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Music from the Motion Picture Juno is the soundtrack for the 2007 film Juno. The album compiles mostly indie rock [1] songs from the 2000s, and was released by Rhino Entertainment on December 11, 2007. [2] [3] It received enough critical and commercial success that other compilations and expanded re-releases have been released in subsequent years.
The song became available as the album's 10th track on August 23, 2024, when it was released by Island Records. A 1980s-style-disco-influenced pop song, "Juno" has lyrics about Carpenter's intense attraction to a man that makes her desire getting pregnant with his child. Music critics were generally positive about "Juno" and praised its production.
"Anyone Else but You" is a song by the indie rock duo the Moldy Peaches, first released on their 2001 self-titled album. The song achieved wider popularity after being featured on the soundtrack of the 2007 film Juno, along with several other songs by Kimya Dawson that she wrote for her toddler. [1]
Juno is a musical with music and lyrics by Marc Blitzstein and book by Joseph Stein, based closely on the 1924 play Juno and the Paycock by Seán O'Casey.The story centers on the disintegration of an Irish family in Dublin in the early 1920s, during the Irish War of Independence.
"Navras" by Juno Reactor vs. Don Davis – 9:08 The track "Navras" was used by rhythmic gymnasts Simona Peycheva of Bulgaria and Penelope Blackmore of Australia in their respective ribbon routines at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games .
Two months before the release of the single, a teaser to the song was released on Juno's YouTube channel on 10 September 2013 [6] and the music video was released on 14 September 2013. [7] The whole video is in black and white and shows Madeline Juno's face the whole time. The video is 3:53 minutes long and was directed by Paddy Kroetz. [8]
"East Jesus Nowhere" is a song by American rock band Green Day. The single was released on October 19, 2009, as the third single and eighth track from their eighth album 21st Century Breakdown . The title is derived from a phrase in the 2007 film Juno .
The track is the fifth entry in the second CD in the film soundtrack, released on 15 May 2003. [3] A different version of the song is featured in Juno Reactor's 2004 album, Labyrinth. [4] A remix of the song was produced by Thomas P. Heckmann and was included on the group's remix album Inside the Reactor in 2011. [5]