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Beverly Hills 90210: Songs From The Peach Pit Album Cover

"Beverly Hills 90210: Songs From The Peach Pit" Soundtrack Lyrics

TV • 1996

Track Listing



"Beverly Hills, 90210: Songs From The Peach Pit" Soundtrack Description

Beverly Hills, 90210 1990s TV trailer still—Peach Pit diner and ensemble cast
Beverly Hills, 90210 — series trailer framing, early seasons

Questions and Answers

What is this album in the 90210 soundtrack lineup?
It’s the third official release after the 1992 debut and 1994’s The College Years, focusing on old-school jukebox cuts tied to the Peach Pit.
When was it released and by whom?
October 1, 1996, by Rhino Records (U.S.). (according to AllMusic)
How long is the album?
About 46 minutes and 35 seconds. (according to AllMusic)
Does it include the TV theme?
Yes — John E. Davis’s “Beverly Hills 90210 Theme.”
Are these exact versions the ones heard in the show?
They’re representative of the diner’s retro vibe; many play diegetically in Peach Pit scenes, though episode-specific edits vary across broadcasts.
Is there a digital/streaming version?
There’s no widely available official full-sequence stream; tracks exist individually on platforms, and fan playlists fill the gap.

Notes & Trivia

  • Rhino issued the album on CD (catalog number R2 72478) with a jukebox-first concept. (as listed by Discogs retail data)
  • Total running time clocks in at 46:35 and the formal release date is October 1, 1996. (according to AllMusic)
  • The selection leans 1960s–70s rock, soul, and pop — exactly what you’d hear piping out of Nat’s jukebox.
  • Unlike the live-artist arcs at the Peach Pit After Dark, this disc sticks to classic catalog cuts, plus the series theme.
  • Fans often note how streaming reruns swap or mute certain songs; the CD preserves cleared masters from the ’90s release window.
Beverly Hills, 90210 trailer frame—Peach Pit counter and crowd chatter, jukebox implied
The diner as a time machine: needle-drops, gossip, plot pivots

Overview

Why would a glossy ’90s teen soap lean so hard on older hits? Because the Peach Pit isn’t just a set; it’s a ritual space. The jukebox cues (’60s rock & roll, Stax/Memphis soul, AM-pop) act like amber — preserving friendships, crushes, and bad decisions under warm neon.

Songs From The Peach Pit bottles that feeling. You get raucous floor-fillers and tender slow-dances, then the unmistakable TV theme by John E. Davis to bookend it. It’s less “music marketing” and more “world-building in a jewel case.” And yes, it plays great front-to-back, even away from West Beverly.

Genres

October, 23rd 2025


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