Good for Your Soul

Good for Your Soul
Studio album by Oingo Boingo
Released July 26, 1983
Recorded Baby O Recorders and Crystal Industries, June 1983
Genre New Wave, Ska
Length 41:42
Label A&M
Producer Robert Margouleff
Oingo Boingo chronology
Nothing to Fear
(1982)
Good for Your Soul
(1983)
So-Lo
(1984)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
George Starostin [2]

Good for Your Soul is the third album by Oingo Boingo. It was released in 1983 and was their final album for A&M Records before transferring to MCA Records. Several songs were recorded but omitted from Good for Your Soul, including "All the Pieces", "Head in the Clouds", "Waiting for You" and "Lost Like This" (a song re-recorded and issued on the 1994 album Boingo).

Contents

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Danny Elfman. 

No. Title Length
1. "Who Do You Want to Be"   3:31
2. "Good for Your Soul"   3:16
3. "No Spill Blood"   3:42
4. "Cry of the Vatos"   2:21
5. "Fill the Void"   3:42
6. "Sweat"   4:31
7. "Nothing Bad Ever Happens to Me"   3:45
8. "Wake Up (It's 1984)"   4:44
9. "Dead or Alive"   4:04
10. "Pictures of You"   4:03
11. "Little Guns"   3:42
Total length:
41:42

Personnel

Oingo Boingo

The liner notes from Good For Your Soul also state:

Original Instruments: Leon Schneiderman
Horn Arrangements: Steve Bartek
All Horn Solos by Sluggo and Dale
Additional horns on "Vatos", "Dead or Alive" and "Wake Up" by Miles Anderson and Mario Guarneri
Harmonica on "Sweat" by Jimmy Wood

Availability

As of 2009, the album is out of print, though it is available on the iTunes Store.

Trivia

Dr. Moreau: What is the law?
Sayer of the Law: Not to eat meat, that is the law. Are we not men?
Beasts (in unison): Are we not men?
Dr. Moreau: What is the law?
Sayer of the Law: Not to go on all fours, that is the law. Are we not men?
Beasts (in unison): Are we not men?
Dr. Moreau: What is the law?
Sayer of the Law: Not to spill blood, that is the law. Are we not men?
Beasts (in unison): Are we not men? [1]
The repeated "Are we not men?" in this passage was also the source of Devo's song "Jocko Homo".

References

  1. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/album/r14408
  2. ^ http://starling.rinet.ru/music/oingo.htm
  3. ^ Orwell, George (1949). Nineteen Eighty-Four.