Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Double album
A double album is an audio album of sufficient length that two units of the medium in which it is sold (especially records and compact discs) are necessary to contain the entirety of it.
Recording artists often think of double albums as a single piece artistically; however, there are exceptions such as Pink Floyd's Ummagumma, one live album and one studio record packaged together, and OutKast's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, consisting of one practical solo album by each member of the hip-hop duo.
The first double album ever released was Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde in 1966, although at the same time Dylan was recording the album Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention were at work on the double album Freak Out!, released two months after Blonde On Blonde.
Since then, the double album format has been more often used for live albums for which material is often plentiful.
In the late 1980s, the compact disc, which can carry more music than a typical vinyl record, became the most common format on which to sell music. Albums which were originally packaged as double records were sold on a single compact disc, such as The Who's Tommy and The Rolling Stones' Exile on Main Street (though not in all cases, such as The White Album). Also, albums of the compact disc era are often longer than ones of previous decades and are packaged on two records if vinyl copies are produced. In general, an album is usually referred to as a double album when it sprawled across two units of the prominent format of its time period.
The following is a list of albums, each of which is double in the vinyl and/or the CD format.
- Tori Amos
- American Graffiti ((soundtrack)
- Anthrax
- Aphex Twin
- Selected Ambient Works Vol. 2 (Triple vinyl with two extra songs, double CD)
- Drukqs (Quadruple vinyl, double CD)
- 26 Mixes for Cash
- The Beatles
- The Beatles (Commonly known as The White Album)
- Anthology 1
- Anthology 2
- Anthology 3
- The Byrds
- Untitled/Unissued
- Billy Bragg
- Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band
- Chicago Transit Authority (later 'Chicago')
- Chicago Transit Authority
- Chicago II
- Chicago III
- Live at Carnegie Hall (Chicago IV) (four vinyl albums; sold today as a triple CD)
- Chicago VII
- Cody Chesnutt
- The Head Phone Masterpiece
- The Clash
- Cream
- Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young
- 4 Way Street
- The Cure
- Datblygu
- Wyau / Pyst
- Miles Davis
- Bitches Brew
- Live-Evil
- Derek and the Dominos
- Mike Doughty
- Dream Theater
- Bob Dylan
- Electric Light Orchestra
- Fleetwood Mac
- The Flying Burrito Brothers
- Honky Tonks
- Peter Frampton
- Funkadelic
- Genesis
- The Grateful Dead
- Grateful Dead
- Live/Dead
- Reckoning
- Without a Net
- Jimi Hendrix
- The Isley Brothers
- Winner Takes All
- Michael Jackson
- Jay-Z
- Jethro Tull
- Living in the Past
- Bursting Out
- Elton John
- Led Zeppelin
- Nellie McKay
- Joni Mitchell
- Don Juan's Reckless Daughter
- Willie Nelson
- Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
- Nine Inch Nails
- Notorious B.I.G.
- Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From the First Psychedelic Era (compilation)
- Paul Oakenfold
- Oasis
- Familiar To Millions
- The Olivia Tremor Control
- The Orb
- Adventures Beyond The Ultraworld
- OutKast
- Phish
- Pink Floyd
- Prince
- 1999
- Sign '0' The Times
- Lou Reed
- The Rolling Stones
- They Might Be Giants
- Santana
- Lotus
- Moonflower
- Skinny Puppy
- Brap (album)
- The Smashing Pumpkins
- Saturday Night Fever (soundtrack)
- Bruce Springsteen
- Swans
- Soundtracks For The Blind
- The Who
- Wilco
- Johnny Winter
- Second Winter (Note that the second side of the second record was blank, so this may not be considered a true double album by some)
- Stevie Wonder
- XTC
- Yes
- Neil Young and Crazy Horse
- Live Rust
- Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention
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