Adley Rutschman strolled to home plate with a new sound blasting from Camden Yards’ speaker.

The two-time All-Star and most of his teammates changed their walk-up songs amid the Orioles’ struggles — a superstitious attempt to turn around the club’s fortunes.

Instead of Kanye West’s “Gorgeous,” it was the Bee Gees’ “Stayin’ Alive” — an apt choice for a slumping catcher on a team slipping in the standings. Gunnar Henderson followed with “Magic Stick” by Lil’ Kim and 50 Cent instead of his fan-favorite “Sweet Escape” by Gwen Stefani. Starting pitcher Albert Suárez took the mound with D4L’s “Laffy Taffy” welcoming him.

However, the new tunes didn’t work. The Orioles just kept playing like a broken record.

Rutschman, Henderson and Baltimore’s bats were shut out and recorded only five hits against San Francisco Giants ace Blake Snell and his bullpen in a 10-0 defeat. The Orioles have now lost eight of their past 11 and scored only 21 runs over that stretch.

“Figured just change something up a little bit, get everybody in kind of a funny mood,” Henderson said. “Hopefully, they’ll be good for us down the road. Didn’t show tonight, but yeah, hopefully, it will be kind of a mood change.”

Snell, the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner, was his dominant self, striking out 12 across six innings. The only thing that prevented Snell from working a no-hit bid — which would have been no stranger to the Orioles after they were nearly held without one Friday versus the Detroit Tigers — was Emmanuel Rivera’s soft single in the second inning.

New walk-up songs don’t make hitting Snell’s nasty breaking balls any easier.

“I knew that they were going to try to mix some things up a little bit, but I wasn’t thinking about it going into the game until I heard the ‘Macarena,’” manager Brandon Hyde said, referencing Anthony Santander’s new song. “So, yeah, and then Gunnar’s song was different. They’re just trying. They know they’re grinding, and they’re trying to snap out of it a little bit and trying to make an adjustment.”

Baltimore falls to 84-67 and is losing time to make up ground in the race for the American League East title. With only 11 games remaining, the Orioles are temporarily 3 1/2 games behind the New York Yankees, whose game on the West Coast has yet to conclude.

“It’s not fun going through it,” Henderson said of the team’s skid. “I mean, feel like we’ve been talking about it for a while. Just trying to figure out a way to get through it.”

The Orioles sported baseball’s best offense in the first half of the season, but as injuries have mounted in recent months, their success at the plate has diminished. It’s hit a nadir in September as no-hit bids, shutouts and anemic offensive performances have become the norm.

Two weeks ago, Baltimore led New York by a half-game. Since, the Orioles have gone 3-8 and scored two or fewer runs seven times. Their lineup has combined to slash .189/.261/.316 for a paltry .577 OPS. Tuesday was the third time they’ve been shut out in that stretch.

Hyde said the thought of facing Snell, who entered with a 1.45 ERA over his past 12 starts, in a pivotal game wasn’t something impacting the Orioles entering the game.

“No, I didn’t sense that at all going into the game,” the sixth-year skipper said. “I thought the energy was great in our clubhouse, like it normally is. Thought our guys were prepared. I thought we had a really good hitter’s meeting. I just thought that we faced one of the better pitchers in the game, and we didn’t swing the bat well against him. We had a tough time with him.”

Albert Suárez struggled against his former team, allowing six hits and four runs in 3 1/3 innings to mark the journeyman’s shortest start since July 23. Suárez likely has one or two starts remaining in the regular season before the Orioles must decide whether he will be in their playoff rotation ahead of Dean Kremer or in the bullpen.

Baltimore’s bullpen was excellent — until it wasn’t. Keegan Akin and Burch Smith combined to toss 4 2/3 hitless and scoreless innings while striking out six. But ex-closer Craig Kimbrel imploded in the ninth for the worst inning of his career.

Kimbrel allowed six runs and only retired two batters as San Francisco (73-78) went up by a touchdown and a field goal. It marked the first time in the 36-year-old’s distinguished career that he’s surrendered more than four runs in a single frame.

Kimbrel put up an All-Star quality first half, but he’s been one of the worst relievers in the major leagues in the second half. In 18 innings since July 14, he’s posted an 11.50 ERA and 2.222 WHIP.

Some of the 23,967 Orioles fans at Camden Yards booed Kimbrel as he took the mound and throughout his outing. But they didn’t bother — instead focusing on getting back to their cars — as he walked off the mound.