| Product Summary | | Label: Uni/interscope | | UPC: 00606949246020 | | Release Date: 4/2/1996 | | Buy.com Sku: 60349677 | | Item#: M4CD46 | | Buy.com Sales Rank: 25140 | Format: CD |
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(P) 1994 Interscope Records (C) 1994 Warner Bros. Productions Ltd., Monarchy Enterprises C.V.
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| | Album Notes and Credits | Notes & Personnel Info |  | Producers include: Trent Reznor, Ron Goldberg, Hypoluxa, Hermes Pan, Count Ringworm. |  | Compilation producer: Trent Reznor. |  | Original score written by Trent Reznor. Samples include "Ted Just Admit It" (as performed by Jane's Addiction), "I Put A Spell On You" (as performed by Diamanda Galas), "Checkpoint Charlie" and "Violation Of Expectation" (as performed by Barry Adamson). |  | Tha Dogg Pound's "What Would U Do" was nominated for a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group. |  | Personnel: Chris Vrenna (drums, programming). |  | Editor: Alex Gibson. |  | Unknown Contributor Roles: Cowboy Junkies; Dan Zanes; Dr. Dre; Duane Eddy; A.O.S.; Juliette Lewis; Lard; Nine Inch Nails; Patsy Cline; Patti Smith; Peter Gabriel; Russell Means; Sergio Cervetti; Tha Dogg Pound; Hollywood Persuaders; Barry Adamson; Leonard Cohen; Bob Dylan. |  | Most soundtracks simply feature the film's incidental music or songs that were heard in the background throughout the movie. Not Natural Born Killers. Assembled by Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails), the soundtrack to Oliver Stone's brutally warped serial killer saga recreates the hallucinatory feeling of the film. Snatches of dialogue interweave with song fragments and sound effects, creating a harrowing, violent soundscape where Leonard Cohen occasionally offers a relief of sorts. In fact, Reznor managed to convey the insanity of the movie's lead characters much more effectively than Stone did with the film itself. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine |  | Oliver Stone couldn't have made a better choice for the producer of NATURAL BORN KILLERS' soundtrack than Trent Reznor, alternative music's supermanipulator and Nine Inch Nails' frontman. |  | Reznor's use of dialogue and choice of songs perfectly cut through Stone's blatant generalizations about media over-saturation and its effects on society. The songs and their placement in the soundtrack offer a disturbing commentary on our culture's inability to separate the rush of sex from the rush of violence. By putting Patti Smith's raging "Rock N Roll Nigger" next to the sweet seduction of the Cowboy Junkies' "Sweet Jane," Reznor stabs at this confusion, and rubs our noses in it. |  | As a time capsule, the NATURAL BORN KILLERS soundtrack will remind listeners of an era of Dahmer Delicatessen jokes and "Free O.J. Simpson" t-shirts. The overwhelming elegance in Nine Inch Nails' "Born" seethes with equal parts pleasure and pain, and revels in the glory of alienation, declaring "I never was part of you." |  | As a soundtrack, Reznor's use of dialogue from the script is scarily on-target. Telling moments between characters convey as much as the songs. The NATURAL BORN KILLERS soundtrack is a brutal take on social commentary, and one of the most revealing soundtracks of the year. | Engineer: Chris Vrenna |
| | Associated Artists and Works |
| | Technical Info |  | Release Date : 03/07/2005 |  | Original Release Date : 1994 |  | Catalog ID : 92460 |  | Label : Interscope Records (USA) |  | Number of Discs : 1 |  | Runtime : 75m : 38s |  | Studio/Live : Studio |  | Mono/Stereo : Stereo |  | SPAR Code : n/a |  | UPC : 00606949246020 |
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| | Professional Reviews | | Rolling Stone (12/29/94-1/12/95, p.178) - "...Tarantino's...soundtracks could fill the playlist of some eerie radio station dreamed up by a program director with a yen for shock. For KILLERS, Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor is that programmer..."Entertainment Weekly (9/23/94, p.69) - "...The resulting sound collage is surely one of the most ambitious soundtracks ever devised...it's a hypnotic white-noise soundtrack that's almost more disturbing than Stone's own work..." - Rating: A- Q (7/01, p.91) - Included in Q's "50 Heaviest Albums of All Time". Q (12/99, p.76) - Included in Q Magazine's "90 Best Albums Of The 1990s." Q (12/94, p.141) - 5 Stars - Indispensable - "...[mirrors the film's] post-modern, cut-up barrage approach to atmospherics...relentlessly imaginative...[Trent] Reznor employing assorted sound effects and cross-fades to knit the whole shebang together..." Mojo (Publisher) (6/02, p.68) - Included in Mojo's "100 Coolest Movie Soundtracks" - "...Reznor's cut-up score perfectly captures the film's slice'n'dice wonder..." NME (Magazine) (12/24/94, p.23) - Ranked #3 in NME's list of the 10 best compilation albums of 1994. |
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