•
Alice Cooper –
Love It to Death (1971) • The album features a portrait of the original
Alice Cooper band, with the frontman posing with his thumb protruding from underneath his cape as if it were his penis. The album was later reissued with Cooper's entire right arm
airbrushed out of the photograph. Even though no genitals appear,
YouTube,
Spotify and
iTunes pixelate the area, as well as the breasts. •
Biffy Clyro –
The Vertigo of Bliss (2003) • The cover shows a woman sitting down with her hand up her dress
masturbating with a look of pleasure on her face. The controversy of the album cover is accompanied by the erotic artwork of the singles "
The Ideal Height", "
Questions and Answers" and "
Eradicate the Doubt" (all designed by
Milo Manara). Despite being considered offensive and sexist by some,
ShortList magazine praised the band for their bravery and originality when they mentioned it in their list of "50 Coolest Album Covers Ever". •
The Black Crowes –
Amorica (1994) • The album cover originally showed a woman's crotch wearing a thong with a
United States flag pattern on it with
pubic hair visible. The image was recycled from a 1976 issue of
Hustler magazine. After the album was rejected by certain stores due to the cover, the image was replaced with a black background cover which blacked out the hair and only showed the garment. •
Blind Faith –
Blind Faith (1969) • The cover features a topless
pubescent girl, holding in her hands a silver space ship, which some perceived as
phallic. Photographer
Bob Seidemann used a girl, Mariora Goschen, who was 11 years old. The US record company issued it with an alternative cover which showed a photograph of the band on the front. •
Bon Jovi –
Slippery When Wet (1986) • The album originally was to feature a busty woman in a yellow shirt featuring the album title. The reason for the switch is unknown, but some think the label feared stores would not sell it, deeming the cover sexist, while others said
Jon Bon Jovi scrapped the cover when he saw the record company put a bright pink border around the photograph that the band had submitted. Instead, the cover was changed before the album's release to an image of a wet garbage bag with the words "Slippery When Wet" written on it. However, the Japanese edition of the album features the original artwork. '', which
Bow Wow Wow recreated with their 14-year old singer as the nude woman, leading to considerable controversy. •
Bow Wow Wow –
See Jungle! See Jungle! Go Join Your Gang Yeah, City All Over! Go Ape Crazy! (1981) • The cover of the album is a photograph of the band members recreating
Édouard Manet's painting ''
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe''. The band's then-14-year old lead singer,
Annabella Lwin, is shown nude on the cover. The artwork caused outrage in the United Kingdom that led to an investigation by
Scotland Yard, instigated by Lwin's mother. The cover was replaced, and never appeared on the American issue. The cover art was reused for the 1982 follow-up EP
The Last of the Mohicans. •
Chumbawamba –
Anarchy (1994) • The cover originally depicted a baby's head emerging from a woman's
vagina during birth. As some stores would not sell the album due to the cover, the baby image was replaced with an image of several flowers. •
Cradle of Filth –
Thornography (2006) • In news posted on the official Cradle of Filth website in mid-May 2006, it was revealed that the planned artwork for
Thornography had been vetoed by
Roadrunner Records. A replacement was soon forthcoming, although numerous CD booklets had already been printed with the original image. The controversy was over the nakedness of the female figure's legs on the original cover. •
David Bowie –
Diamond Dogs (1974) • The album features Bowie as a half-dog half-man hybrid, and the back cover features the creature's genitals. Following controversy, later copies of the album have the genitals airbrushed out of the painting. Although the trial and two years of subsequent litigation in the case did not result in any convictions, Alternative Tentacles and the band's frontman
Jello Biafra were nearly driven into bankruptcy as a result of costs related to the trial and litigation. Additionally, the album's actual cover – a 1970s
Newsweek photograph of
Shriners in a parade – prompted a 1986 lawsuit from the four elderly Shriners included in the photograph. •
Death Grips –
No Love Deep Web (2012) • The cover shows the erect penis of drummer
Zach Hill with the album's title written across it in black marker. The cover caused such controversy, along with its spontaneous release without their label's permission, that the band were forced to put a disclaimer on their website. An alternative cover was subsequently released depicting lead vocalist
MC Ride wearing socks with the words "Suck my dick" on them. •
Duran Duran – "
Skin Trade" (1987) • The original sleeve, known as the "bum" cover, depicts a closeup of a woman's buttocks (though the ability to distinguish it by eye is relatively difficult without prior contextual knowledge from the viewer). It was banned in the UK, although it was released in France. •
Flux of Pink Indians –
The Fucking Cunts Treat Us Like Pricks (1984) • In addition to the use of profanity in the album title, the album art depicts three crudely drawn erect penises.
Greater Manchester Police, under the leadership of
James Anderton, seized copies of the album from Eastern Bloc Records and charged the band and their record labels with
obscenity, although the charges were dropped. In addition, many stores, such as
HMV, declined to stock it. •
Frenzal Rhomb –
Dick Sandwich (1994) • The cover shows a drawing of several severed penises, some of which are being used as filling in a sandwich. They were subsequently banned from some venues and record stores. •
Funkadelic –
The Electric Spanking of War Babies (1981) •
Pedro Bell's original cover, which showed a nude woman inside a phallic spacecraft, was considered too suggestive by
Warner Bros. Records, which paid Bell to cover the offending parts with a green shape. •
Guns N' Roses –
Appetite for Destruction (1987) • The album's original cover art, based on
Robert Williams' painting
Appetite for Destruction, depicted an open-shirted woman leaning against a wooden fence after evidently being sexually assaulted by a robotic figure which is about to be crushed by a dagger-toothed monster. After several music retailers refused to stock the album, the label compromised and moved the offending image to the inside sleeve, replacing it with a new image depicting a cross and skulls of the five band members. The band stated the artwork is "a symbolic social statement, with the robot representing the industrial system that's raping and polluting our environment". •
The Hotelier –
Goodness (2016) • The album cover shows a group of middle-aged
nudists posing in the middle of a forest. The group consists of five women and three men. The album cover was completely pixelated for its iTunes release, and many online news outlets overlaid a black box over the explicit areas. •
Jane's Addiction – ''
Nothing's Shocking'' (1988) • The album cover, a sculpture of nude
conjoined twins with their hair on fire, caused several distributors to ban the album. •
Jane's Addiction –
Ritual de lo Habitual (1990) • The original album artwork depicts frontman
Perry Farrell engaging in a
threesome. It was replaced in some stores by a text-only cover which stated the band's name, the album title, and the
First Amendment. •
John Lennon &
Yoko Ono –
Unfinished Music No.1: Two Virgins (1968) • The front cover displayed Lennon and Ono frontally nude, while the rear cover featured them from behind. Distributors were prompted to sell the album in a plain brown wrapper, and copies of the album were impounded as obscenity in several jurisdictions. •
Kanye West – "
Cold" (2012) (single) • The cover designed by
George Condo features a woman's body with bare
breasts. It was intended to be the cover art of the song when the name was "Theraflu". When Kanye West changed the name of the song to "Cold", a new cover was revealed, which also caused controversies for bare breasts. •
Kanye West –
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (2010) • The cover originally showed a painting by
George Condo depicting West being straddled by a
phoenix. After certain retail stores refused to sell the album due to the cover, Condo created a less-offensive artwork, showing a ballerina with a glass of cherry juice. However, many versions of the album still feature the original artwork, but pixelated. •
Kanye West –
Vultures 1 (2024) • The cover displays West wearing an all-black outfit, standing next to his romantic partner,
Bianca Censori, who has her back to the camera and is mostly nude above her thighs and wearing black stockings and high heels. •
Led Zeppelin –
Houses of the Holy (1973) • The
Hipgnosis cover, based on the novel ''
Childhood's End'' by
Arthur C. Clarke, features a group of naked children ascending the
Giant's Causeway. The interior art also depicts a distant figure of a naked Overlord standing on mossy ruins (near
Dunluce Castle) while holding one of the children aloft in a ceremonial gesture. Although the album was originally released with the nudity intact,
Atlantic Records were allowed to add a wrap-around paper title band to US and UK copies of the sleeve that had to be broken or slid off to access the record. This hid the children's buttocks from the general display, but still, the album was either banned or unavailable in some parts of the Southern United States for several years. On the subsequent cover, one of the naked children's
buttocks was covered with the text "Led Zeppelin Houses of the Holy" printed on a white background. The buttocks were later airbrushed out. •
Lady Gaga –
Artpop (2013) • The album artwork is a sculpture of Lady Gaga by
Jeff Koons with her legs open and a
gazing ball placed between them. Although no nudity is visible on the artwork, the album cover was still censored in the
Middle East and
China. Rather than traditional
censorship, the gazing ball between her legs was enlarged to fully cover her breasts, and her legs were colored black so they did not appear to be naked. •
Lady Gaga – "
Do What U Want" featuring
R. Kelly (2013) (single) • The single cover is a close-up of Lady Gaga's buttocks wearing a blue, floral
thong. Lady Gaga's blonde wig hangs just above her thong-clad buttocks. The image was taken by photographer
Terry Richardson. A censored version of the cover featuring a pale mauve coloured skirt edited over the top of her buttocks was used in selected countries in the
Middle East. •
Lorde –
Solar Power (2021) • The album cover is a photograph of Lorde at the beach, taken from below. The photograph shows her naked legs and buttocks. In some markets, including mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, her buttocks are censored by a bright sunlight lens flare. •
Marilyn Manson –
Mechanical Animals (1998) • The cover shows a picture of a naked
Marilyn Manson with airbrushed genitalia. Some retail stores, including
Walmart and
Kmart, refused to stock the album. •
Ministry –
Dark Side of the Spoon (1999) • The album's cover depicts a naked obese woman seated in front of a blackboard where the words "I will be god" are written numerous times. The album was banned from
Kmart due to the offending cover. In the album's insert, the same woman covers her breasts with her hands, and her
behind is also exposed on both the insert and back cover. The woman and the words on the blackboard were later airbrushed out. •
Mom's Apple Pie – ''
Mom's Apple Pie'' (1972) • The album was originally released with the album cover featuring a woman licking her lips and holding a pie with a slice removed showing a subtle depiction of a woman's
vulva and some
semen leaking from the pie. The cover was later reprinted with the vulva replaced by a miniature brick wall, topped with razor wire and removing the semen. •
Nicki Minaj – "
Anaconda" (2014) (single) • The artwork for this digital single depicts Minaj with her back towards the camera, emphasizing her
thong-clad buttocks. Some stores censored this art by obscuring the buttocks with the
Parental Advisory seal, or a black box on the edited version. •
Nirvana –
Nevermind (1991) • The album cover featured a naked, baby Spencer Elden with his penis exposed, swimming after a dollar bill. Chain stores such as
Wal-Mart and
Kmart initially refused to carry
Nevermind. Frontman Kurt Cobain refused to censor the cover, stating the only form of coverage he would accept was a sticker that read "If you're offended by this, you must be a closet pedophile" over the genitals. Elden sued the band and Cobain's estate 30 years later for perceived child sexual exploitation. Nirvana saw continued controversy for their next album,
In Utero. •
NOFX –
Heavy Petting Zoo (1996) • The album features two covers, one for the CD version and one for the LP version; both of them caused controversy. The CD version features a man sitting down on the ground in a petting zoo cuddling a sheep with his hand on the sheep's genitalia area. The LP version sparked even more controversy than the CD version, as it features the same man in a
69 position with the same sheep. The album is known as
Eating Lamb on the LP. The LP version was banned from
Germany due to the cover's subject matter. •
Pulp –
This Is Hardcore (1998) • The sleeve photo, directed by
Peter Saville and the American painter
John Currin, depicts a naked model, Ksenia Zlobina pictured in a sexual though ambiguous way. Front man
Jarvis Cocker believed the picture's concept was that "initially, it would be attractive, you'd look at the picture and realise it's a semi-clad woman. But then her look is vacant. It almost looks as if she could be dead, or a dummy. So, it was supposed to be something that would draw you in and then kind of repel you a bit." Advertising posters showing the album's cover that appeared on the London Underground system were defaced by graffiti artists with slogans like "This Offends Women" and "This is Sexist" or "This is Demeaning". •
Queen -
Bicycle Race/Fat Bottomed Girls (1977) (double A-side single) • In nearly all countries, the covers featured a backside photo of a naked woman on a racing bike, with a red bikini painted over the original photo. A brassiere was added to the US covers. •
Red Hot Chili Peppers – ''
Mother's Milk'' (1989) • The album cover features a black and white photograph of the band sprawled across the arms of a proportionately larger naked woman. A rose conceals one of her nipples while singer
Anthony Kiedis' standing body conceals the other. Several national chains refused to sell the record because they believed the female subject displayed too much nudity. A stricter censored version was manufactured for some retailers that featured the band members in far larger proportion than the original. •
Rob Zombie –
Mondo Sex Head (2012) • The cover originally featured
Sheri Moon Zombie's
buttocks, but after controversy arose, it was replaced by an image of a cat, which was referred to by Rob Zombie as a "
pussy shot" to replace the "ass shot". •
Roger Waters –
The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking (1984) • The cover features a nude back-view image of model and
pornographic actress Linzi Drew, her buttocks clearly visible. It was condemned by many feminist groups and was also accused of promoting rape.
Columbia Records was forced to place a black box covering the nudity for future releases to avoid more controversy. •
Roxy Music –
Country Life (1974) • The album features scantily clad models Constanze Karoli and Eveline Grunwald – the sister and girlfriend, respectively, of
Can guitarist
Michael Karoli – posed in front of a bush. Although no nudity is directly shown in the photograph, Grunwald is topless and Karoli's bra is translucent, revealing her nipples and
areolae. Consequently, the album's LP sleeve was packaged in a green outer nylon bag; for a later American release of the album, the front cover was replaced by mirroring the photograph on the album's back cover, which features the foliage and forest, but neither woman. •
Sabrina Carpenter – ''
Man's Best Friend'' (2025) • The cover features Carpenter posed on her hands and knees in a black mini dress and heels while an anonymous figure, cropped out of the frame, grabs a handful of her hair. The cover generated controversy, with some users on social media calling it "degrading," "disgusting," and "embarrassing." Glasgow Women's Aid, a charity aiming to provide support for victims of domestic abuse, publicly criticized the cover in a
Facebook post, calling it "regressive" and "pandering to the
male gaze and [promotion of] misogynistic stereotypes" with "an element of violence and control." Carpenter later released an alternative cover that has her holding a man's arm in a formal event, which she joked was "approved by
God". •
Scorpions –
Virgin Killer (1976) • This cover featured a photo of a naked
prepubescent girl, with her pubic area partially obscured by a "cracked glass" effect. Her pose and the title
Virgin Killer added to the image's notoriety. The
Internet Watch Foundation, a British non-profit group who provides content blacklists for major
ISPs in the country,
also notably blacklisted pages on
Wikipedia for featuring the cover on its article about the album. This block was later retracted due to technical problems which occurred as a result of the blocking mechanisms and due to the already "wide availability" of the image. •
Suede –
Suede (1993) • The gender-ambiguous cover art provoked controversy in the press, prompting Suede frontman
Brett Anderson to comment, "I chose it because of the ambiguity of it, but mostly because of the beauty of it." The cover image of the androgynous kissing couple was taken from the 1991 book
Stolen Glances: Lesbians Take Photographs edited by Tessa Boffin and Jean Fraser. The photograph was taken by
Tee Corinne and in its entirety shows a woman kissing an acquaintance in a wheelchair. •
The Strokes –
Is This It (2001) • The original cover art featured a photograph of a woman's nude bottom and hip, with a leather-gloved hand suggestively resting on it. Although British retail chains
HMV and
Woolworths objected to the photograph's controversial nature, they stocked the album without amendment. In the band's native United States, the cover was changed to a photograph of
subatomic particle tracks in a
bubble chamber. This decision was made by frontman
Julian Casablancas because he liked this image more than the original cover, and was independent of any controversy or label demand. •
Sky Ferreira –
Night Time, My Time (2013) • The album cover features Sky Ferreira appearing topless, wearing a cross necklace inside a shower, with a "demented" facial expression. The album cover was cropped for
iTunes, and in-store versions had an elongated sticker with the album title and her name covering the explicit content. •
The The – "
Infected" (1986) (single) • Released to promote
the album of the same name, "Infected" ran into numerous controversies, one of which was the original sleeve, depicting a painting of a masturbating devil. After objections, it was replaced with a close-up of the devil's face. Singer
Matt Johnson wrote that the original image was "not supposed to be gratuitous titillation but a distortion on a centuries-old metaphor of the darker side of mankind's emotion." . A row of similar statues were featured on the cover of
Tin Machine II; their genitalia were airbrushed out on the American release.|286x286px •
Tin Machine –
Tin Machine II (1991) • The original cover featured a row of four nude
Kouroi. In the U.S., the genitalia of the statues were airbrushed out, leading band member
David Bowie to exclaim, "Only in America!" •
Tool –
Undertow (1993) • Photos in the liner notes of a nude obese woman, a nude man of normal weight, a cow licking its genitals, and the band members with pins in the sides of their heads generated controversy, resulting in the album being removed from stores such as
Kmart and
Wal-Mart. The cover was later replaced by a giant bar code. •
The Weeknd –
House of Balloons (2011) (Mixtape) • The explicit cover is a black-and-white image of a topless woman sitting in a tiled room, surrounded and partially obscured by balloons. When the mixtape was sold separately for retail release on iTunes and in stores in 2015, the cover was censored. •
Whitesnake –
Lovehunter (1979) and ''
Come an' Get It'' (1981) • The album cover for
Lovehunter depicts a naked woman from behind, straddling a large snake, with blood on her hand from a snake bite. Upon its release, the cover was partly covered by a sticker (in the United States) and airbrushing (in Argentina). The ''Come an' Get It'' album's cover depicts a white snake trapped inside a glass apple; the snake's open mouth shows its tongue, which is painted to look like a vulva. According to artist Malcolm Horton, this detail was airbrushed out in America. •
White Zombie – ''
Supersexy Swingin' Sounds'' (1996) • The album's cover depicts a naked woman relaxing in a hammock in front of a driveway and a sidewalk. The edited version of the album (audio-wise) has the woman wearing a blue bikini. •
Witchfinder General –
Death Penalty (1982) and
Friends of Hell (1983) • Both albums' covers feature model
Joanne Latham in states of undress, being attacked or accosted by men in Medieval and Renaissance period attire. The original concept for
Death Penalty was developed by
Revolver Music founder Paul Birch. The negative press from the album covers was a large contributing factor in the breakup of the band. ==Religious==