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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than the movie...?
When I started listening to this, it had been a year or so since I had seen the movie (which I liked), and I couldn't remember which scenes correponded to which tracks. Therefore I enjoyed it as a completley seperate work of art. When I re-watched the movie recently, I was almost dissapointed; the music actually seemed weakened in the context of the scenes. Don't get me...
Published on April 10, 2004 by Henry Platte

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0 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars No trains spotted
The only good song on this album is 'lust for life.' I thought the soundtrack was going to be pretty good, but only 'lust for life' was a good and catchy song. The songs are different from most music out there and I would only buy this album if you really liked the movie.
Published on May 20, 2000 by Eric Aros


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than the movie...?, April 10, 2004
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
When I started listening to this, it had been a year or so since I had seen the movie (which I liked), and I couldn't remember which scenes correponded to which tracks. Therefore I enjoyed it as a completley seperate work of art. When I re-watched the movie recently, I was almost dissapointed; the music actually seemed weakened in the context of the scenes. Don't get me wrong, Trainspotting is excellent, but the soundtrack stands indepedently and possibly even above it as a pop-culture watermark.

It's been observed that there's a lot of variance in the music, but I do think it's held together by a certain theme, a depiction of a way of life - squalor (Mile End, 2:1), desperatley sincere attempts to find some happiness or amusement (Lust For Life, Atomic, For What You Dream Of), an underlying and understandable sense of desperation (Sing and Perfect Day, the only songs which I thought perfectly matched their respective scenes in the movie), made bearable by the occasional glimpse of real, innocent sweetness (Temptation).

Taken seperatley, the songs are again very strong; there are great commerical hits like 'Temptation' and 'Born Slippy,' and more obscure but excellent tracks like 'Sing,' which I don't think can be found on any other album, but which I think is one of Blur's best songs, ever. The instrumental tracks are also good, particularly 'Trainspotting' itself.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Soundtrack Fits the Movie, October 2, 2000
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
While most of the songs on this soundtrack can stand alone, they do form a cohesive and convincing ensemble of songs to create the ambience needed to build the world of Mark Renton and his misfit gang of heroin junkie and crime addicted friends. The movie is an interesting collection of character sketches, if not a disgusting look at the life of heroin addicts, and the soundtrack serves as a perfect backdrop to this narration. "Lust for Life" is a perfect lead-off anthem (although, I am disappointed to report that "Lust for Life" is now being used in a series of inane American t.v. commercials for a cruise ship company...) Primal Scream's "Trainspotting" fits the bill (as a lot of their music would) because it just floats along with no real end in sight, no real climax, and the lifestyle of the characters seems to have this low-key element to it. Nothing matters to them but the "next hit". Based on the strength of Sleeper's remake of Blondie's "Atomic" I ran out and bought an entire Sleeper album but was disappointed by an album of sameness... but "Atomic" is a great addition to this soundtrack and reminds me of the scene in the film in which the song is played (which is a pretty good scene!) Lou Reed's "Perfect Day" and Pulp's "Mile End" are both fantastic additions here, fitting the subject matter nicely. And Underworld's LONG but infinitely satisfying dance track "Born Slippy" seals it up for me. A great album! The entire work sails smoothly along, hitting no significant snags along the way... making a solid product and overall listening enjoyment.
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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best soundtracks in modern music, November 6, 2001
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This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
I consider the soundtrack to the movie "Trainspotting" one of the most definitive soundtrack in modern music. There is an eclectic mix of artists and bands that ranges from alternative to techno, mixing old songs with new songs. This soundtrack couldn't have started off on a better note than with Iggy Pop's classic "Lust For Life", both a film and commercial favorite. The thunderous beats and Iggy's raw vocals mixes nicely together and makes the listener get up and dance. "Nightclubbing", another Iggy Pop song, is excellent. A bit monotonous at times but I just love how deep Iggy's voice gets on this song. It has a trip hop influence in the song, long before the term trip hop was defined. Sleeper's cover of the Blondie classic "Atomic" is excellent without a doubt. Catchy and darn right fun to listen to. I almost love this version more than the original and I love Blondie's music to death. I think my very personal favorite track off the soundtrack has to be New Order's "Temptation". Elastica's "2:1" is awesome. That is probably my all time favorite Elastica song. It's short and sweet. The timing of the beats in the song and Justine Frischman's vocals is what blows my mind away. And of course there is Underworld's "Born Slippy", the song that put this soundtrack on the map as well as for the band. That song and Leftfield's "A Final Hit" are just classic techno music. What I love most about this cd is how it eclectic it is and that the artists and bands put on the album are/were both established and new. You don't see established artists and new artists on the same album very often. The film industry should use the "Trainspotting" soundtrack as an architect to how soundtracks should be, as art and not another form of crass commercialism.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars all time favourite.....and it grows on you, October 23, 1999
By 
za_janice (Cape Town - South Africa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
When I first got this I only liked Iggy Pop's "Lust..." and Underworld's "Born Slippy" (rave/techno whatever)..then I discovered Deep Blue Day {really sounds like a deep blue day), Primal Scream's "Trainspotting" (slow, sleepy), "A Final Hit" (very sleepy and sexual), and Blur's "Sing". I actually fell in love with all the songs and played it over and over and over...it's very eclectic there's all types of music on the CD. the tracks that will never grow on me are Albarn's "Closet Romantic" and Iggy's "Nightclubbing".... A Final Hit is the most beautiful and sensual piece of music i have ever heard. A Perfect Day and 2:1 are also really brilliant. You have to be in the party mood for the others though, they're really 'poppy' for want of a better word. It will definitely grow on you, I mean at first I hated "For What You Dream Of" now I LOVE it, it's so weird.....
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Trainlistening., October 17, 2006
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H3@+h "Over 1500 reviews!" (thanks for the helpful review votes) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
In a world where every other movie has it's own soundtrack, few stand out. This one does to me. Obviously a liking for the movie helps, but even without the film this is an excellent listen. A great mix of old and new, mellow and upbeat. I mean when you stick Iggy, Lou Reed, and New Order on the same disc as Brian Eno, Blur, and Bedrock.....well you can't go wrong. Still a great play ten years later, and should be found cheap anyplace.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "I'm Just an Ordinary Guy...", April 24, 2001
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
A strong collection to accompany one of the best movies of the 1990s. It's an agreeable blend of pre-punk and post-punk with no "punk" music--or what I'd call punk music--to be found. Which is to say that it ably blends tracks from such American stalwarts of the 1970s as Iggy Pop ("Lust for Life", "Nightclubbing") and Lou Reed ("A Perfect Day") with contemporary Brits like Blur, Elastica, Pulp, and Underworld.

And you'll appreciate it even more if you've seen the movie--like Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino and PT Anderson--Danny Boyle really knows how to jack up a scene by adding just the right song to it. Witness the irony of "A Perfect Day" playing while Renton (Ewan MacGregor) is having one of the worst days of his life. Lou Reed's lovely little number adds just the right touch of irony to the proceedings. The soundtrack as a whole serves a similar purpose in preventing the movie from ever descending into pathos or self-pity...and you can enjoy it even without the amazing visuals.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Frenetic, pulsing, and overall...weird!, July 20, 2000
By 
Ilker Yucel "Kryptych" (Annapolis, MD United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
I only saw the movie recently, only hearing that it was one of the strangest, most obscene, and overall one of the most important films ever to come out of the U.K. Indie scene. "Yeah, sure," is what I thought. I'm a fan of indie films, but something about the concept of heroin junkies didn't strike me. I finally saw the film, and I was taken aback by just how lewd and oddly humorous the film was. I loved it immediately! Part of the reason was because of the music. This soundtrack is one of the must frantic collections for a film I've ever heard. So-called Old-timers like Iggy Pop and Lou Reed on the same album with '90's techno beat masters Underworld and alt. rockers like Blur, Pulp, and Elastica, thrown in with some '80's dance music from New Order's classic "Temptation," and Sleeper's cover of Blondie's "Atomic." Sounds like an odd mix, but it worked. Somehow all of these songs interspersed with each other (in the same order in which they appeared in the film no less...I checked) work perfectly to convey the emotions of sonic daydreaming and intoxicated ecstasy the film had. Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" is a wonderfully fast-paced anthem that kicks off Trainspotting with a bang that shows just how much of a punch a "sincere honest drug habit" can give the brain before shorting out. "Nightclubbing," also by Pop, is also a wonderful slow pump that one could get high to, but also gives '90's music fans an idea of where the beat to Nine Inch Nails' "Closer" might have been inspired. Only one of the two Underworld songs from the film was put on this CD, while the other had to be put on the dreadful second soundtrack. Nonetheless, "Born Slippy" is a great song that starts out slow and sad until kicking into a heavy pounding bass techno beat. Brian Eno's song, "Deep Blue Day," to me was unnecessary in both the movie and the soundtrack, but...hey. "A Perfect Day" by Lou Reed is also a bit of a sad song, sending chills down the listener's spine. Leftfield's "A Final Hit," Bedrock's "For What You Dream Of," and Primal Scream's ten-minute title track are also welcome excursions into '90's techno and electronica, while Elastica, Blur, and Pulp provide some sombre alt. rock moods, all of which give a sense of fading Generation-X angst. The lounge feel of Pulp band member Damon Albarn's "Closet Romantic" provides the humor to close the album out. The album is upbeat and danceable, but amidst the pulsing beats is a misery that compliments the film's characters' drug habits and the dreary excuses of lives they lead. Great stuff! Get this album!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Get lost in this, August 22, 2007
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This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
Easily one of the best soundtrack compilations ever put together. It's a perfect narrative for the forgotten, drug-infused, rock-bottom, greasy nightmare most of us have never lived through. In the end you'll have an incredible urge to rinse off in the shower.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Brits Aplenty, June 24, 2003
By 
Greekfreak (Pusan Korea (South)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
This is one of the finest soundtracks of the 90s, and in some ways, the music is better than the film it's supposed to represent!

With my one gripe out of the way starting now--why a cover of Blondie's "Atomic" that's so straight as to be original???--most of the tracks could find their way into a dance club at any given moment, or at least, booming out of somebody's convertible.

A great cross-section of 70s, 80s, and 90s dance music, but minus one star for releasing an unnecessary second disc when they could have taken the good stuff off of it and extended the length of this one.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Really, really good, August 8, 2000
This review is from: Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture (Audio CD)
I loved the movie, so I naturally had to rush out and buy the soundtrack. While it probably isn't for everyone, those people who found themselves swaying to the music should definitely get this. Some of the songs can drag or have tedious bits, but I enjoy all of them. They're very easy to get into, I listen to them when just get up to get myself going(it actually works, too). SO if you liked the movie, go and get this, you won't be disappointed.
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Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture
Trainspotting: Music From The Motion Picture by Trainspotting (Related Recordings) (Audio CD - 1996)
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