As for when a song is written and when it should go on an album, one of Neil Young's recent albums contained songs he wrote and recorded in the 70s (!), but never released.
There is nothing unusual about having songs written at different time periods appearing together on a studio album. The more prolific the songwriter, the better chance this happens throughout their career: Prince, Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello... the list is endless. I'll go back to the Stones analogy again -- "Tattoo You" was a hodgepodge of leftover tracks that were rejected for "Black And Blue," which no fan has ever confused as one of their best.
tonymiller wrote:Wow so 90% of the songs by Rina & Mami and one by Tomomi.
Just like Lennon & McCartney on the Beatles albums with one by George Harrison....I mean Tomomi
Haruna is not Ringo!
Funny about the songwriting analogy, George Harrison was very flattered that Frank Sinatra said his favorite Lennon/McCartney song was "Something." Maybe someday Rina/Mami will be such a powerful writing team that we'll hear "Kan Biru" was their best song?
@mbowie4321 (slightly off-topic)
Glad you appreciated the flip sides. Just a few more that are really cool:
* I Never Loved A Man (The Way I Love You) / Do Right Woman-Do Right Man (Aretha Franklin)
* Rip It Up / Ready Teddy (Little Richard)
* Bring It On Home To Me / Havin' A Party (Sam Cooke)
* I Want To Hold You Hand / I Saw Her Standing There (Beatles)
* Something / Come Together (Beatles)
* Jailhouse Rock / Treat Me Nice (Elvis Presley)
* I Get Around / Don't Worry Baby (Beach Boys)
* Proud Mary / Born On The Bayou - (CCR)
* Travelin Band / Who'll Stop The Rain (CCR)
* Fat Bottom Girls / Bicycle Race (Queen)
* Starman / Suffragette City (David Bowie)
B-sides definitely deserve some respect.