tracks.
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1.Every Breath You Take/Theme from Peter Gunn [Mr. Ruggerio's Remix] – The Police, Henry Mancini & His Orchestra 02:30
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2.Battle Flag – Pigeonhed 05:58
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3.I've Got a Feeling – Katie Jackson, The Campbell Brothers 03:56
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4.The Captain – Kasey Chambers 04:32
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5.Shuck Dub – R.L. Burnside 04:28
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6.Affection – Lost Boys 04:19
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7.My Lover's Prayer – Otis Redding 03:11
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8.Certamente – Madreblu 03:37
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9.Black Books – Nils Lofgren 05:27
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10.Frank Sinatra – Cake 04:01
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11.Baubles, Bangles and Beads – Frank Sinatra 02:34
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12.Thru and Thru – The Rolling Stones 06:01
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13.High Fidelity – Elvis Costello 02:28
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14.Living on a Thin Line – The Kinks 04:11
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15.Girl – Vue 04:43
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16.Vivaldi: Sposa Son Disprezzata – Cecilia Bartoli 05:50
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17.I (Who Have Nothing) – Ben E. King 02:29
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18.Return to Me – Bob Dylan 02:22
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19.Make No Mistake – Keith Richards 06:30
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20.Piove – Jovanotti 03:20
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21.Space Invader – Pretenders 03:28
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22.Tiny Tears – Tindersticks 05:47
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23.Gloria – Van Morrison 02:36
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24.Core 'Ngrato – Dominic Chianese 03:04
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25.Dialogue From "The Sopranos" 05:17
At the end of each episode of The Sopranos, a different song plays under the credits. Sometimes the song has been featured elsewhere in the episode, sometimes it is first heard at the end. What the songs have in common is that none of them are mentioned in the credits. Viewers may recognize the familiar ones, a song by Otis Redding, say, or Them's "Gloria." But many are unusual even if the artists are well known, and others are hard to identify. Some, in fact, are special to the series. Now, puzzled and intrigued viewers can be satisfied by this two-CD set, the second collection of music from The Sopranos, which ranges from opera singer Cecilia Bartoli performing a Vivaldi aria to Bob Dylan turning in a shambling, newly recorded version of the old Dean Martin hit "Return to Me," complete with a verse in Italian. As was true of the first album, this one is full of artists like Dylan who rarely agree to let their material be licensed, among them the Rolling Stones and the estate of Frank Sinatra. Some of the songs bear at least a glancing relationship to the subject of the series, such as the Kinks' "Living on a Thin Line" and the remarkable opening track, a medley of the Police's "Every Breath You Take" and Henry Mancini's "Theme From Peter Gunn." Others are just terrific, or at least ear-catching works. The moral contradictions of the series are exemplified by the segue from Pigeonhead's "Battle Flag" that makes prominent use of a 13-letter word that helps earn the album a parental advisory sticker, to the Campbell Brothers with Katie Jackson's "I've Got a Feeling," a gospel number. As on the series, somehow it all holds together without anybody getting hurt. Most of the time, that is. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
- Genre: Rock, Soundtrack
- Subgenre: Film Music, Hard Rock, Folk/Country Rock, Pop/Rock, Television Music, Rock & Roll/Roots
- Category TV Soundtracks, Soundtracks, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Singer/Songwriter, Country-Rock, Album Rock
- Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics
- Release Date: May 8, 2001
- Artist: Sopranos: Peppers & Eggs (Music From the HBO Or
- Additional Artist: The Campbell Brothers (Performer ), Dominic Chianese (Performer ), Lost Boys (Performer ), Various artists collection, Bob Dylan (Vocals ), R.L. Burnside (Performer ), Tindersticks (Performer ), Keith Richards (Performer ), Cecilia Bartoli (Performer ), Elvis Costello & the Attractions (Performer ), Kasey Chambers (Performer ), Katie Jackson (Performer ), The Kinks (Performer ), Nils Lofgren (Performer ), Otis Redding (Performer ), The Rolling Stones (Performer ), Frank Sinatra (Performer ), Ben E. King (Performer )