It was left off "Now And Zen" for the same reason why the track "Walking Towards Paradise" was originally a CD only bonus track and a B side to the single "Heaven Knows;" due to time constraints. CD mastering engineers can only put up the 74 minutes of music on a CD. This is per CD Red Book standards, which were jointly developed by Sony and Phillips back in 1980. These standards apply to all professionally made CD's. Now, when home CD burners came into the consumer market in the late 1990's and it became possible to burn custom CD-R's at home, it also became possible to burn up to 80 minutes of music on a blank CD-R. Some CD burners even allowed overburning as high as 82 minutes. I used to regularly overburn my mix discs to 81:52 minutes. But these home customizations are well outside the CD Red Book standard and aren't premitted on the professional market. Otherwise, consumers could potentially sue record labels for potential damage to their CD players. I've never personally lost a CD player due to playing overburned CD's, nor am I aware of anyone else who has, but the CD Red Book standards were developed for a reason and I respect that. Sources: searchstorage.techtarget.com/definition/Red-Book www.sageaudio.com/blog/pre-mastering-tips/what-is-isrc-and-red-book-standard.php
@@robbiestewart89 Wait...what?! You are saying playing a c.d....and a copy of one at that...that is over the running time of 80 minutes can hurt your player? I can't believe it when someone says something like that and leaves the readers hanging on explaining something so outrageous as that. Where do you get this information and what is it based on?!