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The Crow: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
The Crow: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

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Artist: Various Artists
Label: Atlantic / Wea
Category: Music

List Price: $11.98
Buy Used: $0.19
You Save: $11.79 (98%)



New (47) Used (170) Collectible (8) from $0.19

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 64 reviews
Sales Rank: 5337

Format: Soundtrack
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 82519
UPC: 075678251924
EAN: 0075678251924
ASIN: B000002IWH

Release Date: March 29, 1994
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Burn - The Cure
  • Golgotha Tenement Blues - Machines Of Loving Grace
  • Big Empty - Stone Temple Pilots
  • Dead Souls - Nine Inch Nails
  • Darkness - Rage Against The Machine
  • Color Me Once - Violent Femmes
  • Ghostrider - Rollins Band
  • Milktoast - Helmet
  • The Badge - Pantera
  • Slip Slide Melting - For Love Not Lisa
  • After The Flesh - My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult
  • Snakerider - The Jesus And Mary Chain
  • Time Baby III - Medicine
  • It Can't Rain All The Time - Jane Siberry

Similar Items:

  • The Crow (Miramax/Dimension Collector's Series)
  • The Crow: City Of Angels - Original Miramax Motion Picture Soundtrack
  • The Crow: Original Motion Picture Score
  • Spawn: The Album (1997 Film)
  • Natural Born Killers: A Soundtrack For An Oliver Stone Film

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Based on the hit comic book about a man who returns from the dead to avenge his killers, the film adaptation of The Crow suffered a cruel irony when star Brandon Lee (son of martial arts superstar Bruce Lee) died during production after a bizarre onset accident. That event only deepened the film's aura of death and gothic unease, moods that are brilliantly underscored by this well-chosen collection of stark alt rock, dark metal, and industrial dirges.

The opener, the Cure's typically angst-ridden "Burn," is about as sentimental as this album gets, bookended by Jane Siberry's wistful "It Can't Rain All the Time." Sandwiched in between is a virtual primer on powerful mid-1990s alt and industrial rock, from Nine Inch Nails hammering Joy Division's "Dead Souls" into its own image to the blistering snarl of Helmet, Pantera, and the Rollins Band. So-called pop-song scores often have a cheap afterthought feel to them; this one, a refreshingly integral part of the film itself, stands as a great album in its own right. --Jerry McCulley


Customer Reviews:   Read 59 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Great soundtrack to a great movie   March 20, 2004
 16 out of 17 found this review helpful

I recently watched "The Crow" on the Sundance Channel and although I knew about the movie I had never really seen it. I really liked the movie and ordered the soundtrack. I admired the tragic story esp. with the death of Brandon Lee in the making and the stylish filmaking, but there was something special about the movie and the soundtrack really takes you back to the movie. The soundtrack rocks and I am so glad I got it. Even without the movie this collection of early 90's rock really stands out.


5 out of 5 stars one of the best   September 6, 2004
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

this collaboration set the mood for the crow perfectly. each and every one of the crow soundtracks are good in their own, but this one takes the lead. i love nine inch nails and dead souls (track 4) is one of their best. golatha tenement blues was a great song from a band i have never heard of called machines of loving grace (track 2). ghost rider is a decent song from the rollins band (track 7). after the flesh from my life with the thrill kill kult (track 11) sounds like something ministry did. over all great soundtrack.


5 out of 5 stars Simply Awesome   May 29, 2001
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Although movies today are released with many songs on the soundtrack, they are there mainly to sell the soundtrack before the movie is released to DVD/video so that more money is made by the producers. Very rarely are they there to enrich the film, and even less rare is a soundtrack that perfectly captures the essence of the mood of the movie. Quite frankly, this movie raised the bar so high in both regards that I don't think it can ever be surpassed. It's truly incredible! I've listened to this CD dozens of times and I never tire of it. From the ultra-cool "Golgotha Tenement Blues" to Nine Inch Nails' wicked "Dead Souls", Rollins Band's brutal "Ghost Rider", and Jesus and Mary Chain's rockin' "Snakedriver", everything about this album is an alt-rock fans dream come true. If you like your music with loud guitars and screamingly intense vocals, yet with creativity and focus, you cannot go wrong with this album. I'm not going overboard when I say it's absolutley brilliant. What a shame it sells a lot less than most of the mainstream garbage that is released these days, and simply because it's considered too edgy and aggressive.


4 out of 5 stars Moody Soundtrack for a Moody Movie   November 28, 2003
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

"The Crow" soundtrack (which is dedicated to the memory of the late Brandon Lee who died while filming the movie and will always be remembered by the part he plays, whether he likes it or not) opens with a spellbinding, quintessential "Crow" song: "Burn" by The Cure, a song linked to the transformational movie scene where Eric Draven (Lee) decorates himself in white foundation, black leather and lipstick after revisiting his trashed apartment. Machines of Loving Grace's "Golgotha Tenement Blues" (#2) and Nine Inch Nails' "Dead Souls" (#4) follow in this same ambiance, keeping with the dark moodiness of the film. The heavier, more aggressive side to this soundtrack can found in tracks like [#9] "The Badge" by Pantera, [#10] "Slip Slide Melting" by For Love Not Lisa, and [#11] "After the Flesh" by My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult--all favorites of mine. After this last song, I generally turn the CD off before the remaining three sappy tracks, which wrap up with the Jane Siberry tune that's titled after the words in the movie: "It can't rain all the time." If you're a fan of this 1994 dark fantasy--or you just like the majority of alternative rock bands/artists on here--then this soundtrack is certainly worth owning. It's a great piece of "The Crow" nostalgia.


5 out of 5 stars This IS the Best Soundtrack that Money Can Buy   January 25, 2001
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

There are countless reasons why I love this album, and it's kinda strange because most of these artists I don't really care for or have never heard of. So when I first picked up a copy, I was skeptical about how much I really was going to enjoy it. But as soon as I had listened to it the first time through, I was hooked. The Cure starts the album off with an okay song (I'm not a big Cure fan), and then Machines of Loving Grace pour through the speakers like a fine wine with the sultry, dark "Golgotha Tenement Blues." After that, STP comes through with a great song "Big Empty" that I think is probably the best Scott and co. have ever written. Track 4 (my personal favorite) is Nine Inch Nails' absolutely fantastic "Dead Souls" which snarls with aggression, and got me hooked on NIN. Rage's "Darkness" is pretty different from anything they have ever tried, and it shows what versatility this band has got. Violent Femmes then arrives with a slightly funky, very interesting song that is one of the most original tracks I have ever heard. Rollins Band, Helmet, and Pantera bust speakers and kick [butt] with there own unique, hard-hitting sounds. After that, the soundtrack delves into lesser-known bands like My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult, and For Love Not Lisa, which are all really good, with the possible exception of Jane Siberry's "It Can't Rain All the Time" which I'm not crazy about. The immense diversity that's been captured on this disk is astounding, and for some reason, I have never gotten tired of listening to this album. So even if you haven't any idea who The Jesus and Mary Chain are, you can be assured that...you'll get the one collection that Iconsider to be about as perfect as anything on earth can get.

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