As I don't have them, I was wondering if they were crammed to the full 70 minutes or so, or if there was space for the odd extra track, but they were subject to quality control.
There's no omission I'm particularly concerned with, just curious.
Different Class CD2 Track Listing ----------------- 1. Common People (At Glastonbury 1995) (7:38) 2. Mile End (4:30) 3. PTA (3:17) 4. Ansaphone (Demo) (4:09) 5. Paula (Demo) (3:37) 6. Catcliffe Shakedown (Demo) (6:43) 7. We Can Dance Again (Demo) (3:50) 8. Don't Lose It (Demo) (3:10) 9. Whiskey In The Jar (4:48) 10. Disco 2000 (Nick Cave Pub Rock Version) (4:22) 11. Common People (Vocoda Mix) (6:18)
Total Playing Time: 52:28 (min:sec) Total Size : 77.0 MB (80,773,106 bytes)
This Is Hardcore CD2
01. Cocaine Socialism (Proper Version) 05:14 02. It's A Dirty World 05:13 (Recording Session Outtake) 03. Like A Friend 04:33 04. The Professional 05:10 05. Ladies' Man 04:45 06. Laughing Boy 03:50 07. We Are The Boyz 03:15 08. Tomorrow Never Dies (Rough Mix) 04:53 09. Can I Have My Balls Back, Please? (Demo) 04:16 10. Modern Marriage (Demo) 04:54 11. My Erection (Demo) 04:22 12. You Are The One (Demo) 04:28 13. Street Operator (Demo) 03:52 14. This Is Hardcore (End Of The Line Mix) 02:06
His'n'Hers I don't have the individual times of the tracklistings but the original lp lasts 50:40, and the overall tracktime of the new 2cd reissue is 1:52:05 making the second cd 62 mins approx?
To be honest I don't think it was a case of quality control - Jarvis seemed to bung in whatever he could find (that was a hitherto unreleased song). Possible further inclusions on HnH could have been the cover versions of Le Roi De Fourmis and The Black Sessions broadcast version of The Night (which is crying out to be 'cleaned up').
The DC era seems to have been completely plundered (bland version of 'Whiskey In The Jar' included) while the only still-hidden track we do know that was recorded during the Hardcore sessions was 'Grown Ups', but it was left as an instrumental which probably explains its omission.
Now, hopefully the reissues will be waiting for me when I get home this evening. Bloody Hong-Kong postal service...