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Music CD - Various Artists, Joss Whedon, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Christophe Beck: Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Once More, with Feeling

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Music CD: Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Once More, with Feeling Artist: Various Artists, Joss Whedon, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Christophe Beck
List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $13.13
Your Save: $ 5.85 ( 31% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Rounder / Umgd
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Main Title 2. Overture/Going Through the Motions 3. I've Got a Theory/Bunnies/If We're Together 4. The Mustard 5. Under Your Spell 6. I'll Never Tell 7. The Parking Ticket 8. Rest In Peace 9. Dawn's Lament 10. Dawn's Ballet 11. What You Feel 12. Standing 13. Under Your Spell / Standing (Reprise) 14. Walk Through the Fire 15. Something to Sing About 16. What You Feel (Reprise) 17. Where Do We Go From Here? 18. Coda 19. End Credits (Broom Dance/Grr Argh) 20. Suite from "Restless 21. Suite from "Hush" 22. Sacrifice (from "The Gift") 23. Something to Sing About (demo)
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0011661905825 Format: Soundtrack Label: Rounder / Umgd Manufacturer: Rounder / Umgd Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Rounder / Umgd Release Date: 2002-09-24 Studio: Rounder / Umgd
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Wonderfull music but falls short without the visuals Comment: Joss Whedon is a genious and this cd is wonderfull to have(ie. to get to have a bit of buffy in the car). But get the episode first because after listening to the cd we just had to watch the episode again. Most of the songs just work so much better with the visuals.
Customer Rating:      Summary: EXCELLENT Comment: This was part of my first order and it arrived within 7 days. Very impressed. Everything works well.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Love is a powerful thing//// Comment: Oh my God. When I finally bought Buffy season six at first I was like "Oh my God there's some stupid musical on there" as I never even seen it at the time so I thought a musical on Buffy would not fit. But the minute I started watching it I fell in love. Especially with Amber's song "Under Your Spell". My God I love that song. It's so romantic and her voice is right on key with what the song represents. Five stars for Amber and that song that will always be in my head!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Just buy it... you'll love it Comment: I listen to this soundtrack at least once a week. If you love Buffy, and especially of course the musical episode, you should really get this. It makes every listen worthwhile.
Customer Rating:      Summary: With Feeling... Comment: This music is definitely inspired. I have performed Under Your Spell for my mom and she loved it...It's the only episode that I can get my whole family to watch because we all love music. Anthony's voice is to die for in this music! Listen to the part in Walk Through the Fire where he first comes in, his voice goes really low and it gives me shivers...by the way, if you like his voice, check out the cd Music For Elevators, it's all him singing...and it even includes a song that Joss Whedon wrote and orginally wanted in the musical, but it never made it. The song's called Last Time. Hope you like it!
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Editorial Reviews:
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While the idea of infusing a weekly TV series with a Broadway musical ethos isn't exactly a new one--think Randy Newman's ambitious Cop Rock--it became something of a turn-of the-century television mini-trend. But few have reached as far--or succeeded--like this November 2001 episode of Fox Network's Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Penned by series creator-producer Joss Whedon and performed by Sarah Michelle Gellar and cast, it's a loving, loopy musical pastiche that takes potshots at everything from Andrew Lloyd Webber to alt-rock. Paralleling the show's lovable pop culture tweaking, the musical styles here (the episode's musical conceit is a curse visited upon Buffy's hometown of Sunnydale) range from a patent footlight chorus of demons being interrupted by Gellar's hard-rocking stake thrusts on "Going Through the Motions" to Spike the Vampire's goth-metal complaint "Rest in Peace," with everything from parking tickets and mustard stain removal to climactic duels with the supernatural getting the Broadway send-up. Also includes strong orchestral score-suites from three other episodes, as well as Whedon and wife Kai Cole's demo for "Something to Sing About." --Jerry McCulley
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