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Embarrassing Early Music Careers Rock Stars Would Rather Forget

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Every musician has to start somewhere, and few can look back on their early careers without a hint of embarrassment. But at times their humble musical beginnings are so drastically different from what we know today, it borders on the ridiculous. Here are a dozen artists who needed a second chance to get it right after a false start.

Billy Joel: Psychedelic Metal God
Before he became the patron saint of Adult Contemporary Radio, Joel made one of heavy metal's most forgettable albums as one half of the organ-and-drums duo Attila. The band's sole release from 1970, a perennial on lists of the worst records ever released, is a monstrous slab of distorted proto-metal noise that Joel himself describes as "psychedelic bulls---." Best of all, the album cover features the stoned-looking duo dressed as Huns, surrounded by meat hooks and sides of beef.

Katy Perry: Pious Christian Pop Angel
The future Mrs. Russell Brand, the woman who gave the world dirty-mouthed hits like 'UR So Gay' and 'I Kissed a Girl,' could once have been described as "wholesome." Yes, believe it or not, catty bad girl Katy Perry was once angelic Christian recording artist Katy Hudson. Released in 2001 (when she was only 16 years old), her self-titled gospel-rock debut made exactly zero references to masturbation, bi-curious make-out sessions or waking up in Las Vegas.

Björk: Flute-Tooting Kiddie Pop Princess
Little Björk Guðmundsdóttir was something of a musical prodigy, and by the age of 11 she was already embracing the unique musical stylings that would become her trademark. But "unique" music made by a prepubescent Icelandic girl in 1977 isn't exactly everyone's cup of tea; her stepfather-produced debut album, 'Björk,' is a Muppets-on-acid mix of disco, cute singing, sitars and extended flute solos (played by Björk herself). On second thought, maybe it's not that different from her recent stuff.

The Cars: Mustachioed Soft Rockers
As co-frontmen of the Cars, Ric Ocasek and Benjamin Orr embodied the sunglasses-and-skinny-ties cool of the burgeoning New Wave movement. As two-thirds of the soft-folk band Milkwood, they did not. Shockingly, the trio's 1973 album 'How's the Weather,' an uninspired hash of Crosby, Stills & Nash–style harmonies and questionable mustaches, failed to resonate with even the most depressed hippies.

Skabba the Hutt
The Bravery: Skanking Ska Rude Boys
In the late '90s, long before the Bravery, Sam Endicott and John Conway, a pair of starry-eyed innocents at Vassar College, spent their days kicking Hacky Sacks in the quad and playing in the ska outfit Skabba the Hutt. But like so many impressionable youths, the two got pulled into a seedy world of angular haircuts and eyeliner abuse, and they soon turned their backs on horn sections and 'Star Wars'-related puns in favor of danceable New Wave revivalism.

Alanis Morissette: Shoulder-Padded Dance-Pop Idol
Morissette's confessional lyrics and edgy, guitar-driven sound made her a fixture of post-grunge rock radio. So isn't it ironic that in the early 1990s this jagged little pill was the Canadian Debbie Gibson? Thanks to a pair of dance-pop albums that made a huge splash in her native Great White North, the shoulder-pad-wearing sensation known simply as "Alanis" even landed a spot opening for none other than Vanilla Ice.

Tori Amos: Big-Haired Pop-Rock Queen
Amos' music is many things -- complicated, challenging, thought- provoking -- and yet her first band, Y Kant Tori Read, is the exact opposite of those things. Her group's ill-fated 1987 self-titled debut, a hot mess where she awkwardly sports Pat Benatar's leftover pirate-sleeve blouses and some cheesy dance beats that would make Taylor Dayne blush, could have been called "Y Kant Tori Stop Wearing Leather Pants?"

Ministry: Pseudo-British Synth-Poseurs
Head-banging industrial-music icon Al Jourgensen likes to blame his former record company for the frilly, faux-British synth-pop of Ministry's 1983 debut album, 'With Sympathy,' but it's hard to imagine some record exec in a suit putting a gun to Jourgensen's head and forcing him to sing like a 14-year-old girl. "I just disregard that record," he says of his dark little secret. "I don't consider it part of my catalog whatsoever."

Ronnie James Dio: Greasy 1950's Doo-Wop Crooner
The fiery rocker who gave the world Rainbow, Dio and the devil horns salute didn't always worship at the unholy altar of metal. In fact, the heir to Ozzy's Black Sabbath throne got his start vocalizing with 1950's doo-wop group the Vegas Kings and, later, as lead singer of Ronnie and the Red Caps, who released the not-so-Satanic 1960 single 'An Angel Is Missing.'

Deborah Harry: Hippie-Dippy Folk Singer
Is it possible that the pin-up queen of the New York punk scene was once wrapped in the flowing, patchouli-scented scarves of hippiedom? Yes, years before she helped put CBGB on the map as the face and voice of Blondie, Harry was in this totally groovy band called the Wind in the Willows (and as a sign of how far removed she was from Blondie at the time, she was actually a brunette). They released one far-out self-titled album in 1968, but the world just wasn't ready for their consciousness-raising mellow vibes.

Trent Reznor: New Wave Cover Artiste
If Nine Inch Nails were an iconic '90s band, in hindsight the 1980s weren't especially kind to its leader. As lead singer of a New Wave band called Option 30, Reznor covered the Police, the Thompson Twins and 'Der Kommissar.' Then he joined synth-poppers the Exotic Birds, who opened for the Eurythmics and Culture Club. That may have been a high-water mark for the group, but for Reznor it was the end of a downward spiral.

Pantera: Glammed-Out Hair-Metalers
Before becoming kings of hardcore thrash in the 1990s, the Texas-bred metal band had some of the biggest hair this side of Sideshow Bob. Raised during the heyday of glam metal, Pantera were already headed toward a heavier sound by the time of vocalist Phil Anselmo's arrival in 1987. He, too, though, was apparently taking personal grooming cues from Tina Turner at the time.

-- Jason Persse and James Sullivan

20 Unlikely Rock Star Hobbies
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Matthew

well i think it's no shame to be doing something different from when they get famous. Fact is music evolves. Simon and Garfunkel was Tom and Jerry before. Tears for Fears was Graduate even Mick Hucknell was in a punk band who first recorded Holding Back The Years before Simply Red covered it.

July 01 2010 at 7:24 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
dancefan

Every single one in that list is utter shite anyway.
Nobody with any credibility there.
People who make lot of money, yes, but nobody who has created anything original.
Maybe that says it all.
They are all just fame-crazy egotists (who were ready to do whatever it takes to get their fame)

May 15 2010 at 11:04 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
susan

I'm sad that this article sets out to mock the beginnings of all these people's musical careers. at least they followed their dreams and were trying, everyone needs to start somewhere. if only more people would be so brave as to create their own music/art instead of putting others down...

April 29 2010 at 1:08 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Rob

Dimebag rules!

April 27 2010 at 7:30 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Rob

Step aside Deep Purple here comes ATILLA!

April 27 2010 at 7:24 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
BigDickBranigan

You have to start somewhere. Those early songs, (especially Tori Amos, and Alanis Morissette), had some kick to them. What they did after that was (YAWN), was boring. Billy Joel, that is what music sounded like, in 1970. He had a Great career (1974-1994, on the charts). Can't imagine Dio, in a doo-wap group.

April 27 2010 at 6:30 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
fran

I remember Michael Bolton's 1st video was metal

April 27 2010 at 3:29 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Felix Millan

Just a quick note on Alanis Morissette, I know digging up stuff from the past is supposed to be "embarassing", but she said it herself that it wasn't like "I posed for Playboy" when someone brings up her two Canadian only albums.

She did write all those songs herself and isn't ashamed.

Actually in her "Eight Easy Steps" video, it goes "back in time" so to speak and includes clips from her "Too Hot", "Walk Away" and other pre-Jagged hits.

That's a TRUE person, it's pretty hard to find that nowadays, in any field...!







April 27 2010 at 2:37 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
jcc1

I dunno who spewed more HATE in their songs, Rezner or Morrisette... & we wonder why country messed up these days?

April 27 2010 at 12:43 PM Report abuse Permalink -1 rate up rate down Reply
jcc1

want to know a truly talented artist from pre school to pro? .. Tim Rushlow...yeah, I grew up with him too back at Pope elemntary school. I may have seen his very 1st live concert (school talent show). He was founder of LITTLE TEXAS. I know they were pretty big for awhile & I don't know that he's done since, but the guy could sing/play guitar like a pro in 5th grade, I know, cause I was there

April 27 2010 at 12:38 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
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