20 genuinely horrible 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.

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Horrible albums made by genius musicians: Do you agree?

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. Here’s our list of genuinely crappy albums by great artists, a syndrome that occurs so frequently that we’re doing 20 instead of just 10.

1. Aerosmith — ‘Rock in a Hard Place’ (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 band’s sound. Ken Tucker of ThePhiladelphia Inquirergave it a one-star review , and the passage of 40 years has done nothing to rehabilitate its reputation.

2. The Beatles — ‘Yellow Submarine’ (1969)

Hey, even the Beatles don’t 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 it’s 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 “It’s All Too Much” is worth hearing. Other than that song, this album is a complete waste of time.

3. Black Sabbath — ‘Forbidden’ (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, 1995’s “Forbidden” was hot garbage from top to bottom and easily the band’s worst release. It had no redeeming qualities, and the less said about it, the better.

4. David Bowie — ‘Never Let Me Down’ (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 1987’s “Never Let Me Down,” words like “middling” and “dull” 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 nobody’s favorite David Bowie album and likely never will be.

5. Eric Clapton — ‘Money and Cigarettes’ (1983)

1983’s “Money and Cigarettes” was Eric Clapton’s first album after being in treatment for alcoholism. While we’re happy he got the monkey off his back, the album itself is massively dull and contains not one note of memorable music. In theNew York Times, the guitarist conceded that he could probably do better on his next album than on this one.

6. The Clash — ‘Cut the Crap’ (1985)

In their glory days, even people who didn’t 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 – making a popular album with 1982’s ‘Combat Rock.” But the fans could not countenance singer Joe Strummer firing half the band and turning in “Cut the Crap” as a Clash album in 1985, and the reviews were merciless. Strummer disowned the album and broke up the band weeks after its release.

7. The Doors — ‘Other Voices’ (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 singer’s 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 didn’t work. They recorded another Jimless album, “Full Circle” in 1972 and then mercifully pulled the plug.

8. Led Zeppelin — ‘Coda’ (1982)

It may not be fair to include “Coda” 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, “Coda” 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 “Houses of the Holy,” and if you do, you will never listen to it a second time.

9. Lynyrd Skynyrd — ‘Skynyrd’s First and… Last’ (1978)

Just like “Coda” was for Led Zeppelin, “Skynyrd’s First and… Last” 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 band’s first album, and a couple of the songs are truly outstanding. Then there are another seven songs, which are not. It’s not unlistenable, but it falls far short of the music released during the band’s heyday.

10. Metallica — ‘St. Anger’ (2003)

“St. Anger” is the worst album Metallica ever recorded, for several reasons. The sound is awful (drummer Lars Ulrich sounds like he’s 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 didn’t offer easy retreads of the stuff fans liked the most, but this album feels like pure punishment, and not the good kind.

11. Pink Floyd — ‘The Final Cut’ (1983)

Pink Floyd’s 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, 1983’s “The Final Cut” has no competition. Waters was primarily responsible for the band’s previous album, “The Wall,” 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 “The Final Cut,” 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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12 Elvis Presley — ‘Having Fun with Elvis on Stage’ (1974)

Whatever you think of Elvis Presley, you’d 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 didn’t do anything to stop the release of 1974’s “Having Fun with Elvis on Stage,” which consisted entirely of the guy’s onstage banter and contained not one note of music. Of course, for some people, the complete absence of Elvis Presley’s music might be a selling point.

13. Queen — ‘Hot Space’ (1982)

Queen was never a band that was a critic’s darling, but the fans always loved them, even when they departed from their rock sound to dabble in other styles. The one time this wasn’t the case was on 1982’s “Hot Space” 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, “Under Pressure,” which featured a guest appearance from David Bowie and is a stone-cold classic. The 40 minutes preceding it uniformly stink.

14.Queen + Paul Rodgers — ‘The Cosmos Rocks’ (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 “The Cosmos Rocks,”it was awful, and the pairing ended shortly after that.

15 Lou Reed and Metallica — ‘Lulu’ (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, there’s 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 Kayecalled it“a catastrophic failure on almost every level” , and he wasn’t wrong.

16. The Rolling Stones — ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’ (1967)

When you have as long a career as the Rolling Stones, you’re 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 1986’s “Dirty Work,” we’re going with 1967’s “Their Satanic Majesties Request,” a blatant attempt at ripping off the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” in both look and sound. The faux-psychedelic album cover housed a record full of ‘faux-psychedelic’ music, which the Rolling Stones had no talent for. In the 1994 book “Keith Richards: In His Own Words,” the legendary Stones guitarist called the record ‘a load of crap.

17. Rod Stewart — ‘Blondes Have More Fun’ (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 couldn’t resist participating in the fad, and his “Blondes Have More Fun” album saw him shaking his booty to a disco beat, especially on its lead-off single, “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy.” It’s certainly not the worst record ever made, but when it came out, fans of Stewart’s more rock material were livid with rage, and many of them never forgave him.

18. Van Halen — ‘Van Halen III’ (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 1998’s very terrible “Van Halen III.”While it’s tempting to blame the new guy for it, the singer described the record as “Eddie [Van Halen’s] baby” in a 2012 interview with Rolling Stone.

19. The Who — ‘It’s Hard’ (1982)

The Who had arguably been in artistic decline in the late 1970s, notably when they released 1978’s subpar “Who Are You” 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 Faces’ Kenney Jones and carried on. Their first album with Jones, “Face Dances,” wasn’t terrible, but the next one, 1982’s “It’s Hard,” absolutely was. The band must have agreed because they broke up shortly afterward.

20. Yes — ‘Union’ (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 doesn’t make any sense, that’s because it doesn’t! The record company decided to worsen an incoherent situation by taking songs recorded by both camps, combining them on one album, calling the album ‘Union,’ and saying it was a Yes album. The music was as incoherent as the backstory, and not one of the album’s 14 songs is good. Legendary Yes keyboard player Rick Wakemansaidthat he referred to the “Union” album as “Onion” because it made him cry whenever he listened to it.

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20 genuinely horrible 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 t...
Iran live updates: 'We'll see what happens,' Trump says on Iran response to proposal

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes targeting military, government and infrastructure sites.

ABC News

Following the announcement of a two-week ceasefire,initial U.S.-Iran talksin Pakistan in April failed to reach a peace deal.

Trump later announced the open-ended extension of the ceasefire and the continuation of a U.S. blockade until negotiations are concluded "one way or the other."

A bulk carrier ship was struck by an "unknown projectile" in the Persian Gulf off the coast of Doha, Qatar, according to U.K. Marine Trade Operations, a maritime monitoring organization."The Master of a Bulk Carrier reports being hit by an unknown projectile," UKMTO said ina warningposted early on Sunday. "There was a small fire that has been extinguished, there are no casualties."The ship, which was not identified by UKMTO, was about 23 nautical miles northeast of Doha when it was struck, the organization said.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio met on Saturday with Qatari Prime Minister Al Thani, who also serves as foreign minister of the Gulf country, according to State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott.The readout says only that the pair discussed "Qatar's partnership on a range of issues."

Ina post on X, Rubio confirmed the meeting, writing that the two officials met to "discuss U.S. support for Qatar’s defense." Rubio's post added: "Our partnership is important to deterring threats and promoting stability in the Middle East."-ABC News' Chris Boccia

Iranian missiles and drones "are locked on American targets in the region and aggressor enemy ships," Commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps' Aerospace Force Gen. Majid Mousavi said in a short statement on Saturday, Islamic Republic state media reported.Mousavi added that the military is "awaiting the command to fire."In a separate note, the IRGC Navy Command warned in a post on X that any attack on Iranian oil tankers and commercial vessels will result in "heavy attack on one of the American centers in the region and enemy ships," the Iranian state media reported.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

Iranian officials on Saturday denied Reuters' report on a suspected oil spill near Kharg Island, calling the claims "false and part of the enemy’s psychological operations.""No official report has confirmed this issue so far," Musa Ahmadi, chairman of the energy commission of Iran’s parliament, told the semi-official ISNA News Agency on Saturday. "I have followed up on the matter, and official reports have not confirmed it," he added.Responding to claims about damage to Iranian oil reserves and oil leaking into the sea due to the country’s inability to store it, Ahmadi said Iran had adopted "appropriate measures for oil storage and production management."He added that oil production across the country’s fields continues "without any problems.""The stains observed in satellite images around Kharg Island are linked to oil residue and ballast water discharged by tankers," Pourkabgani said, according to the semi-official Tasnim News Agency on Saturday.He claimed that a European tanker "had discharged waste into the sea, causing environmental damage," but provided no further details about the vessel.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

The U.S. Central Command said it redirected 58commercial vessels and disabled four since April 13 as part of its blockade on Iran.

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"The U.S. Naval blockade against Iran continues be to fully enforced," CENTCOM said in aposton X.

The United Kingdom said it is sending a destroyer, the HMS Dragon, to the Middle East in anticipation of the deployment of a future international mission in the Strait of Hormuz, AFP reported in a post on X.The destroyer is currently in the Mediterranean, the AFP report added.The U.K. and France said in April they were planning a "peaceful multinational mission" that would ensure safe passage for ships in the strait as a defensive measure. The two countries said it would be separate from the warring parties to the conflict and intended to be deployed as soon as circumstances permit.

On Wednesday, France deployed its carrier strike group to the Red Sea as part of planning for a potential mission to secure the Strait of Hormuz, Reuters reported.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

As the U.S. awaits Iran’s response to its peace proposal, President Donald Trump said Saturday that he "expects to hear very soon" from the Iranians, according to French news outlet TF1 Info.In an interview, Trump also told the outlet "they still very much want to conclude a deal."

President Donald Trump told reporters he was expecting to receive a response on a peace plan from Iran on Friday night but said, "We'll see what happens."Trump made his remarks as he left the White House on Friday evening.Asked if the U.S. had received a response from Iran, Trump said: "We're receiving a letter, supposedly tonight, but we'll see how that goes."

Trump was pressed on Iranian attacks that have persisted in Kurdish areas of Iraq amid the ceasefire, with the president saying that he was focused on getting the entire conflict in the Middle East ended."We want to get the whole thing ended, and we will," he said.-ABC News' Nicholas Kerr and Michelle Stoddard

The Treasury Departmentannouncedsanctions targeting 10 individuals and companies it claims are "enabling efforts by Iran's military to secure weapons" and providing raw materials for its drone and ballistic missile program.The individuals and companies are based across the Middle East, Asia and Eastern Europe, the department said."Under President Trump's decisive leadership, we will continue to act to Keep America Safe and target foreign individuals and companies providing Iran's military with weapons for use against U.S. forces," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

During the U.S.-Israeli strikes at the beginning of the war, Iran's supreme leader,Mojtaba Khamenei, was injured by a blast wave and suffered injuries to his kneecap, back and the area behind his ear, an Iranian official revealed during a state gathering on Friday, according to the semi-official Tasnim News Agency.This marks the first time an Iranian official has detailed the injuries sustained by the new leader of the Islamic Republic during the opening strikes.

The official -- Mazaher Hosseini, head of visits at the office of the late Islamic Republic Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei -- said that Mojtaba Khamenei was going up the stairs at the time and was thrown to the ground by the blast wave.He has recovered from his back injury and his kneecap is expected to heal soon, Hosseini said, adding that the leader is in "perfect health."-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

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Iran live updates: 'We'll see what happens,' Trump says on Iran response to proposal

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes t...
Oklahoma governor vetoes OETA extension, putting public TV at risk

Oklahoma's statewide public broadcasting network — responsible for bringing "Sesame Street," "Antiques Roadshow" andKen Burns' documentariesto Sooner State viewers — is again at risk of gettingshut down by Gov. Kevin Stitt.

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On Wednesday, May 6, Stitt vetoed OklahomaSenate Bill 1461, which would have extended the sunset date for theOklahoma Educational Television Authority, or OETA, from July 1, 2026, to July 1, 2031.

"Though OETA’s programming might be worthwhile for the viewer, funding a television station is not a core function of state government," Stitt said in his veto message.

"I have beenconsistent in my positionthat public broadcasting should not depend on government subsidies."

In 2023, lawmakersvoted to overrideStitt's veto of House Bill 2820, which reauthorized Oklahoma'sPublic Broadcasting Servicemember station as a state entity for at least another three years.

Without the state Senate and House of Representative's overriding Stitt's veto of this session'sSB 1461— authored bySen. Micheal Bergstrom, R-Adair, andRep. Gerrid Kendrix, R-Altus — OETA's legal mandate to operate as Oklahoma's public broadcaster could expire on July 1.

However, the House did unanimously override the governor's veto of House Bill 3320, which would extend the sunset date of several agencies, including OETA. Stitt vetoed that bill on May 5. The House voted to override that veto on Thursday, May 7.

In order to keep OETA from sunsetting this year, the Senate must also override Stitt's veto of House Bill 3320.

“Fornearly 70 years, OETAhas been a tremendous public-private partnership that serves all of Oklahoma,” saidOETA Executive Director Shawn Blackin a statement. “OETA’s state funding supports far more than television programming. It helps sustain the infrastructure that delivers emergency alerts and public safety communications to communities statewide, while also ensuring free access to educational and public service content for families, educators, and rural viewers across Oklahoma.”

In a statement, the board of trustees of the nonprofitFriends of OETAsaid they "respectfully call on the Senate and House to override that veto so that OETA may continue operating and fulfilling its public safety and services missions to the people of our state.”

The board also noted that the state Legislature gave its "bipartisan endorsement of OETA's mission through the strongly affirmative reauthorization votes cast."

State recently invested about $3 million in infrastructure upgrades for OETA

The state Legislature establishedOETA as its own agency in 1953, and in 1956, OETA began airing with one transmitting station, little money, limited broadcast hours and a small audience.

Nowadays, it is the eighth most-watched public TV station in the country, reaching more than 3 million households per year and providing in excess of 35,000 hours of noncommercial programming annually, according to an OETA fact sheet.

OETA programming is available to Oklahomans 24/7 via television, cable, streaming, online and app access.

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The dues-payingPBS member stationairs PBS series like"Antiques Roadshow,""Nature" and"Austin City Limits,"along with emergency alerts and local shows like"Outdoor Oklahoma,""OETA Movie Club,""Gallery America,""Back in Time" and"Oklahoma News Report."

Janette Thornbrue, vice president of operations at OETA, speaks to the volunteers and staffers working the phones during the live pledge portion of OETA's Festival 2026 statewide fundraising drive on Tuesday, March 3, 2026.

Black said that the state recently invested about $3 million in critical infrastructure upgrades to OETA’s broadcast network, helping modernize and strengthen the system of four towers and 14 translators that deliver service across the state. Those upgrades are expected to sustain the network’s broadcast capabilities for the next 20 years and beyond.

Friends of OETA board of trustees called OETA "an integral part of the Sooner State’s public infrastructure on several key fronts:"

  • It is the only broadcaster in Oklahoma that covers all 77 counties, with 18 antennas spread across the state, making it the sole statewide provider for emergency communications. Each year, an average of 230-plus alerts are transmitted by OETA, keeping the public informed about tornadoes, flash floods, ice storms, wildfire evacuations and missing, endangered or abducted children and adults.

  • OETA bills itself as the "state’s biggest classroom," with 1 in 8 Oklahoma City households and 1 in 12 Tulsa households watching children's shows weekly on the network. OETA's educational children's programming gets more than 60 million streams a year, with 170,000-plus educators, parents and students using the authority's digital learning media annually.

  • "OETA is a model successful private/public partnership. The (annual) state appropriation for OETA of less than $3 million unlocks over $7 million in private support — a substantial return on investment for the taxpayers," the Friends of OETA board added in its statement.

For the 2026 fiscal year, the state appropriated $2.95 million to OETA to fund employees' salaries, health insurance and retirement contributions, plus utilities, tower rental costs and other expenses.

People participate in a rally to call on Congress to protect funding for US public broadcasters, Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR), outside the NPR headquarters in Washington, DC, on March 26, 2025.

With his veto, Stitt points to Trump's targeting of federal funding for PBS, NPR

With his 2023 veto,Stitt said he questionedOETA's value to the state and laterclaimed OETA "overly sexualizes" childrenand indoctrinates them. Asked for proof of the latter, he pointed to news programs that discussed transgender issues and scripted programming acknowledging the existence of LGBTQ people.

In his latest OETA veto message, Stitt pointed to President Donald Trump's May 1, 2025,executive orderaimed at ending federal funding for PBS andNational Public Radio.

Following the president's order, the Republican-led U.S. Congress last summer fulfilledTrump's requestto claw back$1.1 billionthat had been allocated for public broadcasting, eliminating a significant source of financial support for hundreds of public radio and TV stations across the country, including OETA.

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"Those platforms have survived and continue to operate," Stitt said in his SB 1461 veto message. "President Trump has shown that ending guaranteed taxpayer subsidies for public broadcasting is not the crisis its defenders claim it to be. Oklahoma should follow his lead by letting viewers and advertisers fund OETA, not Oklahoma taxpayers."

But the Friends of the OETA board pointed out that "OETA, as an instrumentality of the State of Oklahoma, cannot operate without that reauthorization from the Legislature."

If a state entity's sunset legislation isn't adopted before the expiration date,Oklahoma lawallows it to operate for an additional year. At the end of that one-year period, "the entity and its personnel positions shall be abolished," with any leftover funds sent to the state's general revenue fund and assets transferred to the Oklahoma Management and Enterprise Services agency.

In a statement, Cherokee Nation Principal ChiefChuck Hoskin Jr.urged lawmakers to override Stitt's veto of SB 1461 "because the veto would effectively destroy public television in our state."

He added that OETA "has earned the support of state leaders over generations because it provides a valuable public service to all 4 million Oklahomans."

Contributing: Dale Denwalt,The Oklahoman

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman:Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt vetoes OETA extension, putting it at risk

Oklahoma governor vetoes OETA extension, putting public TV at risk

Oklahoma's statewide public broadcasting network — responsible for bringing "Sesame Street," "Antiques Roadshow...

 

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