Full Leather Jacket - Music

Music

  • The song played during the opening scene of this episode, when the Soprano family eats Chinese food, is "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty
  • The song played when Richie was reading the paper and then was joined by Paulie and Silvio, who told him to build a ramp for Beansie, is "Dancing in the Dark", sung by Tony Bennett on the 1993 album Steppin' Out
  • The song played when Sean and Matt approach Tony in the Bada Bing's men's room is "Lap Dance" by the John Spencer Blues Explosion, on the album Xtra Acme USA
  • The song played when Furio and his partner collect from Sean and Matt is "Up 'N Da Club" by 2nd II None, from the album Classic 220
  • The song played as Richie and Carmela talked (while the Polish taxi driver was picking up a television) was "Fields of Gold" from the album Ten Summoner's Tales, by Sting
  • The song played when Matt and Sean sit at the Bada Bing!, reflecting on their status, is "Fuck With Your Head" from the album Learning Curve, by DJ Rap

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Famous quotes containing the word music:

    Good-by, my book! Like mortal eyes, imagined ones must close some day. Onegin from his knees will rise—but his creator strolls away. And yet the ear cannot right now part with the music and allow the tale to fade; the chords of fate itself continue to vibrate; and no obstruction for the sage exists where I have put The End: the shadows of my world extend beyond the skyline of the page, blue as tomorrow’s morning haze—nor does this terminate the phrase.
    Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977)

    As if, as if, as if the disparate halves
    Of things were waiting in a betrothal known
    To none, awaiting espousal to the sound
    Of right joining, a music of ideas, the burning
    And breeding and bearing birth of harmony,
    The final relation, the marriage of the rest.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)

    The further jazz moves away from the stark blue continuum and the collective realities of Afro-American and American life, the more it moves into academic concert-hall lifelessness, which can be replicated by any middle class showing off its music lessons.
    Imamu Amiri Baraka (b. 1934)