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Even More Dazed And Confused Soundtrack Rar: Find Out Where to Buy the Limited Edition Vinyl



If that's not enough for you, four more film soundtracks are available for just a dollar each: Dazed and Confused from 1993, The Crow from 1994, Juno from 2007, and The Fault In Our Stars from 2014. Like the Footloose soundtrack, all four albums have songs that aren't available as individual purchases elsewhere in the Play Store.


The Chambers Brothers originally released a two-minute, forty-second version of this song in 1966 before putting out the more famous eleven-minute version the following year. The eleven-minute version took the soul/rock blend that The Chambers Brothers had going and injected the kind of trippy, lengthy instrumental jam that was typical of the West Coast psych-rock sound of the era. It helped create a blueprint for extended, jammy soul songs, a style that's still being explored today.




Even More Dazed And Confused Soundtrack Rar




The most famous version of "Ball of Confusion" is by The Temptations and Edwin Starr's trademark song is "War", but I chose this version for two reasons: 1) Edwin Starr's nearly-thirteen minute version is trippier than The Temptations' four-minute version, and 2) Edwin Starr's "Ball of Confusion" is trippier than Edwin Starr's "War." One of the landmark songs by psychedelic soul pioneer Norman Whitfield and his collaborator Barrett Strong, "Ball of Confusion" tackled white flight, gun control, unemployment, war, and more. Edwin Starr's howling voice and ad-libbing made it sound even more powerful than The Temptations' version (he incorporates a bit of "War"), and the layers of fuzzed-out guitars and reverb puts the listener in more of a haze.


A beloved neo-soul singer that's on an even slower release schedule than Maxwell is D'Angelo, who's put out three albums in his 20+ year career. His 1995 debut Brown Sugar is as definitive a neo-soul album as Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite, but he would turn the psychedelia up to 11 for his 2000 sophomore album Voodoo. "Devil's Pie" (which appears on Voodoo but first came out on the Belly soundtrack two years earlier) is as good an example of this as any. It was produced by the legendary DJ Premier, and it's a total trip. The jazzy bassline, the sound effects, the layered vocals -- the whole thing sounds like it's from another planet.


Jill Scott's "Blessed" isn't explicitly psychedelic the way "The Healer" and "Mushrooms & Roses" are; it's more like What's Going On. A wash of colorful atmospheres, narcotic rhythms, and hazy harmonies induce many of the same feelings as the songs that were written to soundtrack acid trips. A lot of songs on this list address dark themes and struggles, but "Blessed" is an uplifting song that fights struggle with overwhelming happiness.


2017 has only been a year for a couple months, but it's already given us a song essential enough to mention alongside Diana and Curtis and Erykah. Sinkane (aka Ahmed Gallab) has been around for a while, but he made his best album yet with this year's Life and Livin' It, an album that dives head first into '70s funk and soul. The most mind-expanding moment is its opening track, "Deadweight," which is led by a looping riff that recalls anything from "Cloud Nine" to George Clinton. The breezy harmonies and lyrics about "the thoughts that cloud my head" will make you even more dazed and confused than the riff.


It's the highest-grossing holiday film of all time, and it's got an incredible soundtrack featuring Tyler the Creator, Danny Elfman, Jackie Wilson, Pentatonix, and more...yet it wasn't released on vinyl? Why, that's positively Grinch-y! But Real Gone Music is ready to put presents under the tree with a colored LP pressing of the soundtrack to Dr. Seuss' The Grinch, available for the first time ever! Tyler the Creator's new track, "I Am the Grinch," and his collaboration with Elfman on a new version of "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" are clear highlights, but with chestnuts auld and new(er) like "My Favorite Things" by The Supremes and "Christmas in Hollis" by Run D.M.C, you can't go wrong. Presented in a beautiful jacket with inner sleeve.


Quentin Tarantino's all-time classic Oscar nominated 1994 film Pulp Fiction features an equally as impressive soundtrack that includes famous dialogue from the movie by the likes of John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman and Bruce Willis along with iconic musical selections from none other than Chuck Berry, Maria McKee, Al Green, The Statler Brothers, Kool & The Gang, Ricky Nelson, Dusty Springfield, Dick Dale, Peter Green and Urge Overkill. The film contains a mix of American rock and roll, surf music, pop and soul while the soundtrack is as equally untraditional, consisting of nine songs from the movie, four tracks of dialogue snippets followed by a song, and three tracks of dialogue alone. Seven songs featured in the movie were not included in the original 41-minute soundtrack.


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