Sean O'Hagan 

Albums reimagined as book covers – in pictures

From Abbey Road to Purple Rain, designer Christophe Gowans has reworked some of music's best-known albums as books. By Sean O'Hagan
  
  


Record book covers: Let England Shake
Let England Shake – PJ Harvey
Jacket blurb: 1959 compendium of dance instructions ‘for all the latest ways to cut a rug’.
“This is actually an old record sleeve image," says Gowan. "And I’ve included a diagram of the dance steps.”
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?
(What’s the Story) Morning Glory? – Oasis
Religious claptrap in a leaflet, published by the Oasis Brotherhood. Founder Leon Mail claims to be the “fifth” horseman of the apocalypse and to have become enlightened during a visit to Southall in the 70s
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Abbey Road
Abbey Road – The Beatles
Jacket blurb The story of two Catholic sisters growing up in a swiftly changing postwar Britain. Guess what? It doesn’t end well.
“It’s a place name like Wigan Pier,” says Gowans, “so it immediately suggested a vintage Penguin paperback. That’s why it looks well-thumbed. It’s as close to genre pastiche as I get. I replaced the Penguin logo with an apple in homage to the Beatles record label.”
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Faith
Faith – George Michael
Unauthorised biography of British comedian and TV personality Faith Brown. It’s unclear how much access the author, a George Michael, had to the subject. The passages relating to Brown’s ample hourglass figure seem exactingly thorough, but could equally be the irresponsible imaginings of an obsessive enthusiast…
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Arrival
Arrival – Abba
A 1967 collection of darkly varied work from four new-to-the-scene Scandinavian poets. Controversial at the time, its themes of clubland homosexuality (Dancing Queen), the rise of the consumer society (Money, Money, Money) and opposition to the military (Dum Dum Diddle) ensured its popularity among the student fraternity of Europe
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Blood on the Tracks
Blood on the Tracks – Bob Dylan
Fast-paced 1956 thriller: a jilted train driver hijacks his New York subway train to exact revenge upon his love rival, only to threaten the life of his ex-lover.
“This is an original book cover,” says Gowans. “I just changed the title. I feel a bit guilty but people seem to like it.”
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Purple Rain
Purple Rain – Prince
When a form of acid rain... appears to stunt the growth of every living thing, man’s existence is on a knife edge. Pygmies realise that the peach is unaffected, and found a new society, with the peach stone as its currency.
“It just screams late-60s/early 70s sci-fi - big, thick, stupid paperbacks,” according to Gowans.
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Born to Run
Born to Run – Bruce Springsteen
A rags to glory autobiography by Bruce Reginald Grayson Springsteen. The story of his rise from squalor to victory in the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics is… well, it’s a pretty dull book
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: Power, Corruption and Lies
Power, Corruption and Lies – New Order
Pocket guide to best business practice by four experts, each renowned for their corporate and financial nous.
“Given all the money Factory lost, the idea of New Order as business gurus just seemed very funny.”
Photograph: PR
Record book covers: The Man-Machine
The Man-Machine – Kraftwerk
Pneumatic, insatiable Gloria Grunitsky’s wild rampage across Chicago’s fleshpots – chewing up men as she goes – leads to murderous mayhem she cannot control!...
Photograph: PR
 

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