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Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel Album Cover

"Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel" Soundtrack Lyrics

Cartoon • 2009

Track Listing



"Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel" Soundtrack Description

Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel lyrics, 2009 Trailer
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel lyrics, 2009 Trailer

Overview

The 2009 soundtrack arrives like a sugar rush you kind of pretend to resist, then absolutely don’t. It’s that mix of glossy pop covers and winking nostalgia, the kind that slides into a family movie and sneaks out with chart placements. Officially released in December 2009, the album carries the Warner/Rhino stamp and the unmistakable Bagdasarian touch, pairing The Chipmunks with their scene-stealing counterparts, The Chipettes, for a bigger, brighter sequel vibe. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel Soundtrack Trailer. Lyrics
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel soundtrack trailer, 2009

Background & Production

Rhino put it out; producers Ross Bagdasarian Jr., Janice Karman, and Ali Dee Theodore helped steer the song selections, which lean hard into earworms that kids know and parents recognize, sometimes against their better judgment. The film itself is Betty Thomas’s live-action/CG swirl, with a cast that toggles between humans (Zachary Levi, Jason Lee, David Cross) and the recognizable voice trio of Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler, and Jesse McCartney. The result is a jukebox playground, engineered to move but with enough wink to keep you from rolling your eyes—well, not too much. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1} There’s a small production miracle hiding in plain sight: the “Chipmunk” vocal process still relies on slowed-down performances that are later sped up, which sounds simple until you try to keep warmth and phrasing intact. Producer Janice Karman once laughed about the actors showing up having practiced “chipmunk voices,” only to be told the real trick would happen in post. It’s a charming peek behind the helium. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Musical Styles & Themes

This is comfort candy. You get dance-pop sheen, a bit of rock chug, a splash of hip-hop bounce. Covers are the engine, and the specificity matters: familiar hooks let the performances play like musical cosplay, which is half the fun. Underneath the sparkle, there’s a loose theme running through the film and album—belonging. The voices might squeak, the tempos might sprint, but the subtext keeps circling school hallways, stage jitters, and sibling dynamics. It’s pop with training wheels and unexpected swagger.

Hooks That Stick

The arrangements rarely sit still—tempos nudge upward, percussion gets a soda fizz, and harmonies stack like Lego. When the Chipettes step to a pop standard, the production tends to carve a little more space in the high end, letting the gloss shimmer. It’s aerodynamic, in a bubblegum way.
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel Soundtrack Trailer. Lyrics
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel soundtrack trailer, 2009

Track Highlights

“You Really Got Me” (feat. Honor Society) A fizzy update on the Kinks classic, used like an opening volley—equal parts cheeky and chest-out. It’s also a canny crossover play, tethering the Chipmunks to a then-teen-mag buzz band for that Disney-adjacent halo. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3} “Single Ladies” (The Chipettes) Not subtle, and that’s the point. The joy comes from the theatrical snap: those call-and-response moments are built for school-auditorium heroics. The mix gives Brittany and company sharp, present vocals riding a bouncy low end, translating stadium pop into cafeteria-scale confidence. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4} “Stayin’ Alive” You can’t out-Bee Gees the Bee Gees, but you can wink. The version here leans into the strut, trimming the arrangement into a compact disco capsule that punches above its cute. File under “parents nodding despite themselves.” :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

Film Plot & Characters

Dave gets sidelined by an injury, and the boys land with cousin Toby, a sweet slacker who means well. High school awaits—lockers, cliques, talent shows—and a cash-strapped music program needs saving. Enter a rival girl group (The Chipettes) with their own goals, plus a familiar antagonist who sees dollar signs in tiny talent. Conflicts spark, crushes happen, harmonies eventually line up, and, predictably, a stage becomes a family summit. Is it Shakespeare? No. But for 88 minutes, it’s bright, brisk, and oddly sincere about showing up for your people. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Who’s Who, Quickly
Alvin, Simon, Theodore — Voiced by Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler, and Jesse McCartney; the energy trio, equal parts chaos (Alvin), conscience (Simon), and comfort (Theodore). The Chipettes: Brittany, Jeanette, Eleanor — Christina Applegate, Anna Faris, Amy Poehler; not just counterparts but catalysts, pushing the boys to grow up, at least a smidge. Humans on deck — Zachary Levi’s Toby, Jason Lee’s Dave (in limited but pivotal spurts), and David Cross as the very motivated Ian. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

Behind the Scenes

There’s the logistics you expect with CG characters: actors delivering to eyelines, tennis balls on sticks, X’s taped to matte boxes. Zachary Levi once grinned through the absurdity—playing opposite invisible chipmunks means trusting the process more than your instincts—because the little critters arrive later, courtesy of VFX. That mismatch between on-set emptiness and on-screen chaos is part of the sequel’s DNA. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8} And on the music side, the team leaned even harder into recognizable repertoire this go-round. If the first film proved the marketplace, the follow-up doubled down on songs you could hum in the parking lot before buying the ticket. That bet paid off on the charts.

Numbers Don’t Squeak, They Shout

The album entered the Billboard 200 around the holidays and kept climbing, eventually peaking in the mid-single digits the following summer, with a long tail that surprised some skeptics. On the dedicated Soundtracks chart, it snagged the top spot more than once in spring 2010. In short: sticky as taffy. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}

Reviews & Social Proof

Critics, predictably, split along tolerance lines. Some praised the sharper sequel pacing and the giddy addition of The Chipettes; others rolled their eyes at the brand math. Out in the world, families voted with feet and wallets—box office thrived, and the soundtrack’s chart performance gave it afterglow, the kind you hear leaking out of minivans months later. Variety’s line about “twice the number of singing-and-dancing rodents” still reads like a sly compliment. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}

Quotes

“They’re never there on the set. Instead of chipmunks in my scenes, I was looking at a tennis ball on a stick. The little critters are added later.” — Zachary Levi
“They had been practicing their chipmunk voices.” — Janice Karman

FAQ

Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel Soundtrack Trailer, Songs Lyrics
Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel soundtrack trailer, 2009
Does the soundtrack include only covers?
Mostly covers, yes, but tailored for performance moments in the film—scene-first thinking with pop familiarity baked in.
Who produced the soundtrack?
Ross Bagdasarian Jr., Janice Karman, and Ali Dee Theodore helped shape the selection and sound, keeping it brisk and kid-loud in the best way.
Did the album chart well?
It climbed the Billboard 200 into the single digits and tagged No. 1 on the Soundtracks chart during spring 2010, outlasting the holiday bump.
What’s the core vibe?
High-energy, harmony-forward, and unabashedly bubblegum. Designed for kitchen dance floors and car sing-alongs.
Is the original score on here?
No—this is the pop-song companion; David Newman’s orchestral score lives separately.
Where does it fit in the Chipmunks discography?
As the film sequel’s companion, it marks the full cinematic arrival of The Chipettes within the modern franchise era.

Technical Info

  • Release date: December 1, 2009
  • Type: cartoon soundtrack
  • Primary artists: The Chipmunks & The Chipettes
  • Label: Rhino Entertainment (Warner Music Group)
  • Producers: Ross Bagdasarian Jr., Janice Karman, Ali Dee Theodore
  • Chart notes: Peaked in the Top 10 on the Billboard 200; hit No. 1 on the Billboard Soundtracks chart during spring 2010
  • Notable cue/feature placements: “You Really Got Me” (feat. Honor Society), “Single Ladies,” “Stayin’ Alive”
  • Related film credits: Directed by Betty Thomas; principal cast includes Zachary Levi, Jason Lee, David Cross; voices by Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler, Jesse McCartney; Chipettes voiced by Christina Applegate, Anna Faris, Amy Poehler
Date: September 23, 2025

September, 23rd 2025


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