Billion Dollar Babies was commercially more successful than Alice Cooper's previous albums; it went to No. 1 in both the United Kingdom and United States. In March 1973 the album was certified gold by the
Recording Industry Association of America and in 1986, it went platinum. In a contemporary review for
Creem magazine,
Robert Christgau said that
Billion Dollar Babies is Cooper's "most consistent album", even though it lacks a song as strong as "
School's Out". In a retrospective review,
AllMusic's Greg Prato awarded the album four and a half out of five stars and called it "one of Cooper's very best; it remains one of rock's all-time, quintessential classics". In 2005,
Billion Dollar Babies was ranked number 283 in
Rock Hard magazine's book of
The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time. The album was also included in the book
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
Treble named it in its list "10 Essential Glam Rock Albums".
Chris Cornell of
Soundgarden stated that it was one of his favorite records. In an interview with
Spin magazine in 1989, he commented that: "When I was in junior high, every Friday the teachers would let the kids play their favorite records. I brought in
Billion Dollar Babies [Alice Cooper, 1973] and they wouldn't let me play it. They never vetoed anyone's choice before. It was then I knew that rock'n'roll could scare the fuck out of certain people." The Norwegian band
Turbonegro made a song called "Zillion Dollar Sadist" as a tribute to
Billion Dollar Babies.
David Byrne of
Talking Heads has said that the album inspired him to write the song, "
Psycho Killer". The Swiss
extreme metal group
Samael did a cover of the song "I Love the Dead" on their
Rebellion EP. Italian heavy metal band
Death SS covered the song "I Love the Dead" on their debut album,
...in Death of Steve Sylvester (1988).
Billion Dollar Babies is the second most-represented album in Alice Cooper's live sets, behind only
Welcome to My Nightmare (1975). The only song from the album that has never been played live in any form is the short "Mary Ann", although "Generation Landslide" was not played until the tour eight years later following
Special Forces (1981), on which it had been re-recorded. == Track listing ==