@@smittzero8463 Oh my god, that's *bound* to have some glorious stories. I could def imagine someone accidentally losing something because they sneezed. Imagine that.
The Kurt Cobain thing was just a joke Billy West made that got spun way out of proportion. The creators have stated they have no recollection of a theme song from Kurt.
I always saw it as a way for Billy to make fun of John Ks blind arrogance; that he was so self absorbed, he'd dismiss a song from someone who would turn out to be extremely prolific, like no way any song from some unknown kid would be good enough for my show. Its just another Billy vs John teardown
weezer’s back catalog is crazy, there are 3200 demos on rivers’ website but there are STILL likely thousands of demos and unreleased songs we haven’t heard. the full band recording of superfriend is also a really interesting lost weezer song
Imagining waking up on a Sunday to the sound of your president in the midst of a 4 hour discussion about the bill he's signing in live while in a field of cows, sounds hilarious and super stressful at the same time.
Wow you made my day with that KMD sample. I used to work at Utopia, a head / music shop in Long Island and we would talk about this sample ALOT. We thought it was an piece of media that would be accompanied with a book of some sort. Well it’s been 20 years and it feels good to be right hahah 👍🏼
There's one I've been trying to find for years called "Nightclub" I discovered way back in the early 2000s on some Napster type site. It said it was by the band Deadsy but I found out it's actually by a band called Vanity Beach. It's apparently on the Australian release of their album "Nights of the New" but I've never found a digital or physical copy of it. I don't think anyone else has been looking for it though.
Some lost media that I've always thought about but never really seen much content on is the Virtual World Wide Web stuff from the 90s where you would navigate 3D representations of websites and do other fun stuff. I've tried researching a lot of what I saw during that time but there is so little out there about it beyond the basic premise.
Another song that's lost is The Best Man Lies by The Friendly Indians, a band created by Steve Franks, who's also the guy who created the hit TV show, Psych! Only part of the song was used as the theme song for the show, even the "extended" version is missing a couple verses and a guitar solo. The band has played the song as a whole at various conventions, but the original, full studio recording is still unfound (along with a couple songs off of the EP it debuted on titled "Tiny Badness").
Lost Music is fascinating because of how the word "music" can be defined. Is it an unfinished song that never got released to the public, and only the writers/band members/performers know it for sure, or can it simply be a lost recording? Can it be lost completely if it only exists in the mind of said performers?
Floyd's drummer was NICK Mason. Also, I would argue that Zappa and the Mothers were using "found instruments" for years by the time Floyd had the idea :)
OMG I HAVE THIS JAMES FERRARO RECORD AND CD YOU TALKED ABOUT! Human Story 3 also came with an 80s German noise music record, or at least mine did. The record has some crazy history, not everyone got their copy supposedly. I also got the clear variant 😁
@@jacob_ian_decoursey_the_author I actually have a script for it, and I'm building up my video making experience, so it might actually happen some time sooner than later lol
"Track" doesn't mean "song" though. Odds are very, very good all he means is they had some individual recording tracks that never got turned into songs.
Speaking of lost samples. the They Might Be Giants song "They Might Be Giants" from their most popular album, "Flood" contains the sample "Hang on Tighter" among others that, according to the band, are from an old motivational speech tape they found at a thrift store in the mid 80s. The name of this tape has never been found
"you heard that right: a world leader had his own TV show" we live in a post-Trump presidency era, i don't think that's necessarily shocking anymore lol
I’m so happy Ricky was brought up! I’m the one that wrote the Seona Dancing lost demo article onto the LMW.❤️ Note: it’s actually pronounced “Shawna Dancing”, the band was named after a girl they knew.
Not to be that guy, but Pink Floyd's drummer was named Nick Mason, not Alan Mason - you might've been thinking of Alan's Psychadelic Breakfast when you called him that at 10:32?
Of all places I expected to hear mention of Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, I did not expect it to be from All Things Lost. Let It Sway is a phenomenal album that I definitely recommend people check out of theirs.
There are definitely lost or unreleased DEVO songs from their early days, i.e. when they first appeared onstage as Sextet Devo in Kent in 1973. Two short clips of that show are available in very degraded quality. The setlist is known however. A more recent example was "Whip It Again", a demo from their Something For Everybody album. The band ended up re-writing the lyrics as "Sumthin'". Only a few people have heard it, at a fan convention while the band was still working on the album.
Your videos are amazing, and hugely entertaining as always, keep up the great work, your content is immensely beneficial to us all, especially those of us who want to learn, as much about the world around us as possible, no matter how obscure that information may be!
Electronic group Boards of Canada sampled Sesame Street in a dozen different songs, but finding the source is easy, nearly all of these samples come from the same 1990 episode!
Alright! I need some help from lost media nerds! In between the release of Toxicity and Steal This Album!, Serj Tankian form System of a Down formed the project Serart, with the help of fellow Armenian musician Arto Tuncboyaciyan. Together they released one album, and a short EP of remixes. Shortly AFTER the release of these record, Serj announced that there was going to be a remix contest for the album's final track "I Don't Want To Go Back Empty Handed". I remember there was a site you could download the song's sample stems from, but they were in a format I did not recognize. At the time (2003?) I was really only familiar with .mp3, .wav, .wma and like maybe a few others, but I remember this being a format that not only did I not recognize, but I couldn't make play at all. I deleted it out of frustration, thinking it would be fine to just hear whoever the winners of the remix contest happened to be. I lost track of it entirely, naturally, and did not think to ever check again until kind of recently. The Wayback Machine helped me find the band's old website, which has been LONG abandoned. Turns out, there were three winners of the contest, and their tracks are as follows. First Place: Serart in Space by DJ Tenebrous Second Place: Serart (Capoeira mix) by Rod Oritz Third Place: I Don’t Want To Go Back There (Dance Hall Remix) by Fino Entertainment Sadly, I cannot find anywhere on the internet where it's possible to hear these tracks today. If there's anyone out there who has these old tracks stashed away, or knows where they can be found today, hit me up!
I remember hearing about TAS 1000 from some videos relating to the development of Penguin Chat / Club Penguin. They seem super interesting and I'd love to see that documentary about them if it ever surfaces.
AC/DC recorded the original demo of the song "I'm A Rebel" in the 70's. It's an odd story, because it's not a song they wrote. Alex Young, the brother of guitarists Angus & Malcolm, brought the song to them. In the demo, he's even singing the vocals. The band didn't keep it (they didn't like the idea of ghostwriters), but it was later pitched to Accept, who... accepted.
May I reccomend an addition to this list? The NASCAR on ESPN Speedworld starting grid theme is presumably lost. The version from 1998 is on RUclips, but the 1999-2000 version of the song (which has a slightly different arrangement) hasn't surfaced. I've searched, but have gotten no luck.
This was a really interesting video, although I think you should have included Carnival Of Light by the Beatles (if you haven't already covered it in a previous video). It is one of the most famous lost songs that we know of, if not the most famous simply because of how big the Beatles were. It was only ever played twice at the Roundhouse in London for the Million Volt Light and Sound Rave event in 1967, and has rarely been heard since. Paul McCartney confirmed in 2008 and 2016 that he still has the tape, but hasn't been able to release it. It was almost released in one of the Beatles Anthology albums released in 1996, but George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and Yoko Ono didn't want it on the album because it was never intended to be a song under the Beatles name, even though it was made by them.
I'm a big Queen fan, they have what maybe is a "lost song" though I wouldn't really call it "bizarre." There was an original song of theirs, "Hangman," that they played in concert in the 70s, but they never released a studio version. There was one collector who claimed to have a copy of a studio version, but he never shared it with anybody
something kind of interesting is the millenium fever omnibus cd by sold out. for the most part the band is really only known for its vocalist, hideo suwa, who provided vocals for lots of (mainly) pop’n music songs (just bemani songs overall) hideo is still a somewhat active vocalist nonetheless but sold out disbanded in 2002 so that’s that
An interesting piece of lost media is the music video for a song by the RnB group Blaqùe, from the early 00s, there's a song called Can't Get It Back, and a music video was filmed. It was finished but it was never released. There's a few seconds clip of the video that leaked more than 10 years ago but it never fully leaked Similar thing happened to Mariah Carey. She has a song called"The one" which was supposed to be one of her album's "charmbracelet" singles, but ended up not being one. A music video was filmed, there's a behind the scenes video on RUclips, but the full video Is nowhere to be found. Some say the video was never finished and probably they used some pieces and pasted them in the "Boy (I need u) Music video, which was a single from that album. I really love early 00s RnB music, those dark songs are so interesting, there's so much stuff about it..
Just wanted to say that I saw James Ferraro live in a disused coal mine cave. He projected vore and gore h3ntai and half the people left a few songs into the set.
U2 has a TON of lost songs, since the band's start in 1976 they began doing covers but mostly original songs, throughout 1976-1979 they had alot of songs that have 0 Recordings although we do have their names, for example a 30 second snippet of 'Concentration Cramp' was found on a cassette tape from 1979 back in 2019.
Also alot of live preformances haven't survived either, although we do have rare bootlegs that have some live songs. Some songs that weren't released seen the light of day with deluxe edition albums being released.
Wait I remember Preschool Musical on the stick! I remember seeing it play and being confused about what I was watching, but I thought it was cool. I might've seen preschool musical on a stick 2!
I wonder if the sample spotters could help find the sample from the song Savage by 21 Lil Harold. Nobody knows where the sample came from and when the producer of the song Cubeatz was asked about it he said he wouldn’t say what it was
O hi there I know a case of a lost song, its called Interface and its Made with the music software vocaloid, the song was published in Nico Nico in 2011 by the producer Masa Works Desing, that was called Ell at the time. For unknown reasons Masa erase all his songs with the name Ell at november/december of 2011, making at least 4 songs lost, one of them called Ijou Aikyou was uploaded to youtube in 2019. But the other 3 songs are complety lost, well, almost. The only song that we have something is the song Interface, we only have 10 seconds of song taked from a top of music of the year, thanks to that top we have at least 10 seconds of the song. The other Two songs, Wakare Wa Iwazu Icchimae and Medical Wedding are complety lost to. Also, Masa said that even he doesn't have the complete songs, so the only hope is that some asiatic user downladed em and wait that usb memory survived 10 years
Since I am 100% Using that last one for my own purposes I will share the information I have Chavez revealed the album on Episode 296 of Aló Presidente which can be found here: ruclips.net/video/vA6j5CVJtxA/видео.html
_FARSIDEVIRTUAL_ wasn't the 'first vaporwave album', not by a long shot. Daniel Lobatin's _Chuck Person's Eccojams Vol. 1,_ for one, predates it by more than a year, and Ramona 'Vektroid' Xavier had been creating music well before _that_ which she had, at the time, described as 'DOSWave', now recognised as an early form of vaporwave, or at least as a very close antecedent thereof (Vektroid, for those who don't know, would eventually create, under the pseudonym Macintosh Plus, what is probably the most well-known vaporwave album of them all: 2011's _Floral Shoppe,_ which released about six weeks after Ferraro's album). Of course, if you _really_ want to get down to the nitty-gritty, important stylistic forerunners of the genre can, in retrospect, be traced back at least as far as the early 1990s, and arguably even before that.
i get what u mean with the fact that music like vaporwave goes back to the 90s but arguably half of vaporwave is the visual aspect of it and OPN was really the first person to introduce the visual aspect of what we know as vaporwave today. also RIP DJ Screw vaporwave prolly wouldn't of been a thing without him
Great work! You always manage to find lost media content I haven't heard of yet! Makes me wonder if it were possible to make a list of lost media that was almost found but became lost again.
If we’re talking weird lost songs, I know Alan Menken wrote four or five songs for a Roger Rabbit sequel that never happened. And only one has been found so far, being featured in the debut album of a Broadway actress alongside some other tracks from the Disney vault. So… they’re in the vault somewhere!
this isn't an issue but Joy Division never made it to the 1980s Ian Curtis died in May 1980. I would assume you meant New Order or Depeche mode but other than that great video
@@FM-cp6kc unfortunately JD dropped off fast and at the time wasn't as big as they became. New order which is the surviving members already by that time were making hits.
@@AlternativeMindz Like I said that just might be that Joy Division was still popular in the Philippines (note: I'm from there) around that time. Different countries have different crazes. People still sing Rockwell's Knife and Steve Perry's Foolish Heart in karaoke bars here so I think that was just it, old music that stayed longer than usual
Pink Floyd has a whole page on Wikipedia of unreleased songs and albums. You could do a whole video on them alone. The two songs that come to mind most are "Have You Got It Yet?!" and "Bitter Love".
@@jedshaffer5956 The Wall has alot of stuff that was cut like the missing verse for The Show must go on, the minute that was cut from comfortably Numb, The full 7 minute Run like hell etc
@@ajaxmaxbitch I've always wanted a director's cut of that album. Restore the missing stuff, and restore the original running order, which had "Hey You" after "Comfortably Numb".
In regard to the Pink Floyd entry, I wanted to mention some involving Barrett (both in and out of Floyd): "Have You Got it Yet" is the last Barrett song the band tried to record (I think it's the last, at least). While it never got an official release, one can wonder if the rehearsals (where Syd kept changing the music, only keeping the line "Have you got it yet?" each time) may have been recorded. Or maybe it's never been recorded and can only survive in anecdotes from the surviving band members. Syd released two solo albums post-Floyd. However, he did go into the recording studio for a third album, which ultimately only ended with some snippets, like apparently a rhythm guitar track logged as "Chooka Chooka Chug Chug", due to what it sounded like. As far as I know, none of these recordings (as wholly incomplete as they are) have been officially released. But I also wanted to mention something that ultimately wouldn't be covered in one of these videos, due to the obscurity of the person involved, but my uncle, who owns a used book and music store in town and later started a band called the Schoolmarms with a friend, released a cassette at his store when I was little. This cassette, billed as "The Eternal Firecracker" (with or without the "the", maybe "Everlasting" instead of "Eternal"--it's been a long time since I've seen one of the tapes) instead of his own name, had at least one song later recorded by the Schoolmarms ("I Pray to Elvis"), but it's still different than the version on the cassette. Over time, my uncle lost his copy (or copies) of the tape, and the ones the rest of the family had have disappeared for one reason or another. However, this was sold in his store, so it's possible some copies are floating around out there, with music unheard for over a decade or two (I mean, it was released when people would still purchase cassettes, so it's been a while). To me, at least, this is a tragedy, since I remember enjoying the music (one song that particularly stands out to me, whose name I don't remember, has the lyric, "Cindarella/Dressed in yella'/Went upstairs with/Another fella"). I'm sure I'll never hear it again, which is not fun. Oh well, the Schoolmarms music is still online (and the group has every possibility of re-convening), and as far as music featuring members of my family, we also have copies of the record Shasta High School band pressed when my mom was a member (luckily they never recorded us when I was in the SHS band--I was so awful, I would have brought down the quality of the whole thing).
@Musictime It was released, played at a concert, so it technically was released. As someone who follows an artist who has released some songs on their concerts only, this is not out of the ordinary.
Luca Turilli's Rhapsody had a song that was going to be released on the debut album Ascending Into Infinity, but for some reason was swapped out very late on for a cover of Alessandro Safina's "Luna". It was called Fantasia Gotica and I'd love to know what happened to it. It was even supposed to be a B-side to one of the singles from the album but that never seemed to happen either!
As someone with OCD....I can't stand when unanswered questions about whether something exists or not is held up by a living person who just doesn't give a shit enough to confirm or deny things.
If you do a part 2 of this video, please include My Chemical Romance’s missing Nine Volt Heart. The existence is still unknown until today but it was recorded somewhere in 2001 or 2002
Time for a Queen fan to add something. The most notable one is Hangman, a song written by Freddie Mercury (lyrics) and Brian May (music) that the band performed live between 1970 and 1976. There have been talk of a studio recording, but it has never been confirmed. The 1982 collaboration between Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson also produced at least 2 incomplete songs, State Of Shock and Victory, both of which haven’t been released with both artists performing. And finally, it is somewhat known that Queen overdubbed many parts of their live albums, including Live At Wembley (1976), Live At The Rainbow (1974) and Live Killers (1979). Although the undubed version of the Wembley concert has been found, the unedited version of some parts of the Live Killers album and both of the Rainbow Concerts haven’t, which includes the only known live recording of The Fairy Feller’s Master Stroke, which they rarely performed live and infamously has some harsh alleged overdubs to improve Freddie’s voice.
I didn't realize that James Ferraro had missing songs. My brother use to be friends with the guy at the time. It was at the time my brother was involved with the vaporwave community when being involved with the guy, Todd Ledford, from OESB (my brother did a lot of social media for him). I think at one point he had a lot of the more rare albums of James Ferraro and actually a copy of the original Floral Shoppe vinyl (he ended up selling them all after a falling out with Todd and giving up on some documentary he was going to do on the whole Floral Shoppe drama).
I really wanna hear the lost track "Human Satellite" that was cut from the first Red Hot Chili Peppers album. The late Jack Sherman had a copy and producer Andy Gill thought it had commercial potential, yet beyond that, the band seems to have forgotten. They seem pretty reluctant to embrace being a legacy band even though they have nearly been around for 40 years. There are a fair few unreleased tracks in their archive, but that one sticks out because there was such a dearth of material back then, I'm surprised they didn't include it.
tbh a lot of the Kurt Theme Song was just a Myth as some Nick Staff at the time said he never came to Nick nor did any of them go to Kurt and some people must've misheard hearing that Kurt Cobain was gonna do a theme for Nick
Just clarifying something about James Ferraro's stuff: SPEED (which was a B-Side for Last American Hero in 2008) wasn't released by Ferraro, it was released by his record label manager during that time, Todd Ledford of Olde English Spelling Bee, who also claimed he had a copy of Rehysteria. However, soon after that, it became common knowledge that Todd was a con artist, and he seemingly vanished completely after this. Ferraro hasn't talked at all about his lost stuff from back then, and barely talks about his pre-FSV stuff (although he issued some remasters last year)
fishmans have plenty of unrelased, unknown tracks - most of the tracks titles we dont have audio from are on fishmans wiki, tracks that wr dont have title are on youtube, you just need to search bootlegs from 1987 to 1991. plenty of unknown tracks there
There's been many Sprout videos popping up here. Hopefully someone can find the Musical footage. Never saw that as a kid, but I still loved watching Sprout when I was little.
10:30 BTW you know the drummer of Pink Floyd is Nick Mason not Alan Mason right? Think you got confused with Pink Floyd producer of the time Alan Parsons.
one lost song that could come up with is from the 2000 movie Sorted, theirs a scene where the character goes clothes shopping and then gets chased after because i think because of the other character not buying the clothes for some reason i couldnt shazam it or find it in the movie's soundtrack
We need 10 Dumbest Lost Media. Just the dumbest, weirdest and funniest media that's been lost. It'd be hilarious.
Followed up by Dumbest Ways Media Became Lost. I'm sure there are some amusing stories
@@smittzero8463 Oh my god, that's *bound* to have some glorious stories. I could def imagine someone accidentally losing something because they sneezed. Imagine that.
The Mini Me sex tape is pretty funny. Most of that is lost.
This is interesting
The Kurt Cobain thing was just a joke Billy West made that got spun way out of proportion. The creators have stated they have no recollection of a theme song from Kurt.
I always saw it as a way for Billy to make fun of John Ks blind arrogance; that he was so self absorbed, he'd dismiss a song from someone who would turn out to be extremely prolific, like no way any song from some unknown kid would be good enough for my show.
Its just another Billy vs John teardown
I met Billy West at Connecticon last year and asked him about it. He said “he wanted to” make a song for Ren and Stimpy but never actually did.
weezer’s back catalog is crazy, there are 3200 demos on rivers’ website but there are STILL likely thousands of demos and unreleased songs we haven’t heard. the full band recording of superfriend is also a really interesting lost weezer song
didn’t he write a song everyday during the green album era?
@@Baloonboy105yt i think so, and considering there’s only a few dozen green demos on his website who knows what we haven’t heard
Don't forget the best lost Weezer song, I Will Poop on Their Car Seats
@@Baloonboy105yt yeah, everyday for like five years after he painted his entire room black and dedicated his life to writing perfect pop music
Do they have 'I just saw a submarine in the bathwater?
Man, you produce some of the best lost media related content.
Thanks for watching!
yeah he really does.
*LSupersonicQ cryes in a corner*
Imagining waking up on a Sunday to the sound of your president in the midst of a 4 hour discussion about the bill he's signing in live while in a field of cows, sounds hilarious and super stressful at the same time.
Wow you made my day with that KMD sample. I used to work at Utopia, a head / music shop in Long Island and we would talk about this sample ALOT. We thought it was an piece of media that would be accompanied with a book of some sort. Well it’s been 20 years and it feels good to be right hahah 👍🏼
As a Venezuelan, seeing Chavez on the thumbnail of All Things Lost is a surreal experience.
Same xd
a bit traumatic
@@oscarquinterogranadillo That too 😔
@@oscarquinterogranadillo Same xd
Same
I love how happy this guy is in every video, it’s so uplifting man
I 💙 LOST MEDIA
There's one I've been trying to find for years called "Nightclub" I discovered way back in the early 2000s on some Napster type site. It said it was by the band Deadsy but I found out it's actually by a band called Vanity Beach. It's apparently on the Australian release of their album "Nights of the New" but I've never found a digital or physical copy of it. I don't think anyone else has been looking for it though.
This is probably going to start a decade-long search after it gets discovered.
Kudos to Martha for allowing her tape to be used in TAS 1000's music!
I've been delayed I've been delayed I've been delayed
Try and uh
@@michaelgates5017 sorry about part
Try and, uh, meet me at the 15 70 for about 12:30 instead of, uh, 10, 10:15
@@seanlux2214 I'm gonna be delayed this morning
Some lost media that I've always thought about but never really seen much content on is the Virtual World Wide Web stuff from the 90s where you would navigate 3D representations of websites and do other fun stuff. I've tried researching a lot of what I saw during that time but there is so little out there about it beyond the basic premise.
Another song that's lost is The Best Man Lies by The Friendly Indians, a band created by Steve Franks, who's also the guy who created the hit TV show, Psych! Only part of the song was used as the theme song for the show, even the "extended" version is missing a couple verses and a guitar solo. The band has played the song as a whole at various conventions, but the original, full studio recording is still unfound (along with a couple songs off of the EP it debuted on titled "Tiny Badness").
Lost Music is fascinating because of how the word "music" can be defined. Is it an unfinished song that never got released to the public, and only the writers/band members/performers know it for sure, or can it simply be a lost recording? Can it be lost completely if it only exists in the mind of said performers?
Both
Same could be said for anything then?
Floyd's drummer was NICK Mason. Also, I would argue that Zappa and the Mothers were using "found instruments" for years by the time Floyd had the idea :)
the existence of Alan Mason implies the existence of a Nick Parsons
Another video about lost media! This is definitely gonna be interesting!! 💕✨
My first time hearing about TAS 1000. What a great little story
OMG I HAVE THIS JAMES FERRARO RECORD AND CD YOU TALKED ABOUT! Human Story 3 also came with an 80s German noise music record, or at least mine did. The record has some crazy history, not everyone got their copy supposedly. I also got the clear variant 😁
Make a video about it.
@@jacob_ian_decoursey_the_author I actually have a script for it, and I'm building up my video making experience, so it might actually happen some time sooner than later lol
*Marvel:* Infinity War is the most ambitious crossover in history.
*Sprout:* hold my stick puppet…
MF BERT and Mr. Ernastik on "Math Rapp"
"Track" doesn't mean "song" though. Odds are very, very good all he means is they had some individual recording tracks that never got turned into songs.
Speaking of lost samples. the They Might Be Giants song "They Might Be Giants" from their most popular album, "Flood" contains the sample "Hang on Tighter" among others that, according to the band, are from an old motivational speech tape they found at a thrift store in the mid 80s. The name of this tape has never been found
I was just listening to my Spider-Man playlist when I saw the notification. Talk about good timing! 👍🏽
Lost Pink Floyd music: I sleep.
Lost stick puppet parody of High School musical: My body is ready, give it to me.
"you heard that right: a world leader had his own TV show"
we live in a post-Trump presidency era, i don't think that's necessarily shocking anymore lol
Trump wasnt a president when his shows were active tho.
Hugo Chavez?
It seems that Hugo Chavez is more had a bizarre regime as well as a polarized view.
Liberal
@@TheSultan1470 ???
Young Ricky Gervais was striking in that Bowie kind of way
Was going to say the exact same thing thing.
wow big ups for covering James Ferraro's massive catalog. I'm incredibly intrigued by tas 1000
I’m so happy Ricky was brought up! I’m the one that wrote the Seona Dancing lost demo article onto the LMW.❤️
Note: it’s actually pronounced “Shawna Dancing”, the band was named after a girl they knew.
Not to be that guy, but Pink Floyd's drummer was named Nick Mason, not Alan Mason - you might've been thinking of Alan's Psychadelic Breakfast when you called him that at 10:32?
Yeah I think he did because he said his name right 11:25
Of all places I expected to hear mention of Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, I did not expect it to be from All Things Lost. Let It Sway is a phenomenal album that I definitely recommend people check out of theirs.
I thought the Kurt Cobain theme song was just a myth... thank you for the video Mike!
it probably doesn’t exist
There are definitely lost or unreleased DEVO songs from their early days, i.e. when they first appeared onstage as Sextet Devo in Kent in 1973. Two short clips of that show are available in very degraded quality. The setlist is known however.
A more recent example was "Whip It Again", a demo from their Something For Everybody album. The band ended up re-writing the lyrics as "Sumthin'". Only a few people have heard it, at a fan convention while the band was still working on the album.
Your videos are amazing, and hugely entertaining as always, keep up the great work, your content is immensely beneficial to us all, especially those of us who want to learn, as much about the world around us as possible, no matter how obscure that information may be!
Thank you for your kind words! They mean a lot, sincerely.
Please do a Halloween themed video that would be amazing! Awesome video as always.
Halloween lost media? (Like Halloween lost movies songs and art or animation)
@@bloxsyoutubepage Yeah horror movies or Halloween commercials or tv specials anything Halloween
As soon as you mentioned unknown bert and Ernie clips I was like "just ask Muppet fans they'll know exactly what it is" lol
Electronic group Boards of Canada sampled Sesame Street in a dozen different songs, but finding the source is easy, nearly all of these samples come from the same 1990 episode!
"IIIIiIiIi.... looOooOoOooOve... YOOOoOOoOOu!"
@@FernieCanto Orange!
@@SynGirl32 Yeahhh, that's right.
Alright! I need some help from lost media nerds!
In between the release of Toxicity and Steal This Album!, Serj Tankian form System of a Down formed the project Serart, with the help of fellow Armenian musician Arto Tuncboyaciyan. Together they released one album, and a short EP of remixes. Shortly AFTER the release of these record, Serj announced that there was going to be a remix contest for the album's final track "I Don't Want To Go Back Empty Handed". I remember there was a site you could download the song's sample stems from, but they were in a format I did not recognize. At the time (2003?) I was really only familiar with .mp3, .wav, .wma and like maybe a few others, but I remember this being a format that not only did I not recognize, but I couldn't make play at all. I deleted it out of frustration, thinking it would be fine to just hear whoever the winners of the remix contest happened to be.
I lost track of it entirely, naturally, and did not think to ever check again until kind of recently.
The Wayback Machine helped me find the band's old website, which has been LONG abandoned.
Turns out, there were three winners of the contest, and their tracks are as follows.
First Place: Serart in Space by DJ Tenebrous
Second Place: Serart (Capoeira mix) by Rod Oritz
Third Place: I Don’t Want To Go Back There (Dance Hall Remix) by Fino Entertainment
Sadly, I cannot find anywhere on the internet where it's possible to hear these tracks today. If there's anyone out there who has these old tracks stashed away, or knows where they can be found today, hit me up!
Loved this video! Lost media can be so strange, and some of these lost songs sound so bizaare I really hope they get found one day :p
So glad you covered TAS 1000. I with a couple of my buddies started the TAS 1000 fan page in 2011 and we searched so much for their lost songs.
Love your videos! They are so fun to watch :), lost media truly is a fascinating thing
Thank you! 💕
Love ur videos! Always look forward to them. Lost media is really cool and it’s fun to consistently see content about it
Oh hi there! 👋
Thanks for watching!
I remember hearing about TAS 1000 from some videos relating to the development of Penguin Chat / Club Penguin. They seem super interesting and I'd love to see that documentary about them if it ever surfaces.
I absolutely love this stuff! Thanks for bringing this stuff into the light!
AC/DC recorded the original demo of the song "I'm A Rebel" in the 70's. It's an odd story, because it's not a song they wrote. Alex Young, the brother of guitarists Angus & Malcolm, brought the song to them. In the demo, he's even singing the vocals. The band didn't keep it (they didn't like the idea of ghostwriters), but it was later pitched to Accept, who... accepted.
He's got..... Balls
May I reccomend an addition to this list? The NASCAR on ESPN Speedworld starting grid theme is presumably lost. The version from 1998 is on RUclips, but the 1999-2000 version of the song (which has a slightly different arrangement) hasn't surfaced. I've searched, but have gotten no luck.
This was a really interesting video, although I think you should have included Carnival Of Light by the Beatles (if you haven't already covered it in a previous video). It is one of the most famous lost songs that we know of, if not the most famous simply because of how big the Beatles were. It was only ever played twice at the Roundhouse in London for the Million Volt Light and Sound Rave event in 1967, and has rarely been heard since. Paul McCartney confirmed in 2008 and 2016 that he still has the tape, but hasn't been able to release it. It was almost released in one of the Beatles Anthology albums released in 1996, but George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and Yoko Ono didn't want it on the album because it was never intended to be a song under the Beatles name, even though it was made by them.
I'm a big Queen fan, they have what maybe is a "lost song" though I wouldn't really call it "bizarre." There was an original song of theirs, "Hangman," that they played in concert in the 70s, but they never released a studio version. There was one collector who claimed to have a copy of a studio version, but he never shared it with anybody
something kind of interesting is the millenium fever omnibus cd by sold out. for the most part the band is really only known for its vocalist, hideo suwa, who provided vocals for lots of (mainly) pop’n music songs (just bemani songs overall)
hideo is still a somewhat active vocalist nonetheless but sold out disbanded in 2002 so that’s that
An interesting piece of lost media is the music video for a song by the RnB group Blaqùe, from the early 00s, there's a song called Can't Get It Back, and a music video was filmed. It was finished but it was never released. There's a few seconds clip of the video that leaked more than 10 years ago but it never fully leaked
Similar thing happened to Mariah Carey. She has a song called"The one" which was supposed to be one of her album's "charmbracelet" singles, but ended up not being one. A music video was filmed, there's a behind the scenes video on RUclips, but the full video Is nowhere to be found. Some say the video was never finished and probably they used some pieces and pasted them in the "Boy (I need u) Music video, which was a single from that album. I really love early 00s RnB music, those dark songs are so interesting, there's so much stuff about it..
Great, that’s one more lost media subject to add to more endless sleepless nights……lost songs!
Just wanted to say that I saw James Ferraro live in a disused coal mine cave. He projected vore and gore h3ntai and half the people left a few songs into the set.
the GOAT
I'm sorry what
he WHAT
The original Irish national anthem played in cork in its failed 1916 Easter rising
U2 has a TON of lost songs, since the band's start in 1976 they began doing covers but mostly original songs, throughout 1976-1979 they had alot of songs that have 0 Recordings although we do have their names, for example a 30 second snippet of 'Concentration Cramp' was found on a cassette tape from 1979 back in 2019.
Also alot of live preformances haven't survived either, although we do have rare bootlegs that have some live songs. Some songs that weren't released seen the light of day with deluxe edition albums being released.
I'm searching for a ton of lost music right now, and all the ridiculous ways that equally ridiculous lost tracks have been found give me hope. :')
Wait I remember Preschool Musical on the stick! I remember seeing it play and being confused about what I was watching, but I thought it was cool. I might've seen preschool musical on a stick 2!
I wonder if the sample spotters could help find the sample from the song Savage by 21 Lil Harold. Nobody knows where the sample came from and when the producer of the song Cubeatz was asked about it he said he wouldn’t say what it was
O hi there
I know a case of a lost song, its called Interface and its Made with the music software vocaloid, the song was published in Nico Nico in 2011 by the producer Masa Works Desing, that was called Ell at the time.
For unknown reasons Masa erase all his songs with the name Ell at november/december of 2011, making at least 4 songs lost, one of them called Ijou Aikyou was uploaded to youtube in 2019.
But the other 3 songs are complety lost, well, almost.
The only song that we have something is the song Interface, we only have 10 seconds of song taked from a top of music of the year, thanks to that top we have at least 10 seconds of the song.
The other Two songs, Wakare Wa Iwazu Icchimae and Medical Wedding are complety lost to.
Also, Masa said that even he doesn't have the complete songs, so the only hope is that some asiatic user downladed em and wait that usb memory survived 10 years
Since I am 100% Using that last one for my own purposes I will share the information I have
Chavez revealed the album on Episode 296 of Aló Presidente which can be found here: ruclips.net/video/vA6j5CVJtxA/видео.html
_FARSIDEVIRTUAL_ wasn't the 'first vaporwave album', not by a long shot. Daniel Lobatin's _Chuck Person's Eccojams Vol. 1,_ for one, predates it by more than a year, and Ramona 'Vektroid' Xavier had been creating music well before _that_ which she had, at the time, described as 'DOSWave', now recognised as an early form of vaporwave, or at least as a very close antecedent thereof (Vektroid, for those who don't know, would eventually create, under the pseudonym Macintosh Plus, what is probably the most well-known vaporwave album of them all: 2011's _Floral Shoppe,_ which released about six weeks after Ferraro's album). Of course, if you _really_ want to get down to the nitty-gritty, important stylistic forerunners of the genre can, in retrospect, be traced back at least as far as the early 1990s, and arguably even before that.
i get what u mean with the fact that music like vaporwave goes back to the 90s but arguably half of vaporwave is the visual aspect of it and OPN was really the first person to introduce the visual aspect of what we know as vaporwave today. also RIP DJ Screw vaporwave prolly wouldn't of been a thing without him
@@twotwosixx That's fair. At any rate, I suppose the concept of distinct musical genres with hard-and-fast 'birthdays' is an amorphous one, at best.
Great work! You always manage to find lost media content I haven't heard of yet! Makes me wonder if it were possible to make a list of lost media that was almost found but became lost again.
Thanks so much!
Honestly you're not the first to ask for that topic. I'll keep an eye out!
The Residents have all sorts of unreleased material, old demos, unfinished film footage, etc. In true spirit of the Theory of Obscurity.
If we’re talking weird lost songs, I know Alan Menken wrote four or five songs for a Roger Rabbit sequel that never happened. And only one has been found so far, being featured in the debut album of a Broadway actress alongside some other tracks from the Disney vault. So… they’re in the vault somewhere!
0:29 I was expecting you to talk about the lost Mac Tonight radio ad after you showed him.
this isn't an issue but Joy Division never made it to the 1980s Ian Curtis died in May 1980. I would assume you meant New Order or Depeche mode but other than that great video
I think it may just be that Joy Division was still popular there in the 80s
@@FM-cp6kc unfortunately JD dropped off fast and at the time wasn't as big as they became. New order which is the surviving members already by that time were making hits.
@@AlternativeMindz Like I said that just might be that Joy Division was still popular in the Philippines (note: I'm from there) around that time. Different countries have different crazes. People still sing Rockwell's Knife and Steve Perry's Foolish Heart in karaoke bars here so I think that was just it, old music that stayed longer than usual
@@FM-cp6kc i had not heard of knife though
@@juliusnepos6013 if you've been near karaoke places with a lot of old people, and you hear it now, you will find out that you heard it
what a jumpscare for a start
Yeah
8:24 That band is so crazy that I wouldn't doubt that they made that documentary.
Pink Floyd has a whole page on Wikipedia of unreleased songs and albums. You could do a whole video on them alone. The two songs that come to mind most are "Have You Got It Yet?!" and "Bitter Love".
And the committee ep
@@ajaxmaxbitch And official studio recordings of missing songs from The Wall, like "What Shall We Do Now?".
@@jedshaffer5956 The Wall has alot of stuff that was cut like the missing verse for The Show must go on, the minute that was cut from comfortably Numb, The full 7 minute Run like hell etc
@@ajaxmaxbitch I've always wanted a director's cut of that album. Restore the missing stuff, and restore the original running order, which had "Hey You" after "Comfortably Numb".
@@jedshaffer5956 same but I don't think it ever happen sadly
As a self proclaimed “music man” I didn’t know about these. Very interesting.
Shout out to telling the Humrush / Sesame Street story All Things Lost. Pretty spot on!
In regard to the Pink Floyd entry, I wanted to mention some involving Barrett (both in and out of Floyd):
"Have You Got it Yet" is the last Barrett song the band tried to record (I think it's the last, at least). While it never got an official release, one can wonder if the rehearsals (where Syd kept changing the music, only keeping the line "Have you got it yet?" each time) may have been recorded. Or maybe it's never been recorded and can only survive in anecdotes from the surviving band members.
Syd released two solo albums post-Floyd. However, he did go into the recording studio for a third album, which ultimately only ended with some snippets, like apparently a rhythm guitar track logged as "Chooka Chooka Chug Chug", due to what it sounded like. As far as I know, none of these recordings (as wholly incomplete as they are) have been officially released.
But I also wanted to mention something that ultimately wouldn't be covered in one of these videos, due to the obscurity of the person involved, but my uncle, who owns a used book and music store in town and later started a band called the Schoolmarms with a friend, released a cassette at his store when I was little. This cassette, billed as "The Eternal Firecracker" (with or without the "the", maybe "Everlasting" instead of "Eternal"--it's been a long time since I've seen one of the tapes) instead of his own name, had at least one song later recorded by the Schoolmarms ("I Pray to Elvis"), but it's still different than the version on the cassette. Over time, my uncle lost his copy (or copies) of the tape, and the ones the rest of the family had have disappeared for one reason or another. However, this was sold in his store, so it's possible some copies are floating around out there, with music unheard for over a decade or two (I mean, it was released when people would still purchase cassettes, so it's been a while). To me, at least, this is a tragedy, since I remember enjoying the music (one song that particularly stands out to me, whose name I don't remember, has the lyric, "Cindarella/Dressed in yella'/Went upstairs with/Another fella"). I'm sure I'll never hear it again, which is not fun. Oh well, the Schoolmarms music is still online (and the group has every possibility of re-convening), and as far as music featuring members of my family, we also have copies of the record Shasta High School band pressed when my mom was a member (luckily they never recorded us when I was in the SHS band--I was so awful, I would have brought down the quality of the whole thing).
#11: The deleted fart song I made when I was 10.
This needs to be on the lost media wiki front page ASAP
Another thing about Sprout's PSMOAS, due to it being made in 2008, A lost Widescreen version is possible (but with no evidence)
The Beatles’ “Carnival Of Light” is a good one.
@Musictime It was released, played at a concert, so it technically was released. As someone who follows an artist who has released some songs on their concerts only, this is not out of the ordinary.
You should do the weirdest lost videos from big name RUclipsrs.
Luca Turilli's Rhapsody had a song that was going to be released on the debut album Ascending Into Infinity, but for some reason was swapped out very late on for a cover of Alessandro Safina's "Luna". It was called Fantasia Gotica and I'd love to know what happened to it. It was even supposed to be a B-side to one of the singles from the album but that never seemed to happen either!
As someone with OCD....I can't stand when unanswered questions about whether something exists or not is held up by a living person who just doesn't give a shit enough to confirm or deny things.
If you do a part 2 of this video, please include My Chemical Romance’s missing Nine Volt Heart. The existence is still unknown until today but it was recorded somewhere in 2001 or 2002
omg mcr is my favorite band and i’ve never heard of this
Time for a Queen fan to add something. The most notable one is Hangman, a song written by Freddie Mercury (lyrics) and Brian May (music) that the band performed live between 1970 and 1976. There have been talk of a studio recording, but it has never been confirmed.
The 1982 collaboration between Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson also produced at least 2 incomplete songs, State Of Shock and Victory, both of which haven’t been released with both artists performing.
And finally, it is somewhat known that Queen overdubbed many parts of their live albums, including Live At Wembley (1976), Live At The Rainbow (1974) and Live Killers (1979). Although the undubed version of the Wembley concert has been found, the unedited version of some parts of the Live Killers album and both of the Rainbow Concerts haven’t, which includes the only known live recording of The Fairy Feller’s Master Stroke, which they rarely performed live and infamously has some harsh alleged overdubs to improve Freddie’s voice.
Why does Ricky Gervais look like David Bowie
I see MF DOOM, I upvote.
I didn't realize that James Ferraro had missing songs. My brother use to be friends with the guy at the time. It was at the time my brother was involved with the vaporwave community when being involved with the guy, Todd Ledford, from OESB (my brother did a lot of social media for him). I think at one point he had a lot of the more rare albums of James Ferraro and actually a copy of the original Floral Shoppe vinyl (he ended up selling them all after a falling out with Todd and giving up on some documentary he was going to do on the whole Floral Shoppe drama).
Im surprised The Most Mysterious Song On The Internet wasnt covered here, you should cover it if you do a follow up or a similar video :)
It's on my list to be a solo video! I'm trying to hold out until it's found but... ya know...
I really wanna hear the lost track "Human Satellite" that was cut from the first Red Hot Chili Peppers album. The late Jack Sherman had a copy and producer Andy Gill thought it had commercial potential, yet beyond that, the band seems to have forgotten. They seem pretty reluctant to embrace being a legacy band even though they have nearly been around for 40 years. There are a fair few unreleased tracks in their archive, but that one sticks out because there was such a dearth of material back then, I'm surprised they didn't include it.
The Kurt Cobain theme song has to be fake- because if it was true there’s no way John K wouldn’t be bragging about it any chance he got.
tbh a lot of the Kurt Theme Song was just a Myth as some Nick Staff at the time said he never came to Nick nor did any of them go to Kurt and some people must've misheard hearing that Kurt Cobain was gonna do a theme for Nick
It's See Oh Na dancing.
The album cover for Speed(14:18) looks like that one GBA racing game’s box art kinda
Just clarifying something about James Ferraro's stuff: SPEED (which was a B-Side for Last American Hero in 2008) wasn't released by Ferraro, it was released by his record label manager during that time, Todd Ledford of Olde English Spelling Bee, who also claimed he had a copy of Rehysteria. However, soon after that, it became common knowledge that Todd was a con artist, and he seemingly vanished completely after this.
Ferraro hasn't talked at all about his lost stuff from back then, and barely talks about his pre-FSV stuff (although he issued some remasters last year)
Britney Spears has a lost album called Original Doll, the only thing we have is a song called Mona Lisa
fishmans have plenty of unrelased, unknown tracks - most of the tracks titles we dont have audio from are on fishmans wiki, tracks that wr dont have title are on youtube, you just need to search bootlegs from 1987 to 1991. plenty of unknown tracks there
There's been many Sprout videos popping up here. Hopefully someone can find the Musical footage. Never saw that as a kid, but I still loved watching Sprout when I was little.
This particular video just doesn't load!
I would like to see you cover Lost Video Game Prototypes. Its an interesting topic to cover
10:30 BTW you know the drummer of Pink Floyd is Nick Mason not Alan Mason right?
Think you got confused with Pink Floyd producer of the time Alan Parsons.
Seona Dancing, not Sonoa Dancings.
Actually vaporwave can be traced all the way back to 1993
I REMEMBER watching the Preschool Musical movies they were awesome!
I think you should do a video on lost/found PSAs!
Woohoo!! Been waiting for a sequel
one lost song that could come up with is from the 2000 movie Sorted, theirs a scene where the character goes clothes shopping and then gets chased after because i think because of the other character not buying the clothes for some reason i couldnt shazam it or find it in the movie's soundtrack
Shout out to all my fellow samples spotters
Love Ur content man keep it coming 👍
Oh hi there! 👋
Thanks for watching!