The Boat That Rocked - OST

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For some reason, this star-studded, gem of a movie (featuring the collected talents of Philip Seymour Hoffman, Bill Nighy, Kenneth Branagh, Mad Men's January Jones) about a pirate radio station during the swinging 60s was seen fit only for a straight to DVD release. The mind boggles.

The Boat That Rocked does for 60s music and flared trousers what When We Were Kings did for "The Rumble in the Jungle", ie. it makes you wish you were there. Written and directed by Richard Curtis, who was also responsible for Four Weddings and a Funeral and Love, Actually, there is a notable British groovy vibe about this stellar 2CD collection. Even if weren’t old or sober enough to have any memories of this period, the songs here will still hit you with that reassuring flash of recognition.

Don't be alarmed that 20-something newcomer Duffy kicks things off with "Stay With Me Baby". Everyone knows she found her way to the 21st century from '66 via Marty McFly's Delorean, so that explains that. Elsewhere, generous helpings of The Kinks, Cat Stevens, The Who and Cream offer irrefutable proof that the British understood rock 'n roll a little better than those across the pond.

But when The Beach Boys' "Wouldn't It Be Nice" pops up, followed by Smokey Robinson, Herb Alpert and Otis Redding, you realise that the Americans probably had the surest way with drama and bottom-of-the-barrel, raw emotion.

The ladies of the era could've been better represented, with only Martha Reeves, The Supremes and Duffy's 'twin sister' Dusty Springfield weighing in. The warm, druggy psychedelic good times are here too. Tommy James & The Shondells "Crimson and Clover", Jimi Hendrix's "The Wind Cries Mary", and Procol Harum's "Nights in White Satin" all make you long for a time gone by. As Curtis says in the soundtrack's liner notes, the best days of pop music are not necessarily behind us, but their successors sure are harder to find.
 
 
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Pete 10/17/2009 8:32 PM
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I went on a waiting list for the cd and the dvd, it was all worthwhile, took me rifght back to the days of Radio Caroline, which was responsible for the BBC launching Radio 1 back in 67/68. EXCELLENT
Eloise 10/14/2009 4:00 PM
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Bloody brilliant movie! Loved every minute. And the music, oh, the music. Definitely getting the soundtrack.
Rapunzell 10/14/2009 1:23 PM
I saw this movie pre-view on one of our recent DVD purchases ... and I've been trying to track it down ever since! imagine my frustration when I heard that I wont be able to sing along to the classic hits in a cinema ... O well ... time to pull out the old classics, a bottle of wine and good friends!
Tracey 10/13/2009 3:41 PM
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If you watch this movie and don't feel profoundly jealous that you weren't on that boat, then you should go back to watching The Sound of Music. An absolute cracker of a night in.
Peter 10/13/2009 3:33 PM
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Nights In White Satin by Procol Harum? Nonsense! That was The Moody Blues! Maybe you meant Whiter Shade Of Pale?
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Label
Universal
Genre
Soundtracks
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Kalahari
 
The Boat that Rocked