyd, Genesis, Peter Gabriel and Led Zeppelin. Illustrator Colin Elgie took the theme of Stewart’s title track and made it the dominant motif, depicting a woman seen in the mirror dressing up as a cat, perhaps for a costume party, while the array of items on her dresser all have feline elements.

#4

The Yes Album,” Yes, 1971

Even though the members of Yes had been in an auto accident where keyboardist Tony Kaye had broken his leg, the album cover photo shoot scheduled for the next day went ahead as planned. Photographer Phil Franks wasn’t satisfied with what he shot in the studio, so he took the band to his flat, grabbed a mannequin head and a 1,000-watt bulb, and improvised the setting in his kitchen. Art director Jon Goodchild made the shot look like a piece of 8mm film, with Kaye’s foot in freshly wrapped plaster in the foreground. It became the cover of 1971’s “The Yes Album,” their last before fantasist Roger Dean took over as the band’s graphic artist.

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“Eye in the Sky,” Alan Parsons Project, 1982

It’s ironic that the album and song that served as the commercial peak of the Alan Parsons Project (reaching #3 on US charts in 1982) was never one of Parsons’s favorites. The concept behind it had to do with the universal idea that someone is looking down on us all, either spiritually or in terms of governmental surveillance. Eric Woolfson, who co-wrote and sang many of the group’s tunes, allegedly dashed off the line art that became the cover artwork.

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“Pretzel Logic,” Steely Dan, 1974

Photographer Raeanne Rubinstein took the cover photo for this album one chilly day in January 1974 in Manhattan. The pretzel vendor had been working the corner of 79th Street and Central Park for more than 30 years. As for the Steely Dan title song, it’s a wonderfully juicy Fagen/Becker blues shuffle about time travel, but it seems to have little to do with the phrase “pretzel logic” (which means illogical thinking that doesn’t stand up to scrutiny).

#7

“Woodstock,” various artists, 1970

Former Life Magazine staff photographer Burk Uzzle attended the 1969 Woodstock Music and Arts Fair as a music fan. While other photographers there on assignment focused on the performers, Uzzle was more intrigued with what was going on among the half-million concertgoers. As Jefferson Airplane was bringing up the dawn, Bobbi Kelly and Nick Ercoline, both just 20, suddenly stood up, wrapped in a blanket, and Uzzle captured their hug in the midst of “that sea of humanity.” It became his most famous photo, adorning the cover of the “Woodstock” triple-LP soundtrack.

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“Chicago X,” Chicago, 1976

Once the band originally known as Chicago Transit Authority were forced by the actual Chicago metro transit system to shorten their name to just Chicago, they chose to use their stylized logo (inspired by the Coca-Cola logo) on every album in their catalog. It appeared in many formats — a flag, a wood carving, embossed leather, a map, a skyscraper, even an unfinished billboard. For the group’s 10th LP, art director John Berg turned it into a partially unwrapped chocolate candy bar and ended up winning the “Best Album Cover” Grammy award in 1976. 

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“The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get,” Joe Walsh, 1973

Jimmy Wachtel, older brother of famed LA session guitarist Waddy Wachtel, designed dozens of album covers in the ’70s and ’80s for some of rock’s biggest names, including Stevie Nicks, Jackson Browne, Warren Zevon, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Crosby, Stills and Nash. In 1973, he handled the art design for Walsh’s solo debut, which shows a British Sopwith fighter bi-plane evidently flying upside down (blue sky at the bottom).

#10

“Wheels of Fire,” Cream, 1968

Martin Sharp, Australian artist/cartoonist/filmmaker, was considered his country’s foremost pop artist in the ’60s and ’70s. He came to the attention of Jack Bruce, bassist for Cream, who suggested Sharp be hired to provide artwork for the band’s 1967 LP “Disraeli Gears.” Its psychedelic montage not only won awards, it led to the equally mind-boggling cover for Cream’s 1968 double album, “Wheels of Fire,” which topped the US album charts that summer. The cover of the original LP featured silver foil paper.

#11

“Candy-O,” The Cars, 1979

David Robinson, drummer for The Cars, was a collector of pin-ups, especially the work of Peruvian painter Alberto Vargas, who was known for his paintings that appeared in Playboy and Esquire in the ’50s and ’60s. Vargas was 83 and retired by 1979, but his niece, a fan of The Cars, persuaded him to take on the assignment to do the cover for the group’s second album, “Candy-O,” featuring a curvy model stretched out on the hood of a sports car.

#12

“Poco,” Poco, 1970

For Poco’s strong second LP, art director Gary Burden took a bucolic drawing of farmland and mountains by Morris Ovsey and superimposed a photo of the band taken by the legendary Henry Diltz. The group, led by Richie Furay and Jim Messina, didn’t really meet chart expectations in the country rock genre, although critics and a rabid fan base felt Poco was the cream of the crop. Following personnel changes, they came up with a few Top 20 successes years later.

#13

“Days of Future Passed,” The Moody Blues, 1967

After early success, The Moody Blues were struggling in 1967 when Decca Records asked them to record an adaptation of a Dvorak symphony for their classical subsidiary label. That instead evolved into “Days of Future Passed,” a suite of songs that pioneered the merging of psychedelic rock and classical forms. It exceeded all expectations and spawned the new “progressive rock” genre. David Anstey, a staff visual artist and designer with Decca in London, created the imaginative painting that depicted the various stages of a typical day (morning, afternoon, evening and night).

#14

“Dixie Chicken,” Little Feat, 1973

Comic artist Martin Muller, known professionally as Neon Park, was responsible for the arresting cover artwork on virtually every album in Little Feat’s catalog, including this curious piece for “Dixie Chicken” that places an elegant woman against a padded wall with a wrap-around accordion. Park’s surreal images also graced the covers for albums by Frank Zappa, Dr. John, David Bowie, and The Beach Boys.

#15

“Duke,” Genesis, 1980

Having survived the departure of lead singer Peter Gabriel and then guitarist Steve Hackett, Genesis in 1980 was a trio in the process of evolving from art rock to a more commercial pop sound. For their next LP “Duke,” they brought in French illustrator Lionel Koechlin, whose children’s book, “L’Alphabet d’Albert,” they admired. Rather than produce something original for the cover, he suggested they use a panel from the book, which seemed to complement some of the storybook lyrics from the songs.

#16

“Quadrophenia,” The Who, 1973

London designer/photographer Graham Hughes, a big fan of The Who, immersed himself in the songs and the melancholy storyline of “Quadrophenia” before coming up with the darkly introspective imagery that became the cover of the 1973 rock opera. Lead character “Mod” Jimmy is pictured on his all-important scooter idling in the London fog, with photos of the four members of The Who dropped into the bike’s side-view mirrors.

#17

“Blow By Blow,” Jeff Beck, 1975

Painter John Collier, no relation to the famed 19th Century portrait painter of the same name, worked in collaboration with seasoned album cover designer John Berg to fashion a soft-edged facsimile of Beck offering a trademark guitar riff for the cover of one of his most acclaimed works, the 1975 instrumental LP “Blow By Blow.” The chalk drawing symbolizes Beck’s transition from harder-edged blues to a more jazz-inflected style on this album.

#18

“The Unforgettable Fire,” U2, 1984

For their 1984 LP “The Unforgettable Fire,” the members of U2 drove around Ireland for a few days with photographer Anton Corbijn looking for “something that symbolized ambiguous mysticism,” as Bono put it. They settled on the ruins of Moydrum Castle, dramatically photographed in black-and-white with the band members standing out front. It turned out to be virtually identical to a photo on the cover of the Simon Marsden book “In Ruins: The Once Great Houses of Ireland,” which required a settlement for copyright infringement.

#19

“Mud Slide Slim and the Blue Horizon,” James Taylor, 1971

Ethan Russell is a widely admired rock music photographer who worked with The Beatles, the Stones and The Who, among many others in the classic rock arena. His work graces the famous covers of “Let It Be,” “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” and “Who’s Next,” and he also conducted dozens of photo shoots of the likes of Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and James Taylor, for whom he captured the image for his “Mud Slide Slim” LP cover. He also worked on films and videos for Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon, Rickie Lee Jones and Emmylou Harris.

#20

“Are You Experienced?” The Jimi Hendrix Experience, 1967

First released in the UK with different cover art, “Are You Experienced” was re-shot for the US release by American designer Karl Ferris at Hendrix’s behest. Ferris found the music “otherworldly” and, imagining the trio traveling through space in a biosphere, used a fisheye lens to photograph the group wearing the latest mod threads from London clothing boutiques. Hendrix was pictured wearing a psychedelic jacket with a large pair of eyes staring back at the viewer.

#21

“Simple Dreams,” Linda Ronstadt, 1977

The British-born artist who went by his last name — Kosh — was a highly regarded member of the London Design & Art Directors Club before relocating to California in the mid-’70s. He earned numerous accolades for his album designs for such major artists as Jimmy Buffett, Bob Seger, Rod Stewart, Dan Fogelberg, Randy Newman, Carole King and others. The cover for Ronstadt’s “Simple Dreams,” a multi-platinum hit LP in 1977, won Kosh one of his three Grammy awards for cover design.

#22

“Breakfast in America,” Supertramp, 1979

British designers Mike Doud and Mick Haggerty came up with the imaginative cover for Supertramp’s “Breakfast in America” LP, showing an artist’s rendering of an aerial view of the Lower Manhattan skyline. They used cutlery, salt shakers, coffee mugs, egg crates and other props spray-painted white to depict the buildings and wharfs, and dressed comedienne Kate Murtagh as a waitress in a stance resembling the Statue of Liberty but holding a glass of orange juice and a menu. It won the Best Recording Package Grammy that year.

#23

“Eldorado,” Electric Light Orchestra, 1974

Jeff Lynne envisioned the concept and storyline for ELO’s 1974 LP “Eldorado” before he’d written any of the music. Its plot followed a daydreamer character who journeys into fantasy worlds to escape the disillusionment of his mundane reality.  Designer John Kehe selected an image from one of cinema’s most famous escapist fantasies, “The Wizard of Oz,” showing Dorothy’s ruby slippers protecting her from the clutches of the Wicked Witch of the West.

#24

“Wish You Were Here,” Pink Floyd, 1975

Dutch designer Storm Thorgerson, inspired by the idea that people tend to conceal their true feelings for fear of “getting burned,” came up with the image of two businessmen shaking hands, with one man on fire. “Getting burned” was also a common phrase among musicians who were denied royalty payments, including the members of Pink Floyd. Despite precautionary measures, unpredictable winds during the shoot in Burbank caused one stuntman to suffer minor facial burns. The image was initially concealed in a black shrink-wrap adorned with a sticker of two machines shaking hands.

#25

“Arc of a Diver,” Steve Winwood, 1980

British graphic designer Tony Wright, who created notable album covers for Bob Marley, The B-52’s, The Ramones, The Meters and Bob Dylan in the ’70s and ’80s, was responsible for the trendsetting cover of Traffic’s “Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys” album in 1971. A decade later, he was also the artist behind ex-Traffic leader Steve Winwood’s popular solo record, “Arc of a Diver.” Both were named among Rolling Stone‘s list of “100 Greatest Album Covers.”

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