Dom Dolla, Tiësto, PAWSA and More Fuel High-Octane F1 Movie Soundtrack

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Atlantic Records has lifted the hood on F1: The Album, the forthcoming soundtrack to Apple Original Films’ Formula 1 movie, and it’s a turbo-charged celebration of EDM’s tightening grip on the motorsport world.

The genre has long flirted with Formula 1’s flair for spectacle, but the relationship goes full-throttle with this soundtrack. Dom Dolla leads the charge with “No Room for A Saint,” marking another milestone in his own F1 crossover journey following his headlining performance at LIV on the Grid during the 2024 Las Vegas Grand Prix.

Other dance music producers on the soundtrack include Peggy Gou with her kinetic reimagining of “D.A.N.C.E”; Dutch icon Tiësto, who teamed up with Sexyy Red for the boisterous “OMG!”; and UK underground staple PAWSA, who was recently named by EDM.com as one of 2024’s best electronic music producers.

While artists like Ed Sheeran, Tate McRae and Burna Boy round out the score’s cross-genre appeal, it’s the electronic contingent that underscores a cultural shift that’s been brewing for years. EDM and Formula 1 have been embracing a crossover crescendo in which headliners like Calvin Harris, Martin Garrix and Above & Beyond have become mainstays at Grand Prix weekends from Monaco to Miami.

The film is directed by Top Gun: Maverick‘s Joseph Kosinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer alongside seven-time World Champion Lewis Hamilton. Starring Brad Pitt, the film blends dramatic fiction with real F1 race footage and cameo appearances from motorsport titans like Max Verstappen, Lando Norris and Charles Leclerc.

Both F1: The Album and the feature film itself drop globally on June 27th. Check out the full tracklist and trailer below.

F1: The Album Tracklist

  1. Don Toliver – Lose My Mind (feat. Doja Cat)
  2. Dom Dolla – No Room for a Saint (feat. Nathan Nicholson)
  3. Ed Sheeran – Drive
  4. Tate McRae – Just Keep Watching
  5. ROSÉ – Messy
  6. Burna Boy – Don’t Let Me Drown
  7. Roddy Ricch – Underdog
  8. RAYE – Grandma Calls The Boys Bad News
  9. Chris Stapleton – Bad As I Used To Be
  10. Myke Towers – Baja California
  11. Tiësto & Sexyy Red – OMG!
  12. Madison Beer – All At Once
  13. Peggy Gou – D.A.N.C.E
  14. PAWSA – Double C
  15. Mr Eazi – Attention
  16. Darkoo – Give Me Love

One To One: John & Yoko

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“I just like TV,” says John Lennon to an interviewer, somewhere at the heart of Kevin Macdonald’s scintillating, crackling, livewire documentary about John and Yoko Ono’s first year in New York. “It replaced the fireplace when I was a child. They took the fire away, they put a TV in and I got hooked.”

“I just like TV,” says John Lennon to an interviewer, somewhere at the heart of Kevin Macdonald’s scintillating, crackling, livewire documentary about John and Yoko Ono’s first year in New York. “It replaced the fireplace when I was a child. They took the fire away, they put a TV in and I got hooked.”

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Half a century after their demise we are certainly hooked on Beatles content. After all this time you might rightfully wonder if we need another John Lennon documentary. Particularly one that revisits a period already exhaustively covered in the 2006 The US vs John Lennon. But Macdonald and his team don’t just meticulously recreate the couple’s tiny West Village bedsit on Bank Street – a few guitars, a typewriter and a black and white TV set at foot of the small double bed. They also vividly recreate the electronic maelstrom that they plugged and plunged into, like Alice through the Looking Glass, via the TV and the telephone.

While the 2006 film was an overfamiliar, lionising grind of 21st century talking heads self-righteously proclaiming the wisdom of hindsight, Macdonald brings 1971 to vivid, lurid life. Adam Curtis is an obvious comparison, but Macdonald works some of his hallucinatory cathode alchemy, cutting together news reports from Attica and Vietnam, TV commercials for Clorox, the campaign trails of Nixon, George Wallace and Shirley Chisholm, gameshows, chat shows and the chaotic counterforce of Jerry Rubin, Allen Ginsberg and John Sinclair, watching the sparks fly.

Perhaps even more revelatory are the audio of the phone calls John and Yoko carefully recorded, quite rightly anticipating some future bust and deportation. You hear the enthusiasm of John on the phone to Allen Klein, trying to convince him of his plans for some righteous Jesse James tour through America, freeing the prisoners. You hear Yoko and her assistants’ laborious attempts to secure a supply of 200 flies for her MoMA exhibition. Eventually, you hear John’s growing disillusionment with Rubin’s plan to call half a million a kids to face the cops at the 1972 Republican convention in Miami.

The film is centred around beautifully restored footage from the benefit show John and Yoko performed for the Willowbrook special needs school at Madison Square Gardens in August 1972 – what would turn out to be John’s only full-length post-Beatles concert. But though there’s a fab performance of “Come Together”, an almost unbearable rendition of “Mother” and a version of “Imagine” – cut to footage of Willowbrook kids playing in Central Park, that redeems the song – the real revelation of this film is hearing John’s voice, at the absolute dark heart of 20th century celebrity, madness and violence, sounding suddenly like the sanest man in New York, saying he’s not going to call children to a riot. “They’re all men,” he says, despairing of the would be heroes of the counterculture. “Where are the women? Where’s Mrs Hoffman?”

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