Footloose - Original Soundtrack (1984/2001)
Жанр: Soundtrack, Pop/Rock, Synthpop
Носитель: SACD
Год издания: 1984/2001
Издатель: Columbia
Номер по каталогу: CS 65781
Аудиокодек: DSD64 2.0
Тип рипа: image (iso)
Продолжительность: 00:55:03
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Образ снят с помощью: Sony PlayStation 3 и утилиты sacd-ripper version 0.21
Релизёр:
Треклист:
01.Footloose (performed by Kenny Loggins) 03:47
02.Let's Hear It For The Boy (performed by Deniece Williams) 04:22
03.Almost Paradise (performed by Mike Reno & Ann Wilson) 03:50
04.Holding Out For A Hero (performed by Bonnie Tyler) 05:51
05.Dancing In The Sheets (performed by Shalamar) 04:05
06.I'm Free (performed by Kenny Loggins) 03:47
07.Somebody's Eyes (performed by Karla Bonoff) 03:29
08.The Girl Gets Around (performed by Sammy Hagar) 03:24
09.Never (performed by Moving Pictures) 03:48
10.Bang Your Head (performed by Quiet Riot) 03:55
11.Hurts So Good (performed by John Mellencamp) 03:39
12.Waiting For A Girl Like You (performed by Foreigner) 04:49
13.Dancing In The Sheets (performed by Shalamar) 06:18
SACD+Back
Footloose
Footloose is the original soundtrack of the Paramount motion picture Footloose. The original nine-track album was released in 1984 and reached Number One on the Billboard 200 Pop Album chart on April 21, 1984, where it stayed until June 30, 1984.
When it was re-released in 1998, four bonus tracks were added to the album. In 2002, Sony International released the Australian Souvenir Edition (aka Australian Cast Special Edition). Two megamixes were added to the album, featuring the Australian Cast of the Footloose musical. The original soundtrack contained three Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 hits, including two No. 1 hits, Kenny Loggins’ “Footloose” and Deniece Williams’ “Let’s Hear It for the Boy”, and “Almost Paradise”, a duet by Ann Wilson and Mike Reno that reached No. 7. The song “I’m Free” was covered by the Japanese artist Misato Watanabe as her debut single.
All Music Review
Footloose was a throwback to ’50s rock & roll movies, with a silly plot about a town where it was illegal to dance. It was a major hit, as was its soundtrack, which spent a grand total of ten weeks at number one and sold over seven million copies. It’s easy to see why — the album delivers its mainstream pop, anthemic rock, and light dance-pop with style and an abundance of hooks. Six of the nine tracks became Top 40 hits, and three — Kenny Loggins’ bouncy title song, the excellent power ballad “Almost Paradise” (a duet between Loverboy’s Mike Reno and Heart’s Ann Wilson), and Deniece Williams’ frothy, charming “Let’s Hear It for the Boy” — shot into the Top Ten. The sound and production of Footloose has dated badly — there is a reliance on synthesizers and drum machines that instantly announces that the record was made in 1984 — but that isn’t necessarily a weakness. Not only does it function as a time capsule of a certain moment in pop music history, but many of the songs are catchy enough to transcend their production. There’s nothing of substance on the Footloose soundtrack, but it’s a light, entertaining listen. Sometimes, that can be better than something substantial.