Showing posts with label Albert Magnoli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albert Magnoli. Show all posts

June 9, 2020

45 RPMs 45: Prince ~ Batdance

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photos by Styrous®








Batdance is a song by American musician Prince, from the 1989 Batman soundtrack (link below). Helped by the film's popularity, the song, released 31 years ago on June 9, 1989, reached number one in the US, becoming Prince's fourth American number-one single. It utilized the basic motif by Neal Hefti used in the original 1960's Batman series (links below). Perhaps because the track contains several samples from the movie Batman (which are covered by their own copyright permissions), and since the track can be seen as a promotional tie-in more than a song in any traditional sense, it had not been included on any of Prince's compilation albums, despite its commercial success.          



Prince ~ Batdance
7" 45 RPM record sleeve front
design by Tom Recchion
photo by Styrous®


Batdance was a last-minute replacement for a brooding track titled Dance with the Devil, which Prince felt was too dark. On the soundtrack album Batdance is almost two songs in one—a chaotic, mechanical dance beat that changes gears into a slinky, funky groove before changing back for the song's conclusion. On the single version the guitar solo before the middle section is eliminated, then goes straight to the mechanical Joker laughter from the end of the movie and an earlier movie soundbyte of Michael Keaton saying "Stop").

Music critic Chris Molanphy says Batdance is more of a mashup or remix than an actual song. It jumps from tempo to tempo, theme to theme -- and includes a lot of maniacal Joker laughter. And, strangely enough, it went higher on the charts than some of Prince's other best known songs -- like “Purple Rain" or "1999."          
      

 
Prince ~ Batdance
7" 45 RPM record sleeve front detail
design by Tom Recchion
detail photo by Styrous®


The song's music video (link below), directed by Albert Magnoli and choreographed by Barry Lather, featured dancers costumed as multiple Batmen, Jokers and Vicki Vales. Prince appears as a costumed character in face paint known as "Gemini", with one side of his face representing the Joker (evil) and the other, Batman (good). The Batman and Jokers alternate dance sections, while Prince (as both himself and Gemini) sings. The video ends with Gemini hitting a detonator, exploding an electric chair (referenced in the song), and Prince (actually Keaton's voice) saying "Stop" as the video abruptly ends. The video also features one Vicki Vale wearing a black dress with the words "All this and brains too", a reference to The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller, in which a female news presenter wears a top with the same slogan. The 7-inch edit of the song is basically the album version without the guitar solo and the up-tempo part near the end.        

There is a remix of Batdance that features a guest rap verse by Big Daddy Kane; originally Warner Bros. wouldn't allow its release (links below).      


     
Prince ~ Batdance
7" 45 RPM record sleeve back
design by Tom Recchion
photo by Styrous®


The B-side to Batdance is 200 Balloons, which was recorded for the film and serves as the musical blueprint for the main portion of "Batdance". The song was rejected for the film by Tim Burton and replaced with "Trust". The lyrics of "200 Balloons" reference the scene which it was created for to a greater degree than the replacement track, which is only connected to the scene by the Joker asking "Who do you trust?" after the song ends.         
      

Prince ~ 200 Balloons
7" 45 RPM record sleeve back detail
design by Tom Recchion
detail photo by Styrous®


Prince did little more than replace the lyrics of 200 Balloons in its transition into Batdance. Only musical portions survived the transition, but full lyrics showed up in The Batmix (turn your head to the east, I be coming from the west). 200 Balloons also contains samples of House in Order and Rave Unto the Joy Fantastic; the latter was another song submitted for inclusion in the movie, but rejected (it was replaced by Partyman).            


Prince ~ 200 Balloons
7" 45 RPM record sleeve back detail
design by Tom Recchion
detail photo by Styrous®


In November 2013, an unreleased mix leaked online that featured a rap by Big Daddy Kane. The remix was done by John Luongo, who confirmed its existence. According to Luongo, the reason for the remix being unreleased was that Warner Bros. Records didn't like it because it was "too different" and refused its release. However, Prince liked the finished result.         



Prince ~ Batdance
7" 45 RPM record, side 1
photo by Styrous®






Prince ~ 200 Balloons
7" 45 RPM record, side 2
photo by Styrous®


       
Tracklist:

A - Batdance (Edit) - 4:06
B - 200 Balloons - 5:05

Companies, etc.

    Phonographic Copyright (p) – Warner Bros. Records Inc.
    Copyright (c) – WEA International Inc.
    Copyright (c) – DC Comics Inc.
    Published By – Controversy Music
    Mastered At – Masterdisk
    Pressed By – Specialty Records Corporation

Credits:

    Design – Tom Recchion
    Mastered By – HW*
    Producer [Produced], Arranged By, Composed By, Performer [Performed By] – Prince

Notes:

Sleeve:
"BATDANCE" from the Warner Bros. soundtrack album BATMAN™ a Warner Bros. film.
Available on LP, Cassette and Compact Disc (1/4/2-25936)

TM & © 1964 DC Comics Inc. ℗ 1989 Warner Bros. Records Inc. for the U.S. and WEA International Inc. for the world outside of the U.S. Made in U.S.A. 9 22824-7

Side A, label:
7-22924-A
Controversy Music ASCAP
From the Motion Picture Soundtrack album BATMAN™ a Warner Bros. film (1-25936)
℗ 1989 Warner Bros. Records Inc. for the U.S.
TM & © 1989 DC Comics Inc.

Side B, label:
7-22924-B
Controversy Music ASCAP
℗ 1989 Warner Bros. Records Inc. for the U.S.
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Barcode (Text): 0 7599-22924-7 4
    Barcode: 075992292474
    Rights Society: ASCAP
    Matrix / Runout (Side A, runout, variant 1): MASTERDISK HW [SRC logo] 7-122924 - A - SRI
    Matrix / Runout (Side B, runout, variant 1): SP 7-122924 - B - SRI
    Matrix / Runout (Side A, runout, variant 2): MASTERDISK HW [SRC logo] 7-122924 - A - SRI I - I
    Matrix / Runout (Side B, runout, variant 2): SP 7-122924 - B - SRI I - I
    Matrix / Runout (Side A, runout, variant 3): MASTERDISK HW [SRC logo] 7-22924-A-SR1 1-1
    Matrix / Runout (Side B, runout, variant 3): SP 7-22924-B-SR1 1-1
    Pressing Plant ID (Specialty Records Corporation): [SRC logo]

Prince ‎– Batdance
Label: Warner Bros. Records ‎– 9 22824-7, Warner Bros. Records ‎– 7-22924
Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Specialty Records Pressing
Country: US
Released: 1989
Genre: Electronic, Funk / Soul
Style: Synth-pop, Funk


  
        

Viewfinder links:              
   
Batman, Adam West & the Whole Gang       
Batman soundtrack       
Neal Hefti        
Tim Burton         
Prince                
      
Net links:              

A Pop Life ~ Get the funk up! Prince and Batman: crown time is over?
Casci Ritchie ~ Dressing the Batdance         
Consequence of Sound ~ Break Yo TV: Prince Batdance      
Fandom ~ Batdance Lyrics        
Houston Chronicle ~ The enduring legacy of Prince's Batdance
KEXP ~ Batdancing In The Dark: Revisiting Batman 30 Years Later 
LA Times ~ Prince & Big Daddy Kane Batdance remix Warner Bros. won’t let you hear     
NPR ~ Whither Prince's Batdance? (Quo Batdancimus?)        
Princevault ~ Batdance   
Simply Eighties ~ Prince - Batdance (1989)        
Songfacts ~ Batdance by Prince
The Twin Geeks ~ Batman ’89 or: How Bad Was Batdance Really?
The Ultimate Prince ~ Batman Roundtable: Our Writers Answer 5 Questions    
WNYC Studios Soundcheck ~ That Was a Hit?!?: Prince, Batdance          
      
YouTube links:              
      
Batdance (Official Music Video)          
Batdance (The Bat Mix) / Batdance (Vicki Vale Mix) (12 mins., 25 sec.)
Batman (original - 1960's)             
Dance with the Devil (Unreleased Batman Soundtrack)     
Partyman (Museum Scene) (12 mins., 25 sec.)              
Prince ft. Big Daddy Kane - Batdance (DSRemix) (7 mins.)            
      
      
     
           
Styrous® ~ Tuesday, June 9, 2020       
   



           









July 27, 2018

1,001 LaserDiscs 2: Prince ~ Purple Rain

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photos by 
   
     


         
 
        
     


         
Thirty-four years ago, today, July 27, 1984, the film Purple Rain, was released by Warner Bros. It was the acting debut of Prince, who portrayed "The Kid", a role he reprized in the film Graffiti Bridge. The budget for the film was $7.2 million; the box office receipts was ten times that.     


     

LaserDisc front cover

The film also starred Apollonia Kotero the lead singer of Apollonia 6, Morris Day of The Time, Greek actress Olga Karlatos and Clarence Williams III of The Mod Squad. Williams portrayed the father of the "The Kid" (Prince) character. It's interesting to note that almost every character in the movie is named after the actor who plays him or her.                       


LaserDisc front cover detail


Purple Rain was written by Albert Magnoli and William Blinn, and produced by Prince's managers Robert Cavallo, Joseph Ruffalo and Steven Fargnoli. Prince developed the concept during his 1999 Tour. The original script by Blinn was darker. Later Magnoli was brought aboard and rewrote it. The film was directed and edited by Magnoli in his feature film directorial debut.              


LaserDisc back cover


Prince intended to cast Vanity, leader of the girl group Vanity 6, but she left the group before filming began. After the character change from Vanity to Apollonia, the script was drastically revised, and many dark scenes were cut. Some of these scenes include Prince and Apollonia having sex in a barn (a concept which was the story behind the 1985 song Raspberry Beret); Prince going to Apollonia 6's rehearsal and engaging in a physical fight with the members of The Time; and a scene which featured Prince's mother talking to him about her shaky relationship with his father. In addition, many scenes such as the "Lake Minnetonka" scene, Apollonia first meeting Morris, and the railyard scene were cut down because of time constraints. Many clips from these scenes were featured, however, in the trailer for the movie as well as the "When Doves Cry" montage.                


LaserDisc back cover


The film is tied into the album of the same name, which spawned two chart-topping singles, When Doves Cry and the opening number Let's Go Crazy, as well as Purple Rain, which reached number two. The film won an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score. The soundtrack sold over 15 million copies in America alone, and 25 million worldwide. The film also coincided with spin-off albums by The Time (Ice Cream Castle) and Apollonia 6 (their self-titled album).      


LaserDisc back cover


The film was a box office success, grossing $68,392,977 in the United States. It won an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score, currently the last to receive the award. It was nominated for two Razzie Awards: Worst New Star for Apollonia Kotero and Worst Original Song for Sex Shooter.         



LaserDisc back cover





LaserDisc plastic sleeve





 LaserDisc sides 1 & 2






    
Viewfinder links:             
           
Prince articles/mentions        
          
Net links:             
           
Plot        
Cast          
Music            
Bomani Jones - Purple Rain: Still Brilliant 30 Years Later      
Brooklyn Paper ~ The Man Who saved Purple Rain     
       
    
   
         
The Prince ~ Purple Rain LaserDisc will be for sale on eBay 
     
         
           
        
Styrous® ~ Friday, July 27, 2018