There's several lost Judas Priest songs that are confirmed to have been recorded, there's a few that didn't make the cut for Turbo like "Under the Gun" and "Fight For Your Love". There's a faster version of "On the Run" from Point of Entry and there's one song meant for "Ram it Down"(whose name I'm forgetting now)that didn't make it in that was described as being "like a journey through hell itself"
The lead-singer for NWOBHW band Heavy Load recorded a solo album in the 80s after the band broke-up but the album was never released.
Lita Ford recorded an album in 1985 called "The Bride Wore Black" but the record company didn't like it and shelved it.
My favorite lost song has to either be Carnival Of Light by The Beatles or that Ren And Stimpy song Kurt Kobain supposedly created (though that's more existence unconfirmed than lost).
Post by spelunkydunkey on Nov 5, 2022 16:41:17 GMT
According to the album's producer Tony Visconti, the title track on David Bowie's Blackstar was supposed to be 11 minutes long but was shortened when Bowie found out iTunes won't publish singles over 10 minutes long. Bowie then shortened the song on the actual album to prevent confusion.
Well, I was going to post about "Good Things (Come to Those Who Wait)," the song left off Fleetwood Mac's Mystery to Me album, but it looks like it's been found. Good things do come to those who wait:
I did a thread all about the lost songs from Yamaha's World Popular Song Festival here. There are a lot of them!
Supposedly, the first version of Amon Düül II's "Hawknose Harlequin" (from the Carnival in Babylon album) was 36 minutes long. But United Artists had no intention of releasing a third double album in a row from them, so it got hacked down to nine minutes. The full version has never surfaced.
Last Edit: Nov 7, 2022 5:31:36 GMT by jchalfantnew
How are you even finding this stuff? It's almost as if you're running a script to automatically query Discogs entries on YouTube and then make a post whenever the song isn't in the results.