Two previously unreleased songs by Disturbed will likely pop up in the next few months.

The first will probably be a new track for an upcoming film soundtrack, singer David Draiman said. The second will be a live version of "Dehumanized," a song the band wrote when it penned its previous album, Believe, but held for a different soundtrack.

"It was kept off the record on purpose, but we still haven't found the right vehicle for it," the singer said. "So in the meantime we're going to put a live version of it on the Music as a Weapon II CD and DVD."

Music as a Weapon II, due February 24, chronicles the final show of the 2003 package tour, which took place in the band's Chicago hometown on May 3. The release will feature six songs by Disturbed and two each by Chevelle, Taproot and Unloco. It will be available as a single CD or packaged with a DVD of the same show.

Highlights include a cover of Metallica's "Fade to Black" that segues into "Darkness," a version of "Stupefy" featuring Unloco singer Joey Duenas and Chevelle singer/guitarist Pete Loeffler, and Chevelle's hit "In the Red" with a guest performance by Draiman.

"It's exactly what it was meant to be," Draiman said of the record. "It's a heavy metal show in our hometown with all the power, mayhem and everything else normally associated with the bands."

Music as a Weapon II will be the first release on Draiman and bandmate Dan Donegan's new label, Intoxication Records, which will be distributed through Disturbed's record company, Warner Bros. Other Intoxication albums are forthcoming, though no acts have yet been signed. Draiman hoped to recruit Memento, but the group got a more appealing offer from Columbia.

"I didn't want to get into a bidding war, so I figured we'd work with the next best thing," Draiman said. "But it's really difficult finding the next best thing. I get thousands and thousands of demos I go through, but a lot of it is just not cutting the mustard. So we're still looking."

Draiman and Donegan launched Intoxication last year. The goal, Draiman said, was to nurture a trusting relationship between the band and its fans similar to those they enjoyed as teenage record buyers. "I remember the days when certain record labels were a friend, not the enemy," Draiman said. "You bought a record just because it came out on a specific label, because you trusted the label even if you hadn't heard of the band. That's why Danny and I started Intoxication, to create another situation kids can trust."