Thank you for sharing all of this stuff man! I'm sure this one is gonna divide a whole lot of people, but please, if you could, we will eat up anything.. please share anything and everything you can, i'll gladly listen to Take Your Medicine T3 More Sax, or the Dead Man's Party Instr. Version, I am so thankful for all this stuff!
Yes this sounds like a trial mix to trial changing up the vocals etc which I guess was decided against. It wouldnt have ever been intended to be heard in this stripped down form.
Sorry to inquire about this so late, but by any chance do you have anything extra pertaining to "Good For Your Soul" or "So-Lo" ? "Dead Man's Party" is another album I would inquire but you seemed to have semi-answered those concerns with "Take Your Medicine." I did see that you weren't able to get a tape from UMG relating to "Nothing To Fear," so I do wonder if this outcome also applies to "Good For Your Soul" and "So-Lo." I respect what you've done for the accessibility of Boingo's discography and wish the best for your future endeavors.
Depends on what you mean by "recorded under." All the members of Boingo are on it. The soundtrack version was released under the name Mosley & The B-Men (probably for legal reasons).
@@SirHatchporch Confirmed by Bartek recently that only 3 members of Boingo actually played on it, (Avila, Vatos, and Danny) and the rest were session musicians, including Ira Ingber who now works with Bartek in various solo projects
This is absolutely fantastic.
I hope more Dark At The End Of The Tunnel stuff gets uploaded. This is cool.
Thank you for sharing all of this stuff man! I'm sure this one is gonna divide a whole lot of people, but please, if you could, we will eat up anything.. please share anything and everything you can, i'll gladly listen to Take Your Medicine T3 More Sax, or the Dead Man's Party Instr. Version, I am so thankful for all this stuff!
Seconded!
Wonderful
I wonder if this is almost a demo for the movie version, with the sparse instrumentation and the almost cut and pasted vocals. Super fascinating
Yes this sounds like a trial mix to trial changing up the vocals etc which I guess was decided against. It wouldnt have ever been intended to be heard in this stripped down form.
Thanks a lot
WOAH
Sorry to inquire about this so late, but by any chance do you have anything extra pertaining to "Good For Your Soul" or "So-Lo" ?
"Dead Man's Party" is another album I would inquire but you seemed to have semi-answered those concerns with "Take Your Medicine."
I did see that you weren't able to get a tape from UMG relating to "Nothing To Fear," so I do wonder if this outcome also applies to "Good For Your Soul" and "So-Lo."
I respect what you've done for the accessibility of Boingo's discography and wish the best for your future endeavors.
Any extras that I received was pretty much unintentional. There are loads and loads of other things that exist, just nothing I have access to.
@@rubellanremasters3888 understandable 👍
Was this recorded under Oingo Boingo or Danny Elfman (since he did use this for his score)?
obviously danny, but boingo because that's the catalog he remastered
Depends on what you mean by "recorded under." All the members of Boingo are on it. The soundtrack version was released under the name Mosley & The B-Men (probably for legal reasons).
@@SirHatchporch Confirmed by Bartek recently that only 3 members of Boingo actually played on it, (Avila, Vatos, and Danny) and the rest were session musicians, including Ira Ingber who now works with Bartek in various solo projects
@@Razor12704 ah that’s what I was wondering
@Razor12704 Interesting. Where's the source for that information? (i.e. Can you provide a link?) And was the band on the album version?
🏊♂️
Terrfic version!