A new edit of the single version was released on the 1999 compilation Turn It On Again: The Hits and later on The Platinum Collection.
Consequently, the group's 1999 compilation album Turn It On Again: The Hits was named after it, as was the band's 2007 Turn It On Again: The Tour reunion Tour.
# "Many Too Many" (Banks) (from ...And Then There Were Three...) – 3:31
hits | greatest hits | classic hits | The Turn of the Screw | Turn! Turn! Turn! | Hairpin turn | U-turn | Greatest Hits | adult hits | The Turn of the Screw (opera) | Whitney: The Greatest Hits | Turn On Your Love Light | Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol. II | The Sound of Girls Aloud: The Greatest Hits | The Best of Pantera: Far Beyond the Great Southern Cowboys' Vulgar Hits! | Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark | Rocket Man: The Definitive Hits | Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits & How Baseball Got Big | Gary Puckett & The Union Gap's Greatest Hits | End Hits | Classic Hits | Wrong Turn | Ultimate Hits: Rock and Roll Never Forgets | Turn! Turn! Turn! (to Everything There Is a Season) | Turn! Turn! Turn! (album) | Turn the Radio Off | Turn state's evidence | Turn Out the Lights | Turn It On Again: The Tour | Turn It On Again: The Hits |
#"Shir Kdam-Shnati (Sex Acher)" (Hebrew; "Pre-Bed Song (A Different Kind of Sex)") (with 'Eran Tzur - Offer Nissim Remix) - 4:32
The song appeared in instrumental form (the middle keyboard and guitar solos) as part of the 1992 We Can't Dance tour and 1998 Calling All Stations tour, as well as in 2007's Turn It On Again: The Tour.
# "Come Get Some"* (featuring Lil' Jon & Sean Paul of YoungBloodZ)* – 4:19 Previously unreleased
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While featuring new material, the greatest hits disc contains rare tracks such as a 2003 production "Come Get Some", which featured Sean Paul and Lil Jon of YoungBloodZ, and an exclusive censored version of the song "Whoop De Woo" (a leftover track from the 3D recording sessions).
The delay was due to legal problems caused by the fact that since Pet Shop Boys began, they have been with four different record labels in the US: EMI (1985–1995), Atlantic (1996–1998), Sire Records (1999–2001) and Sanctuary Records (2002–2003).
The album contains ten out of eleven of Jamelia's UK Top 40 singles to date and omits her debut single, "So High", her first top forty hit "I Do", Drama single "Boy Next Door" and her collaboration with Tiziano Ferro, "Universal Prayer", which remains unreleased in the UK.