Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In its "50 Worst Songs Ever", Blender said that "it's difficult to think of a song more likely to plunge you into suicidal despondency than this" and lambasted its "appalling" lyrics. [94] "Kokomo", the Beach Boys (1988) "Kokomo" appeared on Blender ' s list of the 50 worst songs [98] and Dallas Observer ' s list of the ten worst songs by great ...
Below are 10 truly bad soundtracks. Some rise to the level of so bad they’re good, but most are just, well, bad. ... The self-congratulatory Beatles covers album is its own strange subgenre of ...
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 ...
The post 50 Hilariously Bad Album Covers That Deserved To Be Shamed On This FB Group first appeared on Bored Panda. Here's a list of some of the weirdest artwork on records in recent music history.
Sputnikmusic strongly criticized the album giving it a score of 0.5/5 stating that "The Path Of Totality is a truly horrible album, built on a foundation of tired and overwrought stereotypes put together not by just a clueless band, but a bunch of equally confused artists who truly have no proper understanding of the genre they claim to be a ...
This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 100 of the World's Worst Invasive Alien Species; ... Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs; List of music considered the ...
Feeling angry about Apple’s ranking of the 100 best albums of all time, are you? Good. (From their point of view.) That’s exactly how you’re supposed to feel, given a list that aspires less ...
How Could Hell Be Any Worse? is the debut studio album by American punk rock band Bad Religion, released on January 19, 1982, by Epitaph Records. [3] [4] Released almost a year after their self-titled EP, it was financed from the sales of the self titled EP and partly by a $1,000 loan by guitarist Brett Gurewitz's father.