Track Listing 1. Brady Bunch, The (Grunge Version) 2. It's a Sunshine Day - The Original Brady Bunch Kids 3. I'm Feeling Nothing - Dada 4. Marsha, I Have to Tell You Something - (dialogue) 5. Venus - Shocking Blue 6. Girl - Davy Jones 7. You're All a Part of Me - (dialogue) 8. Whatever - Zak 9. Supermodel (You Better Work) - RuPaul 10. You Kids Have No Idea What It Takes to Impress a Chick - (dialogue) 11. Till I Met You - Christopher Daniel Barnes 12. Beast Is Out of Hand, The - Mudd Pagoda 13. Have a Nice Day - Barry Coffing/Zachary Throne 14. I'm Looking Around - Generation Why 15. Marsha Did It Again - (dialogue) 16. I Wish I Could Be Like You - Mudd Pagoda 17. I Think Peter's a Babe - (dialogue) 18. Keep On - The Original Brady Bunch Kids 19. And as a Wise Man Once Said - (dialogue) 20. Brady Bunch, The - Lauren Tyrell/Megan Joyce/Christina Tyrell/Kristina Oloffson/Zachary Throne
| Details | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Producers: Steve Tyrell, Jackie Mills, Dada, Robbie Van Leeuwen, Eric Kupper. Compilation producer: Steve Tyrell. THE BRADY BUNCH MOVIE transplants the family that represents '70s kitsch into the muddy mosh pit of the 1990s; the soundtrack, accordingly, squeezes the two cultures into one space, allowing them to clash as loudly as Mike Brady's wardrobe. On the one hand, you've got the original Brady television cast's versions of two bubblegum-y tunes, both memorable examples of sunny sitcom pop, and the film's Greg Brady (Christopher Daniel Barnes) performing a bubblegum nugget--"Till I Met You"--written by the TV Greg (Barry Williams). On the other hand are such future examples of ace '90s kitsch as RuPaul's "Supermodel" and standard soundtrack renderings of current metal and alterna-pop by, respectively, Mudd Pagoda and Generation Why--two bands invented for the film by top session men. "The Brady Bunch (Grunge Version)" and Davy Jones' "Girl" are at once novelty tunes and the soundtrack's strokes of brilliance; they not only represent a culture clash, they draw their energy from it. The former is a hilarious mosh-pit rendition of the Bradys' theme, while the latter features a distorted grunge guitar invading a ballad by the former Monkees singer. That this group of artists somehow forms a soundtrack--well, that's the way it's just like the Brady Bunch.
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