Track Listing 1. Mountain Town 2. Uncle F**** 3. It's Easy, Mmmkay 4. Blame Canada 5. Kyle's Mom's a Bitch 6. What Would Brian Boitano Do? 7. Up There 8. La Resistance (Medley) 9. Eyes of a Child - Michael McDonald 10. I Can Change 11. I'm Super 12. Mountain Town - (reprise) 13. Good Love - Isaac Hayes 14. Shut Yo Face (Uncle F****) - Trick Daddy/Trina & Tre +6 15. Riches to Rags (Mmmkay) - Nappy Roots 16. Kyle's Mom's a Big Fat Bitch - Joe C./Kid Rock 17. What Would Brian Boitano Do? Pt. II - D.V.D.A. 18. I Swear It (I Can Change) - The Violent Femmes 19. Super - RuPaul 20. O Canada - Geddy Lee/Alex Lifeson
| Details | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes "Blame Canada" was nominated for the 1999 Academy Award For Best Song. It was inevitable a feature film based on the hilarious animated show SOUTH PARK would be made. It was also inevitable that the movie would produce an equally sidesplitting soundtrack. Stan, Kyle, Cartman, Kenny, and the whole South Park gang sing their hearts out in the tradition of the Hollywood musical-but with all the raw, shocking bathroom humor that has made the show such a hit with its devoted viewers. Things naturally can get a bit rough in the language department, so this disc is not for the faint of heart. But that's the fun of it, right? All of the movie's big musical numbers are here, including the opening "Mountain Town," "Blame Canada," and "What Would Brian Boitano Do." Even such characters as Mr. Mackey, Terrance and Phillip, Satan, and Saddam Hussein get their own hysterical spotlight cuts. Also featured are songs by such artists as Nappy Roots, Joe C. featuring Kid Rock, and RuPaul. These were not included in the film, but they are certain to entertain SOUTH PARK fans. A rocking version of "O Canada"--by Rush's Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, along with the flatulent Terrance and Phillip--brings the production to an uproarious end.
Editorial Reviews ...deliciously tasteless...a cast album that gleefully sends up all the Hollywood musical conventions we're being deprived of... - Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly (08/13/1999)
Ranked #68 in EW's 100 Best Movie Soundtracks Entertainment Weekly (10/12/2001)
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