Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-11
Quick Words:
Angus-soundtrack-review-Green
Full Text:
Quick Flick Pick-
The Key To A Successful Soundtrack
(with photo album)
By Shannon Hicks
The feature film Angus has just been released in theatres, but the first
single from this flick - "J.A.R." by Green Day (no, not found on the band's
breakthrough album, dookie ) - has been on the radio for nearly six weeks
already. It is a great alternative/modern rock cut, and it gives you an exact
idea of what you will get from the remainder of the soundtrack: 11 more tracks
from the same musical vein.
It's a bonanza for modern rock lovers; a nevermind for non-listeners.
A few years back, soundtrack producers finally clued themselves in to what the
music-buying public has been trying to tell them for years: put the music
that's really heard in the features on the soundtrack, not the garbage singles
that are just five minutes of junk to begin with and are only used as fillers
in the movie, anyway.
Singles and Clerks are two of the best soundtrack albums to have in your
collection for this exact reason: the albums are the true sound of the movies.
While neither movie was a commercial success at the box office, rentals of
both movies on video have made them nearly cult classics, and their
accompanying soundtracks are gold mines of singles not found elsewhere by some
of modern rock's brightest stars (Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Smashing Pumpkins,
Screaming Trees, et al).
Angus continues this good idea, with the above-mentioned first single from
Green Day, followed with new works by the likes of Smoking Popes, Weezer, Goo
Goo Dolls and Love Spit Love, among other staples of modern rock radio. All of
these bands already have singles from their own albums being played on the
air; Angus now gives listeners a chance to get deeper into each band's
treasure trove. Choice picks include "Ain't That Unusual" by Goo Goo Dolls,
"Funny Face" by The Muffs, and "Am I Wrong" by Love Spit Love ("good-bye/ lay
the blame on love..."), the last of which has also been given airplay for
quite a while now.
Whatever Angus - the feature film - does at the box office, modern
rock/alternative music listeners will no doubt find something on Angus - the
soundtrack - well worth a listen or two.
