16 December 2007

"gratitude" || danny elfman || 1984


I'm convinced that everything Danny Elfman touches with his voice turns into musical gold. One of new wave's most distinctive voices, Danny fronted Oingo Boingo until the mid-80's, when he split and put out a solo album called, well, So-Lo. He then went on to score numerous Tim Burton films (OK, so he's done others, but who cares about those?), including Beetlejuice, The Nightmare Before Christmas, and The Corpse Bride.

While Elfman's movie scores are cool and all, we can't hear his totally rad voice!

That's where today's track comes in. This was his first solo release, and it probably only gained the notoriety it did because it landed on the Beverly Hills Cop soundtrack. If it hadn't, college radio would have been all over it and it would have become a lost radio classic. Thankfully though, many 80's connoisseurs remember this track quite well, and some radio stations are cool enough to still spin it (like mine).

Definitely one of Elfman's finer lyrical pieces as well. A simple reflection on life, but done in a manner that is simultaneously condescending, self-deprecating, boastful and demanding. It's not bad to dance to, but this jam is more suited for playing very loudly in your car if you're driving around in an angered state because someone just let you down. A "steering-wheel pounder," if you will.

Listen to it here.

3 comments:

Brian said...

ummmm ....

You're off by 10 years (unless those concerts I went to from 1985 - 1995 had some other red headed singer.

Maxwell K said...

Maybe my wording wasn't clear. What I meant to say is that Elfman's chief musical project was Oingo Boingo until the mid-80's. He did indeed stay with them beyond then.

I was, however, off by one year, as this song was released in 1984.

Hope that made more sense. :-)

Brian said...

http://stevebartek.com/forum/index.php?topic=971.msg8842;topicseen#msg8842