Andreas's part from a Method Mag DVD. Definately one of the finest jumpers in the game; the switch back 9, suitcase, back 9 line is butter. He rides to a laid back tune by Enola Falls entitled "Brief Lives". Its a chilled and dreamy song which is a perfect fit for his effortless style.



Jon Kooley shreds to a Yeah Yeah Yeah's song in his Burning Bridges part. "Pin" has a non-sensical chorus, a catchy melody and a eclectic variety of sound for a 2 minute track. It works well with the style of the video and with Kooley's tricks.

A Mania TV interview with Eddie Wall. Covers a range of topics including internet, websites, domain names, music videos, the Flaming Lips and Simon and Garfunkel. There's also park footage backed with silky smooth hip-hop.

This is one of the best video parts of last year (from From __ with Love) accompanied with the worst music choice. While some may disagree, thumping techno doesn't seem to work with snowboarding. That said, this is a brilliant part and the kinked frontside ender is heavy.

JP Walker's finishing part from the legendary Forum video 'True Life'. This section is straight gangsta and M.O.Ps 'Ante-Up' certainly suits. This was one of the first genuine handrail parts, with most of the shots coming from the streets of Salt Lake.

Nima Jalali's part in Neoproto's 'Some Kinda Life'. "Search and Destroy" by Iggy and the Stooges is the perfect soundtrack for civil disputes, kinked pretzels, snowballs hitting cop cars and backcountry hammers. Nima rips.

A short clip of Marc Frank on Fuel TV. The riding footage is accompanied by Cage's "Good morning" and there's some beats towards the end mixed by the man himself.

A boppy electronic number entitled "Mercury Tears" by Chromeo is the backing for another strong showing from Burton's Jeremy Jones. This track is a step away from a traditional shred track, creating a light-hearted feel to a technical part. JJ manages to get low half way through, check it.

Jim Rippey's part from Run to the Hills. "Peaceful Days" by Pennywise epitomises the sound of the era, as early-to-mid 90s snowboard films were dominated by punk and metal. Rippey's riding was revolutionary: back 9s, front 7s and snowboarding's most recognised backflip.

Max Henault in Sunset Films first, Frosted Flakes. He rides to a pleasant percussive number entitled "Pass this On" by The Knife. The Robot Food crew used their most widely recognised tune, "Heart Beats" in Afterlame.

Marc Frank Montoya in Burning Bridges. Another exceptional showing from the king of style, riding to Buena Vista Social Club's "Chan Chan".

Jackson Hole's finest gettin it done. Travis Rice rides to a loud abrasive track with footage from Aspen, Japan, the Mtn Lab and plenty of other heavenly locations. All the footage is from Oakley's Community Project

   
 

 

 

 

 



Enter a song, video or whatever to search songsfromtheshred


©songsfromtheshred 2006 Contact Myspace
Best viewed with the latest versions of Internet Explorer and Flash