Holloween How-To
Yes, Halloween merry-makers, you can go with the obvious - Thriller, the song from Ghostbusters, and that CD of Sooper-Frightening Halloween Sound SFX! that you picked up at your local mega-mart; but, wouldnt it be far cooler to make your own mixes of more unusual and unexpected Halloween-themed tracks? Ah, yes. We thought so. So here are several options to make your 2008 Halloween a frightfully memorable one - mwah ha haaa!HIP TO BE SCARED
Looking under the radar is a great place to go for Halloween-themed tracks that youre not likely to hear at another party or in an elevator somewhere on October 31. Start with the Squirrel Nut Zippers, that is, the retro-swing band that put out the horn-filled, sassy underground hit Hell, and then add in a little Echo and the Bunnymen their cover of The Doors People Are Strange is perhaps more strange than the original and definitely cool in its own way. The Cranberries Zombie and Becks Devils Haircut,are two more must-listens, as are a pair from influential ambient-rock master Brian Eno, namely Late October and Shadow.
More modern-day Halloween-ish efforts include groundbreaking animated band Gorillaz track, Dracula, Ted Leo and the Pharmacists Im a Ghost, Howie Days Ghost and Eels My Beloved Monster. And, if you just want to stick with the direct approach, there are not one, not two, but three indie-rock songs titled Halloween, one each by Matt Pond PA, The Misfits and Sonic Youth.
If you want to go old-school without dragging out The Monster Mash for the umpteenth time, theres a fresher option there, too try keeping your musicians retro, but a little more obscure. A few that spring to mind are Frank Sinatras Witchcraft (most recently used on the soundtrack for the movie Bewitched), Bo Diddleys 1964 tune The Mummy Walk and Screamin Jay Hawkins bluesy I Put a Spell On You.
MONSTER MOVIES
Movies are a terrific place to look for mood-setting Halloween music. Composer Danny Elfmans work is included on several soundtrack albums that also make for perfect Halloween listening.
The Beetlejuice soundtrack album includes everything from the distinctive main title instrumentals to the spooky Sand Worm Planet and a couple of tropical-turned-underworld tunes from Harry Belafonte. Elfmans work for the animated pic, Corpse Bride is loaded with Gothic organs and vocal contributions from Albert Finney, Helena Bonham Carter and the movies Bonejangles and His Bone Boys, who bring a New Orleans-style Devils Night jazz feel to the set. Also by Elfman are the soundtracks for Sleepy Hollow, which features plenty of suspenseful mood music, from Into the Woods to Evil Eye to The Windmill.
Other than Elfman, you might want to check out these mostly-instrumental soundtrack albums to set that frightful Halloween mood - try Hans Zimmers Batman works, which also include plenty of dark (k)night moments; the spooky soundtrack to Pans Labyrinth by Javier Navarrete; Michael Giacchinos suspenseful instrumentals that were composed to accompany the equally suspenseful Lost (okay, we cheated. its a TV series, but still); James Newton Howards work on the movie, The Village; Bernard Herrmanns score for The Day the Earth Stood Still; and the eerie Mark Snow compositions from the soundtrack for The X-Files: I Want to Believe.
CLASSICAL CREEPIES
Sometimes, the spookiest sounds are those that are lyric-free were referring, of course, to classical works that embody the spirit of Halloween simply in musical form, whether they meant to or not.
There are some classical pieces that quite obviously lend themselves to Halloween listening, with an immediacy and forboding feel that encapsulates the occasion extremely well: Griegs In the Hall of the Mountain King; Mussorgskys A Night on Bald Mountain and The Hut on Fowls Legs; Bachs Toccata and Fugue in D Minor; and no lullaby here Brahms Hungarian Dance No. 5 in G Minor will spookify your party quite nicely.
The second round of classical music are those that, appropriately, sneak up on you, gathering their instrumental stealth around themselves like a vampires cloak and jumping from a darkened alleyway when you least expect it. Try Mozarts Requiem Dies Irae; Weberns Variations Op. 27 Ruhig Fliessend; Bela Bartoks Out of Doors, BB 89: No. 3 Musette; Shostakovichs Symphony No. 10 (particularly Movement 2) or Symphony No. 2; and Pendereckis Symphony No. 1. While they all look quite refined on paper, their scareability-level is anything but.
POP GOES THE POP
And finally, if you like your Halloween tunes on the lighter, more humorous side of things, a good place to start would be a few of the Halloween compilation discs in the pop genre that are already out there. but, instead of playing em all the way through (expected), pull tracks off of various mixes, add in your other findings from the lists above and voila! youve got your own unique Halloween mix (and an expected one - which, of course, is always scarier.)
A few additional single pop tracks thatll pep up your October 31 with minimum fright include Bow Wow Wows I Want Candy; Oingo Boingos zippy Dead Mans Party; Talking Heads Burning Down the House and Swamp; and DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Princes campy Nightmare on My Street. And, although its technically a song about a beach party, The B-52s Rock Lobster, with its lyrics about attacking piranhas and stingrays, is another one thatll keep everyone on the dance floor.
Now, all you need is to find an equally scary pair of dancing shoes and youre set for this years Halloween...
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