Prom Night (1980 rare/lost soundtrack songs)

Prom Night was a 1980 Canadian horror movie starring Leslie Neilson and Jamie Lee Curtis. It had many elements of Carrie, Black Christmas, and Halloween, but still managed to have 3 sequels and a remake. Part of the potential appeal of the movie was the soundtrack, which heavily features specially written disco music. However, the official soundtrack release only came out in Japan, on vinyl and cassette tapes, back in 1980, and never saw another release.

Although all of the songs are available on Youtube, it's noted that they sound different than what can be heard in the movie, due to poor recording quality and after-the-fact sound edits.

The instrumental pieces, some of which were unused and appeared in Curtains, have never seen a release, although they are mostly intact in the film and could be ripped from it with a high degree of success.

The songs and their state of affairs
Fade to Black - This song plays over the credits. The version on Youtube has a strange fade-in missing from the movie. It's notable part of the song is often used in the instrumental.

Changes - This song seems to be the same as it was in the movie, although the clapping sounds a bit quieter.

Time to Turn Around - Played over a chase scene in the film, the Youtube version sounds perfect to how it should.

Prom Night (part 1) - This song only plays in a short clip, but the audio quality on the main Youtube version is heavily distorted. Another copy, however, sounds clean and is the best version of it available.

Prom Night (part 2) - Played the most in the movie by far, this song is also the most common song on the soundtrack. It seems to be the same.

Love me 'till I die - This song was remixed and sounds muddy as a result. It was changed to avoid any possible copyright infringements with another, similar sounding song, but as a result the clean sounding film version has been lost. The clapping was louder, and the beat was much more distinct in the film.

Dancing in the Moonlight - Seems to be intact, but again, the clapping is a bit softer.

All is Gone - This song seems to play on a radio in the movie, but personally, I've never noticed it in the film.

Dirty Last Night - Played on a car radio in one scene, it seems to be perfectly fine.

Still lost to time: All the instrumental, and the singer of Time to Turn Around is still unknown, as there is no information in the credits. Dirty Last Night has vanished from Youtube.