I Soprano Stagione 6 Italian
10 years after the show ended, we remember its first controversy.
via. HBO
It's been 10 years since The Sopranos universe went black. In that time, the show has cemented its status as the most groundbreaking piece of American television, spawning the 'Peak TV' era with The Wire, Breaking Bad, and Mad Men following in its footsteps. The show is now remembered for its controversial ending, but its first controversy was its portrayal of Italian-Americans.
Depictions of mafia life in pop culture have always been met with condemnation. The Godfather films never used the word mafia, at the request of actual mafia figures. Goodfellas, which shared at least 27 actors with The Sopranos, got director Martin Scorsese and author Nicholas Pileggi banned from one of their most-frequented restaurants, as the owner claimed their film had denigrated Italians. The Sopranos was no exception to this trend: Italian-American groups almost unanimously condemned the series from the very beginning.
In August 1999, Frank Guarini, the chairman of the National Italian-American Foundation (NIAF), declared that the group intended to have The Sopranos taken off the air. In September 2000, a coalition of several Italian-American groups protested outside HBO's office just before the upcoming Emmys. That same month, these groups managed to convince the Columbus Day Parade organizers in New York City to 'de-invite' cast members from the processions, claiming, 'Actors who participate in this mass character assassination do not deserve to be part of New York City's annual tribute to Columbus and to the millions of Italian Americans who helped make this country the power it is today.'
I can't say The Sopranos was really on my family's radar when it aired, but the criticisms of the show were ones I had heard in other contexts. My southern Italian grandparents came to Canada in the 1960s. They managed to keep all of their traditions alive, which were then proudly passed on to me. I heard about the discrimination they faced after immigration, and how my mom and dad's experiences growing up were characterized by being the children of new immigrants. As someone who comes from an unapologetically Italian family, I understand why these groups were worried about The Sopranos. It could have ended up being a series that chipped away at a sense of ethnic pride. I'm also acquainted with the stereotypes critics worried the show would promote. They're the only reason a friend of mine could think my Danny DeVito-esque relative was a mob boss, or that when I met a girlfriend's mom for the first time she asked if I had any family in the mafia.
Italian-American critics of The Sopranos had some legitimate beef on a political and historical level going back decades. Italians were portrayed as criminals from the moment they stepped foot in North America. In 1891, nine Italians were accused of killing the police chief of New Orleans. They were found not guilty, but a mob, including a future governor, dragged these nine men, and two others, from their jail cells and killed them, becoming the largest lynching in US history. Future president Teddy Roosevelt called the incident 'a rather good thing,' and a New York Times editorial called the victims 'sneaking and cowardly Sicilians, the descendants of bandits and assassins.'
To these groups, the Italians-as-mafia stereotype is just an extension of this xenophobic hysteria. It's somewhat fair then that critics were initially concerned about The Sopranos. It takes the worst stereotype about Italian-Americans, and plants itself squarely in it for 86 episodes, even directly addressing it on several occasions throughout the series.
Oct 12, 2011 Phil Leotardo inizia la scalata per divenire il nuovo boss di New York e giura vendetta alla famiglia Soprano. Momenti epici - I Soprano. 102 videos Play all I Soprano 1 Stagione. List of Locations. This page lists all Sopranos filing locations that are currently known. If you want to know more about a certain location, click the link to see the details of that location. Feb 17, 2010 All rights belong to HBO's The Sopranos Sofia Milos interpreta Annalisa Zucca nel 17° episodio dei Sopranos: 'Viaggio a Napoli' (titolo originale.
But that said, believing The Sopranos promotes the Italian-as-mafia myth means you've only engaged with the show on the surface level, at best. In a 2001 interview with The Guardian, Michael Imperioli (who played Tony Soprano's screw-up protégé Christopher Moltisanti) recounted an incident where the Italian-American Anti-Defamation League, who had met with Sopranos creator David Chase to voice their concerns, admitted they had never seen the show.
The NIAF claimed, 'Without the family dinners, the church confessions, the Italian phrases, the Little Italy neighborhoods, and the espresso coffee breaks, The Sopranos would be just another TV show glorifying violence.' Yet the opposite is true. The Sopranos is certainly seasoned with violence, but it's primarily concerned with depicting the state of modern America through an Italian-American lens.
The immigration and assimilation of Italians to America is a primary topic on the show. The Sopranos depicts how, according to author Jennifer Guglielmo, Italians went from being seen as 'hordes of dark, dirty, ignorant, lazy, subversive, superstitious criminals' to the 'very image of white ethnic working-class right-wing conservatism.'
One of the main causes of Italian emigration was the abject poverty of the 19th and early 20th century. Southern Italians bore the brunt of this deprivation, as Meadow Soprano notes to a boyfriend in season five, when she says that her dad's family, and other family, came 'from the poverty of the Mezzogiorno, where all higher authority was corrupt.'
Many southern Italians directed their ire toward the north. Furio Giunta, the ponytailed Mafioso brought over from Napoli in season two, acknowledges this in a episode where he explains to horrified mob co-workers why he doesn't like Christopher Columbus. 'In Napoli, a lot of people are not so happy for Columbus because he was from Genoa ... The north of Italy always had the money and the power. They punished the south since 100s of years. Even today, they put up their nose at us like we're peasants. *Spits* I hate the North.'
One of the cornerstones of Italian-American identity, the main piece of the narrative, is that they took the discrimination head on and carved out a piece of America for themselves.
This is a pretty accurate depiction of the actual history. As a result, most of the Italians that left the newly created country were from the south, which is reflected within the show.
The first major wave of Italian immigration into the US came in the late 19th to early 20th century, which is when the fictional Soprano family made its way over. At customs, Italian immigrants were often forced to Anglicize their names. The show mentions this act of cultural erasure on two occasions: when Carmela meets Columbia University Dean Ross, originally Rossi, and in one of the series' best episode endings, where Phil Leotardo, complaining that his Sicilian grandfather's surname was changed from Leonardo at Ellis Island, says, 'My family took shit from the 'Merigans the minute we got off the boat.'
In the early days, Italian immigrants made ends meet through hard physical labour, and quickly understood that they were in America to do the jobs the WASPs wanted to avoid. This history is noted throughout the series, but most explicitly in a season two scene with Tony Soprano and his therapist, Jennifer Melfi. 'When America opened the floodgates, and let all us Italians in, what do you think they were doing it for?' Tony indignantly asks. 'Because they were trying to save us from poverty? No, they did it because they needed us. They needed us to build their cities, and dig their subways, and to make them richer.'
At this point, Italians faced serious discrimination from police, government, and employers. But one of the cornerstones of Italian-American identity, the main piece of the narrative, is that they took the discrimination head on and carved out a piece of America for themselves. This story is passed on from generation to generation, which is captured in The Sopranos.
Tony, for example, brings both of his kids, at different times, to a church in Newark, New Jersey. In season four, Tony tells an uninterested Anthony Jr. that his great-grandfather, a stone mason who came to America 'with $4 in his pocket,' helped build the church. Tony goes on to say, 'This neighbourhood used to be beautiful. 100 percent Italian. In the 1920s, most of them right off the boat. Most Italians couldn't even find a church that wanted them. So what did they do? Did they cry? Did they go to the government with their hand out? No. They took care of their own problems. They said, 'You don't want us in your church? Fine. We'll build our own. A better one.'
I remember feeling an overwhelming sense of recognition when I first saw these scenes. Tony's thoughts could have come straight out of my dad's mouth. Almost any Italian I've ever met knows them too. We are told how are grandparents came here without an education, but were willing to work hard to better their lives.
As time passed, Italians started to work their way up the economic and social ladder in America. The Soprano family's 'trek up the guinea gulch,' as Tony describes it, illustrates this reality. They started near the church in the Ironbound section of Newark, part of a busy inner-city neighbourhood filled with other Italians. As wealth began to accumulate, the Soprano family moved up Bloomfield Avenue, eventually reaching North Caldwell two generations later, and settling into a lavish, suburban home, where much of the series is based.
Two tendencies among Italians in North America emerged from this ascent, both of which are depicted in the series. Some Italians became ashamed of who they were, and did their best to cover up their foreign roots. Carmela's mother, Mary De Angelis, is portrayed as one of these Italians. At her husband Hugh's birthday party in season five, she introduces guests to her diplomat friend Russ Fegoli. She believes he is a 'cultured Italian' in comparison to the Sopranos, who she refers to as cafones, boorish peasants. Carmela eventually calls her mother out on her 'self-loathing,' accusing her of being happy their last name didn't end in a vowel, and noting that she was upset when Meadow was born because she saw her as being 'so dark.' Tony, meanwhile, views his 'white man' neighbour, Dr. Bruce Cusamano, in the same way, saying he's what his father would have called a 'wonderbread wop.' 'You know,' Tony says, 'he eats his Sunday gravy out of a jar.'
The other tendency, not mutually exclusive from the first, is that some Italians have weaponized their history of discrimination to target others. The Soprano crew's behaviour throughout the Columbus episode in season four is a good example. Silvio Dante, in a heated conversation with Tony, argues that, 'The 'Merigan like [Gary Cooper], they fucked everybody else. The Italians, the Polacks, the blacks.' Yet instead of using that history to find sympathy with the Native protesters opposed to the Columbus Day Parade, he complains that, 'We gotta tip toe around the Indians though, don't we? We can't call our teams the Braves, or the Tomahawks.'
A significant portion of Italian-Americans, at least in my experience, see their economic rise as being without any assistance, in contrast to other groups, who they think get an unfair boost from the government. In reality, this is a false version of history that overemphasizes the challenges Italians faced and minimizes what others are going through. The show slyly notes at this when Vito Spatafore, in the before-mentioned Columbus episode, complains, 'What the fuck did we ever get that we didn't have to work our balls off for?' Many scenes with Vito show him lounging on a folding chair at construction sites, getting paid to literally not work.
There's also a tendency to see newer immigrants as somehow intrinsically flawed, lacking the traits Italians had when they immigrated. The idea is that the WASPs were wrong when they discriminated against Italian immigrants, but newer immigrants have serious problems, and so Italians are right to side with those who once discriminated against them in order to bar newcomers. There is a lack of awareness among Italians that the stereotypes launched against Muslims today are similar to the ones used against Italians in the past. In The Myth of The Muslim Tide, author Doug Saunders writes that Italians, and other Catholics, were perceived as coming from 'countries that were almost all authoritarian, religiously fundamentalist and opposed to the rights of women,' and adhering to 'a changeless, unalterable, clerically preordained dogma that was not so much a faith as a political ideology.'
In season six, Bobby 'Bacala' Baccalieri, in a conversation during the infamous cottage retreat with Carmela, Tony, and Janice Soprano, inadvertently illustrates this contradiction. He describes how his Italian grandfather, who had a police record due to his involvement with anti-government 'shenanigans,' illegally entered the US through Montreal. The Baccalieri patriarch ended up producing two generations of organized criminals, which is one of the main concerns raised by settlers about immigrants, legal or otherwise. Yet Baccalieiri earnestly states, 'You ought to build a wall now though, I'm tellin' ya,' to which they all nod, with Carmela enthusiastically announcing, 'Amen!'
With the arc of Italian-American life, from outsider to defender of the status quo, completely depicted, the show is able to properly contextualize several aspects of Italian-American life today.
The mafia stereotypes, for example, are addressed head on. Melfi's ex-husband, Richard La Penna, is the stand in for critics, raising several concerns of Italian-American organizations from within the show itself. In season one, Richard constantly nags Melfi to give up Tony as a patient, arguing, 'People like him are the reason Italian-Americans have such a bad image.' In a dinner scene with Melfi's family, he argues, 'Ask any American to describe an Italian-American in this country, and invariably he's going to reference The Godfather, Goodfellas.' Eventually, their son, Jason La Penna, states, 'Dad, at this point in our culture and history, mob movies are classic American cinema.' This is accurate, because it reflects the fact that the stereotype, while still around, doesn't hurt Italians as it once did.
In the first three seasons of The Sopranos, Tony and his associates are hounded by the FBI. Yet in the post-9/11 episodes, attention begins to shift elsewhere. Agent Dwight Harris is moved from investigating organized crime in New Jersey to working counter-terrorism in Pakistan. Harris develops a friendly rapport with the crew over the series, and in season six, offers them assistance in their war with New York after receiving a tip from Tony about two Arab men who used to hang around the Bada Bing strip club. Harris' partner appeals to their sense of patriotism, telling Christopher that they should help the government because, 'This is your country too, isn't it?'
On some level, this is simply a reflection of reality. The FBI's focus really did shift post-9/11, and the mafia, whose members tend to be conservative, really has worked with the government before to combat perceived foreign enemies. Yet this shift offers insight into more than just how the FBI decides to allocate its resources. It illustrates how the mafia is no longer the chief public enemy, or fear, for Americans.
In many ways the show reflected my own experience growing up back to me, with expressions, gestures, and customs that I hadn't, and never expected to be, seen on TV before.
Harris comes to view the mafia battles as a game of sorts, where he actively cheers on one side. Yet terrorism is treated with dead seriousness, and even the mobsters are genuinely scared. As a result, the Arabs, Pakistanis, and 'Middle Easterners' in the show get treated with constant suspicion, matching the Islamophobic environment that has only gotten worse since the series ended 10 years ago.
Meanwhile, it's shows like Homeland that are problematic, because the demographics they demonize are still in danger. Italian-Americans are not. That's why it's jarring when Richard La Penna, in the dinner conversation, states, 'Italians Against Discrimination did a study, and at its height the mafia in this country had less than 5,000 members. And yet that tiny insignificant fraction can cast such a dark shadow over 20 million hardworking Americans.' This is factual, but it seems wildly out of touch today, because most people know it's true, and don't need to be told. Muslims, meanwhile, are still viewed with deep suspicion and face discrimination, so it's unsurprising that 'most Muslims aren't ISIS' graphs still need to be spread.
The Sopranos also nailed a bunch of small, day-to-day things, which help make it feel more authentic and relatable to your average Italian. The death glare Livia Soprano gives Artie Bucco when he tells her the dish he made is northern. Carmela writing down the amount of money they're giving at a wedding, so they know if they get 'stiffed' later on. The almost unanimous horror from characters when they find out Tony is sending his mother to an expensive 'retirement community' instead of bringing her into his home. Paulie's rage at what's supposed to be a Starbucks, when he realizes that Italian coffee culture has been appropriated and turned into expensive 'grawn-day' drinks.
Still, it's not enough to say the show didn't portray Italians in a negative way. Instead, The Sopranos should be praised for the vast insight it offers into Italian-American life.
I was 15 when I first watched the show, and it was a revelatory experience. On the surface level I had little in common with the world the series explored. I'm from Canada, not New Jersey. My dad is a plumber, not a mob boss. I've been around Italians on both side of the Atlantic my entire life, and know, at most, a couple potentially 'connected' people. Yet in many ways the show reflected my own experience growing up back to me, with expressions, gestures, and customs that I hadn't, and never expected to be, seen on TV before. More importantly, the series helped me piece together my own identity at a time when it was still in flux. All of the anecdotes and remarks I'd heard throughout my life about being Italian were now strung together in a coherent narrative that helped me better understand my world, and be confident in myself. That feeling has only been reinforced over the last decade after watching the series several more times.
I reached out to several of the Italian-American groups who protested the show when it first came out, asking if they still feel the same way. None of them replied. Maybe they know they were wrong. They should. It would have been a tragedy if they had it their way, and the show was taken off the air. The Sopranos deserves to be added into serious studies of Italian-American life, or at the very least, serve as an introductory course.
Follow Davide on Twitter.
- Tagged:
The HBOtelevision dramaThe Sopranos received considerable critical attention for effective use of an eclectic array of music.[1][2][3][4] Series creator David Chase personally selected all the show's music, with the producer Martin Bruestle and music editor Kathryn Dayak—sometimes also consulting Steven Van Zandt, who portrays Silvio Dante on the show and is also a guitarist for Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band.[1] They often selected music after completing an episode's production and editing, but occasionally filmed sequences to match pre-selected pieces of music.[5]
Stylistically, the music on the show ranges from mainstream pop (Britney Spears, The Bangles) to oldies and classic rock artists (The Beach Boys, The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd), from classic jazz and soul (Ella Fitzgerald, Ben E. King) to hip-hop (Xzibit, Time Zone), often within a single episode.[6]
- 2End credits
- 4Soundtrack compilations
- 4.1Track listings
- 4.1.2The Sopranos - Peppers and Eggs: Music From The HBO Series
- 4.1Track listings
Opening credits[edit]
In the opening credits for each episode, Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) drives from New York City to his home in North Caldwell, New Jersey. The musical accompaniment for this segment is the 'Chosen One Remix' of the song 'Woke Up This Morning' by the British group Alabama 3 (known in the United States as A3 for legal reasons). 'Woke Up This Morning (Chosen One Mix)' is four minutes and five seconds long,[7] so a shortened version of it is used in the opening credits, which is approximately one minute and thirty seconds long.[8]
End credits[edit]
Each episode's closing credits sequence features a unique piece of previously recorded music, with few exceptions. The episode 'A Hit Is a Hit' uses a song by the fictional band Defiler, which appeared earlier in the episode. Three episodes feature multiple songs in the credits sequence ('Commendatori,' 'Whitecaps' and 'Cold Stones'), while two episodes ('Full Leather Jacket' and 'Made in America') have no music at all.
The following is a list of songs used at the end of each episode:
Season 1[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 'The Sopranos (Pilot)' | 'The Beast In Me' | Nick Lowe |
2 | '46 Long' | 'Battle Flag' | Pigeonhed |
3 | 'Denial, Anger, Acceptance' | 'Complicated Shadows' | Elvis Costello & the Attractions |
4 | 'Meadowlands' | 'Look on Down from the Bridge' | Mazzy Star |
5 | 'College' | 'Gold Leaves' | Michael Hoppé |
6 | 'Pax Soprana' | 'Paparazzi' (instrumental version) | Xzibit |
7 | 'Down Neck' | 'White Rabbit' | Jefferson Airplane |
8 | 'The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti' | 'Frank Sinatra' | Cake |
9 | 'Boca' | 'Buena' | Morphine |
10 | 'A Hit Is a Hit' | song unnamed | Defiler (fictional group) |
11 | 'Nobody Knows Anything' | 'Manifold de Amour' | Latin Playboys |
12 | 'Isabella' | 'I Feel Free' | Cream |
13 | 'I Dream of Jeannie Cusamano' | 'State Trooper' | Bruce Springsteen |
Season 2[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
14 | 'Guy Walks into a Psychiatrist's Office...' | 'Time Is on My Side' | Irma Thomas |
15 | 'Do Not Resuscitate' | 'Goodnight My Love' | Ella Fitzgerald |
16 | 'Toodle-Fucking-Oo' | 'Viking' | Los Lobos |
17 | 'Commendatori' | 'Con te partirò' | Andrea Bocelli |
'Piove' | Jovanotti | ||
18 | 'Big Girls Don't Cry' | 'White Mustang II' | Daniel Lanois |
19 | 'The Happy Wanderer' | 'The Happy Wanderer' | Frankie Yankovic & His Yanks |
20 | 'D-Girl' | 'Vedi, Maria' | Emma Shapplin |
21 | 'Full Leather Jacket' | none — only a ventilator and an electrocardiogram are heard | Hospital and the Patients |
22 | 'From Where to Eternity' | 'My Lover's Prayer' | Otis Redding |
23 | 'Bust Out' | 'Wheel in the Sky' | Journey |
24 | 'House Arrest' | 'You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory' | Johnny Thunders |
25 | 'The Knight in White Satin Armor' | 'I Saved the World Today' | Eurythmics |
26 | 'Funhouse' | 'Thru and Thru' | The Rolling Stones |
Season 3[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
27 | 'Mr. Ruggerio's Neighborhood' | 'High Fidelity' | Elvis Costello & the Attractions |
28 | 'Proshai, Livushka' | 'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles' | Les Paul |
29 | 'Fortunate Son' | 'Where's the Money?' | Dan Hicks |
30 | 'Employee of the Month' | 'Fisherman's Daughter' | Daniel Lanois |
31 | 'Another Toothpick' | 'Shuck Dub' | R. L. Burnside |
32 | 'University' | 'Living on a Thin Line' | The Kinks |
33 | 'Second Opinion (The Sopranos)' | 'Black Books' | Nils Lofgren |
34 | 'He Is Risen' | 'The Captain' | Kasey Chambers |
35 | 'The Telltale Moozadell' | 'I (Who Have Nothing)' | Ben E. King |
36 | '...To Save Us All from Satan's Power' | 'I've Got a Feeling' | The Campbell Brothers with Katie Jackson |
37 | 'Pine Barrens' | 'Sposa son disprezzata' (from Bajazet) | Cecilia Bartoli |
38 | 'Amour Fou' | 'Affection' | Little Steven and the Lost Boys |
39 | 'Army of One' | 'Blur' | Aphex Twin |
Season 4[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
40 | 'For All Debts Public and Private' | 'World Destruction' | Time Zone featuring John Lydon |
41 | 'No Show' | 'Kid A' | Radiohead |
42 | 'Christopher' | 'Dawn (Go Away)' | The Four Seasons |
43 | 'The Weight' | 'Vesuvio' | Spaccanapoli |
44 | 'Pie-O-My' | 'My Rifle, My Pony and Me' (from Rio Bravo) | Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson |
45 | 'Everybody Hurts' | 'Take Me for a Little While' | Dave Edmunds |
46 | 'Watching Too Much Television' | 'Oh Girl' | The Chi-Lites |
47 | 'Mergers and Acquisitions' | 'When the Battle is Over' | Delaney & Bonnie |
48 | 'Whoever Did This' | 'The Man with the Harmonica' | Apollo 440 |
49 | 'The Strong, Silent Type' | 'Drum Score' | Eric J.Tuener;Drum Major for George Westinghouse School of Music |
50 | 'Calling All Cars' | 'Surfin' U.S.A.' | The Beach Boys |
51 | 'Eloise' | 'Little Bird' | Annie Lennox |
52 | 'Whitecaps' | 'I Love Paris' (Vegas) | Dean Martin |
'I Have Dreamed' | Fantastic Strings |
Season 5[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
53 | 'Two Tonys' | 'Heaven Only Knows' | Emmylou Harris |
54 | 'Rat Pack' | 'Undercover of the Night' | The Rolling Stones |
55 | 'Where's Johnny?' | 'Earth, Wind, Water' | Mitch Coodley (The Metro Music Production Library) |
56 | 'All Happy Families...' | 'La Petite Mer' | Thierry 'Titi' Robin |
57 | 'Irregular Around the Margins' | 'Chi il bel sogno di Doretta' (from La rondine) | Luba Orgonášová |
58 | 'Sentimental Education' | 'The Blues is My Business' | Etta James |
59 | 'In Camelot' | 'Melancholy Serenade' | Jackie Gleason |
60 | 'Marco Polo' | 'Bad 'N' Ruin' | Faces |
61 | 'Unidentified Black Males' | 'If I Were a Carpenter' | Bobby Darin |
62 | 'Cold Cuts' | 'I'm Not Like Everybody Else' (live) | The Kinks |
63 | 'The Test Dream' | 'Three Times a Lady' | Commodores |
64 | 'Long Term Parking' | 'Wrapped in My Memory' | Shawn Smith |
65 | 'All Due Respect' | 'Glad Tidings' | Van Morrison |
Season 6[edit]
# | Episode title | Song title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
66 | 'Members Only' | 'Seven Souls' | Material featuring William S. Burroughs |
67 | 'Join the Club' | 'When It's Cold I'd Like To Die' | Moby |
68 | 'Mayham' | 'The Deadly Nightshade' | Daniel Lanois |
69 | 'The Fleshy Part of the Thigh' | 'One of These Days' | Pink Floyd |
70 | 'Mr. & Mrs. John Sacrimoni Request' | 'Every Day of the Week' | The Students |
71 | 'Live Free or Die' | '4th of July' | X |
72 | 'Luxury Lounge' | 'Recuerdos de la Alhambra' | Pepe Romero |
73 | 'Johnny Cakes' | 'I'm Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town' | Ray Charles |
74 | 'The Ride' | 'Pipeline' | Johnny Thunders |
75 | 'Moe N' Joe' | 'Let It Rock' | Chuck Berry |
76 | 'Cold Stones' | 'Home' | Persephone's Bees |
'As Time Goes By' (from Casablanca) | Dooley Wilson | ||
77 | 'Kaisha' | 'Moonlight Mile' | The Rolling Stones |
78 | 'Soprano Home Movies' | 'This Magic Moment' | Ben E. King and The Drifters |
79 | 'Stage 5' | 'Evidently Chickentown' | John Cooper Clarke |
80 | 'Remember When' | 'Sing, Sing, Sing (With a Swing)' | Benny Goodman Orchestra |
81 | 'Chasing It' | 'Goin' Down Slow' | Howlin' Wolf |
82 | 'Walk Like a Man' | 'The Valley' | Los Lobos |
83 | 'Kennedy and Heidi' | 'Minas De Cobre (For Better Metal)' | Calexico |
84 | 'The Second Coming' | 'Ninna Ninna (Lullaby)' | Smithsonian Folkways recording, artist unknown |
85 | 'The Blue Comet' | 'Running Wild (Extended Instrumental)' | Tindersticks |
86 | 'Made in America' | none — the credits play in complete silence | none |
Alternate music in Europe[edit]
For the version of the series aired in Europe, the producers partially replaced the music for licensing reasons. European DVD editions (in case of Season One: only the 16:9 re-issue) contain these altered versions as foreign language dubs as well as the original unaltered English soundtrack in Dolby Digital 5.1.
Soundtrack compilations[edit]
The Sopranos: Music from the HBO Original Series | |
---|---|
Soundtrack album by various artists | |
Released | December 14, 1999 |
Genre | Various |
Length | 54:11 |
Label | Sony |
Producer | Various David Chase (exec. producer) |
The Sopranos: Music from the HBO Original Series | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Pitchfork Media | 7.1/10 link |
The Sopranos: Peppers & Eggs: Music from the HBO Original Series | |
---|---|
Soundtrack album by | |
Released | May 8, 2001 |
Genre | Various |
Label | Sony |
Producer | Various David Chase, Brad Grey (exec. producers) |
The Sopranos: Peppers & Eggs: Music from the HBO Original Series | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
To date, there have been two official soundtrackcompilations released in association with The Sopranos. The first, titled The Sopranos: Music from the HBO Original Series, was released in 1999, and contains selections from the show's first two seasons.[9] The second, titled The Sopranos: Peppers & Eggs: Music from the HBO Original Series, was released in 2001, and contains two Compact Discs of songs from the show's first three seasons.[10]
Track listings[edit]
The Sopranos: Music from the HBO Original Series[edit]
- 'Woke Up This Morning' (Chosen One Mix) — Alabama 3
- 'It's Bad You Know' — R. L. Burnside
- 'It Was a Very Good Year' — Frank Sinatra
- 'Gotta Serve Somebody' — Bob Dylan
- 'Inside of Me' — Little Steven & The Disciples of Soul
- 'I Feel Free' — Cream
- 'Mystic Eyes' — Them
- 'State Trooper' — Bruce Springsteen
- 'I'm a Man' — Bo Diddley
- 'Complicated Shadows' — Elvis Costello & the Attractions
- 'The Beast in Me' — Nick Lowe
- 'Viking' — Los Lobos
- 'Blood Is Thicker than Water' — Wyclef Jean featuring G & B
- 'I've Tried Everything' — Eurythmics
The Sopranos - Peppers and Eggs: Music From The HBO Series[edit]
Disc one[edit]
- 'Every Breath You Take/Theme From Peter Gunn' (Mr. Ruggerio's Remix) - The Police; Henry Mancini and His Orchestra
- 'Battle Flag' (Album Version) - Pigeonhed
- 'I've Got A Feeling' (Album Version) - The Campbell Brothers with Katie Jackson
- 'The Captain' (Album Version) - Kasey Chambers
- 'Shuck Dub' (Album Version) - R.L. Burnside
- 'Affection' (Album Version) - The Lost Boys
- 'My Lover's Prayer' (Album Version) - Otis Redding
- 'Certamente' (Album Version) Madreblu
- 'Black Books' (Album Version) - Nils Lofgren
- 'Frank Sinatra' (Album Version) - Cake
- 'Baubles, Bangles and Beads' (Album Version) - Frank Sinatra
- 'Thru And Thru' (Album Version) - The Rolling Stones
Disc two[edit]
- 'High Fidelity' - Elvis Costello & The Attractions
- 'Living on a Thin Line' - The Kinks
- 'Girl' - Vue
- 'Vivaldi: Sposa son disprezzata' - Cecilia Bartoli
- 'I Who Have Nothing' - Ben E. King
- 'Return to Me' - Bob Dylan
- 'Make no Mistake' - Keith Richards
- 'Piove' - Lorenzo Jovanotti
- 'Space Invader' - The Pretenders
- 'Tiny Tears' - Tindersticks
- 'Gloria' - Van Morrison
- 'Core 'ngrato' - Dominic Chianese
- 'Dialogue From 'The Sopranos' - The Sopranos Cast
Other music used and trailers[edit]
Not all artists featured on the show made it on to one of the compilation albums. The producers are known fans of the underground music scene and featured many locally relevant artists on the show. Also some classical pieces on the show failed to make any of the soundtrack albums—pieces by Beethoven, Luciano Pavarotti, and Emma Shapplin. A piece by Al Di Meola didn't make it.
Music used for the trailers was also different. The Season 5 trailer included the song 'Say Yes!' of Siouxsie Sioux's second band The Creatures, from their 2003 album Hái!.
References[edit]
I Soprano Stagione 6 Italian Cheese
- ^ abSepinwall, Alan (March 3, 2006). 'The hits keep on coming'. The Star-Ledger. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
- ^Gross, Joe (January 4, 2000). 'Sharps & Flats'. Salon.com. Archived from the original on January 17, 2007. Retrieved 2007-02-20.Cite uses deprecated parameter
deadurl=
(help) - ^Ventre, Michael (April 2, 2006). 'Music another member of the Sopranos' crew'. MSNBC. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
- ^Browne, David (May 18, 2001). 'The Sopranos; Peppers & Eggs'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2007-02-21.
- ^Biskind, Peter (March 13, 2007). 'The Family that Preys Together'. Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2007-03-21.
- ^'HBO: The Sopranos: Episode Guide'. HBO. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
- ^https://www.discogs.com/Various-The-Sopranos-Music-From-The-HBO-Original-Series/release/1702566
- ^http://www.cinemetrics.lv/movie.php?movie_ID=10101
- ^'Amazon.com: The Sopranos: Music From The HBO Original Series'. Retrieved 2007-02-27.
- ^'Amazon.com: The Sopranos - Peppers and Eggs: Music From The HBO Series'. Retrieved 2007-02-27.