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A Kick in the Head Is Worth Eight in the Pants : ウィキペディア英語版 | A Kick in the Head Is Worth Eight in the Pants
''A Kick in the Head Is Worth Eight in the Pants'' is a studio album by The Bee Gees. Originally known as ''The Bee Gees Album'', recording began in late 1972 at The Record Plant in Los Angeles around the same time as tracks for ''Life in a Tin Can'' were being recorded. Ten tracks were recorded in November 1972 and four more were recorded in January 1973 in London, England. ==History== By the end of 1972, The Bee Gees had two albums recorded and ready for release. The first to be released was ''Life in a Tin Can'' in January 1973. The first and only single from that album, "Saw a New Morning", was not a hit in the US peaking at No. 94. The parent album fared only slightly better, climbing to No. 69. When it was time to release the follow-up album, Robert Stigwood, manager of The Bee Gees and owner of RSO Records, rejected the proposed album after the failure of the lead single, "Wouldn't I Be Someone". The album was shelved, and only a few songs ever received official release. "Elisa", "Wouldn't I Be Someone" and "King and Country" were released as singles in 1973, and then again in 1990 on the box set ''Tales from the Brothers Gibb''. Another track, "It Doesn't Matter Much to Me", was released on a budget label compilation album in the UK in 1974. That track was re-recorded for inclusion on The Bee Gees' 1974 album, ''Mr. Natural'', but was only released as the B-side of the title track when it was released as a single. A 30-second clip of "Castles in the Air" made it on to a 1978 promotional album called ''The Words and Music of Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb''.
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