Music/Songs that should be banned from movies 4evr

FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
edited March 2009 in Strut Central
...that are just played out.(I am especially thinking about songs and music that are used as crutches in movies with otherwise empty and/or poorly constructed stories. Not so much the first and possible effective use of the music or song.)Carmina BuranaIt's even played out as a parody to how played out it is.Gimme ShelterSeems like that guitar intro basically is the score for several Scorsese's movies and various crime knock-offs.Spirit in the SkyEvery goddamn fetish nostalgia pap of a movie or scene (re: woodstock era ish) some how brings in that intro. STOP.I want to also add Lust for Life. Usually in a scene where the protagonist, despite setbacks and obstacles, somehow overcomes them due to his, say, lust for living. No more.Any more? There have to be more. All you hatters.
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  • mrmatthewmrmatthew 1,575 Posts
    obviuous choices:

    Bad To The Bone - anyone who puts on sunglasses or a leather jacket
    Born To Be Wild - see above


    come to think of it, these two songs shoudl just be banned altogether.

  • ladydayladyday 623 Posts
    Born to be Wild
    Any motorcycle scene or scene of someone being rebellious. Actually all Steppenwolf gets the BAN.

    Pains me to say but I Got You (I Feel Good) is movie cliche at this point. Usually in movies starring kids and/or animals.

  • DJ_EnkiDJ_Enki 6,473 Posts
    "I Feel Good," especially when used in a sequence in which the character does not, in fact, feel good.

  • ToccuDomuToccuDomu 225 Posts
    Sounds of Silence in "troubled/lonely person finally finds reason to hope" scenes. Blech.

  • SnappingSnapping 995 Posts
    "For What Its Worth" has become the instant code for "its the sixties and serious things are happening. Whenever I here it in movies and on TV in this context I think that the filmmakers are lazy and unimaginative.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Born to be Wild
    Actually all Steppenwolf gets the BAN.

    But b-boys still love them some Magic Carpet Ride.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    For What It's Worth

  • Lucious_FoxLucious_Fox 2,479 Posts
    Respect

  • OkemOkem 4,617 Posts
    The La's - There she goes

    It seemed obligatory at one point, that every rom-com made had to include this somewhere in their movie. There's even a copycat cover version that's used (anyone in the 'industry' know why they'd do that?).

  • CousinLarryCousinLarry 4,618 Posts
    Sex scenes with hallelujah.

    b/w most of the stuff used in Watchmen. See below.


    2. Unforgettable Nat King Cole
    3. The Times They Are A-Changin' Bob Dylan
    4. The Sound Of Silence Simon And Garfunkel
    5. Me And Bobby McGee Janis Joplin
    9. Hallelujah Leonard Cohen 4:36 Album Only
    10. All Along The Watchtower Jimi Hendrix
    11. Ride Of The Valkyries Budapest Symphony Orchestra

  • verb606verb606 2,518 Posts
    "Respect" and any other similar songs used in the montage of any female character "getting sassy" or "getting her groove back." Especially white women.

    I'm all for the empowerment of female characters in films, but not in some incredibly cliched way.

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
    For What It's Worth

    Oh God. Yes. How did I forget that one?

    +

    Go ahead and add everything from Forest Gump

    "Hound Dog" performed by Elvis Presley ??? 2:16 @1956
    "Rebel Rouser" performed by Duane Eddy ??? 2:21
    "(I Don't Know Why) But I Do" performed by Clarence Frogman Henry ??? 2:18
    "Walk Right In" performed by The Rooftop Singers ??? 2:33
    "Land of 1000 Dances" performed by Wilson Pickett ??? 2:25
    "Blowin' in the Wind" performed by Joan Baez ??? 2:36
    "Fortunate Son" performed by Creedence Clearwater Revival ??? 2:18
    "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" performed by The Four Tops ??? 2:43
    "Respect" performed by Aretha Franklin ??? 2:27
    "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" performed by Bob Dylan ??? 4:35
    "Sloop John B" performed by Beach Boys ??? 2:56
    "California Dreamin'" performed by The Mamas & the Papas ??? 2:39
    "For What It's Worth" performed by Buffalo Springfield ??? 2:38
    "What the World Needs Now Is Love" performed by Jackie DeShannon ??? 3:13
    "Break On Through (To the Other Side)" performed by The Doors ??? 2:27
    "Mrs. Robinson" performed by Simon & Garfunkel ??? 3:51

    "Volunteers" performed by Jefferson Airplane ??? 2:04
    "Let's Get Together" performed by The Youngbloods ??? 4:36
    "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)" performed by Scott McKenzie ??? 2:58
    "Turn! Turn! Turn!" performed by The Byrds ??? 3:54
    "Medley: Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In" performed by Fifth Dimension ??? 4:48
    "Everybody's Talkin'" performed by Harry Nilsson ??? 2:44
    "Joy to the World" performed by Three Dog Night ??? 3:16
    "Stoned Love" performed by The Supremes ??? 2:59
    "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head" performed by B. J. Thomas ??? 3:00
    "Mr. President" performed by Randy Newman ??? 2:46
    "Sweet Home Alabama" performed by Lynyrd Skynyrd ??? 4:43
    "It Keeps You Runnin'" performed by The Doobie Brothers ??? 4:13
    "I've Got to Use My Imagination" performed by Gladys Knight & the Pips ??? 3:30
    "On the Road Again" performed by Willie Nelson ??? 2:29
    "Against the Wind" performed by Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band ??? 5:33

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
    Sex scenes with hallelujah.

    b/w most of the stuff used in Watchmen. See below.


    2. Unforgettable Nat King Cole
    3. The Times They Are A-Changin' Bob Dylan
    4. The Sound Of Silence Simon And Garfunkel
    5. Me And Bobby McGee Janis Joplin
    9. Hallelujah Leonard Cohen 4:36 Album Only
    10. All Along The Watchtower Jimi Hendrix
    11. Ride Of The Valkyries Budapest Symphony Orchestra

    Funny because of all all the bad reviews of that movie, that is the thing that stood out to me as a good reason to wait for the dvd.

  • verb606verb606 2,518 Posts


    Bad To The Bone - anyone who puts on sunglasses or a leather jacket



    Generally I agree with this, although the scene in Terminator 2 of Arnie walking out of that bar after he sonned everyone while BTTB is playing is hilarious to me. Such a great contrast between the cartoonishly corny song and the images of a ruthless robot killer.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Otis Redding in general.

    I can think of both a movie (Heaven Help Us) and a TV show (The Sopranos) which showed a couple getting romantic while one of Otis' famed love ballads played in the background.

    Honorable mention: Jon Cryer lipsynching to "Try A Little Tenderness" to prove his love to Molly Ringwald.

    I don't even know if Otis gets used that often, but based on these three scenes, I'll bet there's at least 20 more I haven't seen.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    "Shout" by the Isley Brothers
    "When A Man Loves A Woman" by Percy Sledge

    Maybe I'm confusing TV
    with movies, but these two songs
    have a lot of wear and tear
    on the soundtrack circuit

  • OkemOkem 4,617 Posts
    Spencer Davis Group - Gimme Some Lovin???

    Any use of Barry White in a 'comical' or ironic sex scene.

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
    "Shout" by the Isley Brothers
    "When A Man Loves A Woman" by Percy Sledge

    Maybe I'm confusing TV
    with movies, but these two songs
    have a lot of wear and tear
    on the soundtrack circuit

    TV too, but there, played-outness is taken to new heights.

  • ReynaldoReynaldo 6,054 Posts
    Amazing Grace

  • ladydayladyday 623 Posts

    Go ahead and add everything from Forest Gump

    "Hound Dog" performed by Elvis Presley ??? 2:16 @1956
    "Rebel Rouser" performed by Duane Eddy ??? 2:21
    "(I Don't Know Why) But I Do" performed by Clarence Frogman Henry ??? 2:18
    "Walk Right In" performed by The Rooftop Singers ??? 2:33
    "Land of 1000 Dances" performed by Wilson Pickett ??? 2:25
    "Blowin' in the Wind" performed by Joan Baez ??? 2:36
    "Fortunate Son" performed by Creedence Clearwater Revival ??? 2:18
    "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" performed by The Four Tops ??? 2:43
    "Respect" performed by Aretha Franklin ??? 2:27
    "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" performed by Bob Dylan ??? 4:35
    "Sloop John B" performed by Beach Boys ??? 2:56
    "California Dreamin'" performed by The Mamas & the Papas ??? 2:39
    "For What It's Worth" performed by Buffalo Springfield ??? 2:38
    "What the World Needs Now Is Love" performed by Jackie DeShannon ??? 3:13
    "Break On Through (To the Other Side)" performed by The Doors ??? 2:27
    "Mrs. Robinson" performed by Simon & Garfunkel ??? 3:51

    "Volunteers" performed by Jefferson Airplane ??? 2:04
    "Let's Get Together" performed by The Youngbloods ??? 4:36
    "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)" performed by Scott McKenzie ??? 2:58
    "Turn! Turn! Turn!" performed by The Byrds ??? 3:54
    "Medley: Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In" performed by Fifth Dimension ??? 4:48
    "Everybody's Talkin'" performed by Harry Nilsson ??? 2:44
    "Joy to the World" performed by Three Dog Night ??? 3:16
    "Stoned Love" performed by The Supremes ??? 2:59
    "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head" performed by B. J. Thomas ??? 3:00
    "Mr. President" performed by Randy Newman ??? 2:46
    "Sweet Home Alabama" performed by Lynyrd Skynyrd ??? 4:43
    "It Keeps You Runnin'" performed by The Doobie Brothers ??? 4:13
    "I've Got to Use My Imagination" performed by Gladys Knight & the Pips ??? 3:30
    "On the Road Again" performed by Willie Nelson ??? 2:29
    "Against the Wind" performed by Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band ??? 5:33

    I agree with you, but in this instance it kind of worked because the movie itself was one long tribute to cliched historical movie moments.

    The Hippie Scene (For What It's Worth)
    The Heavy Drug Scene (Gimme Shelter)
    The Buddy Gets Killed in Vietnam Scene (Sweet Home Alabama)
    and so on...

    Makes sense they'd use a cliched song for a cliched moment.

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    Brown Eyed Girl
    My Girl

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts
    Seems like I've seen parts of Pater Gabriel's Passion score used in too many movies. Especially that part with Baba Maal singing the call to prayer ( or is that Passion Sources?). Usually after a tragedy.

  • FatbackFatback 6,746 Posts

    THE MOST OVERUSED SONGS IN MOVIE HISTORY
    by Noel Wood

    As both a movie buff and a musicphile, I tend to pay a lot of attention to the music that appears in film. I think that the music in a film can really make or break it as an accomplishment. One thing I respected about Quentin Tarantino when he hit the scene was his amazing use of music. Obscure stuff from past decades that you hadn???t thought of in ages, used in sequences where it really helped to create a mood. Unfortunately, though, Tarantino was an anomaly. Too many filmmakers consider their musical selections an afterthought, throwing on some of the least-inspired banal crap you could possibly imagine. And all too often, they use songs that have been used again and again and again. And again. And again.

    So here are the top ten offenders: the ten songs that have become the most overused, hackneyed, clich??d pieces of music in film history. Turn it up.

    10. Cranberries, ???Dreams???
    The Cranberries, an Irish rock band that somehow managed to have more chart success than Sinead O??? Connor and the Sundays combined despite being blatantly derivative of both, have contributed one of the most omnipresent movie themes of the last decade. ???Dreams???, one of their biggest hits, has been featured on the soundtracks to such films as MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE, CHUNGKING EXPRESS, SAFE PASSAGE, YOU???VE GOT MAIL, and BOYS ON THE SIDE. On top of that, it???s been pretty regularly featured in movie trailers as well. Got a romantic comedy you want to shill? Maybe something that can appeal to the whole family? Apparently the rights to ???Dreams??? come pretty cheap. After all, they used it for THE BABYSITTER???S CLUB.

    9. Pete Townshend, ???Let My Love Open the Door???
    Ah, Pete Townshend. The prototype of the punk rocker, the angst-driven guitarist from the Who mellowed out in his older years (possibly around the time that he developed a fondness for child porn.) One of his biggest hits as a solo artist was ???Let My Love Open the Door???, a catchy pop tune that has permeated many a movie soundtrack. You may have remembered hearing the song in GROSSE POINT BLANK, or more recently in the horrid Adam Sandler remake MR. DEEDS. And it???s also one of those songs you???ll see quite a bit in movie trailers. Whenever you need a song to represent an uplifting, inspiring film (Think Tim Burton???s BIG FISH or Cameron Crowe???s JERRY MAGUIRE) call upon Mr. Townshend.

    8. Yello, ???Oh Yeah???
    You know it. It gets stuck in your head. It???s infectious. Bum, bum. Oh Yeah! Chick-a-chick-ahhh! You probably hear it and immediately want a Snicker???s Bar, or one of the other 37,000 products that used the song in a commercial. But this little ditty from Europop pioneers Yello is also pretty common in the movies, particularly comedies from the 1980???s. Immediately springing to mind is the classic FERRIS BEULLER???S DAY OFF, in which this song was used to its maximum potential. But it was also featured in several other films from the era, including THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS, SHE???S OUT OF CONTROL, and OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS. After 1990, however, the song had run its course and was not to be found in the great numbers that it had in its 80???s heyday.

    7. Carl Douglas, ???Kung Fu Fighting???
    I hate this song. Really. I get a lot of flak for it, but it sucks ass. I think the only song I hate more is Clarence Carter???s ???Strokin??????. Part of the reason I hate it so is the fact that it???s managed to find its way into every single clich??d movie moment that it can possibly fit. The reason it???s not higher on this list is only because of the fact that it???s generally only used for that one moment in the film ??? generally the comedic martial arts sequence. You???ve probably heard it in BEVERLY HILLS NINJA, or BOWFINGER, or DADDY DAY CARE, all pretty stupid comedies (two of which feature Eddie Murphy.) The song can also be heard in SPIRIT OF ???76, MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS, and a Tom Jones-sung cover appears on on Jackie Chan???s SUPERCOP.

    6. George Thorogood, ???Bad to the Bone???
    The opening riff is unmistakeable. And when you hear it, you know you???re in for a clich??. Some new badass has entered the picture, or some kid is getting suited up to get revenge on the bully, or someone???s sharking in a pool game. Yes, George Thorogood and the Delaware Destroyers??? ???Bad to the Bone??? is horribly hackneyed, but that doesn???t stop filmmakers from using it to this day. You might remember the song being used in TERMINATOR 2. Or maybe you???re one of those people who heard it in the 1998 remake of THE PARENT TRAP. Director/Composer John Carpenter even put his own spin on the song as the theme to his killer-car flick CHRISTINE. But perhaps more than its appearance in the films itself is the outrageous amount of movie trailers it???s been used it. Think THE COLOR OF MONEY for its best use, but then think of any movie since where a scruffy anti-hero comes in to kick some ass, and you???re almost guaranteed to hear it blaring over the trailer. I???m pretty sure it???s in at least one trailer for GARFIELD.

    5. Spencer Davis Group, ???Gimme Some Lovin??????
    Even the classics work their way into the movies from time to time. The Spencer Davis Group???s ???Gimme Some Lovin?????? is an upbeat 60???s number that everyone knows, and as a result, it???s creeped its way into too many Hollywood movies to count. Whenever you???ve got an uppity romantic montage, you can???t go wrong with this. The producers of NOTTING HILL knew this. It also works in nostalgia flicks, like THE BIG CHILL. But everyone knows the song from its presence in THE BLUES BROTHERS. Covers of the song have appeared in films such as DAYS OF THUNDER and JACK FROST (That one???s by Hanson!) ???Gimme some Lovin?????? is also a popular trailer filler, most prominently in the genre of romantic comedy. It was recently used as a bumper for the Coen Brothers??? INTOLERABLE CRUELTY.

    4. Smash Mouth, ???All Star???
    Smash Mouth???s ???All Star??? is the newest song on this list, having only been released in 1999, but it earns a special place on this list for its utter omnipresence. After butchering tons of other people???s songs, this soulless alt-rock band released this catchy-like-herpes single. Immediately upon its release, it was featured in so many commercials (think Gatorade) and movie trailers that it was virtually impossible to escape. It became the theme song to that summer???s hit comedy MYSTERY MEN, and created the music bed of approximately 79% of that film. In the same year, it was also used for Disney???s INSPECTOR GADGET. If that wasn???t enough, it was used prominently in RAT RACE and even SHREK. The problem is that when this song gets used, it gets used to death. It???s generally featured as part of the soundtrack, plays over the closing credits, and is featured in the trailers. And it???s still being used on movie trailers today. Not a season goes by where it isn???t used to sell some comedy to the masses. The guys in Smash Mouth have a special place in hell waiting for them.

    3. James Brown, ???I Got You (I Feel Good)???
    I love the Godfather of soul, and will always have a soft spot for him, despite the wife-beatings and drunken fleeing attempts. But Brown???s best-known song has become one of the most annoying staples in movie history. ???I Got You (I Feel Good)??? has probably been featured in more films than it hasn???t, and is generally found in almost any family comedy or nostalgia piece. It reads like a who???s who of Hollywood films: GOOD MORNING, VIETNAM. MRS DOUBTFIRE. K-9. A SMILE LIKE YOURS. DISNEY???S THE KID. THE BIG CHILL. And yes, it???s also a regular on the movie trailer circuit, indicating that this is the feel-good movie of the season that will make you delight with laughter! It???s almost become so clich??d that it practically goes unnoticed these days.

    2. Jackie Wilson, ???Higher and Higher???
    Another one from the classic vault . Jackie Wilson???s ???Higher and Higher??? is one of Motown???s shining stars, but Hollywood has turned it into a blight on society. It???s got a great beat and you can dance to it, so let???s put it in any moment that needs to be drilled in as ???fun??? and ???upbeat???. You???ll find this song on films as diverse as THE BACHELOR, SIMON BIRCH, and OPERATION DUMBO DROP. It???s also found playing over the closing credits, as it does on GHOSTBUSTERS 2 or THE AIR UP THERE. And, as with many others on this list, it???s an ad agency???s wet dream for the movie trailer.

    1. Katrina and the Waves, ???Walking on Sunshine???
    And finally, here???s the real culprit. Katrina and the Waves were a watered-down Canadian new wave outfit from the early ???80s, who put out this shitty song and changed the face of motion pictures forever. Yes, don???t let its oversaturation fool you: this was always a shitty song. It didn???t just become that way in retrospect, like many other hackneyed movie songs do. You may have had the displeasure of hearing this piece of shit in THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS. Or you may have had to plug your bleeding ears when you heard it in THE MASTER OF DISGUISE. Or you may have had to clamp your hands over your head when it appeared in BEAN. Or perhaps you banged your head on the seat in front of you when it appeared in DADDY DAY CARE. But the biggest crime was hearing the song in HIGH FIDELITY, especially in the context it???s used. Jack Black???s character is supposed to be this big time music snob, and he tosses in a tape with this song on it to rock out to? Please. And on top of the movies it appears in, it???s probably the most overused song used for movie trailers, shilling films such as JERSEY GIRL. Katrina can taker her Waves and stick them where there is no Sunshine.

    Now, this ten is not a definitive list. There are dozens of other songs that get overused in the movies, often to the point of ridiculousness. Here are some of the other offenders:

    The Jam, ???A Town Called Malice???: BILLY ELLIOT, VALLEY GIRL, multiple movie soundtracks.
    Edgar Winter Group, ???Frankenstein???: DAZED AND CONFUSED, ENCINO MAN, any other movie with a stoner in it.
    War, ???Low Rider???: DAZED AND CONFUSED, 21 GRAMS, any other movie with a junkie in it.
    Tones on Tail, ???Go!???: GROSSE POINT BLANK, CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, any other film with a need for a hoppin??? dance number.
    Steppenwolf, ???Born to be Wild???: EASY RIDER, BORN TO BE WILD, any motorcycle scene.
    Four Tops, ???Can???t Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)???: Movie Trailer Mania!

    One notable honorable mention goes to Steppenwolf???s ???Magic Carpet Ride???, which in 1999 alone was featured in five films: NEVER BEEN KISSED, AUSTIN POWERS: THE SPY WHO SHAGGED ME, OUTSIDE PROVIDENCE, THE LIMEY, and a remixed version in GO.

    But to close this thing, let???s take a look at one particular film that almost seems as if it were destined to have the shittiest soundtrack in the history of film. You saw it mentioned above, because it contains a few of the big offenders as far as generic movie music goes. It???s none other than 2003???s Eddie Murphy Death Knell, DADDY DAY CARE. Here???s a look at this travesty of a soundtrack. You be the judge:

    1. Walking On Sunshine - Katrina & The Waves
    2. Takin??? Care Of Business - Bachman-Turner Overdrive

    3. I Want You Back - Jackson 5
    4. Coconut - Harry Nilsson
    5. Rhinestone Cowboy - Glen Campbell
    6. I Wanna Be Sedated - The Ramones

    7. Kung Fu Fighting - Carl Douglas

    8. Dream Weaver - Gary Wright

    9. Ballroom Blitz - Sweet

    10. Surrender - Cheap Trick

    11. ABC - Jackson 5

    12. I Want Candy - Bow Wow Wow

    Almost every one of those songs is some sort of a clich?? by this point. That???s just sad.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    "Shout" by the Isley Brothers
    "When A Man Loves A Woman" by Percy Sledge

    Maybe I'm confusing TV
    with movies, but these two songs
    have a lot of wear and tear
    on the soundtrack circuit

    The over use comes from hearing the music so much in TV shows/movies, then repeated when you are in the theater.

    There is always a good movie use of an overplayed song. Basically, the first time it is used it works and it's right. Then it is used so often by other film makers wanting the same feel it gets ruined.

    I like Bull Durham which has a scene with 60 Minute Man.
    Heard it in another movie and it made me think of Bull Durham.
    I would think that film makers would want to avoid that kind of connection.

    Two more:
    I'm A Man
    Old Time Rock And Roll
    I hope to never see another movie with a guy dancing alone in his underwear lipsynching anything.

    These song relate to scenes we never want to see again:
    Heroes being cool by putting on sunglasses/leather jacket/mounting a motorcycle.
    60s montage of drugs and protesters.
    Lonely guy lying on his back staring at the ceiling/sky.

    BTW: Singing In The Rain was like the third movie that song was featured in.

  • djkingottodjkingotto 1,704 Posts
    Nowhere to Run - Martha & the Vandellas

    Any hit by The Doors.

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    Sorta related to "Bad To The Bone":

    "Mannish Boy" by Muddy Waters

    I've only heard it ONCE in a movie (Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling starring Richard Pryor), but the song just plain FEELS like an instant cliche

    (the song was in Cadillac Records, too, but it BELONGS there, since "Muddy Waters" is one of the main characters)

  • I always thought that the opening notes to 'Purple Haze' ought to come with a voice over that says "The sixties were a turbulent time..."

  • pickwick33pickwick33 8,946 Posts
    I know this is television, not movies, but the soundtrack to The Wonder Years was like a Greatest Hits of overused oldies from the sixties

  • that boring pink floyd tune "time" from darkside of the moon.
    this is used in EVERY documentary of some geezers walking up or skiing down a mountain (not snowboarding) or discovering a cave - at least on german tv since 1976

    also kruder & dorfmeister's bedroom rockers. it is used foe 80 percent of the beach-relax-it's posh here scenes in travel docs

  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts
    Otis Redding in general.



    Otis is not overused in films. I would like to hear MORE Otis in movies, please.


    As for another post of yours, "Mannish Boy" is also in Risky Business.

    In fact, I bought the RB OST way back in the early 80's just to get that song, which was new and exciting to me at the age of 14 or whatever.



    I vote for:

    ANYTHING BY CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL



    ... unless they can find one that hasn't been played to death.
    But "Run Through the Jungle" (vietnam movies) and "Bad Moon Rising" etc
    can all be retired until the 22nd century.
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