Mystery Mixtape Movie Score Track: Elfman, Zimmer & Kazoos
November 26, 2007 5:00 AM   RSS feed for this thread Subscribe

Help me identify this mystery track from my friends' mix CD, that he can't recall either. No sample available, yet! It's more than likely a movie score track. Cross between 1941, Elfman, Zimmer, Willow, and involves kazoos in places.

In short, to me it sounds like a Pee Wee's Big Beetlejuice Great Escape, featuring periodic Kazoo backups as performed by an Elfman/Zimmer team-up. The friend suggested Chicken Run. but none of the samples on Amazon have a passage found in it. The disc was made 2004 at the latest, I wager. but seems more like around 2000 that he gave it.

Here's my description to said friend, if that helps any:

"If the next mystery track is not Elfman or Zimmerman, despite being a little too POTC-1941-ish, I'm not sure what is. It has a brief high flute intro, flowing strings and brief resounding brass, followed by some marching snare and a tooting low brass, a clarinet solo with some kind of muffled piano accompaniment, then sharply accellerates into a cross between Beetlejuice, 1941 and Willow, with Hans Zimmer looking over his shoulder. And with stacatto-ish low strings. And kazoos."

The track itself is 3:36, no overt vocals (except some Elfman-ish oohs and aahs)

Super detailed description:

00:00-00:12 - very soft strings slowly emerge, gradually adding a slackpaced flute/piccolo solo of the main theme..
00:13-00:26 - the lower strings crescendo into the fray with a smooth and delicate flowing movement and the high strings pick up where the flute left off, followed by flute again.
00:27-00:31 - after a brief pause, soft middle brass comes in with a soft trumpet solo...
00:32-00:35 - solo marching-pace snare
00:36-00:44 - baritone or trombone picks up the pace with a rising triple-it lead-in as a tooting flute/piccolo makes a little twittering song vaguely resembling LOTR's shire theme
00:45-00:46 - trombone/brass rises suddenly to cut the festivities off and stops just as quickly...
00:47-01:00 - a distinctly Elfman muffled piano (or plucked low strings), middle speed pace, down-up-down-up style, with a clarinet fluttering in the background with possibly mandolin accents...
01:01-01:17 - brief unexpected pause, resume same arrangement but faster paced, momentarily adding strings, with a young-ladies aah-aah-aah vocal (characteristic of Elfman, comparable to Edward Scissorhands), periodic swirling violins and trilling clarinets...
01:18-01:22 - brief brass fanfare-like introduction with cascading strings...
01:23-01:28 - returning up-down-up-down with piano/plucked low strings, repeat formula with periodic brass mini fanfares...
01:29-01:32 - A [Batman Animated Series]-sounding spat...
01:33-01:56 - A bold trombone loudly declares the main theme with a Zimmer-like steady-paced strum-strum-strum sound from the mid-to-lower strings. Repeat main theme again but with a trumpet-trombone teamup, with a snare jointing the two, then add (keeping the steady background) a brave violin section counter/sub-melody, with a quick fluttering of timpani toward the end, and a solid brass cap on the end before a brief pause...
01:57-02:00 - kazoos pick up a repeated tail of the main theme pattern...
02:01-02:15 - French horns break in to the renewed steady background to repeat the main theme in all their glory (I can almost detect the snares' "shhhhhh" in response)
02:16-02:46 - Tubular bells accents, flowing middle-to-high strings pick up the sub/counter melody like gliding over a still lake, with kazoos peeking in around 02:22-:26, handing the baton to a forceful solo flute who keeps the joyful pace, passes to the high strings, and into a cymbal crescendo for the win and a sudden halting of the pace in a serious "whoa" rein-tugging into a similarly paced but brief Batman section,
02:47-03:12 - a very low and soft faster-paced Jaws passage, with the Violins with Parkinsons section creeping up, a few taps to the snare and we're back into the main theme with peppy steady-handed strings and kazoos murmuring in the background...
03:13-03:16 - Kazoos simmer down, piping flute accents periodically against the familiar steady low-string background pace...
03:17-03:36 - the pace slacks up again with the last string of the theme going slo-mo, a lonesome and regretful french horn not to be outdone, adds a mournful "awww, man!" and cuts off just as the strings taper off.

I hope you have as much fun finding this track as I did doing commentary!
posted by vanoakenfold to media & arts (12 comments total) 2 users marked this as a favorite
2000-ish and kazoos? It has to be Chicken Run. The snippets at Amazon aren't the only songs that were in the movie - IMDB has a few on their list that aren't included on the CD, it may be one of those.
posted by iconomy at 5:20 AM on November 26, 2007


Yes, but this theme sounds so solid that it must be the main theme, and isn't even hinted at on any of the Amazon tracks.
posted by vanoakenfold at 5:42 AM on November 26, 2007


Good heavens. Could you not just give us an MP3 to listen to?
posted by chrismear at 6:37 AM on November 26, 2007


(Violins with Parkinsons! Wonderful!)
posted by nebulawindphone at 9:35 AM on November 26, 2007


A sample would really help. Also, this sounds quite a bit like the song called Main Titles from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, but that's 5 minutes or so in length.
posted by iconomy at 10:47 AM on November 26, 2007


Good heavens. Could you not just give us an MP3 to listen to?

How would that be fun, though?
posted by vanoakenfold at 11:16 AM on November 26, 2007


Your idea of fun and the rest of the world's idea of fun are two totally different things ;P
posted by iconomy at 11:39 AM on November 26, 2007


Elfman and kazoo? You might get a kick out of this YouTube video: Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo on The Gong Show.
posted by bonobo at 4:24 PM on November 26, 2007


Not Elfman necessarily, Elfman-like in places.

Alright fine =P
posted by vanoakenfold at 10:35 AM on November 27, 2007


It's "Building the Crate" from the Chicken Run soundtrack. At least, assuming the previews on the iTunes Store are correct.
posted by chrismear at 2:08 PM on November 27, 2007


And the preview on Amazon is easily recognisable. I can't imagine how you managed to listen to it enough to write out that description and not recognise it in the Amazon preview. :facepalm:
posted by chrismear at 2:11 PM on November 27, 2007


wtf how did I miss that?? I must have skipped it somehow. darrrgh!
posted by vanoakenfold at 11:09 AM on November 28, 2007


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