The Barenaked Ladies' album Maroon has some lyrics that include the word "Maroon" inside the CD case, but the song doesn't actually exist. The title of her first studio album, Careful Confessions, can be found in a lyric in the song Responsible. All in all, this serves to tie the album's stories into each other and keep the continuity and plot of the whole Ayreon universe going. the Universal Migrator") and in "To The Solar System" ("Please abort Universal Migrator sequence"). Universal Migrator is name-dropped twice, in "Chaos" ("I will now take you back to the Big Bang, and the birth of the very first soul, called. The Universal Migrator Part 1: The Dream Sequencer gets its subtitle dropped several times throughout the story, though the first time is heard right at the start of "Beyond The Last Horizon" on the album Actual Fantasy. The Human Equation is title-dropped on the next album, 01011001, in the song "The Sixth Extinction" ("We must resolve this human equation"). The Final Experiment's name is dropped by Merlin in the tracks "Prologue" and "Ayreon's Fate". Ayreon also does it a bunch of times, sometimes not even on the same album:. The words in bold are titles of the band's past albums: "The thunder/the smash/the cracks between the walls/The black moon pyramid once filled with magic /now it's gone." German Metal band Axel Rudi Pell does this on the song "The Gates of the Seven Seals" on the album Oceans of Time. Avenged Sevenfold's City of Evil takes its title from a line in "Beast and the Harlot". Automatic Loveletter's album "The Kids Will Take Their Monsters On" comes from a lyric in the song "Curtain Close.". Austra's Feel it Break is titled after the refrain of the single "The Beat and the Pulse''. In the Art vs Science song 'Bongo Plan', they spell out the album title 'Off The Edge of The Earth and Into Forever, Forever', letter by letter. Arctic Monkeys' Favourite Worst Nightmare was named for a line in the song "D Is For Dangerous" ("I think you should know you're his favourite worst nightmare"). Architecture In Helsinki's Places Like This is taken from a line in "Hold Music.". Anthrax drop "Persistence of Time" in the first track, " Time". Followed immediately by a Title Drop, no less. One of the tracks, "Song About You", features this in the Pre-Chorus. Søren Andersen, a Danish Guitarist and Singer/Songwriter, released his debut album in 2013, titled "Constant Replay". Alu used the title of her 2004 debut, Infomercial Gasmask, in the first track, "Asphyxia," and similarly her recent (2012) third album, Madhouse Masquerade is dropped in "Silhouettes and Shadows," but her most excellent second album, 2008's "Lobotomy Sessions," has no album title drop. Lily Allen's Alright, Still comes from a spoken part of "Knock 'Em Out". All Time Low's Nothing Personal comes from a line in the track "Break Your Little Heart" ("You were fake, I was great, nothing personal"). AFI have done this once with decemberundeground, mentioning it once in the song "The Interview. Adam and the Ants' Dirk Wears White Sox: A unique case The line "Dirk wears white sox" doesn't appear until "Don't Be Square (Be There)" on the FOLLOWING Ants' album, Kings of the Wild Frontier. Blow Up Your Video has an almost example in "That's The Way I Wanna Rock'n'roll": "I'm gonna blow up my video!". The album itself was a live collection of previous songs, it wasn't untill their next album Highway to Hell that the track "If You Want Blood" was released, it's unknown if the track was written before the album was released or if it was originally intended to be included on it. Honorable mention for If You Want Blood (You Got It). releases, and some others were later part of Jailbreak '74. A couple of tracks from the original High Voltage wound up on U.S. as High Voltage, and the Australian High Voltage was never released at all.
There's an Executive Meddling issue here, as the Australian albums were renamed for American release, and none of them were released in their original form. Finally, the song "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" mentions both "T.N.T." and "high voltage" in the lyrics. Then the following year, Atlantic Records put out a compilation album also titled High Voltage, which contained songs from the first two albums, including "High Voltage". (1975), includes a song titled "High Voltage" which features the titular phrase in the chorus lyrics.
AC/DC's first album, High Voltage (1975), doesn't include the title in the lyrics.