Suede's "The Asphalt World" (Missing 25 Minute Version of 1994 Track)

In 1993 British Band, Suede, was at the top of their success. Having started the britpop crazy, the band was left with the pressure of following up their critically acclaimed self-titled debut. Guitarist, Bernard Butler, started experimenting with heavy drugs after the death of his father. Already in an unstable state of mind, Butler became paranoid and almost intolerable for others to be around.

The band got back in the recording studio to start working on the band's second full-length album, Dog Man Star. Band arguments rose to full-force as none of themembers could get Butler to agree on arrangements or composition. Butler then started working on "The Asphalt World", which stretched over 25 minutes. The original version  had an 80minute long guitar solo witha borderline atonal melodic structure and a high use of dissonance. Suede vocalist, Brett Anderson, said it sounded so horrific in some parts that he almost couldn't sit through the whole thing. Thinking the song would be too nightmarish and inaccessible for most listeners, producer Ed Buller had it cut down to 9 minutes.

Understandably furious, Butler started getting extremely paranoid of Buller. Butler thought Buller was making death threats and that every one in the band's lives were in danger. Buller recalled a few phone conversations with Butler where he could hear a knife scratching against the phone. Butler's paranoia had gotten so severe that by the time he left the ultamatum that either he or Buller left, the label easily dumped him.

The full version of "The Asphalt World" has never surfaced and it is unknown if any copies exist. A few fans have claimed to have heard the full version via bootleg form, but these claims remain unconfirmed.