Friday Night Lights (television soundtrack)
Friday Night Lights is the soundtrack for the television series Friday Night Lights, a program inspired by the film of the same name.
Friday Night Lights | ||||
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Soundtrack album by Various Artists | ||||
Released | July 2007 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 62:03 | |||
Label | Adrenaline Records | |||
Producer | Liza Richardson Jonathan McHugh Jonathan Platt Jonathan Miller | |||
Various Artists chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Music Box | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Although post-rock band Explosions in the Sky wrote most of the film's soundtrack, the music for the television series was a more accessible affair, with bands such as The Killers and OutKast featuring on it. One Explosions in the Sky track did appear on the soundtrack album, however, with "First Breath After Coma" (from their album The Earth is Not a Cold Dead Place) becoming the album closer.[2]
Track listing
- "Devil Town" - Tony Lucca
- "Read My Mind" - The Killers (Like Rebel Diamonds mix)
- "I Turn My Camera On" - Spoon
- "Idlewild Blues" - OutKast
- "Everything I Do" - Whiskeytown
- "Rewind" - Stereophonics
- "Keep Us Together" - Starsailor
- "Big Big Kid" - Jibbs
- "So Divided" - …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
- "Goodbye" - Drive-By Truckers
- "Dead Man's Will" - Calexico/Iron & Wine
- "Storm" - José González
- "I Remember" - Chris Brokaw
- "First Breath After Coma" - Explosions in the Sky
gollark: The "degree" is the maximum amount of variables multiplied together in a monomial; 3 there, because x³ is xxx.
gollark: A polynomial is basically something like x³ + xy² + x + 7; the sum of some monomials, which contain variables and stuff multiplied together.
gollark: Plus trigonometry and exponentials are conveniently merged.
gollark: For example, they have the "fundamental theorem of algebra", where a polynomial of degree n *always* has n roots.
gollark: Anyway, by defining an answer to sqrt(-1) you can attain the complex numbers, which are a very powerful extension to the real number line.
References
External links
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