A collaboration with Jex Russell – check out his review of the vinyl by clicking here.
DUDES – The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1987 MCA)
Every collector is different. My time is a valuable commodity, so when I buy movie soundtracks made up of mixed songs, I generally only play the songs by the bands I like, and I may never hear the rest of of the album. So it came to be, I have never played the Dudes soundtrack, despite owning it almost 30 years. I don’t know the premise of the movie either. All I know is the old Keel music video for “Rock ‘N’ Roll Outlaw” featured some of the movie footage, starring Jon Cryer, Flea, and Mary Catherine Stewart. It was clearly a comedy. Back then, they didn’t tell you what movie or album a video was from, so I never knew the movie was called Dudes until I saw the CD physically.
I bought this disc at the Record Store in 1997 mostly for Keel, W.A.S.P. and Steve Vai. One look at the cover and I said “This is that movie with the Keel song! I recognize those two guys!” And so it was.
The Keel video commences with a stern warning from a police officer: “You know, maybe this wouldn’t have happened if you looked like normal folks.” He scolds a hilariously punky-looking Jon Cryer. We know what kind of movie this is without seeing it. (Lee Ving of Fear is also in the film.)
“Rock ‘N’ Roll Outlaw”, produced by Kevin Beamish, is the opening track. It’s loaded with attitude and a cool riff, backed by electric slide guitar. “All I need is a rock and roll band, and somewhere new to play!” howls Ron Keel, a distinct singer that never achieved the level of success he was due. There’s a dual solo, with Marc Ferrari comedically using a pistol as a slide in the music video. “Rock ‘N’ Roll Outlaw” is one of Keel’s top tunes, and it wasn’t on their album. The drums are recorded a little clanky, but otherwise this tune is top-notch road rock.
I have never listened to the Vandals, as far as I know, in my life until this moment. “Urban Struggle” begins with a mock Indian war beat, and a mutation of The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly theme. It’s a joke song with cowboy-themed lyrics in a mock accent, and then going into a punk western style, and words about mechanical bulls. Not a song I’ll be coming back to.
“Show No Mercy” by W.A.S.P. (produced by Mike Varney) is more my speed. A non-album track, it hearkens back to early W.A.S.P. The lineup pictured inside was the current W.A.S.P., including Johnny Rod and Steve Riley. The actual track is from an earlier lineup with Tony Richards and Randy Piper. As such, it sounds exactly like the first album, and having more tunes with that sound is never a bad thing. It is a smoker, and Chris Holmes’ familiar guitar sound is welcome in my ears. This song easily could have been on the album, if not used as a single.
Simon Steele & The Claw don’t seem to have released much music over the years. Shame. “Vengeance Is Mine” is a traditional metal gallop. The vocals are decent, usually occupying a low John Bush-like growl, but occasionally releasing into a scream. There’s an awkward key change midway through, but the pace remains relentless throughout.
Megadeth’s jokey cover of “These Boots Are Made For Walkin'” was on their first album as “These Boots”, but this version is slightly longer. Produced by Paul Lani, it is a different recording from the album version by Dave Mustaine and Karat Faye. It remains as entertaining as ever. It may as well be an original if not for the lyrics. You’d never think it was “These Boots” if it was purely instrumental.
A complete change of pace is the pop rocker “Time Forgot You” by Legal Weapon. Apparently they were primarily a punk band, but this is a really cool mainstream 80s rock track that could have been a big hit on radio if circumstances allowed. Singer Kat Arthurs is a breath of fresh air after the grit of Mustaine! This is the hidden gem of the album, with a strong bassline and catchy, well-recorded stabs of shimmering rhythm guitar.
“Jesus Came Driving Along” by Swedish band The Leather Nun is like a gothic punk rock hybrid. The vocals are recorded low in the mix and odd sounds are rampant, but it’s pretty cool. It has a beat you can drive to, which might be the intent.
I was never a big Jane’s Addiction fan, but “Mountain Song” is a brilliant piece of swirly-whirly rock brilliance. A big Jane’s fan told me at the time that he never heard this particular version of “Mountain Song” before, produced by the band themselves. He considered it a rarity. The riff to “Mountain Song” seems like it has been ripped off so many times over the years since. There’s a Zeppelin-esque massiveness to it, but with a tribal beat, an 80s haze, and a howling Perry Farrell. Utter musical magnificence.
Punk band The Little Kings have a very cool song here called “The Lost Highway”. The exaggerated warbling mannerisms of the singer recall Elvis a bit, as the band chop out a greasy rockabilly sound behind him. It’s hard hitting and unique. It goes breakneck for a moment, and then back into a rockabilly groove.
A short instrumental from the movie score, “Dudes Showdown” has twangy guitar, and tense synth backing. It certainly sets a scene. It sounds like a setup for a climax.
The final song is almost a coda. It’s Steve Vai’s rare rendition of “Amazing Grace”, which he has since released as part of his Secret Jewel Box collection. At the time however, it was one of those scattered one-off rarities. Vai goes surprisingly delicate here, with heavy, dreamy guitar effects and a very experimental arrangement of the traditional music. Steve used to say, “Sorry, I can’t help myself!” and here’s an example. He couldn’t help doing something completely different.
And that’s the album! Not bad actually, with only the Vandals track being the one I’d skip today.
4/5 stars

I’m surprised at how close our reviews are (with the exception of the Vandals track, which I really like, lol). This was fun Mike, looking forward to the next one!
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Let’s pick another soundtrack we both own!
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Hey Mike – I never knew Keel had made the video you posted. My friend Marc Ferrari is in the video and band – he is playing slide guitar with a pistol :)
Brent ‘the Doctor’ Doerner https://www.facebook.com/twinwicked/https://www.youtube.com/user/mywickedtwin https://www.facebook.com/groups/mywickedtwin/https://www.youtube.com/user/RedDFilm
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Marc Ferrari rocks man…such a great player and cool pistol :)
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Thanks, Mike. Jex tells a better story, but you have the better review, I think. Henry.
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
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I did have a slight advantage in that I knew about / have seen the movie before, but I agree: Mike’s review was fantastic, and I like that he could reminisce about seeing the Keel video as it was released. I have no such story, lol! Or how he could spot that the W.A.S.P. line-up on the back photo was different than the one on the recording. That didn’t even dawn on me.
I like that we gave it the same score without even consulting each other. Talk about consistency!
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Meh, my review was half-assed compared to Mr. Research!
The consistency was great though…we must be mostly right!
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I’ll call it a tie!
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Don’t know this movie (or soundtrack at all). Great review…I guess I now have to go over to Jex’s page and read his. I won’t say who’s is better….(hint…your is).
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Jex’s was better, we all know this :)
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I remember the film but I never saw it. From what you write, the soundtrack sounds like a better bet anyway.
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It probably is. I do miss the 80s comedy style though. Back then there was a new comedy out every week.
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I’ve seen the movie (surprise, surprise). It’s a crazy trip.
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I’ll have to see what free streaming services it’s on. I just discovered Tubi. Last night watched Moby Dick and a bunch of classic 60s, 70s and 80s Doctor Who.
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The full movie is currently on YouTube. Quality level: watchable, lol!
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Thanks man. Can’t be worse than some of the movies I actually did watch in the 80s. I think we watched all the American Ninja films at some point… lol
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Oh man, the first two were great! Let’s be honest: Michael Dudikoff doesn’t make those films, Steve James does, lol!
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I just hated the idea of an “American” ninja. Why not a Japanese ninja movie? Hated the Americanism.
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Then stay away from “Samurai Cop”, LOL!
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Did you ever see Blind Fury with Rutger Hauer, Jex? That’s a great action cheese fest involving swordplay.
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I’ve heard of it, but never seen it. Definitely on my “To-Watch List”, lol!
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I watch a shit ton of obscure horror movies on Tubi. Adblocker on the computer makes it bearable!
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I don’t find the ads that bad. Moby Dick last night, I think I was only interrupted twice. Not bad!
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Interesting. I watched George Romero’s The Crazies without an adblocker on Tubi and there were at least 7 or so ad breaks.
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Dudes is on Tubi by the way. Freevee, PlutoTV, Peacock, Roku, and Plex too.
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I have heard of two of those. LOL
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