Something about
William Eggleston's photographs makes them perfect for album covers. Perhaps it is their uneasy mood, or that they are nonspecific enough to be easily re-appropriated. Maybe it's that as his work is gradually acknowledged to hold a more seminal role in contemporary photography, the music scene tags along. Or maybe he just has musical pals or an agent with good connections.
Whatever it is, Eggleston must hold the record (pun intended) for the largest number of noncommissioned album covers. Many of these were on display at
his Whitney show last winter. For those of us who couldn't attend, what follows is a short survey of his album covers. I'm probably missing some covers, and I know I'm missing the titles and dates of a few photos. If anyone out there can help with additional info I'd be obliged.
Eggleston's first cover was the classic Big Star album
Radio City released in 1974. Lead singer
Alex Chilton knew Eggleston from the Memphis arts scene and was an early champion of his work. Although the photograph (
Greenwood, Mississippi, 1973) has since become very well known, it was relatively obscure at the time. Eggleston hadn't had his MOMA show yet, color was still vulgar, and the choice of photo was fairly radical.
Big Star, Radio City, 1974Chilton later used Eggleston's 1970 hood ornament shot from the
Los Alamos series as the cover of a solo album.
Alex Chilton, Like Flies on Sherbert, 1979When Big Star, long since disbanded, reformed in 1993 to release a live album, they chose an Eggleston photo for the cover. Unfortunately I don't know the photo's name or date or how seriously it was cropped. (
Update: Thanks to Gabrielle Harhoff for identifying the photo as "Washington, D.C., 1990" from the Hasselblad Award 1998 book.)
Big Star, Live at Missouri University, 4/25/93Eggleston's Memphis connections helped him onto the cover of Gimmer Nicholson's album
Christopher Idylls. The album was produced in 1968 by longtime Memphis friend and fellow photographer
Terry Manning (Eggleston helped Manning edit the photography on his 1970 album
Home Sweet Home) but not released until the late 70s on limited edition vinyl and 1994 on CD. I don't know the title or date of the photo.
Gimmer Nicholson, Christopher Idylls, 1968/1994The 80s seem to have been Eggleston's missing years (as they were for so many of us). He published no books or album covers until the end of the decade, when
Green on Red put
Near the River at Greenville Mississippi, c. 1983-86 on the cover of
Here Come the Snakes (released the same year as his monograph
Democratic Forest).
Green On Red, Here Come The Snakes, 1989The Green On Red cover photo was probably spurred by band guitarist
Chuck Prophet, an Eggleston fan who later used this 1975 image for the cover of his solo album
Age of Miracles.
Chuck Prophet, Age of Miracles, 2004
Scottish band
Primal Scream used a cropped version of an Eggleston photograph (c. 1971-73 from the
Troubled Waters series) for the cover of
Give Out But Don't Give Up.
Primal Scream, Give Out But Don't Give Up, 1994Primal Scream liked Eggleston. They went on to use his work for the covers of
Country Girl (a non-Prophet version of the
Age of Miracles cover)...
Primal Scream, Country Girl, 2006
...and a cropped
Los Alamos photo for
Dolls.
Primal Scream, Dolls, 2006Until the new millennium, Eggleston's album covers came about through personal connections or fan base. As Eggleston has gained increasing notoriety in the past decade and become something of a crossover cultural star, his photographs have become a sort of high-brow stock catalog, appearing on a variety of album and book covers with little or no connection to Eggleston.

Jimmy Eat World's
Bleed American is probably the most successful Eggleston covered album in terms of raw sales, some small percentage of which must be due to photographers seeking out the cover's cropped version of
Memphis, Tennessee, 1968.
Jimmy Eat World, Bleed American, 2001Robin Holcomb used Eggleston's
Southhaven, Mississippi, 1980 for the cover of
The Big Time.
Robin Holcomb, The Big Time, 2002Next came this
anniversary compilation from Paramount. I haven't heard this album and I'm not sure I want to. I don't recognize the photograph although sources say it is Eggleston.
Paramount Pictures 90th Anniversary Memorable Songs, 2002
The Derek Trucks Band used a cropped version of
Near Minter City and Glendora, Mississippi, c. 1969-70 from Eggleston's Guide for
Soul Serenade. The band, the photo, and Eggleston share Southern roots which is probably why the image was chosen.
The Derek Trucks Band, Soul Serenade, 2003Forgetting about photography for a moment, the music on
Tanglewood Numbers by
Silver Jews is my favorite of any Eggleston cover album. Singer Dave Berman, as dark and poetic as ever, is joined by wife Cassie on vocals and bass and a roving lineup including Stephen Malkmus and Will Oldham. The cover photograph from 1971 features busts of JFK, MLK, and RFK in an arrangement that seems distinctively Eggleston, not to mention the album was recorded in his home state.
Silver Jews, Tanglewood Numbers, 2005I don't know much about the Eggleston cover shot on
Joanna Newsom and the Ys Street Band's eponymous EP. It looks similar to an untitled tree (pg. 79) in
Democratic Forest, yet not the same. Maybe someone out there can identify it? (
Addendum 8/12/9: This photograph is called "Kenya, 1980" and appears in the book Ancient and Modern)
Joanna Newsom and the Ys Street Band (EP), 2007I have a feeling this is just the tip of an impending iceberg. Eggleston's work seems poised to conquer the pop culture world the same way Ansel Adams conquered the 1970s. For Adams the main vehicles were calendars, posters, and postcards, items woefully inefficient in contemporary branding. To gain cultural saturation today requires a commercial piggyback like an album or book cover, or an advertising campaign. Look for the Eggleston meme to spread like ivy in the years ahead...