Ad
related to: rolling stone most disappointing albums
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
After their album, Philosophy of the World, was reissued in 1980, Rolling Stone suggested that it was the worst album ever recorded. [3] In 2022, Vice wrote that it was the "best worst album of all time". [4] It developed a cult following, [5] with fans including Frank Zappa and Kurt Cobain. [1] [6] Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends, Screaming Lord ...
In 2024, Rolling Stone named The King of Limbs one of the 50 most disappointing albums, writing that it had followed perhaps the "best 12-year runs in rock history". However, they wrote that it was nonetheless "sensational" and "would be seen as a masterpiece if almost anyone else had released it".
The following page lists Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. It concentrates on the 2023-updated list, on which some new albums were added, while others were up- or downrated, or entirely removed. The "Major contributors" column lists up to three main contributing editors.
The self-proclaimed “Greatest Rock and Roll Band in the World,” the Rolling Stones formed in London in 1962, with founding guitarist Brian Jones naming the band after “Rollin’ Stone” by ...
Confessions on a Dance Floor was designed as a remedy, a chart-friendly comeback album led by an Abba-sampling pop steamroller of a single in the form of “Hung Up”. But this is a record ...
St. Anger is the eighth studio album by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on June 5, 2003, through Elektra Records in the United States and Vertigo Records elsewhere. It was the last Metallica album released through Elektra and the final collaboration between Metallica and longtime producer Bob Rock, with whom the band had worked ...
In November 2024, Rolling Stone ranked it at number 50 on its list of The 50 Most Disappointing Albums of All Time. [12] For the album, Chance worked with several songwriters including Darius Scott, Dwayne Verner, Jr., Greg Landfair, Nate Fox and Peter Wilkins. [13]
In 2007, Rolling Stone labeled Down in the Groove as Bob Dylan's worst album. [11] In 2017, the magazine added that "Dylan fans will forever argue about the precise moment when [Dylan's] career hit rock-bottom but most pin it somewhere around the time that Down in the Groove landed with a thud in record stores in May 1988." [12]