
This time it is Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich\'s "Hold Tight" and the bouncy closing credits track, April March\'s "Chick Habit." "Hold Tight" is a breezy 60\'s Brit Rock with a great bass rhythm and Tarantino loves his syncopated drumbeats.

Songs so specifically placed that we can no longer associate them with anything else. It also wouldn\'t be a Tarantino album if there weren\'t at least two or three obscure songs that he makes iconic.
#Death proof soundtrack list movie#
And of course, some audio clips from the movie - otherwise it wouldn\'t be a Tarantino album. In true fashion, you have some cruising 60\'s surfer rock for opening titles (Jack Nitzsche "The Last Race"), some low-key R& B ("The Love You Save (May Be Your Own)" and "Baby, It\'s You") and some funk ("Down In Mexico"). This time it is from Ennio Morricone\'s Cat o\' Nine Tails ("Paranoia Prima") and Pino Donnagio\'s Blow Out ("Sally And Jack"). Like Kill Bill, there are several references to movie scores by Italian composers. The movie literally takes place in supercharged cars and bars, so there\'s a bunch of rousing foot stomping 70\'s tunes (T.Rex\'s "Jeepster" and Pacific Gas & Electric\'s "Staggolee") with a little bit on the verge of the 80\'s ("It\'s So Easy"). While Jackie Brown focused more on funk and blaxpoitation music, Death Proof emphasizes Tarantino\'s love of 70\'s roadhouse rock. This album is everything you\'re expecting from a Tarantino soundtrack, except it\'s a simpler, more focused soundtrack that distills a more specific aspect of his musical preferences. It\'s a concentrated dose of 70\'s nostalgia filtered through that uniquely familiar QT filter.
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Death Proof is the second segment of the exploitation double-feature Grindhouse, Quentin Tarantino\'s tribute to "car" movies of time, like Gone in 60 Seconds and Vanishing Point (which both directly referenced in the movie).
