Home
Lucky You
Barnes and Noble
Lucky You
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
Lucky You
Current price: $14.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The way the critics saw it, the director
Curtis Hanson
didn't leave his fans feeling particularly lucky for having seen
Lucky You
, the
Drew Barrymore
-
Eric Bana
film from which this
soundtrack
was taken. But you don't need to get on board with the movie, or the brutal but brilliant game of Texas Hold'Em, to appreciate this thoughtfully compiled batch of music.
"Huck's Tune,"
the song most apt to drive this CD's sales, is a new composition -- and a good one -- from
Bob Dylan
. Like a lot of recent
Dylan
songs, it's sweet, bruising and elegiac; as closing track, it leaves its listeners with a contented sigh. Elsewhere,
Kris Kristofferson
stares old age in the eye on another dignified new track,
"They Ain't Got 'Em All,"
and
is surprisingly not bad on the poignant
"The Cold, Hard Truth."
For
Bruce Springsteen
fans, the best moment of the disc will arrive on track five.
"The Fever,"
a little-known but well-loved bluesy number, gives new meaning to the concept of musical sizzle. ~ Tammy La Gorce
Curtis Hanson
didn't leave his fans feeling particularly lucky for having seen
Lucky You
, the
Drew Barrymore
-
Eric Bana
film from which this
soundtrack
was taken. But you don't need to get on board with the movie, or the brutal but brilliant game of Texas Hold'Em, to appreciate this thoughtfully compiled batch of music.
"Huck's Tune,"
the song most apt to drive this CD's sales, is a new composition -- and a good one -- from
Bob Dylan
. Like a lot of recent
Dylan
songs, it's sweet, bruising and elegiac; as closing track, it leaves its listeners with a contented sigh. Elsewhere,
Kris Kristofferson
stares old age in the eye on another dignified new track,
"They Ain't Got 'Em All,"
and
is surprisingly not bad on the poignant
"The Cold, Hard Truth."
For
Bruce Springsteen
fans, the best moment of the disc will arrive on track five.
"The Fever,"
a little-known but well-loved bluesy number, gives new meaning to the concept of musical sizzle. ~ Tammy La Gorce