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  • Classic capital covers

  • By Time Out editors

  • London has inspired some of pop's most enduring masterpieces – songs that have reflected and affected our cultural landscape. Here, Time Out remembers some of the most memorable album covers that captured the spirit of the capital.

  • Feature_albumcovers.JPGThe Who – Meaty Beaty Big & Bouncy (1971) The Railway Hotel, Harrow HA3
    Pete Townshend’s psych-pop masterpiece 'I Can See For Miles', as featured on ‘MBB&B’, may namecheck the Taj Mahal and Eiffel Tower, but was allegedly inspired by a hazy night spent gazing across London from Highgate. This cover shows seminal mod hangout The Railway Hotel, now the site of four blocks of flats, each named after a band member. Feature continues

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    Feature_albumcovers10.JPGBlur – Parklife (1994) Walthamstow dog track E4
    A visual hymn to the East End inspired by Martin Amis’s ‘London Fields’ . No word on whether the band still frequent Charlie Chan’s nightclub.

    Feature_albumcovers2.JPG David Bowie – The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972) Heddon Street W1
    The famous red phone box, replaced with one of those horrible blue things in the ’80s, was put back in its original location during Heddon Street’s recent makeover.

    Feature_albumcovers3.JPG Ian Dury and The Blockheads – New Boots and Panties! (1977) Vauxhall Bridge
    Road SW1
    The title referred to the only clothes thrifty Dury wouldn’t buy from charity shops. The cover was shot outside now-defunct Axfords on Vauxhall Bridge Road. The young boy is Ian’s son Baxter.

    Feature_albumcovers7.JPG Oasis – (What’s The Story) Morning Glory (1995) Berwick Street W1
    The cover depicts producer Owen Morris, carrying the master tapes for the album, on his way to exchange them at Reckless Records for ‘Whatever Happened To Slade?’ on vinyl.

    Feature_albumcovers6.JPG Spiritualized – Live At The Royal Albert Hall (1998) SW7
    Well known for their enthusiastic embracing of design trickery, this cover shows an aerial photo of London, with the Albert Hall replacing the circular trade mark symbol on the band’s logo.

    Feature_albumcovers8.JPG The Beatles – Abbey Road (1969) Abbey Road NW8
    You probably know this one already.

    Feature_albumcovers4.JPG The Streets – Original Pirate Material (2002) Hackney Road council flats E2
    The photo was taken in 1995 by German snapper Rut Blees Luxemburg.


    Feature_albumcovers9.JPG Wings – London Town (1978) Tower Bridge SE1
    The proto-‘Frog Chorus’ songs here suggest that McCartney’s knowledge of London Town came from Dick Whittington.

    Feature_albumcovers5.JPG Nancy in London (1966) Number 6B bus
    Nancy Sinatra is pictured on the now obsolete 6B bus, a Saturday workhorse running from London Bridge all the way out to the Royal Forest Hotel in Chingford. A mere two years after Nancy Sinatra visited the capital, reshaping of bus routes hit the former terminus area hard, and the Royal Forest lost much of its custom. The hotel has since been renovated, but according to the management, it is now haunted. What are the odds?

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