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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Mixed Blessing, February 1, 2003
While I'd like to give the soundtrack five stars based completely on the value of three songs, I feel I must admit that certain tracks are... almost embarrassing. Of course, two mildly distasteful tracks on a ten track CD is not too bad a score. I think I'll have to do this track by track, as each song (even those of less quality) is extremely divergent from the others, to my ear.1.Good Times In most senses, this is not a remarkable song in any way. However, I dare you to control that urge to dance a little. 2.Lost in the Shadows (The Lost Boys) Musically, I enjoy this song to an extreme, and, outside of its chorus, the vocals, and the lyrics are not too bad(though more can be said for the lyrics than the vocals). Yet that trashy, piercing, repetitive chorus does grind at the nerves, making this song occasionally hard to listen to. 3. Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me I cannot offer an appropriate evaluation of this song, for my thoughts of it are too much influenced by personal memories it evokes. 4. Laying Down the Law The worst I can say about this song is that it is cliché, the best I can say is that I have a mild affection for the vocal track. 5.People Are Strange I love covers, I don't know why. There is something about the interpretation of one artist's work by another, in their work and not silly analytical words is moving to me. What's more, Echo And The Bunnymen does very well for themselves here. Dare I even venture to suggest that their arrangement was more... (Hm, complex? Interesting?) musically than the (deeply cherished and oft danced to) original. 6.Cry Little Sister(Theme from The Lost Boys) What does one say about a song that speaks for itself? Dark, sharp, twisting, and deeply evocative of the movies themes of inner turmoil and lost direction, Cry Little Sister is, bar none, the best song on the album. "My Shangri la, I can't forget why you were mine-" 7.Power Play A baseball metaphor? A BASEBALL metaphor? I love baseball above all other sports but, please! How...tacky. 8.I Still Believe I wonder how many reeds their saxophone player went through during this recording. Damn, that's a harsh, terrific sound. Forget the mildly pedestrian lyrics and listen to that horn. 9.Beauty Has Her Way It is good. I don't mean that in a semi-literate, Kindergarten fashion, but rather, `and God saw that it was good'. If not anywhere near as important as the world in which we live, this song has a striking, evocative, and charmingly, heartwarmingly sinister tone that defies my judgments. What can I say? Beauty has her way. 10. To the Shock of Miss Louise I don't understand the title, I do understand the music. When I was very young, I read a book in which a girl has a dream of being trapped on a carousel, which is whirling ever faster into a black pile. All around her, wicked faces laughed, and people shouted and jeered. That is the essence of the piece, perhaps even of the entire soundtrack, and the movie which it graces.
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