Customer Reviews
Awsome Soundtrack - By: ThirdPrize, 26 Aug 2008 
From backin the days when Grunge was king & Nu Metal had yet to be invented. If you like this, you might like the Spawn soundtrack which is full of similar metal meets trip hop/techno collaborations.
Cool Rap/Metal OST - By: Adam Jackson, 14 Apr 2008 
As a rule, I prefer more composed/orchestral type scores BUT of its type this is certainly the best! Theres some really good crossover here via
the collaborations between Rap & Metal artists. This was 1993 so it was ahead of its time
Highlights:
Helmet/House Of Pain: Simple, effective riffs, great production & cool rap from Everlast (House Of Pain). The riff & the percussion will stickin your head for,well,years!!!!
Slayer/Ice T: This cover of legendary punk/hardcore act The Exploited's UK'82/Disorder is perhaps the best crossover track ever - its certainly the angriest! Great vocals from Tom Araya/Ice T & VERY heavy,fast, thrash metal guitar & drums (intense double bass drum climax).
Biohazard/Onyx: Angry,Gang style vocals here & a good mix between the Brooklyn hardcore metal icons & the very aggressive rap/hiphop crew
Basically a real good mix for fans of both genres, & still sounding as fresh today as 15 years ago.
it ain't nothing but the real thing..... - By: Mr. M. R. Kalhoro, 31 May 2005 
this has to be the best film soundtrack ever...seriously! a novel idea to bring the worlds of rap/hip-hop with heavy metal works stupendously well....buy this & see....pity about the film itself tho....
Ignore the 'OST' bit! - By: C. Verspeak, 18 Sep 2004 
Its such a shame that this album got labelled as the OST to the film 'Judgment Night'. Because, despite being attached to a really mediocre film that very few people will ever see (the kind of thing you might see on BBC1 at12.30 on a Friday night or 9pm pm on Channel 5), this is a really really good album.
The team-ups on this one are those of fantasy - Faith no More with Boo Ya Tribe! Helmet with House of Pain! Slayer with Ice-T! Biohazard with Onyx!Any one of these alone ought to be cause for significant interest from the music world. On top of these you've got songs from Mudhoney, Therapy?, Cypress Hill, Sir Mix-a-Lot. Er, well...
But, because the film was such a dog, the album pretty much sank without trace.
Most of the tracks on the CD lean pretty much toward the heavier metallic side of pairings, although there are several more mellow moments too. Its all very listenable though - a great example of musical experts from different genres coming together & actually making something new & viable.
Never mind the latest Tarantino soundtrack. If you want to hear REAL musical history from REALLY talented musicians this is the one you want.
The Dogs Bollx - By: , 17 Jan 2004 
Let's face it, the movie was pretty poor but the OST makes up for it big time. Although a dodgy idea, combining mostly hip-hop & metal bands for each track, it's been pulled off incredibly well. I'm not a fan of some of the tracks, but the better ones I can listen to over & over again - Cypress Hill & Sonic Youth & especially De La Soul & Teenage Fan Club. I bought this album almost 10 years ago after hearing the Faith No More track & it still keeps finding its way into my CD player. Definitely one of the best, original movie soundtracks ever released. I wish there were more like it!