Schreurs, van Wieringen, Sander Rozeboom, Degiorgio Schreurs, van Wieringen, Robin Veldman, Degiorgio Track listing No.ĭavid Schreurs, Vincent Degiorgio, Jan van Wieringen, Robin Veldmanĭavid Schreurs, Jan van Wieringen, Caroline Esmeralda van der Leeuw, Vincent Degiorgioĭavid Schreurs, Vincent Degiorgio, van der Leeuwĭaan Herweg, van Wieringen, van der Leeuw, Vincent Degiorgio, David Schreursĭavid Schreurs, van der Leeuw, Vincent Degiorgioĭavid Schreurs, Rozeboom, Vincent Degiorgio Īs of December 2011, the album has sold more than 1,000,000 copies worldwide. As of May 2013, the album has sold 410,000 copies in the UK. In July 2011, Deleted Scenes from the Cutting Room Floor peaked at number 4 on the UK Albums Chart. In May 2011, the album also reached the Top 10 in the UK Albums Chart, jumping from number 140 during its fourth week in the chart. It later reached the Top 5 in Germany (#5), Poland and Austria (#3). In October 2010, the album was released by Dramatico Records in the United Kingdom and in several other European countries. Moreover, as of September 2011, Deleted Scenes from the Cutting Room Floor spent a total of 77 weeks in the Dutch Top 10, tying with Michael Jackson's Thriller as the longest ever running album there. The album later returned to #1, spending a total of 30 non-consecutive weeks on top of the Dutch Albums Chart. On 20 August 2010, Deleted Scenes from the Cutting Room Floor spent its 27th non-consecutive week at number one and became the longest running number-one album in the Netherlands, beating Michael Jackson's Thriller, which held the top spot for 26 weeks in 1983. Between 6 February 2010 and 28 August 2010, the album left the top spot for two weeks only, in April and in June, replaced by Jan Smit's Leef and Alain Clark's Colorblind, respectively. The album debuted at number one in the Dutch Albums Chart. Each song also has an individual synopsis, written by Degiorgio and added as liner notes to the album artwork.
#Caro emerald deleted scenes from the cutting room floor movie#
In accordance with the movie theme, David Schreurs and Vincent Degiorgio are credited as creative directors for creating the visual and conceptual world around the music, like artwork and videos. Scenes were cut in the so-called cutting room, where the deleted and therefore unused scenes fell to the cutting room floor.
The title refers to a figurative term in the film industry.