• Pre-Order
  • EXCLUSIVE

Pulp Fiction (Music From The Motion Picture) - 30th Anniversary Glow-In-The-Dark Vinyl + Cassette Bundle

$44.99

PULP FICTION

30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION

EXCLUSIVE GLOW-IN-THE-DARK VINYL + CASSETTE BUNDLE

Celebrating the 30th anniversary of Quentin Tarantino’s landmark film and soundtrack ‘Pulp Fiction’. The music featured in the film was the perfect marriage with the smash hit film of 1994. Unusually, no score music was commissioned for Tarantino’s film, so the album stood as a celebration of the stirring collection of pop, rock, surf music, country, soul and rock ‘n’ roll that was such a key part of the film’s success.

The album features a fascinating cross-section of well-known hits, obscure revivals, and remakes, combined in a package that was so popular, it sparked a new surf music craze, helped launch the career of Urge Overkill, brought Dick Dale, Kool & the Gang, Dusty Springfield and others to a new generation.

Dick Dale’s ‘Misirlou,’ with his group the Del-Tones, became the opening music for the film and the album, making the American surf guitar king cooler than he’d been for decades. British instrumental favourites the Tornadoes’ ‘Bustin’ Surfboards’ and 1960s American surf group the Lively Ones’ ‘Surf Rider’ kept that flavour going, and the rock ‘n’ roll element was further enhanced by Ricky Nelson’s 1958 US top ten hit ‘Lonesome Town’ and Chuck Berry’s ‘You Never Can Tell.’

Chicago alternative rock band Urge Overkill were given a huge boost by the inclusion of their cover of one of Neil Diamond’s first hits, the 1967 American top tenner ‘Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon.’ Springfield’s much-admired and soulful ‘Son of a Preacher Man,’ from her classic 1968 album ‘Dusty In Memphis,’ was accompanied on the album by another much-travelled soul standard, Al Green’s ‘Let’s Stay Together.’

Kool & the Gang, who had much earlier reaped the benefits of having their ‘Open Sesame’ on the multi-million-selling ‘Saturday Night Fever’ soundtrack of 1977, enjoyed another upswing as their first big crossover pop hit of late 1973, ‘Jungle Boogie,’ also became part of ‘Pulp Fiction.’

Former Lone Justice frontwoman Maria McKee contributed her own composition ‘If Love Is A Red Dress (Hang Me In Rags),’ and another of the most striking inclusions was ‘Flowers On The Wall,’ a No. 2 country success in 1966 for the long-running Staunton, Virginia group the Statler Brothers.

The ‘Pulp Fiction’ soundtrack reached No. 21 on the Billboard album chart and went on to estimated album equivalents of more than six million in America alone.

Limited to 4 per customer.