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Django Unchained is the soundtrack to Quentin Tarantino's motion picture Django Unchained.It was originally released on December 18, 2012. The soundtrack uses a variety of music genres, though with an especially heavy influence from Spaghetti Western soundtracks.
It also contains the original 16mm short version of Street Trash. [ 10 ] In 2010, Arrow Video released a two-DVD set in the UK featuring the documentary Meltdown Memoirs along with a previously unavailable featurette with Jane Arakawa and the booklet 42nd Street Trash: The Making of the Melt written by Calum Waddell. [ 11 ]
Django is the inspiration for the 1969 song and album Return of Django by the Jamaican reggae group the Upsetters. Additionally, Django is the subject of the song "Django" on the 2003 Rancid album Indestructible. The music video for the Danzig song "Crawl Across Your Killing Floor" is inspired by the film and shows Glenn Danzig dragging a ...
The song was used in an advert for Ford's Unlearn campaign in 2016. [4] The song can be heard in advertising for the ninth season of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. The song was used in an advert for the Google Pixel phone. [5]
The band had a number 6 hit in the UK Singles Chart in April 1972 with a song, "Run Run Run", [1] taken from the album. It also received airplay on U.S. album-oriented rock FM radio stations. [5] The song reached number 30 in Canada. [6] Their second album, Bite Down Hard, was a minor success, peaking on the Billboard Top 200 chart at number 75 ...
"Ooh, Whatcha Gonna Do" is the second single released from Run–D.M.C.'s sixth studio album, Down with the King. It was produced by legendary production team, The Bomb Squad. In the United States, the song peaked at number 78 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and number 21 on the Hot Rap Singles chart. [citation needed]
The song is included in most of Run-D.M.C.'s compilation albums, including Together Forever: Greatest Hits 1983–1991, Greatest Hits, [1] Ultimate Run-D.M.C., The Best of Run-DMC, High Profile: The Original Rhymes, and Super Hits. It was also included on the group's first live album, Live at Montreux 2001.
"Pause" is the first single released from Run–D.M.C.'s fifth studio album, Back from Hell. It was released in 1989 alongside Run-D.M.C.'s version of "Ghostbusters" and was produced by Jam Master Jay and Davy D. "Pause" peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Hot Black Singles chart and number 11 on the Hot Rap Singles chart.