Batman (album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Batman
Batman cover
Soundtrack by Prince
Released June 20, 1989
Recorded Paisley Park Studios; June 1988–March 1989
Genre Pop, Rock, Funk
Length 42:29
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Prince
Professional reviews
Prince chronology
Lovesexy
(1988)
Batman
(1989)
Graffiti Bridge
(1990)

Batman is a soundtrack album for the 1989 film Batman by musical artist Prince. As a Warner Bros. stablemate, Prince's involvement in the soundtrack was designed to leverage the media company's contract-bound talent as well as fulfill the artist's need for a commercial (if not critical) revival. The result: yet another successful cross-media enterprise by Warner Bros. in the vein of Purple Rain.

Contents

[edit] Production

The album was quickly recorded in six weeks -- from mid-February to late March 1989 -- and Prince used three tracks recorded earlier: "Electric Chair" was recorded in June 1988; "Scandalous" in October 1988; and "Vicki Waiting" in December 1988. The album was performed entirely by Prince, with a few exceptions. Sheena Easton duets with Prince on "The Arms of Orion." "Trust" features a sampled horn part by Eric Leeds and Atlanta Bliss. "The Future" features strings by Clare Fischer sampled from the (then unreleased) 1986 track "Crystal Ball." "The Future" also samples the Sounds of Blackness choir. "Batdance" includes a sample of Prince's technician Matthew Larson, and "Partyman" features the vocal performance of then girlfriend Anna Garcia[1] (credited as Anna Fantastic)[2][3].

[edit] Ownership over the "Batman" franchise complexities

Ownership of the "Batman" franchise is complex, and the hit singles from this album were not permitted to appear on any of Prince's "hits" collections. Even on the concert t-shirts which listed all Prince's album titles to date had the song "Scandalous" rather than Batman. Despite this, Prince has performed a number of the album's tracks in concert over the years. (Update: the 2005 2-DVD edition of the Batman movie contains Prince's related videos as a bonus feature.) Wedged between Lovesexy and Graffiti Bridge, the soundtrack serves as Prince's final album contribution of the 1980s.

[edit] Critical reception

Critically, the album was not particularly well received at the time, with many reviewers labeling it as mechanical and dull, and suggesting that Prince was just using the soundtrack as a means of jettisoning some of the excess tracks that had built up in the Paisley Park vaults over the years. In 1990, it won a Brit Award for best soundtrack/score. The album also debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 charts, and went multi-platinum in the United States. The album has sold 11 million copies worldwide.

[edit] Danny Elfman's orchestral score

This soundtrack is not to be confused with Danny Elfman's orchestral score for the same movie. The two albums can be distinguished by their covers: The Prince album features the same stylized, black-and-gold Bat-symbol image used for promotional posters and home video releases of the film, while the cover for the Elfman score displays a still image from the film of the Batplane aircraft silhouetted in front of a full moon in a symbolic echo of the Bat-signal. [4]

[edit] Charts

Chart (1989) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 1
U.S. Billboard R&B Albums 1
UK Albums Chart 1

[edit] Track listing

  1. "The Future" – 4:08
  2. "Electric Chair" – 4:13
  3. "The Arms of Orion"(Prince/Sheena Easton) – 5:03
  4. "Partyman" – 3:11
  5. "Vicki Waiting" – 4:47
  6. "Trust" – 4:24
  7. "Lemon Crush" – 4:15
  8. "Scandalous"(Prince/John L. Nelson) – 6:15
  9. "Batdance" – 6:13

[edit] Credits

[edit] Singles and Hot 100 chart placings

  1. "Batdance (The Batmix)" (maxi-single)
  2. "Batdance (Vicki Vale Mix)" (maxi-single)
  3. "200 Balloons"


  1. "Partyman"
  2. "Feel U Up"
  3. "The Purple Party Mix" (maxi-single)
  4. "Partyman Music Mix" (maxi-single)
  5. "Partyman Video Mix" (maxi-single)


  1. "The Arms of Orion" W/Sheena Easton (#36 U.S., #27 UK)
  2. "I Love U in Me"


  1. "Scandalous"
  2. "When 2 R In Love"
  3. "The Crime" ("The Scandalous Sex Suite" maxi-single)
  4. "The Passion" ("The Scandalous Sex Suite" maxi-single)
  5. "The Rapture" ("The Scandalous Sex Suite" maxi-single)
  6. "Sex" "The Scandalous Sex Suite" maxi-single


  1. "The Future" (remix)
  2. "Electric Chair" (remix)



[edit] References

  1. ^ Anna Garcia
  2. ^ Anna Fantastic
  3. ^ Alex Hahn. "Possessed: The Rise And Fall Of Prince", Billboard Books, 2003.  Retrieved on August 14, 2007
  4. ^ amazon.com#gallery

[edit] External links

Preceded by
The Raw & the Cooked by Fine Young Cannibals
Billboard 200 number-one album
July 22 - September 1, 1989
Succeeded by
Repeat Offender by Richard Marx
Languages