- Record Label: Chop Shop/Atlantic
- Release Date: Oct 16, 2009
User Score
Mixed or average reviews- based on 54 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 26 out of 54
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Mixed: 9 out of 54
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Negative: 19 out of 54
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May 25, 2016Uno de los mejores soundtracks !!!! Este es mi favorito de toda la saga , todos los que le dieron calificación negativa están sordos . Este álbum es tan melancólico 10/10
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Jul 13, 2015
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Mar 3, 2015I just do not understand at all how this has a 4.8 average rating. This is probably one of the best movie soundtracks I've heard with well respected and critically acclaimed musicians like St. Vincent, Bon Iver, Thom Yorke, Grizzly Bear and Death Cab. What could there possibly be not to like? I absolutely do not get it.
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Jul 31, 2011poop
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May 29, 2011Although the movie sucks pretty badly the album's to the movies continue to get greater and greater.
The song's are FANTASTIC and are just so so so good beyond description. -
Nov 4, 20103-4 good songs at most with Grizzly Bear being one of them. The rest are nothing special.
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LeahT.Oct 20, 2009I'd be the first to condemn Stephanie Meyer and Twilight. I'm an anti-fan. But the music snob within me can't ignore an album with Thom Yorke, Grizzly Bear, and Bon Iver on it. It's a good listen and I have to put my dislike for the franchise aside - audiophiles should be well pleased.
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EdwardC.Oct 20, 2009Really indie bands aren't on the fucking Twilight soundtrack.
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Despite a few upbeat moments that stick out like a thumb that isn't sore, songs like Grizzly Bear and Victoria Legrand's "Slow Life," Editors' "No Sound But the Wind," and Bon Iver and St. Vincent's lovely, truly odd "Roslyn" are morose enough for die-hard Twilight fans and stylish enough to please the most discerning music snobs.
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When a soundtrack works this well, with each track slotting naturally into a strongly cohesive body of work, you begin to wonder about the clamour that is sure to come from bands and singer songwriters to put their work forward towards featuring on the next film's soundtrack.
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Think of New Moon as a sort of survey course in new-now-next rock: a mixtape with teeth.