True. The album is called "The White Album" but that's a description, not the title. The title of the album is The Beatles.
Fleetwood Mac's first album was self-titled, then their ninth album was self-titled as well, when they re-invented themselves in the 70's with Buckingham and Nicks (a lot of people actually think it is their first album). Before that, they were more of a blues band that started in the 60's.
Chicago's first and second albums were both technically self-titled. The band was originally The Chicago Transit Authority, and that was the name of their first album. Then the real CTA threatened to sue (because it's so easy to confuse a rock band with a bus company) so they shortened the band name to Chicago, which is what they named their second album.
Stone Temple Pilots' latest album, their sixth, is self-titled. This may have been a "statement" in that the band had broken up for like eight or nine years and was back. Also, their sound has changed a lot, but it's the same four guys, so maybe it was also something of a reassurance that's it's still them.
Peter Gabriel's first four albums are all self-titled. They are all Peter Gabriel. He said that the idea was to make them like issues of a magazine. Name in the corner, same font, just different pictures. They had to name the fourth one Security in the U.S. because Americans are so easily confused.
The album commonly referred to as "Led Zeppelin IV" has no title, or if it does, the title is the four glyphs. There is no writing anywhere on the outside cover, including the spine. The label on the record itself was the standard Atlantic orange and green, with Led Zeppelin and then the four glyphs where the name of the album goes.
And so on.