It would have to be an EXTREMELY well-chosed rap song, otherwise the mood would be totally ruined.
he had a Foxy Brown song on the Jackie Brown OST (Letter to the Firm) wich is, indeed, an extremely well chosen rap-song
Yah that one was good. But as i said it has to be well chosen
I thought I had QT’s taste in music figured out until the Kill Bill soundtracks.
I think he would like these songs :
Green Onions - Booker T & The MG’s
Fontella Bass - Rescue Me!
Time is Tight - Booker T & The MG’s
Pink Floyd - Money
Pink Floyd - We Don’t Need No Education
Jimmi Hendrix - All Along The Watchtower
Dick Dale - Ghostrider’s In The Sky
Nena - 99 Luftballons
The Outfield’s - I Dont Wanna Lose Your Love Tonight
Ohio Player’s - Love Rollercoaster
The Clash - Louie, Louie
America - A Horse With No Name
Ash - Walking Barefoot
David Bowie - Rebel Rebel
Eddie Money - Give Me Some Water
Joe Cocker - Hot Town, Summer In The City
Kurtis Blow - (These Are) The Breaks
Prince - Darling Nikki
Sweet - Ballroom Blitz
Johnny Cash - When The Man Comes Around
[quote=“Bad Max”]
Johnny Cash - When The Man Comes Around
[/quote]
But QT wouldn’t use that, he knows not to use songs movies already crisined. (I think thats spelt wrong)
[quote=“CopperHead”]
But QT wouldn’t use that, he knows not to use songs movies already crisined. (I think thats spelt wrong)
[/quote]
How do you know that? Not saying you’re wrong, but did he say in an interview…or are you just assuming that is something he does.
He’s said it in a interview.
Quentin loves just about every song in the world. Cheesy or not.
[quote=“Black Mamba!”]
How do you know that? Not saying you’re wrong, but did he say in an interview…or are you just assuming that is something he does.
[/quote]
On the Pulp Fiction Special Edition OST, there is a interview with QT where he mentions what I said earlier.
I knew I heard it somewhere. I listen to it on my IPOD all the time.
[quote=“Ify”]
Correct me if I’m wrong, but didn’t QT start the whole dialogue in a OST thing??[/quote]
You’re wrong. There’s probably an earlier example but when Jack Nicholson edited the LP of the soundtrack to ‘Head’ he used snippets of dialogue from the movie. Sometimes mixing two seperate sentences to make a new one. For example,“You’re music was pretty white.” “And you know, the same goes for Christmas.” Also the soundtracks to the Monty Python films are heavily dialogue based.
[quote=“ClarenceWorley”]
There isn’t any lame music in his movies.
[/quote]
What about “She was six and he was seven……â€??
I must admit I was excited when I found out that he was using a Neu! track in Kill Bill Volume One.
he seems to know the best soul music aswell though i have to admit apart from “across 110th street” the jackie brown soundtrack was pretty poor as far as qt’s standards of soul music is.
Cheech and Chongs Up In Smoke soundtrack has dialogue excerpts from the film before each song like QTs soundtracks.
Guys listen to this great interview. He first talks about Lenzi’s film Nightmare City - I think the first time “Infected people” ran was in The Crazies. I mean everyone rips off Romero, but anyways, just listen to this - it’s gold!
<LINK_TEXT text=“http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtR5Cxsc … re=related”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtR5Cxscnu4&feature=related</LINK_TEXT>
We’ve all seen that a million times, a million years ago. But thanks a million ;D
I kid, I kid.
Haha. Yeah. What IS he wearing, BTW?