Given the subject matter of
Richard Curtis' film
Pirate Radio, the soundtrack had to filled with absolutely classic rock, pop, and soul. The motion picture (entitled
The Boat That Rocked in the U.K.) is a comedy that reflects on the real life bands of illegal radio stations that broadcast from boats just outside British territorial waters in the mid-'60s and were therefore outside the iron grip of the
BBC. The soundtrack contains a whopping 32 tracks spread over a pair of CDs that contain everything from obvious picks from the era, such the
Kinks'
"All of the Day and All of the Night," and
John Fred & His Playboy Band's
"Judy in Disguise," to
the Who's
"I Can See for Miles" and
the Troggs'
"With a Girl Like You." Other acts from the early classic pop/rock era are
Jimi Hendrix,
Moody Blues,
Procol Harum (of course!), the
Isley Brothers,
Beach Boys,
Supremes,
Otis Redding,
Cream,
Martha Reeves & the Vandellas,
Dusty Springfield,
Easybeats,
Jeff Beck,
the Hollies, etc. -- though
the Beatles and
Rolling Stones are absent for some (more than likely, legal) reason. There are some wonderful surprises too, however: the inclusion of
Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass's
"This Guy's in Love (With You)," the
Turtles'
"Elenore," (sic) and the opening track, a version of
"Stay with Me Baby," by
Duffy. (
Lorraine Ellison's version is also here, included near the end of disc two.)
David Bowie's lone
"Let's Dance," is also here to close the collection. Ultimately, it all adds up to one big party -- even if you have every cut here individually. ~ Thom Jurek