Sleepaway Camp (1983) lost soundtrack songs

Sleepaway Camp is a Friday the 13th inspired horror film from 1983. It's noted for its low budget, rather sleazy feel and shocking ending. The film spawned 6 sequels, only 4 of which were finished and released.

The first three movies are all missing music, but the first one was the only of the originals that had music specially made for it.

The missing music
Three song were composed for the movie: Just What I've Been Looking For, Take a Chance, and Tonight you're Mine. The latter two do not exist outside of the movie in any form, and there are no known recordings of them that have survived the years. All three were sung by Frankie Vinci, and used music from a Casio keyboard and an electric guitar.

The first song is only intact because it was played over the credits, and has been remixed at least once that's known.

Tonight you're Mine is played only once in the movie, and is drowned out by talking and a fight scene. There seems to be an instrumental version of it playing at one point though. Take a Chance plays in one scene and seems to be the shortest of the songs.

There is also a large amount of lost instrumental from the movie, much like the music Rick Wakeman composed for The Burning, an equally forgotten movie from 1981, but unlike The Burning, there was no official soundtrack release, even if most of the music from the older film was rewritten and sounded different from the film.

There is also a corpse reveal scene that was cut from the movie, and the third movie was very heavily cut to prevent an X rating. The second has one lost song that was mostly restored from a bootleg Canadian VHS, and seems to have no cut scenes.

The two lost songs from the movie in question can be heard slightly better in a cheap Canadian release (which was packaged with a completely uncut version of The House by the Cemetery) by Legacy entertainment. The version of the movie on the DVD is very low quality but is completely uncut, the more common Anchor Bay version missing two short scenes, and the sound mixing is slightly off, leading to more of the music being audible.