Ladies: the most difficult equation (and other recent tweets about Good Will Hunting)
Written by Alex on February 27th, 2010Miss Misery, I wanna push you around, well I will, well I will
Written by Alex on February 23rd, 2010
I tend to save things.
I suppose it should be no surprise that while home for the holidays last fall, in going through folders of old papers, I came across a receipt for a notable purchase from February 23, 1998. It was from my local record store on College Avenue, and on that day I purchased the Good Will Hunting soundtrack.
I can pretty honestly say this would become one of the most significant music purchases I’d ever make. I didn’t really listen to music until late in high school… or maybe I did, but it was just the Aladdin soundtrack over and over again. In tenth grade, though, I discovered my dad’s Beatles collection. I went from there, largely basing my new tastes on that of my peers: Dave Matthews Band, Counting Crows, Billy Joel (River of Dreams, man). I can tell you I was definitely not someone who “listened to Dave Matthews before everyone listened to Dave Matthews.”
I can also tell you that on that February day I did not go into Manifest Records to buy the Good Will Hunting soundtrack. More likely, I was going primarily to get my very own copy of Yourself or Someone Like You by Matchbox 20. Also predetermined, I picked out the Counting Crows’ August and Everything After. Somewhat less so, I snagged the soundtrack for the movie Swingers.
Near the cashier was a display of what were probably new(ish) releases. It speaks to how hurting I was for music suggestions that I picked up the CD soundtrack to a movie I had seen, and loved, but had only vaguely recalled the music. “I think I remember liking it,” I said to myself.
While Matchbox 20 lit up my CD player, Good Will Hunting was more of a slow burn. When I gave it a first listen I found it nice and mellow — but it kind of “all sounds the same,” I thought. Matchbox 20, on the other hand… each song blazed like a smash-hit single. (In fact, five of the twelve songs were released as singles.) Good Will Hunting, at least, made good background music.
But it stayed with me.
I don’t really associate it with those early months of 1998, but in following years it became a staple. I fondly remember Good Will Hunting keeping me company on late evenings in my dimly-lit college dorm room. If it was raining outside, it was twice as wonderful.
If not for that impulse buy, who knows how long it would have taken for me to find Elliott Smith? And I felt like I really discovered him, rather than co-opting his catalog along with whatever else my knowledgeable peers recommended.
Elliott Smith has never been far from my ears this past decade, while Rob Thomas and Company burned out and then they faded away.
Nevertheless, I look back twelve years later and wonder: what if Good Will Hunting‘s soundtrack was populated by the songs of Matchbox 20, rather than those of Elliott Smith?
Last night I put together a little video. I think it would have looked and sounded a lot like this…
It’s like Babe Ruth, all over again…
Written by Alex on February 20th, 2010
Turns out the upcoming Damon-Affleck project will likely be The Trade, the story of two New York Yankees in the seventies who swapped wives. The blogosphere is all atwitter with the notion that we may soon see the Boston duo in pinstripes.
You can thank the crackerjack photoshop staff at the MTV Movie Blog for the image above.
Thanks to Adam, for the heads up on this one.
They’ll serve anybody
Written by Alex on February 18th, 2010
A post from Universal Hub — a car in the parking lot of local eatery Kelly’s Roast Beef (discussed here on Blog Will Hunting).







