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50 Terrible Songs on Great Albums

A list of 50 terrible songs on otherwise great, classic albums, from the Beatles and Bob Dylan to Harry Styles and Taylor Swift

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There’s always one. It’s that single track on a great record that sucks to such a profound degree that it almost feels like a sick joke. They exist for all sorts of reasons. Sometimes the lead singer felt obligated to give the drummer one song on Side Two to maintain group harmony. Other times, they took ludicrous amounts of drugs and the idea of having a dog howl for 134 seconds or banging a metal cross against guitar strings for a solid minute and a half felt like a grand plan. And other times, they’re just desperate for a hook and wind up stealing one from a Corn Flakes jingle and placing the shitty tune on the same Beatles album as “A Day in the Life.”

We combed through music history and came up with 50 terrible songs that taint otherwise perfect records. It’s likely that a great many of you will disagree with at least some of these picks. That may be because you’ve heard some of these records so many times that it’s hard to imagine them in any other form. But does Goodbye Yellow Brick Road really benefit from “Jamaica Jerk Off”? Does Synchronicity truly need a song where Andy Summers rants like a lunatic about his overbearing mother? Did Phil Collins really need to deliver “Illegal Alien” with a heavy Spanish accent?

It should be noted that these weren’t always easy calls. The White Album posted particularly vexing questions due to polarizing tracks “Rocky Racoon,” “Good Night,” “Revolution 9,” and “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da.” We didn’t go with any of those songs, and we have little doubt many of you won’t agree with the pick. Likewise, we just couldn’t get with the conventional wisdom that “Treefingers” brings down Radiohead’s “Kid A,” and “La La Love You” has no business appearing on the Pixies’ “Doolittle.” We like both of those songs. The list is ranked from least worst to flat-out worst. If you disagree with us there or on any of our other picks, take to social media and blast us to pieces. We can take it.

12

The Eagles, ‘Try and Love Again’

Randy Meisner was a man of many talents. He was a gifted bassist, and his achingly tender voice was a critical part of the harmony blend that gave the Eagles such a distinct sound. His lead vocals on “Take It to the Limit” are simply magnificent, and all attempts to pull off that song without him have fallen flat. But he simply couldn’t compete as a songwriter in a band with Don Henley, Glen Frey, and Joe Walsh. And these guys were operating at their absolute peak when Hotel California came around. This was Meisner’s last album with the group, and they included his country-rock tune “Try and Love Again” on the second side. It’s the only dud on the otherwise perfect album. Vince Gill did his best with it when the remaining Eagles played Hotel California straight through about five years back, but it was a bathroom break for many between “Pretty Maids All in a Row” and “The Last Resort.”

11

Neil Young, ‘Florida’

When Neil Young finally released Homegrown in 2020 following a 46-year delay, fans had many questions: Why did he hold back such a brilliant collection of songs all these years? How would such an intense, personal LP have been greeted by the public back in 1974? And what the hell is up with that song “Florida”? The latter question refers to a bizarre, spoken-word track where a deeply stoned Young tells a rambling story about witnessing an out-of-control hang glider kill a couple on the ground, leaving an orphaned baby by their side. The only musical accompaniment is the sound of Young and guitarist Ben Keith rubbing piano strings and the rims of wine glasses. It’s a symbolic story about the dissolution of his relationship with actress Carrie Snodgress, and custody questions that linger over their child Zeke. It’s also the dream referenced in the opening lyrics of the next song, “Kansas.” But that doesn’t mean it’s an enjoyable listen. There’s absolutely no reason to hear it more than once.

10

The Stooges, ‘We Will Fall’

The Stooges practically invented punk rock on their 1969 debut LP with songs like “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” “No Fun,” and “1969” that have become standards of the genre. But just three songs into the LP, they veer wildly off course with the 10-minute “We Will Fall.” Built around producer John Cale’s viola and a monk-like chant by bassist Dave Alexander, it sounds more like a discarded Velvet Underground studio jam than anything in the Stooges’ catalog. “There’s usually one song on each of my albums that has people going, ‘When he fucks up, he fucks up big time. This is absolutely unlistenable, pretentious crap, cough cough,’” Iggy Pop said years later. “That was the one on my first album.” For most Stooges fans, it’s merely the track after “I Wanna Be Your Dog” that you skip to reach “No Fun.” When the group reunited in the 2000s, they played Fun House and Raw Power straight through at various points. They never attempted their first album since it would have meant a live performance of “We Will Fall,” and that simply wasn’t going to happen.

9

The Beatles, ‘Good Morning Good Morning’

If anyone thinks “Good Morning Good Morning” isn’t the clear low point of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, they should take a listen to John Lennon himself. “It’s a throwaway, a piece of garbage, I always thought,” he told David Sheff in 1980. “The ‘Good morning, good morning’ was from a Kellogg’s cereal commercial. I always had the TV on very low in the background when I was writing, and it came over, and then I wrote the song.” Lennon did indeed nick the hook from a long-running Kellogg’s commercial. He turned it into something slightly more profound, but it’s still quite clearly something Lennon tossed off with little thought. George Martin went to his grave regretting the decision not to include “Strawberry Fields Forever” on Sgt. Pepper because it had already been released as a single. If they’d only dumped “Good Morning, Good Morning” to make room for it, it would be a much stronger record. (And if you love the song, it’s likely because you’ve heard it a million times and can’t imagine Sgt. Pepper without it. Listen to the song in isolation and see what you think.)

8

The Who, ‘Silas Stingy’

Pete Townshend conceived of the Who’s 1967 LP The Who Sell Out as an imaginary broadcast from a pirate-radio ship, complete with fake commercials for baked beaks and deodorant. It’s a clever concept that mostly works, but not every song lives up to the promise of “Tattoo,” “I Can See for Miles,” “Armenia in the Sky,” and “I Can’t Reach Out.” The clear low point is “Silas Stingy,” which was penned by bassist John Entwistle. It’s basically a nursery rhyme about a painfully cheap old man who keeps all of his money in a black box. Half the song is just a repeat of “Money, money, money bags/There goes mingy Stingy.” It’s annoying the first time you hear it, and unbearable the 10th time you hear it. It’s not just the worst song on The Who Sell Out, but one of the single worst songs the Who ever released. And that includes 1980s coked-out fiascos like “Did You Steal My Money?” 

7

The Beach Boys, ‘Student Demonstration Time’

The Mike Love of today is a proud MAGA Republican who spent New Year’s Eve rubbing shoulders with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago. The Mike Love of 1971 was significantly less politically inclined, but eager to jump on the anti-war bandwagon and find a way for the Beach Boys to be relevant in the era of Kent State and the Weather Underground. That’s why he took Leiber and Stoller’s 1954 song “Riot in Cell Block Number 9” and recast it as “Student Demonstration Time,” on Surf’s Up, writing lyrics about campus activism in response to Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War. “America was stunned on May 4, 1970/When rally turned to riot up at Kent State University,” he wrote. “They said the students scared the Guard/Though the troops were battle dressed/Four martyrs earned a new degree/The bachelor of bullets.” This reads like some sort of parody, but those are the actual lyrics. Even 54 years later, it’s hard to listen to the song without cringing. And it mars a truly excellent Beach Boys album.

6

Simon and Garfunkel, ‘Voices of Old People’

During the creation of their ambitious 1968 album, Bookends, Art Garfunkel visited the United Home for Aged Hebrews in New Rochelle, New York, and the California Home for the Aged at Reseda. The idea was to create a sound collage of senior citizens talking about their lives that would lead up to “Old Friends,” a poignant tune that Paul Simon wrote, where he imagined the two of them “sharing a park bench quietly” at age 70. This result was a painfully depressing two minutes and nine seconds of nursing-home residents sharing things like, “God forgive me, but an old person without money is pathetic,” and, “I couldn’t get younger, I have to be an old man.” It brings the album to a dead stop and reminds each and every listener of the inevitably of death. As the years passed, and the odds that any of these people were still alive slipped down to zero, the track grew even more maudlin.

5

Black Sabbath, ‘FX’

As the old saying goes, cocaine is one hell of a drug. Black Sabbath were snorting it practically by the gallon when they recorded Vol. 4 at L.A.’s Record Plant in 1972. One particularly insane night, after hours in the studio, they ripped off their clothes and began dancing around. A cross that guitarist Tony Iommi wore around his neck brushed against his guitar string, making a distinct sound. “Everybody then danced around the guitar, hitting it,” Iommi wrote in his memoir, Iron Man. “I always put so much work in every song, putting all the different changes in and everything, and we had a track that came about accidentally because a couple of stone people were hitting my guitar.” This was surely good for a laugh in the studio, but featuring the track on Vol. 4 alongside legit songs like “Changes” and “Snowblind” is a decision only four guys blind to logic and reason due to “snow” would make.

4

Elton John, ‘Jamaica Jerk-Off’

Elton John and Bernie Taupin originally planned on cutting their 1973 double LP, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, at the same studio in Jamaica where the Rolling Stones recorded Goat’s Head Soup earlier that year. “It was not a good vibe,” Taupin told Rolling Stone in 2013. “I remember a lot of barbed wire around the studio and armed guards. We spent a lot of time congregating around the pool area of the hotel, feeling there was safety in numbers.” They eventually retreated back to the safer confines of the Château d’Hérouville in France and finished the album in a matter of weeks. The only trace of their Jamaica adventures is found in the deeply unfortunate song “Jamaica Jerk-Off,” where John delivers lines like “We’re all happy in Jamaica/Do Jamaica jerk-off that way” with a strong hint of an island accent. It has no place on the same album as true masterpieces like “Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding,” “Candle in the Wind,” “Sweet Painted Lady,” and “Harmony.” John has never once played it live, and Taupin claims to have no memory of even writing it. That’s probably for the best.

3

Guns N’ Roses, ‘My World’

Countless Guns N’ Roses fans have come across the final track on Use Your Illusion II over the years and had the same question: “What in God’s holy name is this insane industrial song ‘My World,’ where Axl Rose is rapping?” Founding guitarist Izzy Stradlin had the same question, even though he plays on the album and co-wrote many of the songs. “I didn’t even know it was on it until it came out,” he told Rolling Stone in 1992. “I gave it a listen and thought, ‘What the fuck is this?’” The answer is a song that Rose created in just three hours while tripping on mushrooms. “You want to step into my world?” he snarls. “It’s a socio-psychotic state of bliss/You’ve been delayed in the real world/How many times have you hit and missed?” The song is so horrifically, ludicrously awful that it needs to be heard to be believed. And decisions like “My World” played a role in Stradlin leaving the band midway through the Use Your Illusion tour. He had been living in Axl’s world for too long and was ready to get out.

2

Pink Floyd, ‘Seamus’

Pink Floyd’s 1971 LP Meddle is bookended by two prog-rock masterpieces: “One of These Days” and “Echos.” The experimental tracks in the middle fail to reach those highs, but “Fearless,” “A Pillow Full of Winds,” and “St. Tropez” are beloved by Floyd aficionados and have aged extremely well. The same cannot be said for “Seamus.” The novelty blues tune features Steve Marriot’s border collie Seamus howling for two interminable minutes, and was basically included as a joke. But it wasn’t funny in 1971, and it’s definitely not funny now. It’s just the ridiculous song everyone skips past so they can hear “Echoes,” and a strong candidate for the worst song in the entire Pink Floyd catalog. (Sorry, Seamus. We’re sure you were a good boy.)

1

The Police, ‘Mother’

Police guitarist Andy Summers had an extremely overbearing mother. “I was sort of ‘the golden child,’” he said, “and there I was, sort of fulfilling all of her dreams by being this pop star in the Police. I got a certain amount of pressure from her.” It was certainly a difficult situation, and he wrote the manic “Mother” to vent his frustration, utilizing an unnerving 7/8 time signature, and handling the vocals himself. “Well every girl that I go out with/Becomes my mother in the end,” he wails. “Oh, oh, mother/Oh, mother dear, please listen/And don’t devour me.” These are the kinds of things you say to a therapist. You don’t include them on the Police’s final album alongside “King of Pain,” “Every Breath You Take,” “Murder by Numbers,” and other classics. It’s understandable that Sting felt the need to appease his guitarist by giving him one song on the album, but it didn’t have to be this embarrassing fiasco.