Album · 2007 · 15 Songs. Have You Heard the News) Dewey Cox Died. 15 Songs, 43 Minutes.
Other Albums by Walk Hard (Motion Picture Soundtrack). Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story "Original Motion Picture Soundtrack". Walk Hard (Motion Picture Soundtrack).
Complete your John C. Reilly collection. Just all kinds of awesome. Reply See 1 reply Notify me 3 Helpful.
Walk Hard: The Dewey. David Honeyboy Edwards. Dewey first plays this for a group of music producers and it becomes a huge hit and plays throughout other scenes in the film. I Hate You) Big Daddy, John C. Reilly.
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story "Original Motion Picture Soundtrack". Released by S7 Feb 2010 16 Tracks.
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (soundtrack). Redirected from Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story soundtrack). Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 2007 film Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story. It was almost like a Manhattan Project for songwriters," says Bern. It was the most fun thing I've ever done.
Motion Picture Soundtrack. The soundtrack features a sampling of Dewey Cox's greatest hits, spanning over five decades of his musical history. Once Apatow and Kasdan had conceived the ideas for a lifetime's worth of songs, album producer Michael Andrews tapped some of America's top tunesmiths, including Van Dyke Parks, Dan Bern, Mike Viola, Charlie Wadhams, Antonio Ortiz, and Marshall Crenshaw, to write the new classics
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story is a 2007 American comedy film directed by Jake Kasdan, and written by Kasdan and co-producer Judd Apatow. The plot echoes the storyline of 2005's Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line and 2004's Ray Charles biopic Ray. Walk Hard is a parody of the biopic genre as a whole.
Album Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack). Hello, Darlene Hello, Mr. Cox Are you ready to sing one? I'm always ready Alright. This number takes place in Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, in which Dewey (John C. Reilly) is already married but can’t ignore his attraction to his backup singer Darlene (Jenna Fischer, whose singing voice is dubbed by Angela Correa). They sing together on this duet where the humor comes from the fact that the song never quite ventures into obscene territory.