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Angel Pt. 1 (feat. Jimin of BTS, JVKE & Muni Long)

Fast & Furious: The Fast Saga

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released May 9, 2023 | APG Inc – FF10

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FAST X

Fast & Furious: The Fast Saga

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released May 19, 2023 | APG Inc – FF10

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The Fast And The Furious: Tokyo Drift

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released January 1, 2006 | Universal (MT)

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Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Various Artists

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released July 26, 2019 | Back Lot Music

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Angel Pt. 1 (feat. Jimin of BTS, JVKE & Muni Long)

Fast & Furious: The Fast Saga

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released May 9, 2023 | APG Inc – FF10

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Moderately Fast, Adequately Furious

Bulb

Alternative & Indie - Released July 16, 2021 | 3DOT Recordings and Many Hats Distribution

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Savage Amusement

Scorpions

Rock - Released April 15, 1988 | BMG Rights Management GmbH

The Scorpions' two previous releases, Blackout and Love at First Sting, were mostly successful due to the band's ability to adjust with the times; with Blackout, they used the classic power rock introduced by bands like Van Halen, and for Sting they used similar melodies, but with a harder, tighter sound akin to the work of such bands as Dokken and REO Speedwagon. With Savage Amusement, the group's first studio recording in almost four years, the Scorpions experimented with more polished pop melodies that Def Leppard and the like had made popular. The end result is polished and often predictable music that, while good, on the whole fails to be as infectious as the music on their previous albums. Die-hard fans will certainly find their share of worthwhile songs, such as "Don't Stop at the Top" and "Believe in Love," but they still may find Savage Amusement to be incomparable to its predecessors.© Barry Weber /TiVo
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Fast and Furious

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released April 6, 2009 | The Neptunes

The soundtrack to the fourth The Fast and the Furious film is well in the tradition of the previous three, an inconsistent collection of street/club hybrids designed to make listeners feel like they're going to an opulent nightspot that just happens to be on the rough side of town. Fast & Furious -- a confusing name for a sequel that's actually bettered by Malaysia's alternate title 4 Fast 4 Furious -- starts out well enough with the taste-making choice of Baltimore rapper Rye Rye plus M.I.A. on the Blaqstarr-produced "Bang." Busta Rhymes' macho "G-Stro" is good enough, but the Kenna selection is an obscure surprise, coming off his slept-on Make Sure They See My Face album and sounding like Kanye West meets Bootsy. "Blanco" and "Krazy," with Lil Jon's ghetto-tech production, overshadow the other two Pitbull tracks, although the Miami rapper's collaboration with Robin Thicke features the priceless "Like Barack bring some hope to this bad world/Go ahead you bad girl." While reggaeton master Don Omar does fine on "Virtual Diva," the faceless Shark City Click cut and Tasha's pointless Madonna cover are textbook examples of filler.© David Jeffries /TiVo
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Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (Original Motion Picture Score)

Tyler Bates

Film Soundtracks - Released August 2, 2019 | Back Lot Music

The Fast And The Furious Soundtrack Collection

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released March 31, 2015 | Island Def Jam

Download not available

The Fast and The Furious

Various Artists

R&B - Released January 1, 2001 | I.G. Records, Inc. - Universal Records

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The Fast And The Furious: Tokyo Drift

Brian Tyler

Film Soundtracks - Released June 26, 2006 | Varese Sarabande

For the third installment in the FAST AND THE FURIOUS action-movie series, the filmmakers called upon hip-hop and electronica artists to provide the sonic backdrop. Given TOKYO DRIFT's Japanese setting, the Teriyaki Boyz offer up some appropriately local flavor with the energetic techno-rap of "Tokyo Drift (Fast & Furious)" and "Cho Large," while DJ Shadow contributes a version of his melancholy "Six Days" that features a guest shot by Mos Def. A soundtrack that stands alone as a dynamic mix, TOKYO DRIFT is sure to appeal to fans of adventurous techno, R&B, and rap.© TiVo
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Fast & Furious 6

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released January 1, 2013 | Def Jam - Universal Pictures

Booklet
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Fast & Furious

Brian Tyler

Film Soundtracks - Released April 3, 2009 | Varese Sarabande

Though the cover art is very similar, consumers should not confuse the various artists' original soundtrack to Fast & Furious with this, composer Brian Tyler's original score for the film. To be honest, the score is preferable. It contains complete versions of all 25 cues--most of which were exceprted in the film. As a conceptual piece of music, this score is full of drama, exciement and pathos, all fueled a compelling collision of modern classical themes, rock and roll dynamics, and electronic soundscapes . Expertly conducted by the composer, the score stands on its own as a stellar piece of serial music that can be enjoyed not only by fans of the genre, but by virtually anyone interested in fast moving narrative composition.© TiVo
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The Saga Continues (explicit version)

Wu-Tang Clan

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released October 13, 2017 | eOne Music

Hi-Res Booklet
2017's The Saga Continues is billed as a Wu-Tang album, and plenty of major and minor members of the Wu-Tang family are on board for the project, but it's not until you read the liner notes that you find out who the real star of this show is. Mathematics, the MC-turned-DJ who learned the ropes of production from RZA and is said to have designed the Wu-Tang's W logo, produced and co-wrote all 18 tracks on The Saga Continues, and he's learned to replicate the sound of Wu-Tang's classic era with impressive accuracy. He doesn't quite equal the scratchy tension of RZA's peak-period work, but Mathematics fills The Saga Continues with dark, moody beats, atmospheric keyboard patches, snatches of classic soul sides, and samples from vintage kung-fu movies. If this isn't quite a brother to Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), it at least seems like a first cousin, and Mathematics brings his A game on The Saga Continues. Too bad that can't be said for all the MCs on the album. While the cast includes Method Man, Ghostface Killah, Raekwon, Killa Priest, Redman, RZA, and Cappadonna, it often sounds like they were saving their best verses for one of their own albums, and the rhymes often seem scattershot, without giving the album the sharp focus it needs. And though many of the skits on The Saga Continues deal with the raw deal regularly handed to African-American men in the black community as well as in American society at large, the standard-issue braggadocio of most of the lyrics undercuts whatever message Mathematics and executive producer RZA had in mind. As a Wu-Tang album, The Saga Continues is good but not great, but it's a fine calling card for Mathematics, and makes the case that he should be given an album of his own more often. © Mark Deming /TiVo
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Bushi

BU$HI

Hip-Hop/Rap - Released March 28, 2020 | Saturn Records

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Fast & Furious 6

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released January 1, 2013 | Def Jam - Universal Pictures

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Fast Five (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released January 1, 2011 | Abkco Music & Records, Inc.