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Amazon Restaurants Food delivery from local restaurants. I recall that a similar tactic was also used for European releases in the s, because it was cheaper for record shops to import US CDs. Most of the material was actually released world-wide in the past 10 years, but at the time would have simply been considered 'bootleg' anywhere else. My extension to that premise is that the record company could 'legally' under JASRAC add extra tracks - unfinished tracks, early demo versions etc - without the artist's permission.
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Home Questions Tags Users Unanswered. Why are bonus tracks so common in japanese versions? Just as the title says: Why are bonus tracks so common in japanese versions of a release? Viktor Mellgren 9 Please provide some examples According to a user on MetaFilter: BCdotWEB 1, 6 Tetsujin 5, 1 4 This doesn't answer the question at all.
You're talking about bootlegs, OP is asking about bonus tracks. It still remains speculation, and doesn't answer the question: