Dw. Dunphy On… Danny Elfman

ElfmanI always get a little thrill when Danny Elfman decides to step back in front of the microphone or, more bluntly, when Tim Burton decides to let Danny Elfman step back in front of the microphone. His last actual studio recording with a band was 1994’s ill-fated Boingo, an attempt to drag wacky and macabre party rockers Oingo Boingo into the ’90s, yet the dire and very pointed rock sound of the album accomplished two unwanted things: it alienated the original fans who wanted the music to be more fun and less funereal, and it failed to attract new fans thanks to its alignment with the moody, grungy times. After a live farewell concert, documented on a final band release, Elfman and longtime collaborator Steve Bartek went back to the scoring stage.

It makes perfect sense. Elfman had carved out a wildly successful and respected niche in film scoring, and his signature polkas from hell and minor-key romanticism have become immediate signals to an appreciative audience. Still, whenever there’s a reason to sing and Elfman accepts the challenge, it gets me charged up. That it takes Tim Burton’s strange visions to do it ensures that such occurrences aren’t altogether frequent. Remember that Burton’s last musical partner was some dude named Stephen Sondheim, whoever the heck that is; when it’s Elfman’s turn I start to get those old heebie-jeebies back. His music for The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) leaned heavily on his film-music sensibilities, but his tracks for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) as well as a jazz number from Corpse Bride (2005) drew from his more contemporary side.

boneyAs the singing voice of Bonejangles, the pub entertainer for the underworld in Corpse Bride, Elfman had the dubious task every writer, be he a writer of scripts or of songs, dreads — expositor. Luckily, his “Remains of the Day” manages to clue in the audience to what the afterlife, or in this case the underlife, is about, as well as telling the lonely tale of the Corpse Bride without putting us to sleep. Elfman has said in interviews that Bonejangles was his hardest job to date because of the damage the character’s guttural bebop inflicted on his vocal chords — imagine Leon Redbone with a desiccated larynx and you’re in the ballpark.

Elfman’s other most recent vocalization was no less challenging but thankfully a bit less painful. Elfman gave musical voice to the Oompa Loompas — all of ‘em — in Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. Each of the diminutive cocoa pushers was played by Gurdeep Roy (credited as Deep Roy), but even though all the Loompas look the same, they’re voiced in a variety of different ways, often according to the fates of the bad children taking Wonka’s candy tour. With digital pitch shifting and manipulation, Elfman’s voice fluctuates from Barry White to Tiny Tim, from dance number to punk-metal. For Boingo geeks the real treat was the Veruca Salt sequence: copping a Beatles vibe and pushing the pitch tricks to the background, we get as close to pop-star Danny as we have in a very long while.

ngoSo that’s what’s been gained. It ought to be noted what has been lost, though. With the demise of Oingo Boingo, one of rock’s most twisted ensembles, a sense of good-time insanity also seemed to disappear from Elfman’s work. Boingo was very apparent in that sense with the manic opening diatribe “Insanity,” based upon a passage from Bernard Herrmann’s score for Vertigo. The album, for what it was, was actually quite good but was assuredly heavier on the psyche than any of the band’s other offerings. One of the lighter, poppier tracks is a prime example of why I wish Elfman would consider a film-work sabbatical: “Spider” is yet another tune about love lost, but comes across with a nice, creepy edge that keeps things south of Diane Warren, where it belongs. While it’s tonally a cousin to “Is This” from Oingo Boingo’s Dark at the End of the Tunnel (1990), in tempo and in certain chords the sense of this being a new entity still comes through. More than anything else, Boingo brings to mind lost opportunities.

But who knows? In this absurd world of band reunions, where half or more of the concerned parties are absent, or in the film world, where directors like Robert Rodriguez score their own damn films, anything is possible. It just seems that in a cultural and political climate such as the one we’re in right now, where candidates can openly flaunt prolonged, devastating, and costly war ambitions, celebrities are made as quickly as a secret sex tape can be rewound, and our idea of a role model is the person who can store the most Botox in their lips for the longest period of time, a li’l devil in the messy details might be what we all need. Danny Elfman fit the bill once. Maybe he could do it again.

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  • An Oingo Boingo reunion?

    Now, THAT'S something I would gladly pay for!

    Dark At The End Of The Tunnel was a huge disappointment to me when it first came out because it was so different from the fiery insanity of their earlier stuff, but over time, it's grown to be one of my favorite albums.

    "Out of Control" is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard...chokes me up every time.
  • Matt
    The Boingo album (not to be confused with the BOI-NGO album from '88) was a bit spotty, but it does have two of my favorite OB songs (not to mention two of the saddest songs ever)... "Mary" and "Can't See (Useless)".
  • Darius
    Can you please repost "Remains of the Day"? I could only get the first 50 seconds to download. Thank you.
  • I've been on this one a few times today, and each time it downloads fine. Are you using Firefox?
  • I like the Boingo album. If I'm alone on that, that's cool. I'll agree with (other) Matt, Mary is indeed a great track!
  • Matt
    Excellent first name and excellent taste. Kudos!
  • I have to disagree with you as emphatically as possible about the efficacy of "Boingo" to attract new fans, as I was one of them. In fact, up until the release of that I'd not only been dimly aware of Oingo Boingo if at all, but otherwise nearly completely apathetic to rock altogether, which either was a cause or a symptom of alienation from my generation. I think AxCESS magazine called it when they described it as an anti-Sgt. Peppers; it's gloomy in the places where that's light, yet involves just as much craft. It was only with this album that I realized that rock indeed had something to say to me; "Boingo" was on a constant loop during my freshman year in college, and remains perhaps my favorite album of all time to this day, despite a vastly expanded fluency. I even quoted "Spider" on the design I did for my senior yearbook page, which was never published:

    Hope you're happy
    Found what you're looking for
    Do you miss me
    Miss me at all?


    Subsequently I became a fan of the rest of the Boingo oeuvre, even going back to their Mystic Knights days. I was devastated that they broke up a mere year after I'd got into them, and I cursed my lack of initiative to be at that final show, though I own both the double CD and DVD. Unlike so many other groups, I think Elfman means it when he says he does not intend to ever reunite them, and he seems to have no reason to change his mind given his success. That makes it all the more the shame, though you gotta respect his integrity, and given tthat a reunion could sabotage an outfit's legacy I would not want to be the one to twist his arm.
  • I don't think they will ever get back together because they can't tour due to Danny's ears. Johnny Vatos will occasionally play a Halloween show here in SoCal, and I'm afaid that is as close as we are going to get.

    Which makes me very, very sad.

    I saw Boingo live at least eight times, and at their last concert (yes, biatches, I was there!)I cried. If I could see them one more time, I could die happy.

    Besides, I think he is having too much fun (and success) with the movie scores.
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