There's plenty to love about Judgment Night and it's a real shame that got buried so soon after release but I'm glad that this soundtrack has kept it alive, and I love "Fallin'" by Teenage Fanclub & De La Soul. It's difficult to find it but well worth it and one of the best thrillers of the 90s. Although director Stephen Hopkins would like to take credit for this initiative, it was actually the idea of the film's music director Happy Walters. Conceptually, the album is intriguing, but it's also flawed, since most electronica artists flourish when they work. There's even material from The Exploited from their Troops of Tomorrow album (you're never too far from Gary McCormack). Using the rap-meets-alternative Judgment Night soundtrack as a blueprint, the soundtrack to the dark, violent comic book fantasy Spawn boasts collaborations between rockers and electronica artists. The soundtrack features a dynamic hybrid of hip-hop and rock artists performing together such as Sonic Youth and Pearl Jam with Cypress Hill, Slayer with Ice-T himself, and Mudhoney with Sir Mix-A-Lot. Meanwhile, the public went nuts over the soundtrack and it became a big hit, despite most fans being unfamiliar with the movie. It was pulled from distribution and later, slowly, found a life on home video. Released in the autumn of 1993 it quickly died a death in theatres after a shooting during a screening in Boston that the alarmist press decided to blame on the movie itself (and here we are all these years later still mired in this nonsense). Judgment Night is one of those movies where the soundtrack managed to eclipse the actual film that inspired it. "Parental Advisory" symbol appears only on North American releases of this album.Īn additional song called "(You Can't Kill The) Revolution" was recorded by Rage Against The Machine and TooL, but neither band was happy with the results and was ultimately abandoned. All of them were originally performed by The Exploited, and were included on Troops Of Tomorrow. Track 5 is medley cover of "War", "UK '82", and "Disorder". This means that only 4 tracks ("Disorder", "Freak Momma", "Come And Die", and "Real Thing") remained in place on all four major physical formats (LP, Cass, CD, MD). Vinyl LP and cassette releases have different track order: 7→4→1→3→5→9→2→8→6→10→11. Another Body Murdered by Faith no More & Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. Fallin' by TeenAge FanClub & De La Soul Just Another Victim by Helmet & House of Pain Judgment Night by BioHazard & ONYX (Promo-Only) Rock/Metal & Grunge and Gangsta Rap & Hip-Hop This and the latter two: Spawn (The Album) / Blade II The Soundtrack (also from Immortal) had all songs designed to be collaborations. Meanwhile, in the Far East, the freedom fighters of the fallen nation of Doma struggle to rekindle the fires of hope in their countrymen. This was the first soundtrack album created by Immortal Records. Track listing 1 Helmet & House of Pain - Just Another Victim 4:21 2 Teenage Fanclub & De La Soul - Fallin 4:25 3 Living Colour & Run-D.M.C. Having brought an end to the thousand-year conflict between dragon and man in the north, the Warrior of Light and his comrades prepare to liberate Ala Mhigo, a land conquered by the Garlean Empire twenty years ago. Official soundtrack of the film " Judgment Night"