Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Once More, with Feeling
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| List Price: | $18.98 |
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Price as of Tue 22nd May,2012 12:28 pm CDT
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Average customer review:(347 customer reviews)
Product Description
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Track Listing
- Overture / Going Through The Motions
- I've Got A Theory / Bunnies / If We're Together
- The Mustard
- Under Your Spell
- I'll Never Tell
- The Parking Ticket
- Rest In Peace
- Dawn's Lament
- Dawn's Ballet
- What You Feel
- Standing
- Under Your Spell / Standing - Reprise
- Walk Through The Fire
- Something To Sing About
- What You Feel - Reprise
- Where Do We Go From Here?
- Coda
- End Credits (Broom Dance / Grr Arrgh)
- Main Title
- Suite from "Restless
- Suite from "Hush"
- Sacrifice (from "The Gift")
- Something to Sing About (demo)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #22882 in Music
- Released on: 2002-09-24
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Soundtrack
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .0" h x .0" w x .0" l, .23 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
While the idea of infusing a weekly TV series with a Broadway musical ethos isn't exactly a new one--think Randy Newman's ambitious Cop Rock--it became something of a turn-of the-century television mini-trend. But few have reached as far--or succeeded--like this November 2001 episode of Fox Network's Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Penned by series creator-producer Joss Whedon and performed by Sarah Michelle Gellar and cast, it's a loving, loopy musical pastiche that takes potshots at everything from Andrew Lloyd Webber to alt-rock. Paralleling the show's lovable pop culture tweaking, the musical styles here (the episode's musical conceit is a curse visited upon Buffy's hometown of Sunnydale) range from a patent footlight chorus of demons being interrupted by Gellar's hard-rocking stake thrusts on "Going Through the Motions" to Spike the Vampire's goth-metal complaint "Rest in Peace," with everything from parking tickets and mustard stain removal to climactic duels with the supernatural getting the Broadway send-up. Also includes strong orchestral score-suites from three other episodes, as well as Whedon and wife Kai Cole's demo for "Something to Sing About." --Jerry McCulley

