In July 1972, the British music paper
Melody Maker reported that a cut-price LP issued by
Virgin Records was facing deletion because, ironically, it was too popular.
Faust's
The Faust Tapes, then at number 18 in
Melody Makers chart, actually cost more to produce than its selling price (49p) and so Virgin lost supposedly £2,000 on sales of 60,000. It has since been argued that this move was merely a publicity stunt by Virgin's owner,
Richard Branson. On November 16, 1990,
Arista Records deleted
Milli Vanilli's album ''
Girl You Know It's True'' very quickly after
Frank Farian admitted that
Rob Pilatus and
Fab Morvan did not sing on the record. In addition to this, the duo's Grammy Award was revoked a few days later. American
heavy metal band
Pantera's first four albums have been notably deleted from label catalogs:
Metal Magic, Projects in the Jungle,
I Am the Night, and
Power Metal. The largely
glam metal-oriented albums are not favorites of the band, who transitioned to
groove and
thrash metal from the release of
Cowboys From Hell onward. They are only available in bootleg form.
Rex Brown himself said that there will never be a reissue of them, citing every member of the band's most well-known lineup having been against it. The British duo
The KLF summarily deleted their entire back catalogue when they 'retired' from the music industry in 1992.
Manic Street Preachers' 2000 single "
The Masses Against The Classes" was deleted on the day of release as a promotional gimmick. However, copies of the single continued to be available until supplies ran out, which allowed it to reach Number 1, and remain in the charts for 7 weeks. The 2006
Gnarls Barkley single "
Crazy" was deleted by
Warner Music after six weeks at #1 in the UK as a deliberate move to protect it from overexposure. Deleted singles could not then remain on the UK Singles Chart, so the physical single no longer charted after two weeks. However, it remained as a high-selling download single and has continued to receive heavy airplay well after the single was deleted. On 20 April 2013, Dutch composer
John Ewbank deleted his song "
Koningslied" ("The King's Song") only two days after its initial release, citing an overload of criticism aimed at him personally and at the song itself from the general public and the media. The song had been commissioned to act as the official song of
Willem Alexander, Prince of Orange's upcoming investiture as the new King of the Netherlands on 30 April 2013. The song, already at number one in the iTunes download charts on the day of its release, was performed by a large number of well known Dutch artists. ==See also==