Mysterious Skin / O.S.T
Independent filmmaker, Gregg Arraki, has
always served up delicious platters of shoegaze confection to accompany
his revolutionary teen-angst films. Here he employs the services of Cocteau Twins
guitarist Robin Guthrie and avant-garde composer, Harold Budd to
realise a fully original soundtrack. The resulting record is littered with
beautifully-aching melodies which compound an already touching cinematic experience.
Touch / O.S.T
Unlike Robin Guthrie, Dave Grohl is probably not the first name one might associate with dream-pop. He brings along just enough Foo aggression on this predominantly instrumental set to dampen the shock. Veruca Salt frontwoman and then love interest, Louise Post, features on the ethereal title track and 'Saints in Love'. Released in 1997, Touch (the film) bombed critically and commercially, but the soundtrack remains a fan favourite.
Lost in Translation / O.S.T
This well-received film and its accompanying soundtrack really brought 90s alt-rock legend Kevin Shields back to mainstream attention before a 2007 My Bloody Valentine reunion and nu-gaze explosion. Shields even scored a BAFTA nomination for contribution to film score. Other big names to feature include fuzz pioneers The Jesus & Mary Chain, and french duo, Air.
The Doom Generation / O.S.T
Araki's The Doom Generation (1995) is arguably his most influential work. It's got that defining blend of drug-fueled, 90s, teen rebellion coupled with tantalisingly original
quips and glossy, stylised violence. The soundtrack provides the perfect
backdrop to all of the action and features some true shoegaze gems of
the time (from Lush, Slowdive, Medicine et al.). Aside from a few inexplicable omissions from the film (such as
Nine Inch Nails track 'Heresy') for the inclusion of some unlistenable odd-balls, the album serves as a nice introduction to the genre. See also the original soundtrack to Nowhere (1997).
The Limits of Control / O.S.T
Widely-decorated Japanese noise trio, Boris, welcomely appear five times on this 2009 soundtrack. When their landmark album Pink dropped in 2006, many were surprised at the adventurous turn the alternative-metal band had taken. The tracks here (including My Bloody Valentine-tinged 'Farewell' from Pink) illustrate the band at their atmospheric peak. LCD Soundsystem and Bad Rabbit deliver more highlights among some Spanish folk acapellas and acoustics.