This week, let’s take a look at some underrated songs from movie soundtracks! These movies may not all be superb, but they’ve got great music.
1. “The Gremlin Rag” – Jerry Goldsmith
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHsPQMHkI7o
The makers of this film themselves have still been scratching their heads as to why this soundtrack didn’t get any big release other than “as a specially priced mini-album,” although in recent years it has been released in full on CD for those willing to pay $50 for it. Even when this song was released as a single back in the day, it was actually just the B-side to “Gremlins…Mega Madness” by Michael Sembello of “Maniac” fame. It unfortunately is not available as a digital download anywhere because the folks at Warner Bros. seem to be content with keeping this song’s release limited to those in the franchise’s little cult of extremely devoted fans. ‘Tis a shame since this song is, in my book, among the ranks of “Power of Love,” “Ghostbusters,” and other classic ’80s movie themes.
2. “Paradise” – Pheobe Cates
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrxKUSbShzk
I will never think of this woman as a singer. (I’ll forever think of her as the girl from Gremlins.) That being said, this song turned out to be great. From what I’ve heard, the movie was terrible, and interest in the song was really the main thing that got people interested in the film. I don’t know how well the song did on the charts, but now it’s not available as a digital download either. It’s rather rare as I understand it, and that’s just not right. However, the mildly awkward cover by ’90s teen pop star Kaci Battaglia is easy to find since it charted pretty well in its day.
3. “Theme from Firepower” – Gato Barbieri
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cIanRg6S2F0
I know virtually nothing about this 1979 film. All I know is that Gato Barbieri is one of the greatest things to happen to music, and he’s really underrated as an artist. This song is one of his finest works, certainly on par with “Europa” and “Speak Low,” but it doesn’t seem to have the same recognition. The song has such a fiery passion that it clearly deserves to be featured in more films, in bigger scenes, and on more significant soundtracks. It builds and builds until it becomes an experience that everyone ought to hear.
4. Deep in the Dark – Debbie Reynolds/The Sherman Brothers
Everyone loves the Sherman Brothers, but who knows about their non-Disney works? Their most underrated soundtrack is probably that of Charlotte’s Web, a film I grew up watching regularly. What I missed when I watched it as a child was the beauty of this song. I found it slow and boring as a youngster, but now I hear the magic and mystery in it. It has an eerie quality that’s just perfect for a story about a spider, and the organ riff is one of the most enchanting sounds I have ever heard. Yet another reason to thank the Sherman Brothers, and yet another song I’d sign a petition to see put in the iTunes store.
5. Dancin’ – Olivia Newton-John/The Tubes
What’s to say about this weird, weird, weird piece? At first, I found it choppy and off-putting, but then I got used to it. After I had it in my music library for about a month, I determined that it must have been one of the best songs I’d ever heard. It rivals the fantastic songs of Electric Light Orchestra that also inhabit the album, and for me to say that a song is comparable to the works of my favorite band is nothing at which to sneeze. (Grammar, right?) This is one of the few songs that actually turned out to be a good scene in the movie, and I will always be impressed by the goosebumps its climax induces.