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Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
(2024)
Album Cover Art
Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Rick Wentworth
Pete Anthony

Orchestrated by:
Steve Bartek
David Slonaker
Ed Trybek
Jonathan Beard
Henri Wilkinson
Julian Kershaw

Additional Music by:
Chris Bacon
Labels Icon
LABEL & RELEASE DATE
WaterTower Music
(October 25th, 2024)
Availability Icon
ALBUM AVAILABILITY
The score-only album is a digital commercial release only.
Awards
AWARDS
None.
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ALSO SEE





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   Availability | Viewer Ratings | Comments | Track Listings | Notes
Buy it... only for the collection of songs and a few choice score cues by Danny Elfman as a souvenir from an awkward sequel that essentially functions as a music video.

Avoid it... on all the albums if you expect any single, satisfying representation of the film's soundtrack, not all the songs released and the score underwhelming in its limited duties.
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EDITORIAL REVIEW
FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #2,059
WRITTEN 10/26/24
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Elfman
Elfman
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice: (Danny Elfman) After decades of teasing audiences with the prospect of a sequel to 1988's cult classic, Beetlejuice, creator Tim Burton finally assembled three of his original cast members for an extremely popular continuation in 2024. With the original main duo of ghosts from the 1988 film written out of the picture, Burton concentrated on another generation of the Deetz family, anchored by a now adult Lydia Deetz, whose life has been less than stellar in the years since the demon Betelgeuse attempted to marry her from the afterlife in the now famously haunted, small-town New England home. With her father killed by a shark (actor Jeffrey Jones likely could not return because of his sex offender status), her mother and daughter (Catherine O'Hara returning and Jenna Ortega entering, both as Burton regulars) navigate their complicated, professionally successful but personally bankrupt lives while forced back to the haunted house that started the afterlife adventures long ago. Battling complicated entanglements with the dead and humorous new characters from the afterlife, Lydia Deetz must reluctantly call upon Betelgeuse once again to assist. While the story of the sequel is a little fragmented and dissatisfactory, the reunion of Michael Keaton and Winona Ryder makes the end result a worthwhile diversion. One of the charms of the 1988 movie was the combination of Danny Elfman's original score and the high-profile employment of two Harry Belafonte songs to help carry the narrative. The score marked an important push into the mainstream for Elfman and has long remained an admirable fantasy/comedy effort even if its recording was somewhat sparsely rendered. It has always been a score overflowing with personality even if it didn't overwhelm you with sonic force. Interestingly, Burton and Elfman completely flipped that equation for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, using the opportunity to emphasize the music of the film to an even greater degree in both the songs and score employed. The director opted to produce what essentially plays like a prolonged music video this time around, with the score far more marginalized around the edges. That score, however, is modernized to emphasize resounding force rather than fringe deviousness, despite Elfman's continued creativity, yielding an awkward change in direction for the franchise's sound.

From a film score collector's perspective, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is a massively mixed bag. While it's great to receive a sequel to such a beloved Elfman score, it's frustrating to hear it marginalized amongst the plethora of song placements. Those songs are actually quite adept at their duties, pushing a 1970's to 1990's vibe that works fairly well in some portions of the film. The tone definitely skews towards the earlier end of that range, "MacArthur Park" by Richard Harris applied with great success for the wedding and the infamous "Soul Train Theme" playing an outsized, repeated role in the story, both of them bringing continued multi-culturalism to a setting that is otherwise mostly whitewashed. While the essential "Day-O" song is employed as a eulogy in this story, it was seemingly deemed a relic of the lost characters of the franchise, so don't expect to hear it performed outside of one funeral setting for solo voice and children's choir. As such, there's no Harry Belafonte to be heard anywhere. With most of the really vital scenes in the narrative featuring extended song placements, Elfman's score was left connecting dots in between. Most importantly, though, he managed to reprise enough of the Beetlejuice score's thematic and instrumental personality to carry the concept forward with satisfaction. Three or four cues from the first score are reprised in part. Utilizing decades of improvements in technology and a larger budget, the composer applied the basic sounds and motifs from the first film with greater depth in the soundscape to give each element more dramatic stature. Trademarks of Elfman's 1980's and 1990's mannerisms are pilfered here with joy, ranging from a bevy of muted trumpets for suspense and whiny strings for creepiness. A pipe organ presides once more over important scenes, and fluttering woodwind lines are everywhere in the background. A solo soprano voice punctuates a few cues with solace or mystery while a chorus supports the supernatural element. The voices are employed with more varied humorous performance inflection this time, especially in the ghost-appropriate noises they make over the titles. The only obvious instrumental addition is a theremin, though its placement is more prominent in the film than on album. Listeners will note that the recording is really fantastic, vibrant throughout and sounding, quite frankly, more robust that most Elfman scores of this era.


Ratings Icon
VIEWER RATINGS
226 TOTAL VOTES
Average: 3.06 Stars
***** 35 5 Stars
**** 51 4 Stars
*** 67 3 Stars
** 40 2 Stars
* 33 1 Stars
  (View results for all titles)

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COMMENTS
2 TOTAL COMMENTS
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Danny Elfman and Beetlejuice, both lecherous around women   Expand >>
Arthur Jorem E. Gorospe - October 26, 2024, at 5:31 p.m.
2 comments  (884 views)
Newest: October 26, 2024, at 8:48 p.m. by
SelinaK2
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Track Listings Icon
TRACK LISTINGS
Total Time: 45:42
• 1. Main Title Theme (3:21)
• 2. Ghost Host (1:45)
• 3. Plane Crash (0:58)
• 4. Boo (1:22)
• 5. Going to Beetlejuice (1:12)
• 6. Day-O* (2:52)
• 7. Ghost That Matters (1:59)
• 8. Ex-Wife's Back (2:34)
• 9. Gallery Performance (0:48)
• 10. Obituary (0:39)
• 11. The Attic (3:22)
• 12. In the Model (0:38)
• 13. Ghost Story (1:26)
• 14. Snake Ceremony (0:55)
• 15. Beetlejuice Returns (2:27)
• 16. You Agreed to Swap Lives (2:49)
• 17. Saturn (1:10)
• 18. Out of Luck (1:09)
• 19. Delia Calls Beetlejuice (1:22)
• 20. Selfies Gone Wrong (0:39)
• 21. Dolores Interrupts (1:00)
• 22. Beetlejuice Balloons (0:58)
• 23. Delia Departs (1:06)
• 24. What's That? (0:45)
• 25. End Titles (4:35)
• 26. Waiting Room (More of a Dog Person) (1:09)
• 27. Waiting Room (Delia) (0:31)
• 28. Waiting Room (You're Dead, OK?) (0:53)
• 29. Waiting Room (Bonus Track) (1:32)
* performed by Alfie Davis and The Sylvia Young Theatre School Choir

Notes Icon
NOTES AND QUOTES
There exists no official packaging for this album.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten
or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Beetlejuice Beetlejuice are Copyright © 2024, WaterTower Music and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 10/26/24 (and not updated significantly since).
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