Original Soundtrack
Lost Highway [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack]
Lost Highway [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack]
UPC: 602557411331
Format: LP (2 disc)
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"The Perfect Drug" was nominated for a 1998 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance.
While famous rockers may pilfer much of the spotlight on the soundtrack to director David Lynch's LOST HIGHWAY, the album's true stars are the score composers who gave birth to the noir-ish sense of symphonic dread that emanates from its every pore. Longtime Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti's pieces veer from smoky free-jazz roars to amorphous quasi-dubs. Barry Adamson contributes a series of Tom Waits-like moments that can best be described as haunted marching-band music. And soundtrack producer Trent Reznor...well, you know his sense of the world well enough to see that he's a perfect musical fit for Lynch's darkly-psychotic-in-the-corners worldview.
Within such a thematically unified context, the contributions of the famous rockers (Smashing Pumpkins, David Bowie, Marilyn Manson, Reznor's Nine Inch Nails, others) could have either added a voice to the darkness, or ruined the mood altogether. Thankfully, under Reznor's strong-arm guidance, the stars (particularly the drum-machine-driven Pumpkins and drum-and-bass-driven Bowie) go right for the dark side.
While famous rockers may pilfer much of the spotlight on the soundtrack to director David Lynch's LOST HIGHWAY, the album's true stars are the score composers who gave birth to the noir-ish sense of symphonic dread that emanates from its every pore. Longtime Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti's pieces veer from smoky free-jazz roars to amorphous quasi-dubs. Barry Adamson contributes a series of Tom Waits-like moments that can best be described as haunted marching-band music. And soundtrack producer Trent Reznor...well, you know his sense of the world well enough to see that he's a perfect musical fit for Lynch's darkly-psychotic-in-the-corners worldview.
Within such a thematically unified context, the contributions of the famous rockers (Smashing Pumpkins, David Bowie, Marilyn Manson, Reznor's Nine Inch Nails, others) could have either added a voice to the darkness, or ruined the mood altogether. Thankfully, under Reznor's strong-arm guidance, the stars (particularly the drum-machine-driven Pumpkins and drum-and-bass-driven Bowie) go right for the dark side.
Tracks:
Disc 1:
1 - I'm Deranged [Edit]
2 - Videodrones: Questions
3 - Perfect Drug
4 - Red Bats With Teeth
5 - Haunting & Heartbreaking
6 - Eye
7 - Dub Driving
8 - Mr. Eddy's Theme 1
9 - This Magic Moment
10 - Mr. Eddy's Theme 2
11 - Fred & Renee Make Love
12 - Apple of Sodom
Disc 2:
1 - Insensatez
2 - Something Wicked This Way Comes [Edit]
3 - I Put a Spell on You
4 - Fats Revisited
5 - Fred's World
6 - Rammstein [Edit]
7 - Hollywood Sunset
8 - Heirate Mich [Edit]
9 - Police
10 - Driver Down
11 - I'm Deranged (Reprise)
1 - I'm Deranged [Edit]
2 - Videodrones: Questions
3 - Perfect Drug
4 - Red Bats With Teeth
5 - Haunting & Heartbreaking
6 - Eye
7 - Dub Driving
8 - Mr. Eddy's Theme 1
9 - This Magic Moment
10 - Mr. Eddy's Theme 2
11 - Fred & Renee Make Love
12 - Apple of Sodom
Disc 2:
1 - Insensatez
2 - Something Wicked This Way Comes [Edit]
3 - I Put a Spell on You
4 - Fats Revisited
5 - Fred's World
6 - Rammstein [Edit]
7 - Hollywood Sunset
8 - Heirate Mich [Edit]
9 - Police
10 - Driver Down
11 - I'm Deranged (Reprise)