"Dutch" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2021
Track Listing
Gunna
Danileigh
Manny World
BRAE
Manny World
Eric Bellinger
Genasis
Macy Gray
Nevvaro
RAWQWLTY
LilKris
Nigeeee
Freeway
"Dutch (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)" Soundtrack Description
Overview
Crime sagas often live or die on musical attitude. Dutch (2021) plants its flag with a compact, radio-leaning compilation on Imani Records—thirteen cuts of hip-hop, R&B, and a marquee cover by Macy Gray—paired with an original score by Chris Paultre. The album bowed March 12, 2021, day-and-date with the U.S. theatrical roll-out. (Trusted sources: Apple Music; Film Music Reporter; Soundtrack.Net.)
Names on the sleeve include Wheezy Outta Here & Gunna, DaniLeigh, O.T. Genasis, Eric Bellinger, Freeway, and more; Gray contributes a rework of Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.” The movie—adapted from Teri Woods’ novel and directed by Preston A. Whitmore II—leans on needle-drops to punctuate power plays, club spaces, and score-bridged montage. Music supervision is credited to Manny Halley, with music clearance by Nicolle Johnson. (Trusted sources: IMDb; Wikipedia.)
Questions & Answers
- Is there an official soundtrack album?
- Yes. Dutch (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)—Imani Records, digital release March 12, 2021; 13 tracks, ~36 minutes.
- Who composed the score?
- Chris Paultre is credited as composer for the film’s original score.
- Who handled music supervision/clearance?
- Manny Halley is credited as music supervisor; Nicolle Johnson is credited for music clearance.
- What notable artists appear on the album?
- Wheezy Outta Here & Gunna, DaniLeigh, O.T. Genasis, Eric Bellinger, Freeway, B. Rae, Rawallty, Lil Kris, and Macy Gray among others.
- Is Macy Gray’s “Burning Down the House” the Talking Heads song?
- Yes—her version is a cover of the 1983 Talking Heads single, tailored here for the film/album.
- Where can I stream the album?
- On major platforms (Apple Music, Spotify, YouTube Music); label credit appears as Imani Records.
- Does the album include every song heard in the film?
- No. It’s a curated compilation; the score and additional cues heard in-film aren’t issued separately in a wide commercial release.
Notes & Trivia
- The soundtrack dropped the same day the film hit select U.S. theaters (March 12, 2021).
- Label credit on DSPs reads “℗ 2021 Imani Records.”
- Macy Gray’s cut is a studio cover of Talking Heads’ 1983 hit—recontextualized for a modern crime film.
- Composer credit on trade/DB pages lists Chris Paultre; album is “Various Artists” (no separate score album widely released).
- Trusted sources mentioned in text: Apple Music; Spotify; Film Music Reporter; Soundtrack.Net; IMDb; Wikipedia.
Genres & Themes
Trap & street rap: momentum for chase/planning beats; swagger tracks set temperature before dialogue does.
R&B hooks: smoother interludes and club interiors; vocal-forward cuts for seductive or reflective spaces.
Legacy cover, modern mix: the “Burning Down the House” remake delivers a recognizable riff with new gloss—irony and escalation in one gesture.
Tracks & Scenes
Public, timestamped scene-by-scene placements for Dutch are scarce in reputable databases; below are album highlights with conservative placement notes drawn from official materials and film context. Where the exact on-screen moment cannot be verified in open sources, we avoid minute-marks and label usage generically (club/montage/transition) to prevent speculation.
“Keep My Distance” — Wheezy Outta Here & Gunna
Scene: Early-arc momentum/establishing energy (non-diegetic montage style).
Why it matters: Sets a modern trap pace for Dutch’s rise narrative.
“Jiggy Lil Be” — DaniLeigh
Scene: Club-floor or party-space texture (likely diegetic in-room feel).
Why it matters: Brings pop-R&B sheen to social power plays.
“Enemy” — O.T. Genasis
Scene: Plot turn where rivalries surface; needle-drop to underline threat (non-diegetic).
Why it matters: Lyrical stance fits the film’s survival ethos.
“Ambidextrous” — Eric Bellinger
Scene: Seduction/strategy interludes; room-level vibe (diegetic-adjacent).
Why it matters: Smooth counterweight to the harder rap cues.
“Bread Winner” — Freeway
Scene: Hustle montage / cash-flow beats; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Old-school credibility threaded into a newer palette.
“Mandarin Hotel” — B. Rae
Scene: Elegance-coded interiors or late-night transitions; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Title/location vibe signals upscale criminal logistics.
“Yuh Dun Kno” — Rawallty
Scene: Street-level movement; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Dancehall color to widen the compilation’s feel.
“We Made It” — Lil Kris
Scene: Victory-leaning montage; non-diegetic end-act energy.
Why it matters: Anthemic ring for temporary wins.
“Again” — Nevvaro
Scene: Relationship-tension/reflective interlude; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Gives the cutthroat plot a quieter breath.
“Heat Up” — Manny World
Scene: Setup for a confrontation or chase; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Title equals purpose—ramp the pulse.
“Burning Down the House” — Macy Gray
Scene: Trailer-promoted/album-signature cut used to punch up escalation (non-diegetic).
Why it matters: A classic reinterpreted; irony suits Dutch’s aim-high chaos.
Music–Story Links
Dance-floor cuts and swagger rap signal control in public rooms; R&B leans soften otherwise transactional scenes. The Macy Gray cover plays like a calling card for burn-the-rulebook choices, while score cues thread quieter strategy beats between album drops.
How It Was Made
Score & supervision. Composer: Chris Paultre. Music supervisor: Manny Halley. Music clearance: Nicolle Johnson. Album released by Imani Records as a various-artists set; no broad retail score album is documented.
Compilation strategy. Compact run time (~36 min) focused on recognizable names and club-ready tempos, sequenced for pop impact rather than exhaustive coverage of every cue heard on screen.
Reception & Quotes
Critical views on the film were mixed to negative; several notices still singled out named artists or the energy of selected cues.
“A shambling, rambling recycling of clichés…” Variety
“I did dig the Macy Gray songs used here though.” Letterboxd user note
Availability: the album streams widely; physical editions were digital-first and platform-centric.
Additional Info
- Album window: March 12, 2021 digital drop (Imani Records).
- Standout legacy link: Macy Gray’s “Burning Down the House” (Talking Heads cover).
- Artists spanning styles: trap (Gunna), club-R&B (DaniLeigh/Eric Bellinger), legacy rap (Freeway).
- Score: credited to Chris Paultre (no separate wide release confirmed).
- Supervision: Manny Halley; clearance by Nicolle Johnson.
- Editions: Single 13-track digital compilation; runtime ~36 minutes.
Technical Info
- Title: Dutch (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
- Year: 2021 (album & film)
- Type: Various-artists soundtrack + original score in film
- Composer (score): Chris Paultre
- Music Supervision: Manny Halley
- Label: Imani Records
- Runtime (album): ~36 minutes; 13 tracks
- Notable inclusions: “Keep My Distance” (Wheezy Outta Here & Gunna), “Jiggy Lil Be” (DaniLeigh), “Enemy” (O.T. Genasis), “Ambidextrous” (Eric Bellinger), “Bread Winner” (Freeway), “Burning Down the House” (Macy Gray)
- Release context: U.S. theatrical limited on March 12, 2021
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Dutch (2021 film) | based on | Dutch by Teri Woods |
| Chris Paultre | composed score for | Dutch (2021) |
| Manny Halley | music supervised | Dutch (2021) |
| Nicolle Johnson | music clearance for | Dutch (2021) |
| Imani Records | released | Dutch (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) |
| Macy Gray | performed | “Burning Down the House” (Talking Heads cover) on the album |
| Wheezy Outta Here & Gunna | performed | “Keep My Distance” (album) |
| O.T. Genasis | performed | “Enemy” (album) |
| Eric Bellinger | performed | “Ambidextrous” (album) |
| Freeway | performed | “Bread Winner” (album) |
Sources: Apple Music; Spotify; Film Music Reporter; Soundtrack.Net; IMDb (title & full credits); Wikipedia (film); Talking Heads song page.
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