Product Details
The Blair Witch Project: Josh's Blair Witch Mix [Enhanced CD]

The Blair Witch Project: Josh's Blair Witch Mix [Enhanced CD]
From Chapter III Records

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Track Listing

  1. Gloomy Sunday - Lydia Lunch
  2. Order of Death - Public Image Ltd.
  3. Draining Faces - Skinny Puppy
  4. Kingdom's Coming - Bauhaus
  5. Don't Go to Sleep Without Me - The Creatures
  6. God Is God - Laibach
  7. Beware - The Afghan Whigs
  8. Laughing Pain - Front Line Assembly
  9. Haunted - Type O Negative
  10. She's Unreal - Meat Beat Manifesto
  11. Movement of Fear - Tones on Tail
  12. Cellar - Antonio Cora

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #159802 in Music
  • Released on: 1999-07-13
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Enhanced, Soundtrack, Import

Customer Reviews

Incredible frightening...just like the movie...5
I saw the movie and found it to be a chilling psychological terror that I think sets a standard for horror films and films in general (if only it really was a true story like some people still think...it's not in case you don't know)...The music is a perfect blend of some of the best gothic rock and industrial music ever written. Lydia Lunch's goth-jazz "Gloomy Sunday" is a great way to open the album. "The Order of Death" by Public Image Ltd. (a.k.a. the Sex Pistols go electrogloom) is a great reminder of the advent of synthesizers in goth music, while Skinny Puppy is just a great way to remember how bands like Nine Inch Nails got their ideas from. The same can be said for Laibach sounding like Rammstein (Laibach had been doing that kind of music before Rammstein ever did, so expect to hear accents and hard pounding germanic metal). Bauhaus and Tones On Tail (they may as well be the same band) also provide some great eighties goth that fits the mood of the movie really well, and Siouxsie Sioux's vocals on The Creatures' "Don't Go To Sleep Without Me" is a great clincher for the movie (i.e. Alien's "In space no one can hear you scream."). Type O Negative's epic "Haunted" is by far not only the best song on the soundtrack, but also one of the finest moments in electronic/industrial music...a true masterpiece. Meat Beat Manifesto's "She's Unreal" almost sounds like it could be the Witch's theme song, while the Front Line Assembly's "Laughing Pain" sounds a little like Circle of Dust...but again, they did that sorta stuff first. Afghan Whigs' song didn't impress me, but the last track did. Antonio Cora's "score" piece for the movie is nothing more than five minutes of creaks and scary noises...preceded by Heather Donahue's apology speech from the movie. Absolutely terrifying. The movie is a masterpiece, and the soundtrack it inspired is a great sampler for goth and industrial. If you want to hear the best material from those genres...this is it!!! And see the movie for one of the most visceral and horrifyingly scary experiences of your life!!! "I'm gonna die out here..."

Not a Soundtrack, but a Companion Piece5
A Soundtrack to a movie with no music? No, this is not some shallow attempt to cash in on a successful film (surprisingly), but rather a very good goth-industrial compilation disc. In the context of the film, one of the doomed kids put together a mix tape to put them in the mood as they headed out to the woods to make their ill-fated documentary. This CD is that mix, and it couples with the movie and the website (blairwitch.com) very nicely to create a true multimedia experience. Even if you haven't seen the movie, the CD stands on its own as a great goth- industrial sampler if you want to know more about that kind of music. Also, the film's haunting closing credit music is included.

Creepy.....very creepy.4
Ok. The movie was ultra-creepy. I just saw it. I know. The website is quite creepy. And this soundtrack (even though it has only one or two selections actually FROM the movie) is yes...creepy, very creepy. All goth bands and coffinrock (hmmm Coffin Rock, that's a place in the movie....) and sound bytes from the film, it delivers the chills even after you have left the movie theater. Long after. Lots of weird songs and sounds here. Perfect for reminiscing or just mood music when you're playing an eerie game like Doom. I personally like this kind of music and am already quite fond of the CD which features the likes of Skinny Puppy, Bauhaus, and Type O Neg. However...If you don't like Gothic music or the movie, you probably shouldn't get this CD. It isn't going to appeal to everyone, so I gave it a 4 out of five. It's a must-have, though for fans of the movie.