There is an explicit version of the "Fame Monster" album, but they do sell clean versions of it.
In the this is it album, your welcome:)
I have a version by Michael Buble, it was on a compilation album of versions of the song by many artists
Let It Be, and the compilation The Beatles 1967-1970 (aka the "Blue Album"). The original, undubbed version appeared on the bootleg album Get Back, and later officially on The Beatles Anthology Vol. 3. A remixed version appears on Let It Be... Naked.
on 'take to the skies' there is screaming for 'jonny sniper'. the single does not have screaming
8:33
The band System of a Down recorded Aerials in 2002 on their album 'Toxicity'. The album version is 6.11 mins long but the single is 3.57 mins long. The album version is merged with a 'hidden track' called 'Arto'.
Like most hit songs of that era (1972), there were two versions: a long one (3.58 in length) and a shorter version (3.23 in length). Top-40 stations tended to prefer a short version of a song, while album-rock stations wanted to play the complete, long version, so record companies provided an edited version along with the album version.
According to Discogs the single version of Survivor's "Eye Of The Tiger" is 3:45. The album version is listed as 4:05.
iTunes has a clean version of every song/album.
The album Pocketful of Sunshine was the American version of the british version titled NB.
The live version from the album 'Gold and Platnum' is a little over fourteen minutes long. I don't know about the studio version. Length of 'Free Bird' 9:09 (album version)10:08 (outtake version)11:09 (demo version)14:23 (live version)
There is no such thing. Green Day refused to make a clean version of their album. It is why you don't see their album in Walmart.
The album version is 4 minutes long, the single version is just under 3 and a half minutes. The full length video of it is just over 10 minutes.
There are two versions of this CD. One comes with the album version and the other is with the movie version. The CD that os found post often in stores is the one with the movie version because it has been the most popular one.
The album is "Crowing Stone"
The album version of a song is the version that is recorded on a regular album. It is also commonly called the long version. The adjectives album and long are used to differentiate it from the short version, a.k.a. the radio version, the single, or the "45." Several decades ago, radio station executives were very fussy about singles being close to three minutes in length, which cramped the style of many artists and their record companies. Those who gave in to the pressure from the radio execs often made a different recording for air play and singles sales than the full version of the song that went on their album. The reason I had specified "regular" album is because many greatest-hits albums contained the short versions of an artist's hits. Many album versions have longer introductions or longer solos. Also, versions made for radio often had "cleaner" lyrics than their album counterparts. For example, in "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" by the Charlie Daniels Band, the album version contains the lyrics "I told you once, you son of a bitch, I'm the best that's ever been!" The "short" version of that song, which isn't any shorter than the album version, has the lyrics "I told you once, you son of a gun, I'm the best that's ever been!" (Many may find that less offensive, but I think calling the devil a son of a gun is just plain goofy.)