Spawn
 |
Artist:
Original Soundtrack
Label:
Sony
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Limited Edition
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 074646889824
EAN: 0074646889824
ASIN: B000002C4M
Release Date: 1997-11-25 |
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Listmania:
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SPAWN..one of my amaizing collections!
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Add to you Marilyn Manson collection...
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My Favorite Rock Albums Ever #2 (in no particular order)
Tracks:
- (Can't You) Trip Like I Do - Filter & The Crystal Method
- Long Hard Road Out Of Hell - Marilyn Manson & Sneaker Pimps
- Satan - Orbital & Kirk Hammet
- Kick The P.A. - Korn & The Dust Brothers
- Tiny Rubberband - Butthole Surfers & Moby
- For Whom The Bell Tolls (The Irony Of It All) - Metallica & DJ Spooky
- Torn Apart - Stabbing Westward & Wink
- Skin Up Pin Up - Mansun & 808 State
- One Man Army - Prodigy & Tom Morello
- Spawn - Silverchair & Vitro
- T-4 Strain - Henry Rollins & Goldie
- Familiar - Incubus & D.J. Greyboy
- No Remorse (I Wanna Die) - Slayer & Atari Teenage Riot
- A Plane Scraped Its Belly On A Sooty Yellow Moon - Soul Coughing & Roni Size
- This Is Not A Dream (The U.K. Mix) - Apollo 440 & Morphine
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Customer Reviews:
A great album, a massive soundtrack.......2006-07-11
I was a big fan of Spawn before I got to be a big fan of music. When I found the soundtrack in a garage sale, I jumped on it and had listen it almost a thousand times!! ...When I realized I had a special one: instead of "For whom the bells tolls" of Metalica on track 6, I have "This is not a dream" from Apollo 440 and Morphine, and I must admit it's my personal favorite track on the album!! I'm glad I didn't bought the American version.
The Lost Art of Great Soundtracks!! .......2006-03-29
Spawn is by far, along with the original Batman starring Michael Keaton, the best comic book remake movie ever. Sadly underplayed, especially to the recent flood of sub-par remakes. Well, not only was the magic and mayhem captured forever on film, the soundtrack played a huge roll in the movie as well, thus making it a vital part of the movie that sadly, now, has seemed to become a forgotten craft: That is of course, the lost art of producing a Great movie soundtrack. Showcasing some of the best and most cutting edge artists of that era, which may have not been very long ago, but nevertheless was a significant time. A time of change within the rock community. A precursor to what would be the short life of Nu-Metal and the rebirth of straight up Rock and Roll, which seemed to split fans right down the middle, and all different ways at that. A cool time and a cool change that was long overdue in the music world. although this is one soundtrack that is definitely dated, it is still a much appreciated and a more often than not listened to addition to my collection. Anyone who loves the movie needs this soundtrack, not to mention anyone who just loves music of the heavier sort, this is an awesome soundtrack.
Classic fusion of genra's.......2006-03-02
This soundtrack knows what it needs to be and works really hard at succeeding...and for the most part it really does. From the explosive first track, Filter and Crystal Method set the bar very high, and for the most part the following tracks, while never fulling living up to "Trip like I Do" still fit the mold and deserve to be listed on the same track listing. "Long Hard Road out of Hell" is a great song, dispite the controversy of Sneaker Pimps regreting having to woek with Manson, they still delivered a brilliant song, and the second best on the album. "Satan" by Orbital and Kirk Hammet as well as "Tiny Rubberband" by the Butthole Surfers and Moby really stand out as quality tracks. The redone "FOr Whom the Bell Tolls" is appropriate subject matter, but all in all I was not overly impressed with the track. "Torn Apart" is brilliant (gotta love Stabbing Westward) and Prodigy's "One man Army" is freaking killer. Closing track by Soul Coughing & Roni Size is decent but I would have closed with Slayer's "No remorse" instead. Here is my HUGE complaint...KoRn's "Kick the P.A." is one of the dumbest songs ever, and with the talent that KoRn has shown they possess this was a waste of a track...They could have done SOOOOOO much better. Incubus and Silverchair are fine and Henry Rollins shows he still has it (never lost it)...so all in all Spawn delivers...they just should have cut KoRn before the CD was released!
I need to re-comment.......2006-01-28
Since years have passed and I have matured enough to write a better review, here it goes...
This is one of the darkest and most superb soundtracks that is out there right now. Combining rock metal with electronica was pure genius. Each song has its own significant deliverance, such as revenge and restoration. Filter and the Crystal Method's "(Can't You) Trip Like I Do" had me hooked for months with its dance-like tone, while Orbital's remix of "Satan" with Kirk Hammett made my spine tingle with its creepy rhythms. "Tiny Rubberband" is so wierd it's incredible. "Familiar" and "A Plane Scraped Its Belly on a Sooty Yellow Moon" are so-so songs, otherwise this CD overall is a must for people who enjoy metal and techno. This gets an A+ from me.
Excellent.......2006-01-18
If you reject this on the premise that rock and remix don't get along, you're missing a very good album. True, the Cure did for Purple Haze (on the "Stone Free" tribute to Jimi Hendrix) what Ashlee Simpson did for singing off-key, but the idea of mixing techno beats with the rock genre was a revolutionary idea for its time. Actually, think more aggressive drum'n'bass. We're not setting Metallica to any early 90's rollerdance here, but to the dark and sinister wonders of Ronnie Size and the Sneaker Pimps. I nixed one star because of: 1. Atari Teenage Riot (which honestly doesn't sound remixed so much as repackaged in the same "scream a lot to a fast beat, be silent for a measure, say something menacing, repeat" syndrome that makes every ATR LP sound alike) 2. Mansun's "Skin Up Pin Up," which was just weird; 3. the Prodigy track (the remix minces Tom Morello's brilliant guitarwork into sampling obscurity) and 4. the Stabbing Westward track (done better on their album "Darkest Days.")
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- Days of Darkness ~ Testament
- No Jive ~ Nazareth
- Dreaming with the Dead ~ Ripping Corpse
- Panting on the Wall ~ Edguy
- Def Before Dishonor ~ Hard Corps
- Rips the Covers Off ~ L.A. Guns
- Chaos A.D. ~ Sepultura
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