milt26
Tino.is.a.Space.Monkey
milt26

Must have decided “Wave of Mutilation” was too on the nose.

I love that album, but it also amuses me how padded some of the songs are, like how People Who Died and Three Sisters repeat verses.

Just as the song pays unsympathetic tribute to the dead,

Catholic Boy is one of the greatest albums ever released and a must-listen for anyone who claims to love rock and roll.

I would hope so, given the movie’s subject.

Came here to say the same thing. It’s a weird miss. Bizarre might be overstating- but certainly weird.

They rearranged it a little bit (the wrong lyrics followed Black’s grunting), which distracted the pedantic side of me.

“...given that it was written by James Gunn.”

It's also in Basketball Diaries.

The Fear Street movies use a lot of Pixies too, and none of the songs are Where is My Mind. Maybe they were on sale.

As for Mr. Robot, no musical moment was more perfect than Bleach's “The Head That Controls....” at the start of S2E10, where Joanna very calmly gets dressed and puts on makeup to the soundtrack of Japanese hardcore.

Speaking of superhero entertainment with great needle drops, I just started watching The Boys. Three episodes in and they’re spot on, like “Cherry Bomb” by The Runaways and “Stop” by Jane’s Addiction.

They rearranged it a little bit (the wrong lyrics followed Black’s grunting), which distracted the pedantic side of me.

I wouldn’t associate this song with “poptimism”. A singer-songwriter of unexceptional vocal abilities telling an authentic story about the actual people he knew that others couldn’t logically tell is more fitting in with the “rockism” that’s supposed to oppose.

Or the Against Me! version from a couple of years ago on the Songs that Saved Me comp.

For me, the best drop of the whole movie was the Pixies Hey while they are fighting there in the Rain. Absolutely great use of that song, and good to hear Pixies on screen and it not be Where is My Mind

The decision to omit the use of ‘People Who Died’ over the end credits of 2004's Dawn of the Dead is thoroughly bizarre, given that it was written by James Gunn.

No love for his performance of the song (with a young Robert Downey Jr on drums!) in the 80s classic Tuff Turf?

I went to see X last week in So Cal and as the lights went up and everyone filed out, this song came on. And everyone in my section started singing it in unison! It was pretty cool. It’s one of those songs that if you know it, you know every word.

I’m sure she’s learned her lesson this time. Good job, Twitter.