- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
| Green Day | Track Performer |
| OutKast | Track Performer |
| Mystikal | Track Performer |
| Vertical Horizon | Track Performer |
| J.T. Money | Track Performer |
| Nine Days | Track Performer |
| Wheatus | Track Performer |
| OPM | Track Performer |
| Simple Plan | Track Performer |
| Steve Wright | Engineer |
| Juvenile | Producer |
| Arnold Lanni | Producer, Engineer |
| Kenneth McMillan | Engineer |
| Organized Noize | Composer |
| Ralph Sall | Producer, Executive Producer |
| Eddie Miller | Programming, Engineer |
| Christopher "Tricky" Stewart | Composer, Producer |
| Mitch Allan | Producer |
| André Benjamin | Composer |
| Angelo Caruso | Engineer |
| Antwan Patton | Composer |
| Brandy Flower | Art Direction |
| Mario DeArce | Digital Editing |
| Ziad Al-Hillal | Engineer |
| Brian "B-Luv" Thomas | Engineer |
Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
This is one of my favorite movies! I watch it over and over, and part of the reason why is the soundtrack. It's such a perfect combination of bad boy/underdog type songs. Oh, and I think the song that everyone comments is NOT on the album is "The Girl all the Bad Guys Want" by Bowling for Soup.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
hey i enjoyed some of the songs in the album..but i was wondering what and who sang the song after dizzy won that football match with his ol' high school and later they were dancing to that tune till that dude showed up and start the fight...it's not featured in the album..i really wanna know who sang it and title...please HELP..anyone who knows it...please mail me
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Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide - William Ruhlmann
Ralph Sall, who wrote the music for the high school comedy The New Guy, has put his mark on the rock and rap songs on this "music from the motion picture" various-artists collection. He gets co-writing credit on four songs and produced seven of them, and he seems to have specially chosen the rest. This is not one of those soundtrack albums that really serves as a label sampler; though Sony acts Wheatus and Nine Days do turn up, most of the tracks have been licensed from other companies. Nevertheless, as a listening experience, it still comes across as a miscellaneous collection of hard rock and hip-hop. There are some interesting remakes: Eve 6 contributes a newly ...