<P> The album has been certified 2x platinum in the U.S. </P> <P> Also missing is the special "Lament" Flexipop single from 1982, as this was not a proper single, and "I'm a Cult Hero" from 1979, probably because it was released under a different band name (Cult Hero). </P> <P> The man featured on the album cover was not a member of the Cure; he was chosen because his appearance fit the desired aesthetic of the album . His name is John Button, and was at the time a retired fisherman . He also appeared in the music video for "Killing an Arab". According to the band's 2005 biography by Jeff Apter, when asked why he agreed to lend his face to the band's media, Button's answer was, "If I can help these youngsters break through, after all, why not?" He also reportedly said that he would buy a player and listen to one of the band's songs "out of curiosity, just to see". </P> <Ol> <Li> "Killing an Arab" (Robert Smith, Lol Tolhurst, Michael Dempsey)--2: 22 </Li> <Li> "Boys Don't Cry" (Smith, Tolhurst, Dempsey)--2: 35 </Li> <Li> "Jumping Someone Else's Train" (Smith, Tolhurst, Dempsey)--2: 54 (from Boys Don't Cry, 1980) </Li> <Li> "A Forest" (Smith, Tolhurst, Simon Gallup, Matthieu Hartley)--4: 53 (from Seventeen Seconds, 1980) </Li> <Li> "Primary" (Smith, Tolhurst, Gallup)--3: 33 (from Faith, 1981) </Li> <Li> "Charlotte Sometimes" (Smith, Tolhurst, Gallup)--4: 13 </Li> <Li> "The Hanging Garden" (Smith, Tolhurst, Gallup)--4: 21 (from Pornography, 1982) </Li> </Ol>

Who is the man on the cover of staring at the sea