25 Album Covers That Brilliantly Use the American Flag
Revolutionary rap albums, rock classics, celebrations and protests
The American flag has spent 250 years fluttering over battlefields, front porches, moon landings, and hot dog eating contests, but it has also enjoyed a prolific side hustle posing for album covers. While Old Glory sometimes appears on albums with hand-on-heart sincerity, it’s more often been reimagined, re-stitched, wrapped around rappers, or otherwise subjected to treatment that would make a high school civics teacher red, white, and blue with rage.
That’s because musicians aren’t content to use the flag for simple patriotic window dressing. It has been appropriated as a symbol of rebellion, identity, hypocrisy, hope, fear, and every contradiction packed into the American experiment.
So consider this a guided tour through 25 of the most memorable flag-bearing sleeves ever pressed to vinyl, CD, or pixels — proof that no graphic designer has worked harder in popular music than Betsy Ross.
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MC5, ‘Kick Out the Jams’ (1969)
The translucent flags on the cover of Detroit proto-punk legends MC5’s 1969 debut album represent a musical manifesto as much as a political one. Equally influenced by John Coltrane and Chuck Berry, as well as the radical White Panther party, the incendiary group kicked down the doors with a hyper-charged American stew of fuzzed-out garage rock, hard rock, and soul in a raw, live setting.
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Jefferson Airplane, ‘Volunteers’ (1969)
Released at the height of Sixties counterculture, Jefferson Airplane’s Volunteers marked a dramatic turn from the inward-looking Surrealistic Pillow to an outspoken anti-war and anti-establishment stance. From a distance, the flag on the cover looked worn and smeared with dirt, but a closer look reveals the markings to be strands of branches and foliage, perhaps representing an America that had been deeply weathered, but was ripe for renewal.
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Canned Heat, ‘Future Blues’ (1970)
The mashed-up image of two great American triumphs – the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima and the Apollo 11 moon landing – on Canned Heat’s 1970 album would seem celebratory if it weren’t for the upside-down flag, a traditional military signal of distress. On an album whose themes return repeatedly to environmental destruction and the consequences of American technoligical progress, the image seems to ask “We’ve conquered the moon, but at what cost?”
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Sly & the Family Stone, ‘There’s a Riot Goin’ On’ (1971)
There’s a Riot Goin’ On landed in 1971 as the optimism of Woodstock and “Everyday People” gave way to bleaker mood of the Nixon years. To Sly Stone, the darker, more divided times called for a unifying new flag to represent all people: black for the absence of color, red for the blood we all share, and the sun instead of stars because, he claimed, you never had to search far to find it. -
Don McLean, ‘American Pie’ (1971)
There is no stately star-spangled banner on the cover of Don McLean’s 1971 American Pie, just ol’ Don and his red, white, and blue-painted thumb. This homespun take on the flag befits an album whose title song uses the death of Buddy Holly — and alludes to other era tragedies — to evoke a broader sense of America’s lost innocence during the wane of 1960s idealism.
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Johnny Cash, ‘Ragged Old Flag’ (1974)
You couldn’t blame the flag on the cover of Johnny Cash’s Ragged Old Flag for looking a bit weathered in 1974. Writing in the aftermath of Watergate and Vietnam, a disillusioned Cash imagines the flag as a weary but unbroken survivor on the album’s spoken-word title track: “She’s been through the fire before/And I believe she can take a whole lot more.”
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Hüsker Dü, ‘Land Speed Record’ (1980)
The zine-like cover of the seminal Minnesota punk trio’s live debut album looks as it sounds: recalling the raw, xeroxed, DIY aesthetic of early American hardcore. Like the album’s 17 breakneck punk blasts, its image of flag-draped military caskets is relatively standard Eighties punk fare, but the band’s evolution into pioneers of melodic, introspective post-hardcore would not be far behind.
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Various Artists, ‘Let Them Eat Jellybeans!’ (1981)
This 1981 release was among the first compilations of underground punk in the U.S., helping to expose the nascent scene to a far wider audience. Although the groups range from straight-up hardcore (Black Flag, Dead Kennedys) to noisy-art punk (Half Japanese, Christian Lunch), they can all likely agree on one thing: the country is in distress, as the cover’s upside-down flag attests, and Ronald Reagan and his candy of choice have much to answer for.
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Bruce Springsteen, ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ (1984)
If Bruce taught us anything on his 1984 commercial breakthrough, it was not to take everything you see at face value. Beneath the album’s overtly patriotic cover and arena-sized choruses lay songs about disillusioned Vietnam vets, struggling workers, declining hometowns, and Americans who felt left behind by the country they loved — a layer of complexity that many listeners didn’t (or wouldn’t) see.
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2 Live Crew, ‘Banned in the U.S.A.’ (1990)
2 Live Crew’s 1990 album, Banned in the U.S.A., arrived in the immediate wake of obscenity prosecutions surrounding their previous release, As Nasty As They Wanna Be, in which Florida authorities arrested members of the group for performing its songs in public. By wrapping themselves in patriotic imagery for Banned’s cover, the group framed the controversy as a First Amendment battle and argued that it was censorship – not “Me So Horny” – that was fundamentally un-American.
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Ice Cube, ‘Death Certificate’ (1991)
Old Glory is draped over the toe-tagged corpse of Uncle Sam on the cover of Death Certificate, Ice Cube’s 1991 indictment of an America that, to him, had systematically abandoned and exploited its Black communities. Released against the backdrop of the Rodney King beating, a devastating crack epidemic, and mass incarcerations that disproportionately targeted people of color, Death Certificate was dead serious.
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Biz Markie, ‘All Samples Cleared!’ (1993)
The cover of Biz Markie’s 1993 All Samples Cleared was another cheeky, flag-draped response to a legal ruling that had serious implications for the future of hip-hop and free speech. In a landmark decision, The Biz was ordered to pay $250,000 in damages for using a sample of Gilbert O’Sullivan’s 1972 hit, “Alone Again (Naturally)” on his previous album without permission, putting a pivotal nail in the coffin of the free sampling era.
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The Black Crowes, ‘Amorica’ (1994)
The Crowes knew exactly what they were doing when they chose a conspicuously bushy image from the 1976 bicentennial issue of Hustler as the cover for their 1994 album. The ensuing fallout, in which Kmart and Walmart refused to carry the album until the band created an alternate blacked-out cover, said more about the state of censorship and cultural values in America than any lyric could.
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Ministry, ‘Filth Pig’ (1996)
Al Jourgensen followed up the success of Ministry’s 1992 album Psalm 69 – an intense blast of sample-laced industrial thrash – with the slow, sludgy, uber-bleak Filth Pig. The suitably disturbing album cover – in which a besuited man grips a small American flag as thick red blood from the chunk of raw meat on his head oozes down his face – is the first clue that good times are not necessarily ahead.
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OutKast, ‘Stankonia’ (2001)
The inverted, black-and-white stars and stripes that leap at you from the cover of OutKast’s 2000 sonic manifesto, Stankonia, form a national flag for the duo’s imagined Afrofuturist freak-topia, and a powerful visual representation for the album’s themes of political anxiety, Black identity, and artistic reinvention. More than just a symbol of protest, it’s a declaration that America is not a fixed idea – it can be remixed, redefined, and funkified. -
Tortoise, ‘Standards’ (2001)
Chicago post-rock standard-bearers Tortoise are masters of musical deconstruction and reconstruction, stripping jazz, Krautrock, Brazilian rhythms, and early electronic experimentalism down to their foundations and blending them into new, often abstract forms. The fragmented, distorted flag on the cover of 2001’s Standards – a familiar form that has also seemingly been cut apart and reassembled – is an apt visual metaphor for the group’s musical approach.
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Suicide, ‘American Supreme’ (2002)
There has been no bleaker, bloodier dissection of the American Dream than Suicide’s epic 1977 song, “Frankie Teardrop,” in which a despondent factory worker snaps and murders his family before turning the gun on himself. The seminal NYC synth/noise/punk duo’s 2002 comeback album, American Supreme, lacked anything so affecting, but the ghostly, washed-out flag on its cover suggested they hadn’t finished plumbing the nation’s darker undercurrents.
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Dolly Parton, ‘For God and Country’ (2003)
Released in 2003 as an emotional response to the aftermath of 9/11, Dolly’s For God and Country aims to soothe a shaken nation with nostalgic, good ol’ American patriotism both musical (“God Bless the U.S.A.”) and visual (Dolly’s flag-tastic USO pin-up girl costume on the cover). Like the vintage wartime recruitment posters she’s emulating, Dolly is here to inspire and uplift through challenging times.
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Killer Mike, ‘I Pledge Allegiance to the Grind’ (2006)
The cover of Killer Mike’s 2006 album swaps the flag’s stars for skulls-and-crossbones in a pirate-like declaration of rebellion, and also a celebration of the everyday people grinding just to get by. In Mike’s telling, true Americans are the hustlers and workers fighting for their slice of the pie amidst the poverty and violence of inner city life, not the politicians and celebs who only care when there are cameras around.
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A$AP Rocky, ‘Long. Live. A$AP.’ (2013)
Long. Live. A$AP. marked Rocky’s ascent from Harlem mixtape sensation to major-label rap star driven by classic American hustle. On the album’s cover, the rapper is draped in the flag like a triumphant champion, recalling a certain other flag-waving Rocky following his victory over a (very) foreign challenger, as well as James Brown’s iconic cape routine, which, curiously enough, also appears in Rocky IV.
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Drive-By Truckers, ‘American Band’ (2016)
Drive-By Truckers’ 2016 album American Band was its first in 17 years not to feature cover art by southern Gothic painter Wes Freed. Instead, the cover depicts a stark, shadowy photo of an American Flag being lowered to half-mast, setting the mood for a politically charged and weary album that grapples with gun violence, racial injustice, and the country’s deepening divide.
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Eminem, ‘Revival’ (2017)
Em released Revival in 2017, near the end of Trump’s first year in the White House, and you don’t need to hear a note to understand how he feels about it if you scrutinize the cover. Semi-obscured behind a translucent swath of the flag, the rapper bows his head with his face in his hands, later explaining, “The cover is me with my head down, because as much as I love our country, we got shit to work on.”
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Joey Bada$$, ‘All Amerikkkan Bada$$’ (2017)
The flag on the cover of Joey Bada$$’s 2017 album is made from Blood-red and Crip-blue gang bandanas, transforming symbols of violence and division into a paradoxical emblem of unity. The image mirrors the tension and contradiction that run throughout the album, where the Brooklyn-born rapper celebrates America’s ideals of freedom and equality, even while condemning it for failing to live up to them.
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Lil Uzi Vert, ‘The Pink Tape’ (2023)
The color pink has long been central to Uzi’s visual identity, and not just because of the $24 million pink diamond they had surgically implanted in their forehead. Although the Brooklyn-born rapper/singer has never fully explained the significance of the pink-striped flag on the cover 2023’s The Pink Tape, it is consistent with their history of challenging expectations around masculinity, style, and conventional hip-hop culture.
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Beyoncé, ‘Cowboy Carter’ (2024)
Even coming from the woman who threw generations of Beckys under the bus just to illustrate a point, Cowboy Carter was a bold move. On the cover of her Grammy-winning 2024 country-concept opus, Beyonce literally plants a flag to reclaim the overlooked contributions of Black pioneers to American roots music and culture.
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