![]() There are plenty of other good songs here, all of them characterized by driving intensity: most notable are "Six Days (Remix)," a DJ Shadow song featuring Mos Def "The Barracuda," a fun garage rock-style song by 5.6.7.8's, a group of Japanese women who sing in English "Restless," a straightforward slab of electronica by Evil Nine "She Wants to Move," a great dance-rock song by N.E.R.D., who is the Neptunes in another guise "Speed," a 1995 song by Atari Teenage Riot, a super-noisy band tagged as "digital hardcore" in their day and a pair of Don Omar songs, which as reggaeton do seem out of place here, yet are good songs and give this already diverse album still more diversity. ![]() These Teriyaki Boyz inclusions are the most entertaining aspect of Tokyo Drift. There are two tracks from the group here, "Tokyo Drift (Fast & Furious)" and "Cho Large," both of which are produced by the Neptunes the latter song even includes a rap by Pharrell Williams, who is the face of that production duo. ![]() Teriyaki Boyz are a Japanese rap group of such ability that even those with no grasp whatsoever of the language can easily enjoy their music. But it's also fitting because of the inclusion of a couple Japanese-language songs, which are in line with the film's Tokyo setting. ![]() The driving intensity of the music compiled for the soundtrack of The Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift is fitting.
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