Lady Gaga The Fame Act Ii -itunes Plus- Zip -
All of the songs listed above are copyrighted by Interscope Records and Sony/ATV Music Publishing. Leaked demos are still intellectual property. Downloading them via unauthorized ZIP files is technically piracy. While labels rarely sue individual downloaders for old demos, your Internet Service Provider (ISP) may send you a warning.
While the allure of owning The Fame Act II is strong, you must understand the risks associated with searching for "Lady Gaga The Fame Act II -iTunes Plus- zip" .
In late 2009, following the explosive success of Just Dance and Poker Face, Lady Gaga was working at a frenetic pace. She had originally conceived The Fame as a two-part conceptual album. Act I was about the obsession with fame itself—the desire to get in. Act II, as she described in a now-deleted 2009 blog post, was about "the dark side of the elevator going up." Lady Gaga The Fame Act II -iTunes Plus- zip
This project was not The Fame Monster. Confusion often arises because The Fame Monster was an eight-track EP (later expanded) that dealt with the "paranoia" of fame. Act II, however, was a fully produced, 12-to-14-track second disc meant to be packaged with a re-release of the original album.
Songs rumored to be on Act II include:
When Interscope Records pushed for a tighter, more concise "horror" concept, Gaga pivoted. She took the strongest songs about fear and paranoia, rebranded them as The Fame Monster, and let Act II sink into the digital abyss.
Because no official CD exists, many "iTunes Plus" files are actually transcodes—MP3s that were converted from a low-bitrate YouTube video into a fake 256kbps AAC file. You are often downloading noise, not master quality. All of the songs listed above are copyrighted
While the official Act II remains unreleased, you can legally build a playlist that mirrors its spirit using existing iTunes Plus purchases.
Here is the "Fan-Made Act II" playlist you can create right now by buying the tracks individually on iTunes: When Interscope Records pushed for a tighter, more
By purchasing the officially available tracks in iTunes Plus format, you get the 256kbps AAC quality without ever touching a sketchy zip file.