Various Artists - Soundtrack / Pump Up The Volume - Music From The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Artist Various Artists - Soundtrack
Album Title: Pump Up The Volume - Music From The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Soundtrack: Film Soundtrack
Format CD
Released 08/14/1990
Label MCA Records, Inc.
Catalog No MCAD -8039
Bar Code No none
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. Everybody Knows / Concrete Blonde (4:43)
2. Why Can't I Fall In Love / Ivan Neville (4:02)
3. Stand / Liquid Jesus (4:23)
4. Wave Of Mutilation (U.K. Surf) / Pixies (3:01)
5. I've Got A Secret Miniature Camera / Peter Murphy (4:27)
6. Kick Out The Jams / Bad Brains With Henry Rollins (3:05)
7. Freedom Of Speech / Above The Law (4:16)
8. Heretic / Soundgarden (3:48)
9. Titanium Expose' / Sonic Youth (6:27)
10. Me And The Devil Blues / Cowboy Junkies (5:36)
11. Tale O' The Twister / Chagall Guevera (3:19)
Date Acquired 10/10/1992
Personal Rating
Acquired from Roadrunner Records
Purchase Price 13.00

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Andy Kellman
In a sense, Pump Up the Volume was the second in Allan Moyle's Disillusioned American Youths trilogy, released ten years after the new wave runaway drama Times Square and five years prior to the truly horrid record shop angstfest Empire Records. Like Times Square, and to a somewhat lesser extent Empire Records, Pump Up the Volume's major players are music obsessives who immerse themselves in rock groups that float away from the mainstream radar. In this case, the protagonist is pirate radio DJ Hard Harry (Christian Slater), a hyper-hormonal high-school student who takes great delight in playing the likes of Leonard Cohen and Sonic Youth for his audience of confused, angst-ridden schoolmates. The soundtrack reflects much of what is played during the movie, including Soundgarden's pre-fame "Heretic," Concrete Blonde's version of Cohen's "Everybody Knows," the Pixies' "Wave of Mutilation (U.K. Surf)," and two songs that deal with the movie's theme of censorship, Above the Law's "Freedom of Speech" and Bad Brains' (with Henry Rollins) cover of the MC5's "Kick Out the Jams." Unfortunately, Was (Not Was)' delightfully perverse "Dad I'm in Jail" is excluded, as is Nora Diniro's lusty ode to Hard Harry ("Jam me, jack me, push me, pull me," etc.). At any rate, the Pump Up the Volume soundtrack works well for those who want a decent snapshot of early-'90s alternative music. And if you're feeling nostalgic for that frustrating period of your life when you looked like Christian Slater but couldn't get any girls to pay attention to you, it works equally well.
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