Mega Lops said:
Zombie Jon Snow said:
Bruce Almighty said:
You must be thinking of something else.
Probably GNR Use Your Illusion I and II although technically each is a double album unto itself (2 vinyl LPs).
You can dig yourself into a hole deeper if you like; that's your choice.
Use Your Illusion I & II are NOT a double album. A sales and marketing tactic to sell more material from an artist fans were hungry for does not make those two a double album.
And longer playtimes for I and II individually don't make either of those a double album.
Also, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is not a double album despite it being reissued and sold as a double LP.
American Idiot - yep, see above.
Not sure if I'm missing anything and don't have more time to poke more holes, but I did correct this image for everyone.
LOL let's see if I have this right....
Even though their length greatly exceeds the capacity of a single LP album (about 48 minutes without seriously eroding the dynamic range) and even tough they come ONLY in a packaging with 2 LPs they are NOT double albums. Got it.
I can see a point somewhat on American Idiot I think it's only 12 or 13 songs as I recall (with some having parts) but it is only 57 minutes long. It's like really 1.5 albums worth.
But
Use Your Illusion I is 76+ minutes long
Use Your illusion II is just under 76 minutes long
And again the ONLY vinyl versions of these albums, and Lauryn Hill, and American Idiot are in DOUBLE LP format.
Just because those albums came along in a time when vinyl was nearly gone and were released as a single CD initially is pretty weak sauce. They WOULD have been double albums if released in vinyl then and are double albums in vinyl form now.The rip off to consumers was never because of vinyl. Hell selling what were double albums (originally) in a 2 CD format even though they could have been fit onto one CD was the industry's tactic early on. I had a few like that. This is the opposite. GNR I and II could have been put out in double vinyl and double CD form instead of a single CD.
Regardless not sure why you are hanging onto some criteria based on its original release form (on CD) when the definition of a double album back in the day was always how many vinyl LPs it fit on.
What do you say makes something a double album - if it's not the length compared to an LP capacity or the packaging as a double LP? Just whether it was initially marketed as such initially?
Hell everyone I know talked about those GNR albums as double albums when they came out - like each were double. We all knew it was like 30 songs combined. And they did 4-5 minute songs or longer. The only band that could do 30 songs on just 2 LPs was the Beatles with their penchant for under 2 minute songs (see White Album).
And anyway if you don't like my thread and criteria feel free to start your own.