A Few Best Men (soundtrack)

A Few Best Men: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack and Remixes is the sixth soundtrack album by Australian singer Olivia Newton-John, released on 20 January 2012 by Universal Records in Australia.[2] It was released to promote and accompany the 2011 Australian comedy film, A Few Best Men.

A Few Best Men
Soundtrack album by
Released20 January 2012
Recorded2011
Las Vegas, Nevada
(Paramount Studios)
New York, New York
(Youngstar mbc Recording Studios)
Malibu, California
(John Farrar Studio)[1]
GenrePop, dance-pop, electropop
Length56:03
LabelUniversal
ProducerStephan Elliott, Marius de Vries, Lo Five, Guy Gross, Chew Fu, Pablo Calamari, Archie, Roulette, PVH, Laurence Malkin (exec.)
Olivia Newton-John chronology
A Celebration in Song
(2008)
A Few Best Men
(2012)
This Christmas
(2012)
Singles from A Few Best Men
  1. "Mickey (Chew Fu Fix)"
    Released: 9 January 2012

The soundtrack basically consists on old pop hits sung by Newton-John and remixed by producers like Chew Fu, Roulette and Archie. The film's director, Stephan Elliott, invited Newton-John in person for the project, and also work as music producer. Some tracks are performed by session musicians credited as "The Wedding Band". Newton-John also recorded a new original track from the soundtrack, "Weightless" (written by her long-time collaborator, John Farrar, and his son, Max[3]).

The lead single is a cover of Toni Basil's "Mickey", released to radio 9 January 2012.[3] A music video was released, without Newton-John appearing. The song "Weightless" also has a music video that was made with clips from the film.

Background and development

When Stephan Elliott and Warren Fahey approached me with the idea of re-recording all of the songs featured in the film, I thought it would be fun as I was familiar with the songs from the 70s and 80s. Stephan and I had great fun recording in Los Angeles. Not only is he a great film director but a very talented music producer - full of fun, energy and musical vision. Having never done a dance and club album before, I was excited to hear what the remixers have done with these songs to make them so clever and different from the originals.[3]

— Newton-John talking about the offer to work on the soundtrack of A Few Best Men

In August 2011, the blog The Randy Report published a notice that Newton-John was producing a dance track with John Farrar and Marius de Vries.[4][5] This confirmed the rumors that she was doing a dance album, which later proved to be the soundtrack of his new film, A Few Best Men.

The film's director and soundtrack producer, Stephan Elliott, told that his goal is to bring the famous voice of Newton-John together with sharp edged 21st century music style, creating a winning mix. His long-time collaborator, the music composer Guy Gross, produced the songs performed by The Wedding Band and wrote a new original track, "Wankered". Newton-John songs are produced by several well-known remixers. Elliott also co-produced every track of the album. About the first single, Newton-John comments: "For 'Mickey', my sister Rona and I sang the chorus together and, I never realized how cheeky the words were until I read them! My vocal coach, Steve Real, kept my voice alive that day and also added his beautiful voice to the background vocals. The genius remixers worked magic!"[3]

The only Newton-John soundtrack track to actually appear in the film is "Weightless", which is featured in the closing credits. All other songs featured are performed by "The Wedding Band", which includes its soundtrack songs, all the covers performed by Newton-John on the soundtrack album and the unreleased songs "The Ballroom Blitz", "Skippy", "Howzat!", "Falling in Love Again", "Rock and Roll (Part I & II)", "Freeze Frame", "I'm Walking", "The Chicken Dance", "The Twist", "Y.M.C.A." and "Some Girls". The score was composed by Gross and also was not fully commercially released but received an indication for the AACTA Award for Best Original Music Score in 2013.

Promotion

Newton-John with Stephan Elliott at the premiere of A Few Best Men

The promotion of the film and the soundtrack included the participation of Newton-John in several Australian television shows such as The Project and The Circle.[6]

A medley named "A Few from A Few Best Men" (Mirror Ball remix) with the songs "Mickey", "Weightless" and "I Think I Love You" was made for the promotion of songs at dance clubs and video ads. Newton-John sang another medley with the songs "Daydream Believer" and "Weighless" at her performance in 2012 AACTA Awards on 31 January at the Sydney Opera House.[7]

A Summer Night with Olivia Newton-John

A Summer Night with Olivia Newton-John to promote A Few Best Men soundtrack is the eighteenth worldwide concert tour by Newton-John. The tour first leg began in February 2012, in Australia. Newton-John also performed in Asia, North America and Europe, making this tour her largest since the Heartstrings World Tour, which was finished in 2005.

A medley featuring the songs "Mickey", "Daydream Believer", "I Think I Love You" and "Sugar, Sugar" was added to the setlist for some legs. "Weightless" also was added, performed after the medley. Newton-John performed "Weightless" for the first time on her 2011 United States Tour.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[8]
Herald Sun[9]

Cameron Adams of Herald Sun gave the soundtrack a negative review, criticizing the album production. About the song "Daydream Believer", Adams says the remixer Pablo Calamari puts Newton-John's vocal in a sonic blender, "turning her into a drowning robot". While some songs like "Georgy Girl" and "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" have not been criticized, he questions "why does half this record try to turn her into LMFAO?".[9]

Allmusic's Jon O'Brien did a mixed review, also criticizing the auto-tuned production and the vocal performances of "The Wedding Band" musicians. He ends: "Newton-John would have perhaps been better off saving the best songs for a new studio album rather than frittering them away on a mixed bag of a soundtrack which makes the fatal mistake of being more fun to record than to listen to".[8]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Weightless"John Farrar, Max FarrarStephan Elliott, Marius de Vries3:28
2."The Rain, The Park & Other Things" (Lo Five remix)Arthur Kornfeld, Steven DuboffLo Five, Elliott2:27
3."The Nips Are Getting Bigger[A]"Martin MurphyGuy Gross, Elliott2:30
4."Daydream Believer" (Chew Fu Fix)John C. StewartChew Fu, Elliott3:16
5."The Pushbike Song" (Pablo Calamari remix)Evan Jones, Idris JonesPablo Calamari, Elliott4:57
6."Wankered[A]"GrossGuy Gross, Elliott1:57
7."Afternoon Delight[A]"Bill DanoffGross, Elliott2:21
8."A Beautiful Morning[A]"Eddie Brigati, Felix CavaliereGross, Elliott2:54
9."Brand New Key" (Archie remix)Melanie SafkaArchie, Elliott3:35
10."The Love Boat" (Roulette remix)Paul Williams, Charles FoxRoulette, Elliott3:36
11."Live It Up[A]"Greedy SmithGross, Elliott2:23
12."Sugar, Sugar" (Chew Fu Fix)Jeff Barry, Andy KimChew Fu, Elliott3:25
13."Living in the 70's[A]"Greg MacainshGross, Elliott2:26
14."Devil Gate Drive" (Chew Fu & PVH Night Fever remix)Nicky Chinn, Mike ChapmanChew Fu, PVH, Elliott2:57
15."Georgy Girl" (Roulette remix)Tom Springfield, Jim DaleRoulette, Elliott4:20
16."I Think I Love You" (Chew Fu & PVH Love Hurts remix)Tony RomeoChew Fu, PVH, Elliott3:12
17."Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" (Lo Five remix)Jim SteinmanLo Five, Elliott5:17
18."Mickey" (Chew Fu Fix)Chinn, ChapmanChew Fu, Elliott3:25
19."Weightless" (Punk Ninja remix)John Farrar, Max FarrarArchie, Elliott3:27
  • A^ Tracks performed by "The Wedding Band".

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[1]

Release history

Country Date Label Format
Australia[2] 20 January 2012 Universal Music Australia CD, digital download
United States[10] 31 January 2012 Universal Music Australia
(import)
United Kingdom[11]
gollark: Generally, you punish the actual harm directly.
gollark: Besides, that isn't even particularly true for many of them.
gollark: They could cause you to cause harm to other people, but so can a lot of things, so I don't think this is a reasonable standard.
gollark: If you own your own body, I would assume that this includes being able to put drugs in it.
gollark: I doubt this? Basically all governments impose restrictions on e.g. drugs.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.