Teenage Fanclub and De La Soul, Ice-T and Slayer, Pearl Jam and. The soundtrack to the 1993 Stephen Hopkins film that pitted suburbia against the inner city brought together acts from the world of rap and rock to collaborate and fuse their sounds. It’s an interesting look at a moment in time before rap-rock became the gigantic powerhouse that it did. At last A reissue of the infamous Judgment Night soundtrack. So he was not against it, but just not super jazzed. No one was not into it. Pearl Jam, obviously, I’d say, three or four of the guys were super into Cypress. Eddie was kind of like, yeah, cool, chill, whatever, I’m gonna go surfing, type thing. So that was one of the bummers of not getting that. I mean, those two bands at the time, were massive. They never really turned it in, and then Tool got weird and their label got weird, and we were running out of time. I think it was something where they just didn’t get it together. It was more the Tool side that flaked and never decided. It was a weird thing at the point, they were, at that time, was saying crazy stuff, it was anti-Semitic stuff, and all this. Just Another Victim - Helmet / House of Pain Fallin - Teenage Fanclub / De La Soul My, Myself, & My Microphone - Living Colour / Run DMC Judgement Night. I wanted Public Enemy, and they were like, nah. I think this guy’s name was Peter Mensch, Metallica’s manager, he was like 45, was one of the biggest managers around, and here’s this 22-year-old schmuck calling and saying, “Hey, have you ever heard of Cypress Hill? They want to do a collaboration for a movie.” And they’re like, “What? OK, give us a million dollars.” It was “Fuck off, kid.” So, some of that didn’t go well. Some of the managers in those days were just dicks. See, in those days they were like the shit, the shit, right? They’ve obviously aged, and probably wish they would’ve done it. They were super pure and prissy in those days. I really was a huge fan of Nirvana’s, and Kurt was the one that was difficult, not Dave and those guys. Turns out there were many more artists that Happy wanted but couldn’t get. Rolling Stone interviewed many of the musicians involved for The Oral History of The Judgement Night Soundtrack. ![]() The soundtrack was the brain child of 22 year old Cypress Hill manager Happy Walters. Pearl Jam with Cypress Hill, Helmet with House of Pain, Faith No More with Boo-Yaa Tribe, Slayer with Ice-T, Mudhoney with Sir-Mix-A-Lot, plus many more. Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.fm. The soundtrack featured 11 songs that were collaborations between some of rock and metal’s biggest names with rap and hip-hop artists. Listen free to Judgment Night Judgment Night - Soundtrack. ![]() The movie itself quickly faded into memory, but the soundtrack that came with it would help spawn the popularity of the sub genre Rap Metal. In 1993 a movie came out staring Emilio Estevez, Denis Leary and Cuba Gooding Jr.
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