These 13 bands should have been immortal.... but each had one fatal flaw

These 13 bands should have been immortal.... but each had one fatal flaw

From Badfinger to XTC, these bands had enough magic to conquer the world - but there was always a chink in their armour

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The history of rock music is littered with the corpses of bands that possessed brilliant flashes of genius – but never sustained the momentum required to achieve lasting greatness.

These groups had the core talent, the songs, and the vision, but ultimately succumbed to a single, often tragic or self-inflicted, fatal flaw. These are the stories of the 13 bands whose potential masterpiece was prematurely shattered.


1. Derek and the Dominos

Derek and the Dominos, featuring Eric Clapton, 1970
Derek and the Dominos, featuring Eric Clapton (far right), 1970 - Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Crippling turmoil and addiction

Derek and the Dominos was a short-lived supergroup that produced the legendary Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs. The kink in their genius was purely personal: the band was formed during Eric Clapton's most intense period of anguish, fuelled by his unrequited love for Pattie Boyd (George Harrison's wife) and a severe, escalating descent into heroin addiction.

The emotional chaos, coupled with the tragic early death of key collaborator Duane Allman, meant the group simply couldn't continue. Clapton abandoned the band, and the profound personal turmoil immediately shattered the group’s immense potential for subsequent masterpieces.


2. XTC

XTC British band 1980 - Dave Gregory, Colin Moulding, Andy Partridge, Terry Chambers
XTC, 1980. L-R Dave Gregory, Colin Moulding, Andy Partridge, Terry Chambers - Ebet Roberts/Redferns via Getty Images

Fatal flaw: stage fright

XTC possessed the genius songwriting and pop instincts that arguably deserved global stardom, yet their trajectory was fundamentally crippled by frontman Andy Partridge's severe stage fright. In March 1982, at the peak of their early popularity, Partridge suffered a devastating panic attack on stage and made the permanent decision to stop touring immediately.

This retreat effectively made XTC a studio-only band for the remainder of their career. In the 1980s, global success – especially in the crucial American market – demanded relentless touring to connect with fans and secure radio rotation. Their inability to promote their acclaimed albums live meant that XTC's commercial reach was permanently limited.

While they became one of rock's most critically revered groups, Partridge's necessity to protect his mental health directly prevented them from achieving 'massive' sales and mainstream fame. But what a band they were. Here's 1980's 'Generals and Majors', featuring goofing around from a young Richard Branson:


3. The La's

The La's, Liverpool 1990
The La's in their native Liverpool, 1990. Their mercurial singer/songwriter Lee Mavers is the yawner - Clare Muller/PYMCA/Avalon/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Crippling perfectionism

Liverpudlian songwriter Lee Mavers possessed a melodic genius, best exemplified by the classic hit 'There She Goes'. However, Mavers suffered from a crippling form of artistic perfectionism that became the band's executioner. He recorded and re-recorded their debut album numerous times with different producers, always finding fault with the sonic purity of the results.

When the self-titled album was finally released in 1990, Mavers famously disowned it, claiming it didn't capture the band's intended sound. This absolute inability to be satisfied led to the immediate demise of the band, leaving behind a legacy defined by one perfect, yet frustratingly small piece of work that their leader never accepted.


4. Mother Love Bone

Pearl Jam, early 1991. L-R Stone Gossard, Jeff Ament, Dave Krusen, Eddie Vedder
The newly formed Pearl Jam at Wetlands, New York, early 1991. L-R Stone Gossard, Jeff Ament, Dave Krusen, Eddie Vedder - Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Tragedy

Mother Love Bone possessed the sound, the charisma, and the major label backing necessary to become the first Seattle grunge band to achieve global stardom. They fused glam-rock theatricality with grunge grit, anticipating the sound of the decade.

The band's trajectory was tragically cut short in 1990, however, by the sudden death of charismatic frontman Andrew Wood from a heroin overdose, just before the release of their much-anticipated debut album Apple. The band’s potential was shattered overnight, leading the surviving members (Jeff Ament and Stone Gossard) to regroup and form Pearl Jam, a different, more sombre band altogether.


5. The Stone Roses

The Stone Roses, rock band, 1989. L-R John Squire, Reni, Ian Brown, Mani
The Stone Roses, rock band, 1989. L-R John Squire, Reni, Ian Brown, Mani - Joe Dilworth/Avalon/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Creative paralysis

The 1989 debut album by The Stone Roses was a foundational masterpiece, fusing the jangle of the 60s with the groove of rave culture. The band's trajectory was derailed almost immediately, however, by a gruelling, two-year legal battle with their label, Silvertone, which halted all momentum. When they finally signed to Geffen, the pressure to follow up their classic became paralyzing.

Internal ego clashes between vocalist Ian Brown and guitarist John Squire intensified during the laborious recording of Second Coming. They struggled to recapture their chemistry and lost all momentum, resulting in a divisive album and a fragmented demise. They allowed business and pride to suffocate their genius at the height of their influence. But to listen to a track like 'She Bangs the Drums' is to fall in love all over again with their effortless grace and jangly, Byrds-inspired groove.


6. Blind Faith

Blind Faith recording their debut album. L-R: Steve Winwood, Ric Grech, Ginger Baker, Eric Clapton
Blind Faith recording their debut album. L-R: Steve Winwood, Ric Grech, Ginger Baker, Eric Clapton - Bob Seidemann/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: No collective vision

As the first true rock 'supergroup', Blind Faith – featuring Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood and Ginger Baker – was doomed by insurmountable expectations. Following the breakups of Cream and Traffic, the hype surrounding their 1969 formation was unprecedented. Blind Faith's stumbling block was not a lack of talent but the immense external pressure and the internal realization that they lacked a focused musical identity beyond their famous members.

They only released one self-titled album, which felt rushed and inconsistent, quickly dissolving after a short, messy tour. They proved that combining three geniuses doesn't guarantee a masterpiece, especially when the focus is on the names rather than developing a cohesive new sound.


7. Sex Pistols

Sex Pistols final concert, Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco, 14 Jan 1978
Sid Vicious, Johnny Rotten and Steve Jones at the Sex Pistols' final concert at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom, 14 Jan 1978 - Richard McCaffrey/Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Self-destruction as an art form

The Sex Pistols were less a traditional band and more a cultural event, perfectly engineered by manager Malcolm McLaren. Their Achilles heel was their built-in expiry date. They were designed to shock, provoke, and implode, with zero interest in longevity or musical evolution beyond their core message of anarchy.

The toxic internal dynamic – fuelled by the chaos of Sid Vicious, the disdain of Johnny Rotten, and McLaren's calculated manipulation – guaranteed that they achieved their goal of total cultural disruption, but only at the cost of their own existence. They ended after just one seminal album, Never Mind the Bollocks, leaving a flawless, influential, but incredibly small body of work.


8. Thin Lizzy

Thin Lizzy 1976
Thin Lizzy and friend at the Dragonara Hotel, Bristol, UK, October 22 1976. L-R: Brian Downey, Phil Lynott, Brian Robertson, Scott Gorham - Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Substance abuse

Led by the brilliant songwriter and frontman Phil Lynott, Thin Lizzy created a magnificent sound defined by intricate dual-guitar harmonies. Their problem was twofold: they never sustained a stable, cohesive lineup around Lynott, suffering from a constant revolving door of guitarists, disrupting their creative consistency.

Crucially, the band was also severely hampered by pervasive substance abuse within the core membership, which corroded their professional discipline and personal relationships. While they delivered brilliant albums like Jailbreak, the internal instability and drug use prevented them from maintaining peak quality and surviving the 1980s intact.


9. Television

Television band. L-R. Billy Ficca, Richard Lloyd, Tom Verlaine, Fred Smith
Television, 1977. L-R. Billy Ficca, Richard Lloyd, Tom Verlaine, Fred Smith - Roberta Bayley/Redferns via Getty Images

Fatal flaw: rivalries

Television were pioneers of the New York punk scene, releasing the seminal Marquee Moon, an album that redefined what a punk band could achieve structurally and instrumentally. They were hamstrung by an intense creative rivalry between guitarists Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd, and a general refusal to court commercial success or maintain a conventional touring schedule.

This isolation and internal tension resulted in minimal output – just two initial albums (Marquee Moon and Adventure) – and long periods of debilitating inactivity. Television prioritized their unique, intricate art form over everything else, which led to one stone-cold classic (Marquee Moon) but which, ultimately, limited their impact and longevity.


10. Jeff Buckley

Jeff Buckley, American singer-songwriter, Atlanta, Georgia, USA, August 1994
Jeff Buckley in Atlanta, Georgia, August 1994 - David Tonge/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: A tragic death

Jeff Buckley possessed a generational vocal talent and a compositional depth rarely seen in the 1990s. He released one certified masterpiece, Grace (1994), an album that fused rock, opera, and folk with astonishing emotional power. Then came a cruel twist of fate: Buckley's sudden, accidental death by drowning in 1997.

Buckley was just 30 and on the cusp of recording his second album, poised to redefine rock music for the late 90s and beyond. His tragic passing cut short a career that promised endless innovation, leaving behind a heartbreakingly small, perfect body of work. Here's the exquisite 'Lover, You Should've Come Over':


11. Big Star

Big Star L-R: Chris Bell, Jody Stephens, Andy Hummel and Alex Chilton
Big Star in what should have been their breakthrough year, 1973. L-R: Chris Bell, Jody Stephens, Andy Hummel and Alex Chilton - Charlie Gillett/Redferns/Getty Images

Fatal flaw: horrendous bad luck

Big Star – led by Alex Chilton and Chris Bell – were a band of genuine, foundational genius who created power-pop masterpieces like Radio City. Their shortcoming was an absolute inability to translate critical acclaim into sales, largely due to catastrophic business failures. Their record label, Stax, was plagued by distribution problems that kept their first two albums almost entirely off the shelves.

The band's constant failure to achieve commercial recognition, despite crafting perfect power-pop songs, led to a crippling disillusionment and mental strain among the members. This manifested tragically, most notably in founding member Chris Bell's increasing frustration, isolation, and eventual self-destructive behaviour, culminating in his departure after the first album.

The repeated heartbreak over catastrophic distribution failures that kept their music off shelves created immense pressure. This stress caused the band to splinter and fade across three distinct albums, leaving them to dissolve into obscurity as one of the 1970s’ most unjustly ignored groups, only to be rediscovered decades later.


12. Badfinger

Badfinger gives the finger, 1970. Left to right): Mike Gibbins, Joey Molland, Tom Evans, Pete Ham
Badfinger gives the finger, 1970. Left to right: Mike Gibbins, Joey Molland, Tom Evans (1947-83), Pete Ham (1947-75) - Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Rock's worst manager

Badfinger was a talented power-pop group discovered and championed by The Beatles, becoming the first non-Beatle act signed to Apple Records. Talent, looks, cohesion: they seemed to have everything. Except, it soon became clear, a head for business. Badfinger were the ultimate victims of predatory management. They were systematically victimized by manager Stan Polley, one of the worst rock managers of all time, who fraudulently looted their earnings.

The crushing realization that years of commercial success had netted them nothing but debt led to profound depression. The betrayal ultimately resulted in the tragic suicides of two core members, guitarist Pete Ham (in 1975) and bassist Tom Evans (1983), meaning that the band's huge potential was tragically and viciously sabotaged by the business side of rock.


13. The Birthday Party

Nick Cave and Tracey Pew of the Birthday Party in Kilburn, London 15 July 1982
Nick Cave and Tracey Pew of the Birthday Party in Kilburn, London 15 July 1982 - David Corio/Redferns via Getty Images

Fatal flaw: Self-sabotage

Nick Cave’s early band was a terrifying, brilliant precursor to his later work, melding noise, blues, and gothic punk with intense ferocity. Their flaw was an unrelenting commitment to extremism and internal chaos that made them commercially and personally unsustainable. The members were plagued by addiction and relentless interpersonal feuding; their performances were genuinely confrontational and often violent, rejecting any form of mainstream accessibility.

While their musical vision was powerful enough to change the sound of Australian post-punk, Cave and co.'s collective desire for self-destruction and uncompromising hostility guaranteed they would implode before achieving wider success.

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