Product details: - Product group: Music
- Edition: Audio CD
- Publisher: Maverick
- Format: Enhanced, Explicit Lyrics, Soundtrack
- Release Date: 2003-09-23
- Number of discs: 1
- Tracks:
- Disc 1
- Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) - Nancy Sinatra
- That Certain Female - Charlie Feathers
- The Grand Duel - (Parte Prima) - Luis Enrique Bacalov
- Twisted Nerve - Bernard Herrmann
- Queen of the Crime Council - Julie Dreyfus
- Ode to Oren Ishii - RZA
- Run Fay Fun - Isaac Hayes
- Green Hornet - Al Hirt
- Battle Without Honor or Humanity - Tomoyasu Hotei
- Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood - Santa Esmeralda
- Woo Hoo - 5.6.7.8's
- Crane-White Lightning - RZA
- The Flower of Carnage - Meiko Kaji
- The Lonely Shepherd - Zamfir
- You're My Wicked Life - David Carradine
- Ironside - Quincy Jones
- Super 16 - NEU!
- Yakuza Oren 1 - RZA
- Banister Fight - RZA
- Flip Sting
- Sword Swings
- Axe Throws
- Studio: Maverick
- Manufacturer: Maverick
- Package Dimensions: 5.6 x 75 x 75 inches
Fashion be damned: Pop culture is just one big Hometown Buffet for writer-director Quentin Tarantino. Nowhere has that sensibility been more apparent than on his hand-picked soundtrack choices, and this oft tongue-in-cheek tale of a female assassin's revenge (his first film in six years) is no exception. With dizzy, almost palpable glee, Tarantino evokes the international hall-of-mirrors influences that energize martial arts films and much of Asian pop culture in general. Thus the hip-hop of Wu Tang's RZA (who, along with composer Charles Bernstein, concocts what passes for the score's traditional cues) somehow finds itself but one ingredient in a heady souffle that includes vintage TV and film cue rarities (Al Hirt's main title from The Green Hornet, Bernard Herrmann's haunting theme from Twisted Nerve, the spaghetti western melodrama of Luis Bacalov's "The Grand Duel," Isaac Hayes in full blaxploitation mode on "Run Fay Run"), Charlie Feathers' vintage rockabilly and a pan-kitsch sensibility that encompasses Zamfir, Nancy Sinatra's angst-in-the-pants take "Bang, Bang" and Santa Esmeralda's disco-era workout of "Please Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood." Tarantino's contemporary Japan-Pop selections are no less giddy, ranging from Meiko Kaji's sultry "Flower of Carnage" to The 5.6.7.8's loopy "Woo Hoo." It's everything we've come to expect from a Tarantino score (including dialog excerpts and a few sound fx stingers), with a madcap trip around the pop music world thrown in for good measure. -- Jerry McCulleyCustomer reviews: Love it!, 2008-11-16 This soundtrack is everything I hoped it to be. If you love Kill Bill, you have to own the soundtrack as well.
Marketed chic, 2008-10-09 3 1/2
Even if this is perhaps the most diverse ranging soundtrack put together from a Tarantino film yet, there is simply too much effort going into track selections, feeling less inspired and more calculated then previous compilations despite length and worldliness working in favor of the theme.
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