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Jennifer's Body (Music from the Motion Picture) [Deluxe Version]

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Download links and information about Jennifer's Body (Music from the Motion Picture) [Deluxe Version]. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:04:34 minutes.

Release date: 2009
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:04:34
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Kiss With a Fist (Florence The Machine) 2:04
2. New Perspective (Panic! At The Disco) 3:47
3. Teenagers (Hayley Williams) 2:05
4. New In Town (Little Boots) 3:16
5. Finishing School (Dashboard Confessional) 3:24
6. Through the Trees (Low Shoulder) 5:03
7. Time (Cute Is What We Aim For) 3:56
8. I Can See Clearly Now (Screeching Weasel) 2:17
9. Chew Me Up and Spit Me Out (Cobra Starship) 3:57
10. Toxic Valentine (All Time Low) 2:52
11. I'm Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You (The Black Kids) 3:37
12. Death (White Lies) 5:00
13. Celestial Crown (The Sword) 1:56
14. Little Lover's So Polite (Silversun Pickups) 4:58
15. Ready for the Floor (Lissy Trullie) 4:00
16. Violet (Hole) 3:25
17. In the Flesh (Low Shoulder) 2:41
18. Running After Chip (Theodore Shapiro) 2:29
19. New Perspective (Panic! At The Disco) 3:47

Details

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Jennifer’s Body is about a teenage vixen turned boy-killing succubus during a local band’s satanic ritual gone horribly wrong, so it makes perfect sense to open the album with a punch-throwing garage rocker like Florence + The Machine’s “Kiss With a Fist." Panic! At The Disco’s “New Perspective” is too polished and glossy to dodge radio airplay, but the real gem resides in the scattered hooks of “Teenagers” by Hayley Williams, an up-tempo folk rock tune with a contagious hit-worthy chorus. Conversely, “Celestial Crown” by Austin hessians the Sword probably won’t make any Infinity or Viacom-owned radio playlists, as it sounds even darker than Ozzy-era Black Sabbath — but as the tune accompanies the story’s satanic rock band, it perfectly captures the vibe of every high school’s denim-clad, soap-dodging, hair-farming, stoner contingent. Of the three bonus cuts on the Duluxe Edition, Hole’s grungy grrrl anthem “Violet” easily upstages songs by Low Shoulder and Theodore Shapiro.