"The Outcasts", with various spelling variants, has been a fairly common name for rock bands for many years; at least 10 bands were using this name during the mid-1960s. This has led to some confusion among these varied groups. One common misconception has to do with the 1960s band The Outcasts from
Manhasset, New York, whose recordings were reissued by the same Cicadelic/
Collectables label, even before they featured the Texas band. In the mid-1980s, Cicadelic Records released three archival albums by the New York group:
Meet the Outcasts! (studio recordings, mostly previously unreleased),
The Battle of the Bands Live! (split release) and
Live! Standing Room Only (a 1967 concert). In 1993,
Collectables reissued both albums on CD, with additional songs that include "Society's Child" and "Get It On". Popular recordings (reissued on compilations) of this band are "Don't Press Your Luck", "I Didn't Have to Love Her Anymore", "Nothing But Love", "Set Me Free" and their unique versions of "
Walk On By" and "
Gloria". Another band called the Outcasts recorded several tracks backing Linda Pierre King, an artist featured on a compilation of female garage rock artists from Texas,
We Had the Beat / The Heartbeats & Other Texas Girls of the 60s. That album's liner notes suggested that the San Antonio band had backed her on these songs, a natural mistake, since King is from Houston, and the
record label that released the final single by the Outcasts, Gallant Records, was based there. ==Songs==