Soundtracks:  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #


Barnyard Album Cover

"Barnyard" Soundtrack Lyrics

Movie • 2006

Track Listing



"Barnyard" Soundtrack Description

Barnyard (2006) official trailer thumbnail with Otis and the barnyard crew
Barnyard movie soundtrack — Trailer still, 2006

FAQ

  • Is there an official soundtrack album? Yes — a 12-track various-artists album tied to the film, originally issued in 2006 and later reissued digitally.
  • Who composed the score? John Debney composed the original score.
  • Which song does Sam Elliott perform? He sings a cover of “I Won’t Back Down,” used first diegetically, then reprised in the action.
  • What’s the song during the barn party with the rapping rodent? Shaggy’s “Boombastic,” performed onstage by in-world performer Biggie Cheese.
  • What track plays when “Wild Mike” goes off? Rednex’s “Wild ’N Free.”

Additional Info

  • The album mixes dancehall, alt-country blues, and left-field indie pop — a deliberate “party vs. responsibility” palette.
  • Les Claypool guests on North Mississippi Allstars’ “Hittin’ the Hay.”
  • Kevin James (Otis) leads a brisk novelty take on “Down on the Farm (They All Ask for You).”
  • Shaggy’s “Boombastic” appears diegetically via Biggie Cheese during the barn rave.
  • Peter Gabriel’s ballad “Father, Son” underscores the film’s grief beat.
  • Bobby McFerrin & Russell Ferrante’s “Freedom Is a Voice” is heard with Miles’ log-tapping rhythm gag.
  • Digital reissues surfaced later; the original CD carried a 2006 release.
Barnyard trailer frame: nighttime barn party lights and stage
Party lights, big hooks — the film’s needle-drops lean bright and immediate

Overview

Why does a reggae chart-topper crash a country-fried cow comedy? Because Barnyard weaponizes contrast: goofy revelry up top, real stakes underneath. The soundtrack makes that pivot land. Across 90 minutes the movie alternates between barn-bash hijinks and a coming-of-age about Otis stepping up. The album mirrors that swing. You get Biggie Cheese hamming through Shaggy, Rednex revving up Wild Mike, and then — out of nowhere — Peter Gabriel’s “Father, Son” and Sam Elliott’s plainspoken “I Won’t Back Down.” It shouldn’t cohere. Somehow it does. The result is a jukebox that sells the film’s core tension: playtime vs. responsibility.

Genres & Themes

  • Delta/alt-country grit → earthy community vibes; the farm as a lived-in hangout (North Mississippi Allstars).
  • Dancehall/reggae pop → collective euphoria and comic swagger (Shaggy’s “Boombastic”).
  • Euro-country dance → chaos switch flipped (Rednex when Wild Mike explodes into motion).
  • Club-leaning big beat → carefree “goofing off” montage energy (Basement Jaxx).
  • Adult-contemporary balladry → grief and resolve without melodrama (Peter Gabriel’s “Father, Son”).
  • Americana cover sung in-character → leadership as a vow (Sam Elliott’s “I Won’t Back Down”).
Barnyard trailer still: Otis facing the night sky — a quieter emotional beat
High-energy cues give way to intimate, reflective songs when the story turns

Key Tracks & Scenes

“Boombastic” — Shaggy
Where it plays: Diegetic, onstage during the barn party; Biggie Cheese fronts the band.
Why it matters: Pure comic swagger that defines the barn’s secret nightlife and Otis’ party-animal comfort zone.
“Down on the Farm (They All Ask for You)” — Kevin James & North Mississippi Allstars
Where it plays: Barn party sequence; leads into the “pizza delivery” bit while the animals pretend to be human.
Why it matters: A wink of vaudeville timing — the tune keeps momentum while the scene escalates into slapstick.
“I Won’t Back Down” — Sam Elliott
Where it plays: Ben’s lone night watch (diegetic vocal) with an instrumental/brief reprise underscoring later confrontation.
Why it matters: A character vow in song form; the lyric becomes the film’s moral spine that Otis eventually inherits.
“Wild ’N Free” — Rednex
Where it plays: Wild Mike’s dance freak-out in the barn.
Why it matters: A can-can-charged Euro-country blast that flips the room from rowdy to unhinged.
“Father, Son” — Peter Gabriel
Where it plays: Quiet post-tragedy beat; the film pauses to let grief and memory breathe.
Why it matters: Soft focus, big ache — it resets the movie from carefree to consequential.
“Freedom Is a Voice” — Bobby McFerrin & Russell Ferrante
Where it plays: Heard around Miles’ log-tapping rhythm joke; a moment of groove-based calm between crises.
Why it matters: Human-level playfulness: percussion as community heartbeat.

Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats as connected to songs)

  • Otis’ arc: Party cues (“Boombastic,” “Down on the Farm”) frame his avoidance; “I Won’t Back Down” later reappears as the ethic he grows into.
  • Ben’s legacy: Singing that vow alone under the stars sets a bar the story keeps measuring against.
  • Wild Mike chaos spike: “Wild ’N Free” turns the barn from silly to feral in seconds — a musical jump cut that foreshadows trouble outside.
  • Grief to resolve: “Father, Son” clears emotional space; the score then stitches back into action as Otis decides to step up.
  • Community texture: Roots-leaning cuts by North Mississippi Allstars make the barn feel like a band that’s been playing together for years.
Barnyard trailer frame: daylit farm road — the everyday world the songs keep puncturing
Everyday farm life, repeatedly interrupted by outsized needle-drops

How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)

  • Score: John Debney led the orchestral spine (action beats like “Hill Surfing” are pure score).
  • Music supervision: Karyn Rachtman handled supervision/executive music producing; Ralph Sall produced the soundtrack album.
  • Artists & features: North Mississippi Allstars anchor the roots vibe; Les Claypool guests on “Hittin’ the Hay.”
  • Indie wildcard: Starlight Mints contribute “Popsickle,” the album’s left-field sugar rush.
  • Licensing texture: 90s/00s staples (“Boombastic,” “Wild ’N Free,” “Do Your Thing”) were chosen to supercharge party and montage energy.

Reception & Quotes

“‘Boombastic’ laden with plenty of bling-bling.” OutNow DVD review
“The fun is well-balanced with a tale of redemption.” AVForums
“Some of these party scenes are actually funny.” The Independent Critic
“A rat raps to ‘Mr Boombastic’…” ChristianAnswers (viewer reaction)

Technical Info

  • Title: Barnyard — Music from the Motion Picture
  • Year: 2006 (film); soundtrack first issued 2006
  • Type: movie
  • Composers (score): John Debney
  • Music supervision / exec. music producer: Karyn Rachtman
  • Soundtrack album producer: Ralph Sall
  • Selected notable placements: “Boombastic” (barn party), “Down on the Farm (They All Ask for You)” (pizza-delivery gag), “I Won’t Back Down” (Ben’s night watch / reprise), “Wild ’N Free” (Wild Mike dance), “Father, Son” (grief beat), “Freedom Is a Voice” (Miles’ log-tap bit)
  • Release context: Film opened Aug 4, 2006 (US); album tied to Aug 22, 2006 physical release; later digital reissues followed.
  • Label / album status: Originally issued by Bulletproof (CD); later digital via Sall Entertainment Group/Fontana North; streaming on major platforms.
  • Availability notes: Album widely streamable; physical CD (BPF 1008) circulates on the secondary market.

September, 26th 2025


A-Z Lyrics Universe

Lyrics / song texts are property and copyright of their owners and provided for educational purposes only.