Pineapple Express (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack]
Download links and information about Pineapple Express (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack]. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 52:51 minutes.
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Release date: | 2008 |
Genre: | Theatre/Soundtrack |
Tracks: | 15 |
Duration: | 52:51 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Pineapple Express (Huey Lewis & The News) | 4:26 |
2. | Electric Avenue (Eddy Grant) | 3:48 |
3. | Dr. Greenthumb (Cypress Hill) | 3:08 |
4. | Lost At Birth (Public Enemy) | 3:33 |
5. | Poison (Bell Biv DeVoe) | 4:20 |
6. | Wanted Dread and Alive (Peter Tosh) | 4:22 |
7. | Don't Look Around (The Mountain) | 3:44 |
8. | Pineapple Chase (a.k.a. The Reprise of the Phoenix) (Graeme Revell) | 3:03 |
9. | Bird's Lament (Moondog And The London Saxophonic) | 2:02 |
10. | Coconut Girl (Brother Nolan) | 3:36 |
11. | Hilawe (Arthur Lyman) | 1:09 |
12. | The Crossroads (Bone Thugs - N - Harmony) | 3:45 |
13. | Pineapple Fight (a.k.a. The Nemesis Proclaimed) (Graeme Revell) | 3:08 |
14. | I Didn't Mean to Hurt You (Spiritualized) | 5:12 |
15. | Woke Up Laughing (Robert Palmer) | 3:35 |
Details
[Edit]The fertile, culturally attuned comic minds of Judd Apatow, Seth Rogen, and Evan Goldberg pose a question that apparently escaped everyone else in sequel-mad Hollywood: What if Jerry Bruckheimer made a stoner comedy? Chances are the veteran action producer wouldn’t have blessed it with as delightfully a loopy soundtrack collection, one that spins Huey Lewis and the News’ infectious, ‘80s throwback title track into a dizzy musical cocktail that freely mixes prime hip-hop (Cypress Hill, Public Enemy, Bone, Thugs-N-Harmony) and Jamaican influences as disparate as Peter Tosh and Eddy Grant’s Rock-of-the-‘80s staple “Electric Avenue” alongside Bell Biv DeVoe, Mountain’s ‘70s hard rock, and even exotica pioneer Arthur Lyman. Top it off with some Robert Palmer and Spiritualized, a couple slices of composer Graeme Revell’s nervous, Bruckheimer-lampooning action score and the sublime “Bird’s Lament” by Moondog & The London Saxophonic and you’ve got a wonderfully free-associating collection as potent as the mythical herb that inspired it.