

#GOD GAVE ROCK AND ROLL TO YOU BILL AND TED LYRICS MOVIE#
Just some good old fashioned movie score from David Newman. Surprisingly, no ultra shreddy music plays over the proposal scene.Non soundtrack things I noticed when re-watching the film I bet Vai left his Jem behind and exclusively played that guitar for his bitchin' solos.

Rufus's neon Flying V guitar in the beginning of Bogus Journey might be the single greatest guitar ever created in history. If you haven't, go to Amazon right now and buy it! Preston, Esquire, and Pants Theodore Logan!Īnyway, this original soundtrack is totally the type of cassette tape you would have acquired off of a BMG/Columbia penny in the mail for 12 albums deal. That's not to mention the inclusion of hair metal stalwarts Winger and Slaughter, and, guitar heros Steve Vai and Richie Kotzen. Out are Shark Island, Tora Tora, and Vital Signs. In are most non heinous bands like Kiss, Faith No More, Megadeath, and Primus. Where as the Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure soundtrack featured unknowns, as Extreme and Nelson became household names later, the Bogus Journey soundtrack drops the commercial success hammer. And while the rock remains the same, the names on the album cover get a major overhaul. aww who cares, they kick ass and emerge victorious. The Wyld Stallyns are back with another excellent adventure, that's really a bogus journey, that ends triumphantly, and. God Gave Rock 'N' Roll to You II - Kiss.As the spoken word bit in the Kiss song goes: “ I know life sometimes can get tough!/And I know life sometimes can be a drag!/But people, we have been given a gift/We have been given a road/And that road’s name is… Rock and Roll!”īill & Ted Face the Music is in cinemas now. When to use it: Whenever you’re lacking in strength. The unifying power of rock ‘n’ roll – expressed here in the Kiss song that served as the theme for Bogus Journey, is a central belief in the three movies, even if they might better deliver their message via the medium of trap right now. When to use it: When contemplating the transience of life. The basis of many ancient philosophies and self-help regimes essentially boils down to an acceptance of the ‘nowness’ of all things, so they really stumbled on something here. This one is slightly harder to get on board with while enduring the manure-slicked Slip ‘N’ Slide that is the year of our lords 2020, but this is Bill’s summary having skipped around through history in their time-travelling phone box. When to use it: While gazing at heavy metal depictions of hell, the Grim Reaper, the Devil et al and thinking they look kind of cool.


Death – and his “cute butt” – will come for us all.Ī lesson learned in Bogus Journey, when Bill and Ted discover that Satan’s manor is nothing like it is in the eyes of Iron Maiden. When to use it: When remembering that while time may be elastic, we each have our expiry date. Not the lyrics of Bill and Ted’s band Wyld Stallyns, but those of hair metal band Kansas, borrowed by Bill and Ted in attempt to converse on a level with philosophical superstar Socrates. When to use it: Apply the philosophy whenever a parent’s new partner is eliciting difficult-to-process feelings in you. In spite of the tangled web, Bill and Ted welcome her back to the family with kind words and a performance of their new song, which includes theremin and throat singing. When to use it: When traditional syntax just doesn’t express how excellent or heinous something is.Īcross the three movies, the character Missy has been many things to Bill and Ted: lusted-after high school senior, Ted’s stepmom, Bill’s stepmom and now, in Face The Music, Ted’s little brother’s new wife. In practice, when Bill describes their trip to Hell in Bogus Journey as “non-non-non-non-heinous”, it means it was heinous, which is quite what you’d expect from a visit to hell. When to use it: Whenever you’re asked the question: ‘What number am I thinking of right now?’ Surplus modifiers are not-not-not-uncoolīill and Ted aren’t the sharpest tools, but their mastery of the double-negative speaks to a cognitive idiosyncrasy, rather than insufficiency. It’s the number that’s always at the forefront of a Bill & Ted acolyte’s mind, for some reason. 69 is the only figure of numerological import
