Английская Википедия:Dead Man's Party (album)
Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Infobox album
Dead Man's Party is the fifth album by American new wave band Oingo Boingo, released in 1985. The album contains the only two singles by the band to chart on the Billboard Hot 100: "Weird Science" at number 45, and "Just Another Day" at number 85.[1]
The album cover art is an homage to the Mexican holiday Día de Los Muertos.
Composition
Elfman stated that he wrote the album's lead single, "Weird Science", spontaneously in his car, after receiving a call from director John Hughes about composing a song for his upcoming film of the same name. The song went on to become the band's most commercially successful single, which Elfman later regretted, as he believed it "just didn't feel like it was really a part of [the band's] repertoire".[2]
In film and television
"Just Another Day" was featured as the opening theme for the 1985 film That Was Then... This Is Now.
The title track appears in the 1986 film Back to School.[3] It has also appeared in episodes of Chuck, Scorpion and Stranger Things.
"No One Lives Forever" appears in the Cannon Group films The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986) and Down Twisted (1987). It was later used in Casper: A Spirited Beginning (1997) and as the theme for the October 29, 2010 episode of Rachael Ray.
The song "Stay" became a hit in Brazil and was used as the theme song for the Brazilian telenovela Top Model, which increased the popularity of the band in that country and resulted in a Brazilian compilation album, Stay. It was also featured in Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut (2001),[4] as well as in Any Questions for Ben? (2012).
In addition to its appearance in the film of the same name, "Weird Science" was used again as the theme to the television series on the USA Network.
Reissue
In 2021, Rubellan Remasters issued a remastered version of Dead Man's Party on CD with seven bonus tracks.[5]
Track listing
Шаблон:Tracklist Шаблон:Tracklist
2021 CD bonus tracks
Charts
Chart (1985–1986) | Position |
---|---|
US Billboard 200 | 95 |
Australia (Kent Music Report)[6] | 65 |
Personnel
Шаблон:Div col Oingo Boingo
- Danny Elfman – vocals, rhythm guitar
- John Avila – bass guitars, vocals
- Steve Bartek – guitars
- Mike Bacich – keyboards
- John Hernandez – drums, percussion
- Sam Phipps – tenor saxophone
- Leon Schneiderman – baritone saxophone, alto saxophone
- Dale Turner – trumpet, trombone
Technical
- Danny Elfman – co-producer
- Steve Bartek – co-producer
- Michael Frondelli – mixing
- Bill Jackson – engineer
- David Leonard – engineer, mixing ("Weird Science")
- Stuart Farusho – second engineer (recording)
- Paul Levy – second engineer (recording)
- Mike Kloster – second engineer (recording)
- Judy Clapp – second engineer (mixing)
- Charlie Pakkari – second engineer (mixing)
- Laura Engel – studio production assistant
- Wally Traugott – mastering
- Larry Vigon – art direction, design
- Jayme Odgers – art direction, photography
- Celeste Williams – clay figure creation
References