"Batman Soundtrack" redirects here. For the Danny Elfman musical score, see
Batman (score). For the soundtrack to the 2022 film, see
The Batman (soundtrack).
Batman is the eleventh
studio album by American recording artist
Prince and the
soundtrack album to the 1989 film Batman. It was released on June 20, 1989, by
Warner Bros. Records. As a
Warner Bros. stablemate, Prince's involvement in the soundtrack was designed to leverage the media company's contract-bound talent as well as fulfill the artist's need for a commercial revival. The result was yet another multi-platinum successful cross media enterprise by Warner Bros., in the vein of Purple Rain.
The album was recorded in six weeks, from mid-February to late March 1989, and Prince used three tracks recorded earlier: "Electric Chair", "
Scandalous!", and "Vicki Waiting" (originally known as "Anna Waiting", named for his then-girlfriend
Anna Fantastic). Originally, the songs "
1999" and "
Baby I'm a Star" from earlier albums were slated to be used in the film, but Prince instead recorded an entire album's worth of material with
Batman samples and lyrics. In a 2010 Rolling Stone interview, Prince revealed that the project was initially supposed to be a collaboration between himself and
Michael Jackson: "Did you know that the album was supposed to be a duet between Michael Jackson and me? He as Batman, me as the
Joker?" Prince would have sung
funk songs for the villains, while Michael Jackson would have sung
ballads for the heroes. This never came to fruition as Jackson was busy with his
Bad World Tour and already signed with
Epic Records (the label he had been with since 1975), while the film was a
Warner Bros. production. The album was performed entirely by Prince, with a few exceptions:
Sheena Easton duets with Prince on "
The Arms of Orion", "Trust" features a sampled
horn part by
Eric Leeds and
Atlanta Bliss, and "
The Future" features strings by
Clare Fischer sampled from the then-unreleased 1986 track "Crystal Ball" and samples of the
Sounds of Blackness choir. "
Batdance" includes a sample of Prince's technician Matthew Larson, and "
Partyman" features a vocal performance from Anna Fantastic).[1] All dialogue sampled on Prince's Batman album is taken directly from a
workprint of Batman and therefore lacks
ADR and
foley. This is especially noticeable in the beginning of the first track, "The Future", with dialogue of
Michael Keaton speaking as Batman.
In the album's
liner notes, the lyrics of each song are associated with one of the characters in the film: "The Future" and "Scandalous" are credited to Batman; while "Electric Chair" and "Trust" are credited to the Joker. "Vicki Waiting" is sung from the perspective of Bruce Wayne, while "Lemon Crush" comes from
Vicki Vale; the two characters share the duet, "The Arms of Orion". "Partyman" was inspired by Prince's first meeting with
Jack Nicholson (out-of-character) on-set.[2]
"Batdance", whose lyrics consist mostly of samples from the film, is credited to all aforementioned parties, as well as Gemini, Prince's Batman-centric
alter ego that resembles Batman villain
Two-Face—Prince on the right half of the body and the Joker on the left. Prince himself is credited with singing two lines of the album as himself: "Who do you trust if you can't trust
God? Who can you trust—who can ya? Nobody" in "Trust"; and the word "Stop!" that ends "Batdance" and the album proper (though the "Stop!" is actually a
sound bite of Michael Keaton, directly from the film where he tells the
Batmobile to stop).
The Batman era also marked a change in Prince's appearance; he switched out the elaborate costumes,
polka dots and
lace from Lovesexy for much simpler attire, usually donning dark blue/black clothing and "Batman" boots. The artist's hair was fully straightened from his signature wavy curls, as shown in the "Batdance" video.
In 2016, film critic
Matt Zoller Seitz praised Prince's songs and music videos for Batman, more so than the film itself, stating that his songs "suggest a goofy, perverse, sensuous, somewhat introverted Batman film that so far we've never gotten from anyone", and arguing that Prince's music videos "are more psychologically perceptive than any of the Batman films".[13][14][15]
In 2019, a Symposium took place to discuss the album.[16]
Ownership complexities
Prince had to agree to sign the publishing rights to the songs used in the film over to
Warner Bros.; Prince's hit singles from this album were not permitted to appear on any of his hits compilations until the 2016 release of 4Ever, which included "Batdance". Only the B-sides "200 Balloons", "Feel U Up", and "I Love U in Me" appeared on his 1993 The Hits/The B-Sides collection. On concert
T-shirts which listed all of Prince's album titles to date, the song "Scandalous!" appeared in place of the album Batman.[citation needed] Despite this, Prince performed a number of the album's tracks in concert over the years.[17] A 2005 special edition
DVD of the Batman film contains Prince's related videos as a bonus feature (although the video for "Partyman" is an edited down version of the original seven-minute long video).
Track listing
All tracks are written by
Prince, except where noted
^Harris, Keith (June–July 2001).
"Prince: Batman". Blender. Vol. 1, no. 1. New York. Archived from
the original on August 20, 2004. Retrieved April 16, 2017.