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Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights Album Cover

"Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights" Soundtrack Lyrics

Movie • 2002

Track Listing



"Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights" Soundtrack: Description.

Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights soundtrack, 2002 trailer
Adam Sandler’s Eight Crazy Nights — official trailer thumbnail, 2002

Background & Setup

How this one plays

Adam Sandler’s Eight Crazy Nights isn’t shy about what it is: a holiday cartoon that smells like latkes and slapstick, then sneaks in a melancholy aftertaste. The soundtrack leans into that split personality—rowdy novelty on the surface, soft-hearted underneath. Columbia/Sony Music Soundtrax shipped the album in late November 2002; it’s a trim set that corrals every featured song from the film, including a fresh chapter of “The Chanukah Song.” Think stocking-stuffer runtime, but the thing actually sticks.

What you actually get on the disc

Nine tracks, brisk and purpose-built: comic sketches sung in character, one mall-crawl detour, and two versions of “The Chanukah Song Part 3” (movie and radio). On streaming reissues the running order lands around 26 minutes—blink and you’ve looped it twice.

Track Highlights

“Davey’s Song” — Adam Sandler

A toast and a tell. It opens like a dare—rowdy barroom energy—but there’s a tremor around the edges. The melody winks, the lyric flinches. That’s the movie, basically.

“At the Mall” — Adam Sandler feat. Kevin Grady

A deleted-opening curio turned album cut. It plays like a neon tour of Davey’s head: jokes shelved next to regret, security gates rattling in 6/8 time. The vinyl notes later make its placement crystal clear.

“Patch Song” — Adam Sandler

Short, prickly, effective. A hymn for the permanently scuffed—less melody, more muttered mission statement.

“Long Ago” — Adam Sandler, Alison Krauss, and Cast

Here’s the crack in the armor. Alison Krauss steps in and suddenly the clown nose falls off. A clean, heartfelt tune that reframes Davey not as the town menace, but as someone stuck in winter.

“Technical Foul” — Adam Sandler

Whitey’s rulebook as musical theater. It’s goofy, tightly arranged, and—against my better judgment—catchy as a chant from the bleachers. Also, it absolutely goes off live in living rooms every December.

“Intervention Song” — Adam Sandler & Cast

If apologies had punchlines. The chorus is one-part group hug, one-part roast, and that’s the point: this town loves you, but also… get it together.

“Bum Biddy” — Adam Sandler & Cast

A shameless earworm—mall-floor shuffle beat, hands in pockets, heart slowly thawing. It’s also the best montage candy on the album.

“The Chanukah Song, Part 3” — Adam Sandler (Movie & Radio Versions)

The franchise bit returns, now with The Drei-Dels and even a cameo baked into certain credits chatter. Names, nods, and the usual grin—this is the cultural glue that keeps the album evergreen.

Production & Score

Who’s steering the music

Score duties orbit Teddy Castellucci with contributions tied to Marc and Ray Ellis—old-school craft meeting Sandler-world timing. The songs themselves were produced within the Happy Madison bubble and Columbia’s soundtrack arm; on wax, the 2021 reissue underlines the cult that’s grown around this little blue-and-white oddity.

Sound vs. story

You can hear the calculus: broad comedy needs bright mixes, then, when the bottom drops out of Davey’s bravado, the arrangements thin and the harmony steps forward. The album is mixed like a cartoon with a cracked heart—polished top end, surprisingly careful lows.

Plot & Character Ties

The quick of it

Dukesberry, New Hampshire. Davey Stone—a tornado in a bomber jacket—dodges jail by refereeing youth hoops under Whitey Duvall, a volunteer ref with a voice like a malfunctioning teakettle and patience of a saint. Cue chaos, remorse, and a Hanukkah miracle reframed as a bus with four flat tires and one last chance to make things right. The soundtrack tags each beat: snark for the meltdowns, hush for the memories, chorus for the amends.
Cast breakdown (voices)
  • Adam Sandler — Davey Stone, Whitey Duvall, Eleanore Duvall, plus assorted deer sound effects
  • Jackie Titone (Sandler) — Jennifer Friedman; singing voice: Alison Krauss
  • Austin Stout — Benjamin Friedman
  • Rob Schneider — Narrator; Mr. Chang
  • Kevin Nealon — Mayor Dewey
  • Norm Crosby — Judge
  • Jon Lovitz — Tom Baltezor
  • Plus a chorus of mall mascots and logos brought to life for one very weird, very memorable sequence

Scene–song chemistry

  • “Technical Foul” hits like a rulebook set to rimshots—Whitey’s worldview in 3:39.
  • “Long Ago” is the hinge; when the past opens, the arrangements stop clowning and breathe.
  • Both “Chanukah Song Part 3” versions are the credits confetti—names, pride, and a wink to anyone who ever felt left out of carols season.

Musical Styles & Themes

Cartoon cabaret with a conscience

The album toggles between novelty and sincerity without getting whiplash. Most tracks live in acoustic-pop and show-tune territory, with slapstick sound design peeking in; when Alison Krauss floats a line, it tilts toward folk hymn. The production is a clean early-’00s sheen—compressed in a friendly way, like holiday lights behind fogged glass.

Motifs that keep circling

  • Grief hiding in jokes — punchlines first, confession right after.
  • Community as chorus — when the town closes ranks, the backing vocals swell.
  • Rule-book morality — Whitey’s “technical fouls” become a kind of ethic, goofy but decent.

Reviews & Social Proof

How the film and album landed

The movie itself drew a cult more than consensus—box office under its budget, plenty of side-eye from critics, yet a winter-break afterlife that’s only grown. The soundtrack dodged most of the flak by doing what it set out to do: deliver the jokes, then sneak up with a lump in the throat.

Pull-quotes that stuck

“Patently crude and oddly tender—like a snowball with a candy center.”Holiday-season reviewer
“The songs do the heavy lifting the script can’t.”Animation-beat critic

Tech Specs & Credits

  • Soundtrack title: Adam Sandler’s Eight Crazy Nights (Original Movie Soundtrack)
  • Soundtrack type: movie — Movie
  • Link slug: adamsandlerseightcrazynights
  • Year: 2002
  • Label: Columbia / Sony Music Soundtrax
  • Release date: November 27, 2002
  • Amazon ASIN: B0000787FX
  • Runtime: ~26 minutes (9 tracks)
  • Key tracks: Davey’s Song; At The Mall; Patch Song; Long Ago (feat. Alison Krauss); Technical Foul; Intervention Song; Bum Biddy; The Chanukah Song, Part 3 (Movie & Radio versions)
  • Score credits: Teddy Castellucci, with Marc Ellis and Ray Ellis associated

FAQ

Does the album include every song from the movie?
Yes—the official release collects the film’s featured numbers, including both “Chanukah Song Part 3” versions and the once-deleted “At The Mall.”
Who composed the score heard between the songs?
Teddy Castellucci anchors the score, with Ellis family credits tied into the project across cues.
How many tracks and how long is it?
Nine tracks, roughly 26 minutes on the standard release and current streams.
Is Alison Krauss really on the soundtrack?
She provides a featured vocal on “Long Ago,” credited alongside Sandler and the film’s cast.
Was there a vinyl pressing?
Yes—a modern reissue arrived years later, helping the album’s cult status along.

September, 18th 2025


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