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Songs from american pie
Songs from american pie













songs from american pie

'Cause the players tried to take the fieldĪnd as the flames climbed high into the nightīut the man there said the music wouldn't play While the sergeants played a marching tune With the jester on the sidelines in a cast The birds flew off with a fallout shelter When the jester sang for the king and queen

songs from american pie

Them good ole boys were drinking whiskey and ryeĪnd singin' this'll be the day that I die Well, I know that you're in love with him It deserves a soundtrack with more character.Drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee was dryĪnd them good ole boys were drinking whiskey and ryeĪnd can you teach me how to dance real slow? That's too bad, because American Pie is a memorable teen movie. Taken individually, some of these tracks work and may sound good on the radio (for instance, Tonic's lead single, "You Wanted More," has more personality on the airwaves than it does here), but everything blends together too much to leave a lasting impression. Whether it's post-grunge pop or tempered ska-punk or lunkheaded neo-swing, it all shares the same clean production and a reliance on distorted guitars for sonic coloring the two Bic Runga songs - one her signature tune, "Sway," the other, "Good Morning Baby," a duet with " Dan Wilson of Semisonic" - and arguably Bachelor Number One's tune are the only time the post-grunge bombast takes a breather. That's not necessarily a bad thing, actually, since some of the debut cuts - Shades Apart's "Stranger by the Day," Bachelor Number One's "Summertime," and Super TransAtlantic's "Super Down," in particular - hold their own quite nicely, but the main problem is that all the songs on the album sound too damn similar. If you're wondering why you don't recognize about half the names on the record, that's the reason why. Universal released both the film and its soundtrack, and quite a few Universal artists are featured on the record, including debut cuts from a number of new acts. That's not the case with American Pie, which is a sleek, smooth-running corporate machine. It's impossible to think of the Farrelly brothers' masterpiece without thinking of Jonathan Richman's running chorus or the positioning of Joe Jackson's "Is She Really Going Out with Him" or the closing "Build Me Up Buttercup" - the songs were not only a soundtrack, they were a running commentary on the film itself. Unlike Mary, the filmmakers didn't weave a distinct soundtrack into their movie. Since it followed There's Something About Mary, the filmmakers were allowed to take some vulgar liberties unimaginable in the '80s. American Pie was designed to bring Porky's into the '90s - no mean feat, since Porky's was made in the '80s and set in the '50s.















Songs from american pie