Varèse Sarabande and Craft Recordings have announced plans to re-release Danny Elfman’s celebrated scores for Pee-wee’s Big Adventure (1985) and Back to School (1986) on new colour vinyl editions. Recreating the original double-feature vinyl presentation, the release revives a fan-favorite Danny Elfman double bill on a single-LP package. The collection features Pee-wee’s Big Adventure on Side A—the first collaboration between Elfman and director Tim Burton, and the launch of one of cinema’s most celebrated composer/director partnerships—and Elfman’s score for the rowdy ’80s comedy classic Back to School on Side B.
The release follows the 40th anniversary of Pee-wee’s Big Adventure last year, while Back to Schoolcelebrates the milestone in 2026. In addition to the “Rocket Red” variant, Barnes & Noble will offer an exclusive “Tequila Dance Green” vinyl, while VareseSarabande.com will carry a striking exclusive “Rebel Splatter” vinyl. These new pressings arrive June 26 and are available for pre-order now.
Actor Paul Reubens created Pee-wee Herman while performing with the Groundlings in the late 1970s, later transforming the character into a stage show and an HBO show in 1981, eventually leading to the 1985 feature film Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. Directed by Tim Burton in his feature film debut, the film follows Pee-wee on his wildly eclectic cross-country search for his stolen bike, the Red Rocket. Oingo Boingo frontman Danny Elfman was brought in to compose the score, and a dream pairing between filmmaker (Burton) and composer (Elfman) was born.
Elfman continued his breakout run a year later with 1986’s Back to School, starring renowned funnyman Rodney Dangerfield as a rich businessman who goes to college to inspire his disillusioned student son. Oingo Boingo performs their hit “Dead Man’s Party” during a fraternity party scene in the film, while Elfman’s score perfectly weaves its way through the film’s moments of pure jocularity and earnest humanity. The film is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year.

LP Tracklist:
Side A – From Pee-wee’s Big Adventure
1. Overture / The Big Race
2. Breakfast Machine
3. Park Ride
4. Stolen Bike
5. Hitchhike
6. Dinosaur Dream
7. Simone’s Theme
8. Clown Dream
9. Studio Chase
10. The Drive-In
11. Finale
Side B – From Back to School
1. Overture
2. Do Not Go Gently…
3. The Brawl
4. Action Medley
5. Classroom Secretary
6. Triple Lindy
7. Love Suite
8. Study Montage
In an oral history for Indiewire on the making of Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, Elfman reflected on the unlikely chain of events that led to his hiring for the now-classic film: “I got the call randomly. I didn’t learn until later just how crucial Paul [Reubens] was in the decision [that got me hired]. I didn’t meet with him; I met with Tim. Five years prior, Paul had seen a midnight film my brother made called Forbidden Zone.
“Before I was in a rock band, I was in a musical theatrical troupe called The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo, and they did the score. It’s a really quirky cult film. Paul saw it and made a little note: ‘If I ever make a movie, I gotta call this guy.’ Well, amazingly, he didn’t lose that scrap of paper. When it came time for him and Tim to talk about music for Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, my name came up.”
The rock icon turned composer was initially shocked that he would be tapped to write the music for the film. He explained in the interview: “When I had my meeting with Tim, the first thing I thought was that maybe they wanted a song. I just assumed that’s what the meeting was about. When he informed me, ‘No, I’d like you to do the score,’ I was like, ‘A score? Me?’ I didn’t know how to do a score.”
By the time Elfman returned to score Back to School the following year, he was already beginning to develop the fearless, instinct-driven style that would define his early film work. Though he was more familiar with the film scoring process thanks to his work on Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, he credited his relative naivety for part of the the work’s ingenuity.
In an interview with writer Owen Williams, Elfman explained: “Back to Schoolwas my third [film score]—and I’d never taken a lesson on an instrument, never mind scored a film. I was teaching myself everything from the bottom up, so when I listen back now…those things sound very primitive to me. That doesn’t mean [they’re] ‘bad.’ Maybe I should learn something from them and get to something more primitive again. I think in those days I was driving on this crazy energy, so maybe it’s that. I wasn’t following any rules because I really didn’t give a shit. Maybe that shows.”
That spirit of experimentation and creative freedom runs through both scores, making Pee-wee’s Big Adventure and Back to School as exhilarating and distinctive today as they were four decades ago.
Click here to pre-order/stream Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure / Back To School (40th Anniversary Edition)



