Danny Boyle, Andrew MacDonald and John Hodge's adaptation of Irvine Welsh's Trainspotting was one of those rare films that captured the spirit and style of contemporary youth culture. That alone was a remarkable event, but what was even more surprising was how its accompanying soundtrack summarized the sounds of mid-'90s British alternative music. They couldn't hope to replicate that seminal event with the soundtrack to their subsequent romantic comedy, A Life Less Ordinary, and they don't, even though the album has plenty to recommend it on its own. Since the film is set in America, it is only appropriate that there are several American bands on the soundtrack (Trainspotting was almost entirely British), and several of the songs have a distinct country leaning. The first half of the record is stellar, featuring Beck's groovy, swinging "Deadweight," and Luscious Jackson's "Love Is Here," Ash's storming title track, R.E.M.'s re-recorded (and superior) "Leave," and Folk Implosion's "Kingdom of Lies," among others. The second half sags a bit, as a pair of oldies (Elvis Presley's "Always On My Mind," Bobby Darin's "Beyond the Sea") and a couple of nonentities (Dusted's "Deeper River") hurt the momentum, but that doesn't distract from the pleasures of new tracks from the Cardigans, A3, Underworld and the Prodigy. In the end, A Life Less Ordinary isn't as consistently engaging as Trainspotting, but it doesn't really matter, since this soundtrack offers more thrills than average and has a distinctive, compelling mood of its own. Source: [AMG]
Ash - A Life Less Ordinary
Track Listing 1. Beck - Deadweight 2. Luscious Jackson - Love Is Here 3. Ash - A Life Less Ordinary 4. Sneaker Pimps - Velvet Divorce 5. The Folk Implosion - Kingdom of Lies 6. R.E.M. - Leave [New Version] 7. Faithless - Don't Leave 8. Underworld - Oh 9. The Cardigans - It's War 10. Elvis Presley - Always on My Mind 11. Alabama 3 - Peace in the Valley 12. Bobby Darin - Beyond the Sea 13. Squirrel Nut Zippers - Put a Lid on It 14. Dusted - Deeper River 15. Prodigy - Full Throttle
The gimmick here is that on each track a hard rock act has been combined with a rap act: Sonic Youth and Cypress Hill, Living Colour and Run-D.M.C., and so on. The idea, as with Run-D.M.C.'s duet with Aerosmith on "Walk This Way," is to achieve musical synergy and commercial crossover, and at least the second goal was met when this album went gold while the movie it accompanied went into the dumper. But, as on any duet album, from Sinatra to Elton John, the concept has to be translated into appropriate pairings on good songs to really work. Sometimes, it has. Living Colour and Run-D.M.C. meld well on "Me, Myself & My Microphone," and Slayer and Ice-T make an angry thrash of "Disorder." But in both cases, the rappers are familiar with the style -- Ice-T has a metal band of his own in Body Count. Elsewhere, neither the rappers nor the metal kids sound distinctive enough to make a striking impression beyond a faithfulness to a hard, angry approach. Source: [AMG]
Teenage Fanclub & De La Soul - Fallin`
Track Listing 1. Helmet & House Of Pain - Just Another Victim 2. Teenage Fanclub & De La Soul - Fallin' 3. Living Colour & Run DMC - Me, Myself & My Microphone 4. Biohazard & Onyx - Judgment Night 5. Slayer & Ice-T - Disorder 6. Faith No More & Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. - Another Body Murdered 7. Sonic Yout & Cypress Hill - I Love You Mary Jane 8. Mudhoney & Sir Mix-A-Lot - Freak Momma 9. Dinosaur Jr. & Del The Funky Homosapien - Missing Link 10. Therapy & Fatal - Come and Die 11. Pearl Jam & Cypress Hill - Real Thing