
Ep. 323 Today's Peep Features Musical Misfires: Rock Bands' Worst Albums: From Scorpions to Metallica & Lou Reed, Pat Walsh Explores Shocking Album Failures that left Fans Scratching their Heads, And We'll "Do It Till We're Satisfied"
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About this listen
What happens when rock legends completely lose the plot? On this entertaining musical journey, I dive into some of rock music's most bewildering failures – albums so unexpected and poorly received that they left fans and critics alike questioning everything they thought they knew about these beloved artists.
The Scorpions' 1999 album "Eye to Eye" stands as a perfect example of a hard rock band abandoning their signature sound for pop territory. With synthesizers and harmonies replacing power chords, tracks like "To Be Number One" sound more like Soft Cell than the German rockers fans had come to love. I play excerpts that demonstrate just how far they strayed from their hard-rocking roots.
We also explore Neil Young's electronic experiment "Trans" (1983), where the folk-rock icon processed his vocals through vocoders and embraced Kraftwerk-inspired soundscapes. There's actually a touching backstory here – Young created these distorted vocals partly to reflect his communication struggles with his non-verbal son who had cerebral palsy. While conceptually interesting, the album remains one of Young's most commercially unsuccessful releases.
Perhaps most notorious is the "Lulu" collaboration between Lou Reed and Metallica from 2011. Despite both artists' legendary status, their partnership produced what many consider one of the worst albums ever recorded. I'll play segments from tracks like "Pumping Blood" that demonstrate how two excellent artists somehow created something far less than the sum of their parts.
We round out our musical misadventures with Lou Reed's infamous "Metal Machine Music" – over an hour of pure noise that was pulled from store shelves just three weeks after its 1975 release. The contrast with BT Express's infectious "Do It ('Til You're Satisfied)" provides a refreshing palate cleanser after our journey through rock's most fascinating failures.
What album from a favorite artist left you bewildered? Share your thoughts and don't forget to subscribe for more musical explorations that venture where others fear to tread!