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  1. Listen to all 14 songs from the The Rocky Horror Picture Show soundtrack, playlist, ost and score. whatsong. Movies. Shows. Lists. ... 100 Most Featured Movie Songs.

    • Over at The Frankenstein Place
    • Super Heroes
    • Sword of Damocles
    • Hot Patootie - Bless My Soul
    • I Can Make You A Man
    • Wild and Untamed Thing
    • Eddie's Teddy
    • I'm Going Home
    • Dammit, Janet
    • Don't Dream It, Be It

    Pretty much every song in Rocky Horrorslaps and we don't really want to call any of them bad. But "Over At The Frankenstein Place" just doesn't have the same energy or iconic staying power of many of the other tracks. It sets the scene well enough, gives us an explanation for Brad and Janet's arrival, but doesn't do much beyond that.

    The final song in the movie, aside from the credits reprise, "Super Heroes" is a nihilistic little ditty that emphasizes how lost our hero and heroine are once they'd been shown a new way by Frank, only to have him taken away. It might give the audience something to ponder as they come away from the movie, but doesn't live up to its high points.

    This song gives Rocky a moment to reflect on his strange birth. He seems eerily aware of the tragedy that will befall all of them as the night goes on, but none of them can escape their fate. RELATED: IT: 5 Reasons Why Tim Curry's Pennywise Was Iconic (& 5 Why Bill Skarsgard's Was Nightmare Fuel) This song's more in line with the showy energy of th...

    Eddie, played by Meat Loaf, doesn't appear in much of the movie, but he certainly does leave an impression. The most rock 'n' roll track in the film features a defrosted Eddie crashing Frank's party, well after Frank was finished with him. As it turns out, people who cross Dr. Frank-n-Furter don't last long.

    This whole song is a reference to Charles Atlas magazine advertisements, claiming their muscle-building program could "make you a new man" in just seven days. Of course, Frank takes this suggestion rather literally and as always, Tim Currysteals the show.

    This triumphant number closes out the floor show and marks an end to Frank-n-Furter's wild party. This is mostly because Riff Raff and Magenta crash the show and proclaim his mission a failure. Unfortunately, the party and sound don't rock on that much longer.

    A surprisingly catchy number recounting Eddie's many flaws, you might not expect this one to be as enjoyable as it is. RELATED: 10 Hidden Details You Missed About The Main Characters In Rocky Horror Picture Show But it's got a good beat, offers some insight into a couple of minor characters, and even lets Dr. Scott get in on the musical action.

    As one of the last songs in the movie, it offers a genuinely emotional close to Frank-n-Furter's story and is probably one of the many reasons the film resonated so strongly with LGBTQ viewers. In it, Frank laments that he's never felt accepted anywhere, but that despite all his struggles he's still seen beautiful things in the world. It hits even ...

    The opening is a fun back and forth between Brad and Janet, upbeat and with a lot of simple rhymes. It isn't the most interesting or out-there song in the musical, but it is wildly catchy. It's also fun watching the scene and catching all the foreshadowing, like the family chorus members or the fact that they're attending a funeral.

    Another portion of the floor show, "Don't Dream It, Be It" is a languid, sensual number where Frank seems to break the rest of his guests and convince them to join him in his life of decadence. RELATED: The 10 Best Indie Horror Movies Of All Time, According To IMDb The characters who aren't already part of his harem are struggling to resist him and...

    • Courtney Osteen
  2. All 19 songs featured in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show”: Timestamp: 0:00 | Scene: Red lips singing. Opening credits. Timestamp: 0:07 | Scene: Brad sings outside the church, inside both Brad and Janet sing. Timestamp: 0:14 | Scene: Brad and Janet sing in the rain after their car breaks down. Riff Raff sings from the window of the house.

  3. If you've ever pondered the origin of the expletive "Dammit Janet," this original soundtrack to the 1975 cult classic musical The Rocky Horror Picture Show takes the credit. Back in the mid-‘70s punk rock had just started to fuel the music underground, so a film (and accompanying soundtrack) this subversive was unarguably too far ahead of its ...

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  6. The Rocky Horror Picture Show - Original Soundtrack. 16 songs • 54 minutes The Rocky Horror Picture Show is the original soundtrack album to the 1975 film The Rocky Horror Picture Show, an adaptation of the 1973 musical The Rocky Horror Show. The 1975 soundtrack album was released by Ode Records and produced by Richard Hartley.

  7. Various Artists · Compilation · 1975 · 16 songs. Various Artists · Compilation · 1975 · 16 songs. ... Listen to The Rocky Horror Picture Show - Original ...

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