Welcome,
Guest
Sign In
|
Register
GO
SEARCH FOR
Artist
Album
Song
Home
Blog
Daily Downloads
Release Dates
Tags
Latest Reviews
Latest Lists
Write Review
Create List
Staff Picks
See All
List
10 Great Pop Music Moments in Cinema
Posted by
Ruben_James
on
10/17/2006
There’s nothing like a perfectly placed pop song in a movie. This thought came to me the other day as I relaxed on the couch while watching The Karate Kid. You say, “Whuuuuuuuuuut?” I say, “YES!” More on that later... Some directors have a gift for it--Martin Scorsese, Wes Anderson, P.T. Anderson, and John Hughes immediately come to mind. Some directors don’t--Zach Braff comes to mind. Before I knew it, I had assembled my list of “10 Great Pop Music Moments in Cinema.” For added entertainment, I have included YouTube videos. Some clips are from the actual film, some aren’t. Deal with it.
Email This
Tracks
1
.
Bananarama - Cruel Summer
The Karate Kid
Man, did I love this movie! I started taking Tai Kwon Do lessons after I saw it. Much to my dismay, the “crane kick” was not one of the deadly moves I mastered and I never made it past green belt.
After being invited to a totally rad beach party, Daniel gets his ass kicked by Ali’s ex-boyfriend and Cobra Kai, Johnny. Nice way to spend the last day of summer. The next morning, Daniel rides his bike to school, over-sized aviator sunglasses hiding his shame, as “Cruel Summer” plays. It’s just a perfect moment. And a great song! Second place goes to Joe Esposito’s “You’re The Best” (
YouTube
), which is just so bad it’s good.
2
.
The Rolling Stones - 2000 Man
Bottle Rocket
Wes Anderson is, no doubt, a master of the pop song in film. Great taste. There are so many great musical moments in his films that it makes it hard to choose just one. There is the Who “A Quick One...” (
YouTube
) scene from Rushmore, the Nico “These Days” (
YouTube
) scene from The Royal Tenenbaums, but I gotta go with the first one that blew my mind. As the gang’s big heist turns sour, Dignan goes out in a blaze of glory set to the Stones mind-blowing tune from Their Satanic Majesties Request. “They’ll nenver catch me, man... Cause I’m fuckin’ innocent.”
3
.
Leonard Cohen - Stranger Song
McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Robert Altman loved Leonard Cohen’s debut album,
Songs of Leonard Cohen
, so much so that he used three songs from it on the soundtrack to his 1971 film, McCabe & Mrs. Miller. The bleak, lonely mood of the songs fit the film perfectly. As John McCabe, alone and on horseback, makes his way to a lonely mining town to open a whorehouse, “Stranger Song” accompanies. Just one of those rare instances when two art forms meet to become one moving moment.
4
.
B.J. Thomas - Raindrops Keep Fallin' on my Head
Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid
George Roy Hill tapped Burt Bacharach to write music for Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. This one is a complete 180 from the dreary tone of McCabe & Mrs. Miller with is comedy relief and snappy score. Bacharach is a genius and he proves that with such great songs as “South American Getaway.” The funny thing about this scene, however, is the fact that raindrops aren’t falling and there’s not a cloud in site. But the jovial mood of the song fits perfectly with Newman hamming it up on that crazy new inventionthe bicycle.
5
.
Thompson Twins - If You Were Here
Sixteen Candles
I could make an entire list out of songs from John Hughes’ soundtracks. Simple Minds, The Psychedelic Furs, The Smiths, OMD... But I’m gonna have to go with one from the first of the great Hughes teen movies. “If You Were Here” plays during the big redemption scene when poor Samantha finds Jake Ryan waiting for her after her wasted sister’s wedding. This is just a really great song. The trials and tribulations of the past few days are all worth it once she’s sitting shotgun in that sweet red Porsche. Although I was probably more of a Farmer Ted, boy, did I want to be Jake Ryan.
6
.
Van Halen - Everybody Wants Some!
Better Off Dead
This was another great film from my childhood. The first time I saw this I thought it was the funniest thing I had ever seen and begged my mom to rent it over and over on “Pizza Fridays”! This song was also my introduction to pre
1984
Van Halen. And what better way to turn a 10 year old on to early VH than through a dancing claymation hamburger? I would soon own all the cassettes.
7
.
Cat Stevens - If You Want To Sing Out, Sing Out
Harold and Maude
The story of the young death-obsessed Harold and his love for Maudea 79-year-old madcap. You can’t deny the emotional weight of Harold dancing through the hills to Cat Stevens’ song of acceptance at the end of this 1971 Hal Ashby film. It just makes you feel damn good.
8
.
Harry Nilsson - Everybody's Talkin'
Midnight Cowboy
I can’t help but think about Joe Buck looking so ridiculously out of place (but totally cool) and walking down Broadway whenever I hear this song. It was Nilsson’s first big hit and captures the free spirit and naivete of Joe Buck perfectly. Waaaaaaah waaaaaah...
9
.
Various Artists - Wise Up
Magnolia
Man, did Paul Thomas Anderson take a chance on this scene! Ballsy! This is a complete potential train wreck. I mean, if you just describe this scene to someone, it sounds so ridiculous. But it works... and is so powerful. Aimee Man wrote a real knock-out song with the help of Jon Brion and Anderson, in turn, writes the breaking point of his best film to date around it.
10
.
Harry Nilsson - Jump Into The Fire
Goodfellas
This is the climactic scene where the completely coked-up and frazzled Henry cooks for the family, runs errands, sells guns, cuts coke, and ultimately gets busted. The music is actually a montage of songs including Harry Nilsson’s “Jump Into The Fire,” The Rolling Stones’ “Monkey Man,” The Who’s “Magic Bus,” Muddy Waters’ “Mannish Boy,” and George Harrison’s “What is Life.” Scorsese is a complete master of pop music in film and I think this is the most effective use of pop music in a film ever. Honorable mention goes to the Billy Batts beat-down scene and its use of Donovan’s “Atlantis.” (
YouTube
)
Add Comment
Comments
Tags
Tag This List
See All
Daily Download
Staff picked track of the day
Wolf Parade
Language City
Here's our second peak at Wolf Parade's wonderful forthcoming
At Mount Zoomer
. (See
"Call it a Ritual"
to catch up.) The Montreal band definitely appears to have avoided the sophomore slump that plagues so many "next big things." Get the album June 17the via Sub Pop.
[DOWNLOAD]
See All
Added Downloads
The Old Haunts
Mudhoney
The Accidental
Lesser Gonzalez Alvarez
Music Go Music
Shearwater
Wolf Parade
Windsor For The Derby
The Dirtbombs
Sybris
The Instruments
Flight of the Conchords
War On Drugs
Fleet Foxes
Locust Avenue
No Age
Man Man
Tokyo Police Club
Los Campesinos
Monroe Mustang
Okay
Indian Jewelry
Wye Oak
Sera Cahoone
The Black Hollies
See All
Featured Review
Awesome Color
Electric Aborigines
In the first few seconds of Awesome Color's second album it's apparent that the Michigan-bred Brooklyn trio's take-no-prisoners approach to pure Motor City rock and roll is more than plain homage. They're proud of their roots
...
-
Ruben_James
[READ REVIEW]
Recent Blog Entries
Radiohead Fans Go Off The Deep End
Stream: CocoRosie - "God Has a Voice, She Speaks Through Me"
New Release Roundup for May 13
MP3: Blitzen Trapper - "Crushing the Wheat"
Andrew Bird Discusses Recording New Album
Video: Portishead - "The Rip"
Arcade Fire to Score Richard Kelly's
The Box
Video: Behind the Scenes of
Christmas on Mars
Is Denton, TX Indie Rock's Next Austin?
Video: Impossible Shapes - "Let The People Build What They Will"
See All
Blog Tags
The Who
Kurt Cobain
Broadcast
M Ward
Awesome Color
John Phillips
Jason Collett
Ra Ra Riot
George Harrison
1990s
Black Lips
Guns N'' Roses
Panther
The Week That Was
Fleet Foxes
Polyphonic Spree
Patton Oswalt
Octopus Project
Beck
Peter Moren
Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin
Field Music
Nirvana
Rufus Wainwright
Yeasayer
See All
Upcoming Releases
Select U.S. album release dates
05/20/2008
Bonnie "Prince" Billy
Lie Down in the Light
05/20/2008
Indian Jewelry
Free Gold
05/20/2008
Islands
Arm's Way
05/20/2008
Joan of Arc
Boo Human
05/20/2008
Mates of State
Re-arrange Us
See All
Collective
Latest members to join Discollective
jberry26
fak3r
mij1525
max
dady
hasdre
©2007 Discollective.com. All rights reserved. |
contact
|
faq
|
Artist Index
|
terms
|
privacy