Same Artist Same Title
LaserWolf
Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
TK 602 is George McCrae lp titled George McCraeTK 608 is George McCrae lp titled George McCrae1975 & 1978 respectfully.2 differnt lps.Why was TK so stupid? Cocaine?Lots of other examples of artists with albums with the same title, but I think this is the only one that is also on the same label.Dan
Comments
Barrabas (i think those 2 were on diff labels.....RCA and ATCO???? Still even more reason not to repeat)
Peter Gabriel had Peter Gabriel, Peter Gabriel, Peter Gabriel, and Peter Gabriel, right? Atco, Atlantic, Mercury, and Geffen (in the U.S. it was called Security).
vs.
The Albert on Perception
All his records from 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1980, 1985 and 1986 have the same title (Tim Maia).
Caetano Veloso is another example; not as bad as Tim: from 1968, 1969, 1971 (all by Polygram).
Peace
What's up with The Albert. I've been confused by this, thinking this is different than when I had it befor. Did they have 2 self titled records on Perception?
4 self titled albums? What an egomanica!
Maybe they couldn't afford an original title.
Maybe they couldn't afford an original title.
Or maybe they thought their names were the coolest thing in the whole world.
Peace
Yup....
Co-sign on Maia. Ridiculous. And even worse, many of his covers look the same.
"yo, you need that Maia LP, son"
"which one?"
"the one called "Tim Maia" with him on the cover"
"... ..."
That's like...all of them.
Or the two self-titled Gal Costa albums, both from 1969. I think everyone calls the second one 'Nao Identificado' just to keep it comprehensible.
hey, kinda like how george foreman named all his kids 'george'! it wasn't their first name at least (i think).
what about same song titles but different songs?
Alvin Cash "Twine Time" on mar-v-lous andf his "Twine Time" on XL...different tunes altogether.
You think? Because there are a lot of non-Tropicalia Brazilian artists with the same thing going on... Ed Lincoln, Tamba Trio, Milton Banana Trio, Tim Maia all released a ton of self-titled records in different years. Not to mention all the dudes who just released numbered records, like Andre Penazzi or Ed Maciel.
I think we would be hard pressed to find another same title, same artist, differnt song example.
There are lots of songs with the same title that are different songs. This one just came to mind:
Call Me Aretha Franklin
Call Me Al Green (Willie Mithchell)
Call Me Jazz Standard (Hatch?)
Call Me Blondie (Harry)
These are 2 different guys, right:
Doug Payne says they are the same.
Jimmy jimmie rodgers rogers:
And we discussed this on another thread not too long ago- same artist, same album title, same cover and label art, same song titles, same EVERYTHING except- a different recording of the music (on at least one of the songs, in some cses all of them)! Ripple Blast Singers "Funny Girl Ala Soul", Steve Halpern "Christening For Listening", one of the good Jamie Aebersol records (pink cover).
Then there are the albums with a track missing on certain pressings. There are a number of these, right now what comes to mind is that "Brand New Funk '78" album on one of Sylvia Robinson's labels. And Captain Sky... there's the version of his first album with "Super Sporm", another one that has "Dr. Rock" in it's place, and yet another pressing that has both songs!!! I don't know what they were thinking about with that one.
I am no help with this one.
The big reason for swapping out tracks was once a song hit, it was stuck on the lp. So Fleetwood Mac's Oh Well replaced some other track, and Buffalo Springfield stuck For What It's Worth on and took something else off. In both cases these are the best songs on the record, but rock collectors want the raer version without.
The other reason was the perception of something being obscene. This is probably what was up with Super Sporm. Didn't some labels call it Super Sperm?
James Brown has multible examples of cuts being removed or added. There is a JBs with a DJ version with an extra cut. And Out Of Sight on Smash, and all the early King things being reissued with different covers and titles.
Who Knows?
Well, straight-up reissues shouldn't count. You were apparently talking about cuts being removed or added. As far as those King albums, covers were updated and titles were changed, but the basic content remained the same.
Doug Payne is wrong. Two different folks. Lonnie LISTON Smith wears shades all the time.
Not really. Jerry Butler got "Lost" twice - once on Vee Jay, and another time on Mercury. Both songs are different.
The Staple Singers also had two different songs called "Are You Sure" (on Epic and Stax, respectively).
Oh yeah, "Call Me" is one of the most cliched titles ever, right up there with "Give It Up" and "Loving You." The "Call Me" written by Tony Hatch is probably best known through Chris Montez' version.
There are probably more versions of "Save Me" then the Isley Brothers one and the Aretha and others version...
The Rationals (from the US) liked that title so much, they recorded two different songs with the title...one was a remake of the Kinks cut, the other was a song previously recorded by Chuck Jackson.
tell me about it, I honestly heard the Kinks cover version by the Rationals and bought the A-Square 45 from eBay for cheap...only to get it and find the Goffin-King version, which is a ballad and not the punk beat record I thought I was buying!
what about artists that have s/t albums which have s/t songs, like
black sabbath-black sabbath-black sabbath
mandrill-mandrill-mandrill
kool & the gang-kool & the gang-kool & the gang
don't forget about george foreman bitches.
iron maiden-iron maiden-iron maiden
I saw one on VH-1 classics the other day that had s/t song on s/t LP on a s/t label...shit I cant for the life of me remember it, but it had to be the only example of that.
hookup, ur avatar is trippy maaan
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