Details

Track Listing 1. Overture / Going Through The Motions 2. I've Got A Theory / Bunnies / If We're Together 3. Mustard, The 4. Under Your Spell 5. I'll Never Tell 6. Parking Ticket, The 7. Rest in Peace 8. Dawn's Lament 9. Dawn's Ballet 10. What You Feel 11. Standing 12. Under Your Spell / Standing - (reprise) 13. Walk Through the Fire 14. Something to Sing About 15. What You Feel - (reprise) 16. Where Do We Go From Here? 17. Coda 18. End Credits: Broom Dance / Grr Argh 19. Main Title 20. Suite From Restless: Willow's Nightmare / First Rage / Chain Of Ancients 21. Suite From Hush: Silent Night / First Kiss / Enter The Gentleman / Schism 22. Sacrifice - (from "The Gift") 23. Something to Sing About - (demo, featuring Kai Cole/Joss Whedon)
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Joss Whedon, Kai Cole | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes This soundtrack from the television series features music and lyrics written by the show's creator Joss Whedon, as performed by cast members including Sarah Michelle Gellar. This soundtrack to the legendary musical episode of one of the most consistently entertaining shows on network TV is packed with Broadway-style songs sung by the cast with varying degrees of expertise. Put simply, it's a hoot. The premise is that a spell's been cast on them and they have to sing everything that comes out of their mouths, consequential or not, and whether they can sing or not. This leads to such songs as "They got the mustard out" (that's the entire lyric right there) and the priceless "Parking Ticket" song featuring the immortal lines "I think that hydrant wasn't there...I'm just a mortal don't you care/hey I'm not wearing underwear." The opener, "Going Through the Motions," features an ennui-laden Sarah Michelle Gellar lamenting her lack of interest in her vampire-snuffing activities, all the while fighting off a chorus of demons, ghouls, and various other manifestations of evil with all the enthusiasm of a teen forced to do the dishes. Some degree of Buffy orientation is required, and don't let the schmaltzy Disney-style orchestrations fool you--this teen musical's about as subversive as it gets.
Industry Reviews 5 stars out of 5 - ...It rocks, desperately and epically, and is funny and heartbreaking. Love it without irony...a Uncut (02/01/2003)
...This has the feel of a surrealist Broadway musical - or Frank Zappa's 200 MOTELS minus the smut. All in all, bloody okay. - Rating: B Entertainment Weekly (10/04/2002)
|