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Saving Private Ryan (soundtrack) Schindler's List (soundtrack) Short Cuts (soundtrack) Small Soldiers (soundtrack) South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (soundtrack) Space Jam: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture; Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (soundtrack) Swing: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
The new issue included featurettes and cast interviews, including:The Class of '95 (a look at the cast), Creative Writing (Amy Heckerling talks about the script), Fashion 101 (how filmmakers invented the trendsetting style of Clueless), Language Arts (the director and cast members give facts on the groundbreaking slang and how Clueless revived ...
Last Action Hero (soundtrack) The Last Great Wilderness (album) Laurel and Hardy music; Lead Us Not into Temptation; Leningrad Cowboys Go America (album) Lisztomania (album) The Little Vampire (soundtrack) Live 1965: Music from Charlie Is My Darling; Love and a .45 (soundtrack) Love Me or Leave Me (Doris Day album) Love Me Tender (EP) Lullaby ...
The song is best known for its chorus, " 'Eezer Goode, 'Eezer Goode / He's Ebeneezer Goode", the first part of which is phonetically identical to "Es are good" – 'E' being common slang for the drug ecstasy. [3] However, 'E' is also sung many other times during the song, ostensibly as ' e (i.e. he), such as in "E's sublime, E makes you feel ...
Dick Tracy (Original Score) is the 1990 soundtrack album to the film of the same name.It features songs written by Andy Paley and performed by such diverse musicians and singers as k.d. lang, Take 6, Jerry Lee Lewis, Brenda Lee, Tommy Page, August Darnell, Patti Austin, Erasure, Ice-T, LaVern Baker, Al Jarreau, Darlene Love and Paley himself.
Scream: Music from the Dimension Motion Picture is the original soundtrack to the film released on December 17, 1996, by TVT Records. It featured 11 songs—most of which appeared in various scenes in the film—in addition to a cue from Beltrami film's score. The soundtrack was not as successful, failing to chart on the US Billboard 200. [3]
The soundtrack is considered to have helped open the door to the explosive popularity of Seattle grunge in the early 1990s. According to Steve Huey of AllMusic, "Singles helped crystallize the idea of the 'Seattle scene' in the mainstream public's mind, and it was also one of the first big-selling '90s movie soundtracks (it went platinum and reached the Top Ten) to feature largely new work ...
Juice (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to Ernest Dickerson's 1992 crime film Juice. It was released on December 31, 1991, through SOUL/MCA Records and consists mainly of hip-hop and R&B music. [8] The album peaked at number 17 on the Billboard 200 and number 3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in the United States.