46 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great flashback, November 13, 2002
Feather your hair and put on your one glove and get ready for a supurb flashback to the 80's. Wave 103 (Volume 2 in teh Grand Theft Auto: Vice City soundtrack series) has many great 80's pop tunes to add to anyone's music collection. This collection does include many great artists (like Tears for Fears, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Human League), but they could have picked better songs by these group. Like Shout, Relax, or Human, but the the songs they did pick are still good.
Since Amazon has no track listing, so here ya go:
01. DJ Adam First Inro
02. Frankie Goest To Hollywood - Two Tribes
03. Tears for Fears - Pale Shelter
04. Kim Wilde - Kids in America
05. Blondie - Atomic
06. A Flock of Seagulls - I Ran (So Far Away)
07. The Human League - (Keep Feeling) Fascination
08. DJ Adam First Halftime
09. Nena - 99 Luftballons
10. The Psychedelic Furs - Love My Way
11. Spandau Ballet - Gold
12. Thomas Dolby - Hyperactive!
13. Romeo Void - Never Say Never
14. Corey Hart - Sunglasses At Night
15. DJ Adam First Outro
16. Sissy Spirtz (Commercial Skit)
17. Synth And Son (Commericial Skit)
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent selection; note 2 missing songs from game, March 16, 2003
Grand Theft Auto Vice City has taken the video game soundtrack to the next level. This disc, based on the New Wave station "Wave", is actually included in the 7 CD box set for the game that is also available. (In my opinion, a much better value than buying one of two of the individual CDs.)
On Wave, we have the obnoxious DJ Adam First, who informs everyone that he is very knowledgable about music (which is why we're listening to him.)
The soundtrack on Amazon is correct, however, for some very odd reason, there are at least 2 songs missing from this disc that are included in the game. Gary Numan's classic "Cars" as well as 80s staple "Love Missle F1-11" by the one and only Sigue Sigue Sputnik do not appear on this disc. Not sure why, especially since the disc clocks in at under 60 minutes. That includes some amusing DJ moments (not included in the game) as well as a few commercials thrown in at the end. "Synth and Son - the home of keyboards!"
Whether or not you can even remember the 80s, this disc provides enough classics to hold you over. I Ran (So Far Away), by ultimate one-hit-wonders A Flock of Seagulls, which is featured on the TV commercial for the game, appears here. The Human League, Corey Hart, and Tears for Fears, it's all here from the game. The Psychedelic Furs are a great band, period, and their Love My Way (which is more early 80s) appears here. (One would think Pretty in Pink would pop up in the glitzy Vice City.)
Overall, recommended for GTA junkies, though again, I would recommend the box set much higher. For the money, it provides plenty of listening pleasure through multiple genres, and it's still a great value if you don't listen to one or two of the discs (everyone will balk at one of the stations, most likely.)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A superb compilation of the New Wave/New Romantic 80's sound, September 10, 2004
This is one of those niche releases, that is the musical accompaniment for the phenomenal selling "Grand Theft Vice City" Ps2/X-box/PC game. Mining a period in the early eighties when "Miami Vice" was the 80's cop-show of choice. But this is no ill-conceived release, rushing out to make a quick buck of the back of the game. (Well, actually it is to some degree, but the tracklisting / Compiling here is sublime).
After the amusing radio-show styled presenter, introduces you to the cd with his own blend of amusing kitsch. You're transported back to the musical hey-day of early 80's FM radio-rock/Pop.
"Frankie Goes to Hollywood's" sublime "Two Tribes" is a perfect starter, and proves to be the perfect catalyst to get the listeners attention fully. It's step above the usual Pop tracks and it's combination of outspoken lyrics mixed with dance orientated sounds, means this is certainly one of those tracks from the 80's that has worn well, and actually stands up remarkably well.....in fact I'd go so far as to say it one of the best highlights on an album with lots of choice cuts.
"Kim Wilde" was destined to forever live in the shadow of someone like "Blondie", but her biggest hit "Kids in America" is aptly represented here, and to be honest it a fairly good stab at the knowingly cool bumblegum-pop that Blondie do so well, and actually enjoyed heavy rotation on radio on it's initial release. But the more ambitious & Detached sound of "Blondie's" own "Atomic" is the next track, and as excellent as Kim's effort is, it just can't match the sassy cool, and beautifully realised new-wave sound of Blondie's effort. (although it is nice to have a direct comparison of the two).
"The Human League" toss their synth-pop hat into the ring with one of their earlier hits with the slightly weird, off-kilter synth's of "(Keep Feeling) Fascination", and anyone that was familiar with their own unique of New Romatic, will have a hard job wiping away the nostalgic tears, when they hear this one. Easily one of their finest singles.
"Nena's" one hit wonder of "99 Red Ballons" features here, but the hugely disappointing thing is that its the German version.....Why???, is the question most people will asks themselves when they first hear this track. It's still as truly fantastic piece of catchy throw-away pop music, but having the English language version would have been infinitely more preferable. (one assumes there was a problem licensing the English version). Nonetheless this still remains one of the quintessential 80's pop tracks. (obviously depending on your view of that musical period).
"Corey Hart's - Sunglasses at Night" will even been familiar to those that haven't heard the original, due to the sublime "Tiga & Zyntherius" club/dance remix of this track, which surprisingly apart from being noticeably slower and lacking the dance beats of the remixed version, with the tempo radically altered and pedalling an atmosphere that is far more moody & gloomy. This is still well worth checking out for those that are only familiar with the 2000 remix edition.
For those that view the whole 80's musical scene with great suspicion and think it was a period in music they'd rather forget, or you've played the "Grand Theft Auto" game, and the music drove you distraction, It's highly advisable you give this a miss, and this album works firmly on the premise of 'Nostalgia' & retro, to make it's mark with the listener.
Some will also bemoan the slightly 'Cheesy' nature of the tracks here, and there are a couple of tracks ("A Flock Of Seagulls' - I Ran (So Far Away)", "Tears For Fears - Pale Shelter"), that just about manage to stay on the right side of cheesy. But to criticise the compilation for being cheesy is slightly missing the point. It is (to some degree) supposed to be a retrospective of the music genres that made a large portion of 80's music (Rock, Hip-Hop, Soul/R&B, Pop, etc...), and so will sound dated in comparison to what we're used to today. But remarkably (due to some excellent compiling), the vast majority of the works here are excellent efforts, and I found that looking past the nostalgic attachment with the songs here, there still remains an incredibly solid set of tracks to enjoy & digest. Maybe not an essential purchase for those that didn't hear this the first time around, but if you did enjoy these songs on their original release, you owe it to yourself to pick up a copy of this superb collection of 80's retrospective. (better still, if your varied with your music genres, pick up the box set with all 7 albums).
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