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Post by turkeysandwich on Nov 7, 2012 18:00:45 GMT -5
I was discussing this with a friend today. We were talking about Queen's News of the World which has "Sheer Heart Attack" as one of its tracks. Of course Queen had released the album Sheer Heart Attack 3 years prior, but according to wiki the title track was started during those recordings, but not completed until News of the World came out.
I would guess the most notable example of this is Led Zeppelin with the song "Houses of the Holy" appearing not on Houses of the Holy, but on Physical Graffiti.
Any other good examples of this?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 7, 2012 18:06:49 GMT -5
Happened in reverse two times with the Beach Boys: -Shut down released 3/4/1963. Album Shut Down Vol 2. released 3/2/1964 -Surf's Up originally recorded around 12/66 and 1/67 but not released. Album Surf's Up released 11/8/1971.
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chazraps
Wade Wilson
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Post by chazraps on Nov 7, 2012 18:32:25 GMT -5
Mr. Lif's "I, Phantom" was on his 'Emergency Rations EP,' but not his album 'I, Phantom' which dropped a few months later.
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Knailsic From Now On
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Post by Knailsic From Now On on Nov 7, 2012 18:43:16 GMT -5
"The Cool" was on Food & Liquor instead of The Cool.
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agent817
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Post by agent817 on Nov 7, 2012 18:59:02 GMT -5
Tha Alkaholiks' song "Coast II Coast" appeared on the Friday soundtrack, but it didn't appear on their album called "Coast II Coast." I am surprised at that because artists have songs on soundtrack albums to movies and that song appears on their forthcoming album after that.
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Hawk Hart
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Post by Hawk Hart on Nov 7, 2012 19:03:52 GMT -5
"The Cool" was on Food & Liquor instead of The Cool. That's what I came in to post.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 7, 2012 19:07:28 GMT -5
"They Might Be Giants" by They Might Be Giants was recorded for the album called They Might Be Giants, but wasn't released until 1990 on Flood.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 7, 2012 19:11:19 GMT -5
Surely, Yellow Submarine counts. It was released on Revolver in 1966 and then for the Yellow Submarine soundtrack and film in 1968.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 7, 2012 19:16:39 GMT -5
Surely, Yellow Submarine counts. It was released on Revolver in 1966 and then for the Yellow Submarine soundtrack and film in 1968. Oh man, I can't believe I missed that
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ERON
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Post by ERON on Nov 7, 2012 19:34:39 GMT -5
Def Leppard's debut album was titled On Through the Night, but the song "On Through the Night" appeared on the second album, High 'n' Dry.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 7, 2012 19:43:37 GMT -5
Waiting For the Sun was the title of a Doors album in 1968 but wasn't released as a song until 1970 on Morrison Hotel.
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Post by Citizen Grimm on Nov 7, 2012 20:42:54 GMT -5
Queens of the Stone Age album title Lullabies to Paralyze is actually taken from a a song on their previous record, Songs for the Deaf.
The song is question would be Mosquito Song.
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Blindkarevik
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Post by Blindkarevik on Nov 7, 2012 21:08:50 GMT -5
Kindof along those same lines... Kamelot had an intro, instrumental track on Ghost Opera called "Solitaire"... yet on their new album, they have a new song called "Solitaire" as well... never really figured why that is. I mean, I could understand, if they wanted to call it that, at least toss some sort of additional title in parenthesis to separate the two.
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AFN: Judge Shred
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Post by AFN: Judge Shred on Nov 7, 2012 22:43:39 GMT -5
Jets To Brazil had an album called "Orange Rhyming Dictionary", but the song with that title was on the next record "Four Cornered Night". Fantastic song and albums.
Also, TS, good thread man, great idea.
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chazraps
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Post by chazraps on Nov 7, 2012 22:51:53 GMT -5
Queens of the Stone Age album title Lullabies to Paralyze is actually taken from a a song on their previous record, Songs for the Deaf. The song is question would be Mosquito Song. "Title Track" means the song who shares the name with the album, not the song that contains the lyrics named after the album. The latter would be much easier to put together. Surely, Yellow Submarine counts. It was released on Revolver in 1966 and then for the Yellow Submarine soundtrack and film in 1968. Wait, wasn't "Yellow Submarinw" actually on the "Yellow Submarine" soundtrack? That means it's on the right album, as well as on an additional album.
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FinalGwen
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Post by FinalGwen on Nov 8, 2012 1:37:13 GMT -5
The title track of Madness' album "Wonderful" didn't actually make it onto an album, only being released on one of the associated singles as a b-side. It did eventually make it onto the 'deluxe' album release on iTunes, over a decade later, but...
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2012 7:33:41 GMT -5
The Dismemberment Plan released the album Change in 2001. They split in 2003, and in 2004 frontman Travis Morrison released the song Change on his solo album.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2012 7:40:09 GMT -5
"They Might Be Giants" by They Might Be Giants was recorded for the album called They Might Be Giants, but wasn't released until 1990 on Flood. Obviously, the song was not the boss of them, so THEY decided when it would be released.
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Post by "Gizzark" Mike Wronglevenay on Nov 8, 2012 9:24:35 GMT -5
I always find it interesting when an album has an ALMOST title track.
Simon And Garfunkel have the song 'The Sound Of Silence,' taken from the album Sounds Of Silence (although it was also on Wednesday Morning 3am).
Rolling Stones have a song and album called Undercover and Undercover of Darkness. I forget which one was song and which one was album.
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Bam Neeley
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Post by Bam Neeley on Nov 8, 2012 12:21:13 GMT -5
Carcass' album Symphonies of Sickness has got a song named Reek of Putrefaction which was the name of the previous album.
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