Latest Release
- OCT 1, 2024
- 6 Songs
- Trash · 1989
- School's Out · 1972
- Love It to Death · 1970
- Billion Dollar Babies · 1973
- Hey Stoopid · 1991
- Ohio Players (Trophy Edition)
- Alice Cooper Goes to Hell · 1976
- Hey Stoopid · 1991
- Killer · 1971
- Billion Dollar Babies · 1973
Essential Albums
- Forget the fancifully named lead singer (born Vincent Furnier), the live show's horror-movie trappings, even the Budweiser and golf of later years. Love It to Death was where sloppy rocker Cooper tightened up and took his place as hard-rock hero for a new generation that wasn't sure if love was all you needed. (Teen philosophy circa 1971: "When you see me with a smile on my face/Then you'll know I'm a mental case.") At his best dispensing single-length chunks of post-garage catchiness ("Eighteen," the hit here, was only the first of many), he also reveled in long theatrical pieces ("The Ballad of Dwight Frye") and outright silliness. The album ends with a cover of a tune by Rolf "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport" Harris.
Artist Playlists
- The Coop still slays after all these years.
- A true rock originator.
- His shock-rock rep overshadows a playfully eclectic discography.
- One of rock's most reliable stars delivers the goods on stage.
- 2019
- 2023
Compilations
Appears On
More To Hear
- Dave talks musical influences with the legendary rocker.
- Alice Cooper plays spooky Halloween hits.
About Alice Cooper
Few artists understand the good sense in bad taste like Alice Cooper. The son of a preacher who started out playing Beatles parodies at his high school talent show, Cooper (born Vincent Furnier, in Detroit in 1948) went on to form the band Alice Cooper before assuming the moniker as his own gender-bending alter ego, bridging snotty, hook-heavy anthems with a blood-spattered stage show that ended in his beheading by guillotine. That Grand Guignol-style act made him one of the most inventive performers of the '70s and earned him the title The Godfather of Shock Rock. And while Cooper’s theatrics were the linchpin of his legacy, connecting rock’s innate sense of rebellion with the cheap thrills of Z-grade horror, the music was pretty inventive too. It balanced early punk and metal (“I’m Eighteen,” “School’s Out”) with surprisingly tender ballads (“I Never Cry,” “You and Me”), laying the foundation for the New York Dolls, The Misfits, Poison, and Marilyn Manson. Despite the decades they spent together, Furnier rarely took Alice Cooper home. A born-again Christian who once credited his sobriety to golf, he remains a classic example of the distance between performer and persona, of the act that stays onstage. Reflecting on the rumor that he once ripped the head off a chicken and drank its blood mid-set, he said he knew better than to refuse the publicity, instead going with the advice of early supporter Frank Zappa: “Whatever you do, don’t deny it.” More to Know ∙ With the exception of the band’s drummer, all original members of Alice Cooper competed on the same high school cross-country team. ∙ One of Alice’s early lineups was called The Nazz, but he changed the name after learning that Todd Rundgren’s band had beaten him to it. ∙ They were personally signed by Frank Zappa to his Straight Records label. ∙ Alice has frequently cited The Yardbirds as his favorite band. He also counts The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, and The Who as major influences. ∙ In 2003, Alice received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, located next to Gene Autry’s. ∙ The band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2011. ∙ In 2015, he formed the supergroup Hollywood Vampires with Johnny Depp and Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry. ∙ In 2018, he appeared as King Herod (opposite John Legend’s Jesus) in a live, televised version of Jesus Christ Superstar. ∙ Salvador Dalí created a holographic portrait using chocolate éclairs, ants, and diamonds, titled First Cylindric Chromo-Hologram Portrait of Alice Cooper’s Brain.
- FORMED
- 1964
- GENRE
- Hard Rock