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Victor Victrola is all about Chuck and his world, with a little bit of everyone else sprinkled in, so it only makes sense that the music is hot and heavy. Stripper by Sohodolls sets things off as we watch Chuck focus all his time and energy on a dancer that is performing just for him. Funny enough, a little later Blair is dancing to the exact same song after Chuck dares her to take to the stage.
Chuck’s excitement about his new business venture is apparent as So They Say by Classic plays while he is pitching his idea for a burlesque club to Blair. Later Release by Miss Eighty 6 plays as Bart criticizes Chuck’s pitch for the club and tells him to get back to studying if he wants to impress him.
Realizing his mistake, Nate goes to Jenny and asks her to keep what happened at the Masked Ball to herself, Ballad of an Easy by David McConnell plays on. Dan and Serena, on the other hand, are busy getting to know each other in a blissful state, helped along with songs like Second Hand Lovers by John Ralston and Whatever by Elliot Smith.
In contrast, Just Love by Harry Warren plays as the Archibald’s arrive at the Waldorf’s for dinner and the families talk about their impending engagement. Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Winter continues the farce of a relationship and the slightly stifling atmosphere that it is all happening in.
A couple different sounds also make their way into the episode including Photograph by Air playing as Dan is imagining Serena with other men. Girl I Told Ya by Valeria plays in the background when Bart comes back to the club to apologize to Chuck and tell him that he is going to invest in the club after all.
Jenny closes out the episode when she shows up at her mother’s place in Hudson and With Me by Sum 41 conveys her feelings about the split.
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