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Album Cover That Splintered Heart, According to Nancy Wilson


Nancy Wilson has revealed the Heart album cover that really upset the male members of her band.

During an appearance on Billy Corgan’s Magnificent Others podcast, the guitarist detailed Heart’s unique and often challenging gender dynamic.

Describing it as a “tricky eggshell walk,” Wilson explained that she and her sister, singer Ann Wilson, were expected to remain silent about groupies and other dalliances the men were enjoying on the road.

“We knew their wives and their girlfriends, but we would see them with the groupies and not tell the wives or the girlfriends about the groupies,” she admitted. “And so there was a brother-sisterhood where, you know, what happens in the band stays in the band.”

READ MORE: Heart Albums Ranked Worst to Best

Still, Wilson noted that the bigger challenge was managing the egos of her male bandmates when most of the public attention was directed toward her and Ann.

“Attention just naturally would fall on me and Ann together as a focal point,” Nancy recalled, before pointing to the album cover that really drew the ire of her bandmates. “The guys were on the back cover of (1980 album) Bebe Le Strange. And just me and Ann, the big black and white close-up of me and Ann on the front cover really pissed them off.”

The front and back cover of ‘Bebe Le Strange’.                                                                    Epic

The front and back cover of ‘Bebe Le Strange’.                                                                    Epic

As Nancy remembered, it wasn’t just that Heart’s male members were pushed to the back cover, but how it was done.

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“[The picture] was the back of our heads with the hair,” she explained, “and their pictures were inserted on top of the back, in our hair.” Nancy then paraphrased her bandmates’ complaint: “So we were just the out-of-focus guys in the background, in your hair.”

Why Did Heart Have to ‘Relinquish’ Their Band Democracy?

Nancy went on to note that despite each of Heart’s lineups being “really a family,” having a true democracy never worked due to her and Ann’s significant roles.

“What public perception wants to focus on is something as simple as you at the center of it, or me and my sister at the center of Heart, you have to kind of relinquish the idea of complete democracy in many ways,” Nancy explained. “Because you are the songwriter. You wrote the lyrics, right? You wrote those songs. That was your soul coming through that speaker that put your own melancholy into the world. And that’s what me and Ann were, the songwriters.”

READ MORE: The Most and Least-Played Song Live Off Every Heart Album

“So every band member, first we made the mistake of being their girlfriends, and then there were a lot of different lineups after that, after the first lineup.”

Heart will launch their 2026 tour on Feb. 15. Nancy was quick to point out that the band’s current lineup is “the best lineup ever.”

Rock’s Greatest Frontwomen

Gallery Credit: Corey Irwin



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Here you can find the original article; the photos and images used in our article also come from this source. We are not their authors; they have been used solely for informational purposes with proper attribution to their original source.

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Sarah Parker
Sarah Parker is a research analyst and content contributor with a strong interest in business strategy, organizational behavior, and social development. With a background in sociology and public policy, she focuses on exploring the intersection between research and real-world application. Sarah regularly contributes articles that bridge academic insights and practical relevance, aiming to foster critical thinking and innovation across sectors.