
From West End Girl to Sour, the 10 Best Revenge Albums of All Time
The common adage may dictate that revenge is a dish best served cold, butâluckily for usâmusicians tend to serve it piping hot, with a side of pettiness. And though plenty of standalone clap-back tracks have emerged from celebrity break-ups, it takes a certain level of passion, skill, and audacity to commit to an entire revenge album.
Lily Allenâs West End Girlâa scathing, no-holds-barred album allegedly at least partly inspired by the dissolution of her marriage to Stranger Things star David Harbourâtakes the idea of airing your dirty laundry to a level that few others would dare to, even by todayâs oversharing standards. Reportedly written and recorded in Los Angeles over the course of just 10 days, it has the feel of someone setting their diary entries and voice notes to music, and has spawned a thousand reaction videos since being released in October.
RosalĂaâs Lux, meanwhile, sees popâs most sonically ambitious star working through themes of sex, regret, heartbreak, and, yes, revenge. Though much of the press around the albumâas well as its artwork, in which RosalĂa dons a nunâs-habit-slash-straightjacketâhas focused on the singerâs path to emotional salvation, there are plenty of shots fired throughout, perhaps most overtly on âLa Perla,â in which she calls a former partner a âpeace thief,â âemotional terrorist,â a âwalking red flag,â and âhuge disaster.â
Here, find 10 of the best to ever go long-form with revenge.
Lemonade, Beyoncé
When life gives you lemons (being cheated on by your husband of a decade, even though you are BeyoncĂ©) you make lemonadeâor, in this case, Lemonade. Surprise-released in 2016, the visual album meticulously documented BeyoncĂ©âs emotional journey through marital betrayal, and had the whole world speculating about the identity of âBecky with the good hair.â Her most ambitious and sonically diverse record to date, Lemonade saw BeyoncĂ© working through her pain and anger and eventually coming to a place of forgiveness and healing, with Jay-Z still by her side nearly another decade later.
Rumours, Fleetwood Mac
Quite simply one of the best and messiest albums of all time, from one of the best and messiest bands of all time. Everyone was fucking, fighting, and divorcing, and out of the ashes of their emotional chaos emerged their artistic magnum opus. The truly incredible thing about Rumours is that they were all getting musical revenge through lyrics they were writing about each other while in the same studio, and then making the person they were writing about harmonize to said lyrics. âDreamsâ and âGo Your Own Wayâ being on the same record is basically like if Eamonn and Frankie had released âFuck it (I Donât Want You Back)â and âF.U.R.B.â together as a mixtape. Can you imagine if theyâd stuck âSilver Springsâ on there (as originally intended), too?
Blackout, Britney Spears
âItâs Britney, bitch,â begins the iconic fifth studio album by the greatest pop star to ever do it. Blackout saw Spearsâno longer blonde and smiling, but mad as hell in a black wigâreturn to music amidst a very public breakdown that was both exacerbated and mercilessly documented by the evil paparazzi culture of the 2000s. The record is a giant middle finger to everyone that had anything to say about her and the way she was choosing to handle her fame and personal life, the endless media narratives that circled her, and all the loser men sheâd had to encounter along the way.
Blood on the Tracks, Bob Dylan
Dylanâs 15th studio album detailed the breakdown of his marriage to his ex-wife, Sara. Their relationship survived his rumored constant infidelity, but apparently couldnât outlast a two-year home-renovation project in Malibu. Dylan denied it being strictly autobiographical, but the recordâs themes of pain, betrayal, loss, and regret have canonized it as one of the best, and most deeply personal, break-up albums of all time. âIdiot Wind,â regularly referred to as one of the meanest songs ever written, wonders if his former lover even knows how to breathe without him. Sinead OâConnor once said that it âgave me permission to be angry,â and so for that alone, we must thank him.
Sour, Olivia Rodrigo
A masterclass in teenage angst and the heartbreak that follows the painful end of a first love, Sour broke the global Spotify record for the biggest opening week for an album by any female artist, and catapulted Rodrigo from Disney kid to superstar in the process. A perfect blend of anger, vulnerability, and infectious one-liners, all spread over immaculate riffs and melodies, Rodrigoâs record showed everyone that revenge is in fact a dish best served sour.
Here, My Dear, Marvin Gaye
This album may as well have been called Divorce. Written and recorded as Gaye was going through a messy split from his first wife, Anna, itâs as full of recriminations and sarcasm as it is sincerity and self-pity. The Motown singerâs mood going into its production could hardly be described as inspired: âWhy should I break my neck when Anna was going to wind up with the money anyway?â he wrote in the liner notes. Nonetheless, artistry prevailed, and he ended up using the recording process as the closest thing men got to therapy back in 1977. His ex-wife hated it and considered suing Gaye for invasion of privacy, but eventually decided against it.
Eternal Sunshine, Ariana Grande
Though her most famous break-up album might be Thank U, Next, Eternal Sunshine shows what revenge sounds like when youâve genuinely healed and moved on from your past relationship. Devoid of any bitterness and awash instead in the quiet acceptance that comes with spiritual growth and ageâor, to use the parlance of our times, your Saturn returnâGrandeâs ultimate act of revenge is leading a life well-lived. Brighter days ahead indeed.
Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette
Alanis Morissette walked so Rodrigo could run. Jagged Little Pillâs lead single, âYou Oughta Know,â is one of the best and most vengeful songs of the 20th century, but the rest of the record is full of the same raw honesty, female rage, and moments of introspection. Released when Morissette was just 21 years old (I know), if has resonated with three generations of women since its release in 1995.
Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, My Chemical Romance
Okay, so this isnât a revenge album in the strictest sense of the word, but it celebrates the concept of sweet revenge, and so itâs earned itself a spot on this list. Plus, the music video for the lead single-slash-millennial anthem, âIâm Not Okay (I Promise),â is a trailer for a fake movie in which the school goths get revenge on the oppressive jock class.
Reputation, Taylor Swift
âIâm sorry, the old Taylor canât come to the phone right now. Why? Oh, âcause sheâs dead.â No list of revenge albums would be complete without a mention of the pettiest artist of our times. Recorded as a response to media scrutiny around her personal life, Swiftâs Reputation era saw her shedding her good-girl image to clap back at anyone who had dared to besmirch her good name and image as Americaâs Sweetheart. Reputation is Swift in her villain era, letting us know that she doesnât care what anyone thinks about her and her dating history.








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