"Degrassi: The Boiling Point"Soundtrack Lyrics
TV • 2011
Track Listing
Stefan Brogren
Moneen
Melinda Shankar
Jessica Tyler
Munro Chambers
All Too Much
Hannah Georgas
Raymond Ablack
Royalchord
Luke Bilyk
Adaline
Raymond Ablack
Jenna and Sav
Munro Chambers
Dance Movie
Jessica Tyler
Munro Chambers
The Dead Hand
Eve And The Ocean
Stefan Brogren
"Degrassi: The Boiling Point (Music from the Series)" Soundtrack Description
Overview
How do you sell a high-stakes semester? With a compilation that moves like the hallway between bells. Degrassi: The Boiling Point (Music from the Series) (2011) packages the first half of Season 10’s needle-drops—indie pop, blog-rock, CanCon gems, and a few in-world quotes from the cast—into a punchy, 20-track set. It mirrors the show’s “four nights a week” momentum and the arc’s shifting tones: crushes, fights, fallouts, fragile repairs.
The album is officially a various-artists soundtrack released in early 2011 and tied to the “Boiling Point” branding. It includes short spoken interludes from the characters, marquee syncs (VV Brown’s carnival-styled “Shark in the Water” promo became the season’s calling card), and a cross-section of songs tied to specific moments: Fitz vs. Eli heat, Holly J.’s decisions, Jenna’s pregnancy reveal, and Sav’s push-pull with family duty.
Questions & Answers
- Is there an official soundtrack album for “The Boiling Point”?
- Yes. Degrassi: The Boiling Point (Music from the Series) was released February 1, 2011 as a 20-track compilation tied to Season 10’s first half.
- Who releases/owns the album?
- The Canadian digital listing credits ℗ 2011 Sall Entertainment Group Inc. with distribution via Fontana North.
- Does the album include dialogue from the show?
- Yes—several brief spoken interludes by cast members appear between songs, framing story beats.
- Where can I stream it today?
- It’s available on major services (Apple Music, Spotify) under the title Degrassi: The Boiling Point (Music from the Series).
- How does it relate to Season 10’s “Boiling Point” branding?
- “The Boiling Point” was TeenNick/MuchMusic’s promo title for the first 24 Season 10 episodes; the album was marketed alongside that run.
- What’s the promo song everyone remembers from this era?
- VV Brown’s “Shark in the Water,” used in the carnival-themed Season 10 promo; a version featuring the Degrassi cast was widely circulated.
Notes & Trivia
- Several tracks on the retail album are short spoken bits from scenes—tiny scene-setters between fuller songs.
- Season 10’s first half aired as “The Boiling Point”; the second half was rebranded “In Too Deep.”
- The carnival promo cut of “Shark in the Water” became a franchise-defining moment and teased plot threads for the semester.
- Canadian digital metadata lists Sall Entertainment Group as the rights holder, reflecting Ralph Sall’s soundtrack-album imprint.
- Degrassi’s music identity blends Canadian indie (Bahamas, Parlovr) with blog-era alt and pop crossovers.
Genres & Themes
Indie/alt pop tracks supply the show’s heartbeat—glossy enough for montage, honest enough for teenage stakes. Think bright hooks that can turn minor-key when relationships wobble.
Canadian indie & singer-songwriter cuts (Bahamas, Amelia Curran) lean into vulnerability: kitchen-table breakups, bathroom pep talks, late-night texts you shouldn’t send.
Rock & blog-era bangers drop in for kinetic moments—basketball games, hallway chases, party scenes where a single choice turns into fallout.
Tracks & Scenes
“Shark in the Water” — VV Brown
Where it plays: The carnival-themed Season 10 promo; also heard during “All Falls Down (Part 2)” at the Vegas Night chaos.
Why it matters: An earworm that doubles as a thesis—temptation, danger, and performance all whirling together.
“The Temporary Blues” — The Features
Where it plays: Adam gets ready for school, steeling himself in the mirror.
Why it matters: A private routine scored by restless guitars; self-presentation as armor.
“Hotblack” — Oceanship
Where it plays: Vegas Night sequence, from Holly J.’s private dance to Fitz menacing Eli with a knife.
Why it matters: Dreamy shimmer flips sinister, matching the night’s spiral from flirtation to threat.
“Big Bad Wolf” — The Heavy
Where it plays: Eli and Fitz’s fight.
Why it matters: Swaggering stomp for a power struggle that tips the show into real danger.
“Next To Me” — Civil Twilight
Where it plays: Holly J. emails Declan about the Yale trip, choosing ambition amid messy feelings.
Why it matters: A contemplative breather that frames a life-pivot as a quiet click rather than a scream.
“Tiny Glass Houses” — Amelia Curran
Where it plays: Jenna waits with a pregnancy test; the world narrows to a bathroom and a heartbeat.
Why it matters: Folk minimalism that respects the moment’s gravity.
“Sunshine Blues” — Bahamas
Where it plays: Anya breaks up with Sav.
Why it matters: Soft, rueful, and adult—two teens deciding to protect different futures.
“I Lied” — Laurell
Where it plays: Fiona alone on Vanderbilt’s rooftop, searching for control in a life that’s tilting.
Why it matters: Pop confession as character study.
“Time to Win” — Down with Webster
Where it plays: Drew, Dave, and K.C. on the basketball court.
Why it matters: Locker-room bravado that fuels (and masks) insecurity.
“Little Pieces” — Parlour Steps
Where it plays: Clare’s nighttime drive in Morty, Eli’s hearse—flirtation with a shade of foreboding.
Why it matters: A romantic track with a soft bruise underneath.
“What the Heart Wants” — Beth Thornley
Where it plays: After Sav and Holly J. inhale helium, reality seeps back in.
Why it matters: A gentle landing that hints the joke won’t solve their bigger problem.
Music–Story Links
Season 10 makes songs do double duty. Party bangers set a trap—“Hotblack” glitters while danger creeps in. Folk pieces tell the truth Jenna can’t yet say out loud (“Tiny Glass Houses”). “Shark in the Water” sells a carnival of masks; once the semester starts, cues peel those masks back: Sav’s bravado vs. duty, Clare’s curiosity vs. risk, Fiona’s control vs. collapse. Even the spoken interludes on the album work like chapter cards—teen voices framing consequence.
How It Was Made
The Boiling Point album curates the season’s first-half syncs into a concise listen and folds in character soundbites. The release is a Canadian-marketed compilation under Sall Entertainment Group/Fontana North, aligning with a long line of officially branded Degrassi soundtracks. On-screen, Season 10’s music supervision leaned into contemporary indie and CanCon discovery, then punctuated high-drama set pieces with bold, high-energy cues.
Reception & Quotes
Fans still treat the “Shark in the Water” era as peak promo magic; the compilation benefits from that halo. Media retrospectives have credited the promo with helping relaunch the series’ momentum in 2010.
“A carnival-themed montage… ‘Shark in the Water’ became the soundtrack to the next era of Degrassi.” Insider
“In the U.S., the first 24 episodes were promoted asThe Boiling Point… the dedicated soundtrack followed in February 2011.” Wikipedia
Trusted source mentions (text-only): Apple Music; Spotify; Wikipedia; Insider (Business Insider).
Additional Info
- The compilation runs about 35 minutes—quick hits that mirror episode pacing.
- Physical CDs circulated in 2011; online listings still surface via marketplace sites.
- Spoken interludes on the album are lifted from scenes, not newly recorded skits.
- The promo’s “cast version” of “Shark in the Water” features alternate edits compared with the standard video.
- Season 10’s soundtrack strategy: local voices + international hooks = instantly shazam-able moments.
Technical Info
- Title: Degrassi: The Boiling Point (Music from the Series)
- Year: 2011
- Type: TV soundtrack (various artists + spoken interludes)
- Rights/Label (CA): ℗ 2011 Sall Entertainment Group Inc. / Fontana North
- Format/Length: Digital; ~20 tracks; ~35 minutes
- Series Context: Covers the first 24 episodes of Season 10 branded as “The Boiling Point” (with “In Too Deep” following).
- Signature Promo Sync: “Shark in the Water” — VV Brown (carnival cast promo; also used in-episode)
- Availability: Streaming on Apple Music and Spotify; secondary-market CDs exist.
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Degrassi Season 10 | marketed as | The Boiling Point (first 24 eps) |
| Degrassi: The Boiling Point (album) | released | February 1, 2011 (digital) |
| Sall Entertainment Group Inc. | owned rights to | Degrassi: The Boiling Point (album) |
| Fontana North | distributed | Degrassi: The Boiling Point (album) |
| VV Brown | performed | “Shark in the Water” (promo/episode usage) |
| Epitome Pictures | produced | Degrassi Season 10 |
Sources: Apple Music; Spotify; Wikipedia (Degrassi Season 10; Soundtracks list); Insider (Business Insider) oral history of the promo; Degrassi Wiki (Season 10 music placements).
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