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WXPN Artist to Watch (2006)
May 2006: Gnarls Barkley
So who is Gnarls Barkley? It seems that, in the music world,
Gnarls Barkley is always nearby yet impossible to find. The
membership rolls of both the Atlanta hip-hop collective Dungeon
Family and Athens, Georgia's psychedelic enclave Elephant
Six list Barkley as an affiliate, but mention him to either
group and they'll shoot each other frightened looks
and start talking basketball. The rumors fly hard in every
direction and remain defiantly unverifiable.
Clinton Jacks works as a cook in a Waffle House restaurant
near the South Carolina coast. "One night back in the
year 2000," he recollects, "I saw Danger Mouse
come in here. Cee-Lo was with him. And they had this other
dude with them, dressed up like H.R. Pufnstuf. Danger Mouse
and Cee-Lo ate big meals, but H.R. Pufnstuf only wanted hash
browns. Then they left, Danger Mouse and Cee-Lo, but H.R.
Pufnstuf stayed around for hours. He must've had twenty
cups of coffee. I went in the bathroom, and when I came out,
he was gone. But he left a $500 tip on the table. And he
left a little note that said, 'Compliments to the chef.
Gnarls Barkley.'"
Danger Mouse, a/k/a Brian Burton, produced the infamous Grey
Album, a full-length blend of the Beatles' music and
Jay-Z's raps that became a cult classic after it was
suppressed by EMI. He recently garnered a Grammy nomination
for Producer of the Year for his work with the "virtual
band" Gorillaz. Having recorded with enigmatic rapper
MF DOOM, not to mention a cast of voices from "Adult
Swim", Danger Mouse is no stranger to outsized characters.
He admits that he helped out with St. Elsewhere, the first
album credited to Gnarls Barkley. "A lot of people ask
me about him," says Danger Mouse when the topic arises.
"He found one of my Pelican City records, which was
this downtempo experimental stuff I did in college, and I
started getting letters from him. He's not [Blur frontman
and Gorillaz co-creator] Damon Albarn - I can blow that
myth out of the water for you. A lot of people think he lives
in South Carolina. Personally, I think you'd be more
likely to find him in Europe."
Cee-Lo Green, a/k/a Thomas Calloway, is a Dungeon Family
alumnus, once-and-future member of Goodie Mob and a wildly
eclectic solo artist. His music is steeped in the gospel and
blues traditions of the Southeast, merging timeless soul with
experimental funk and hip hop. He confirms reports that his
dramatic voice and soul-rummaging lyrics appear on portions
of St. Elsewhere. "Yes, I believe that I sang on at
least some of the Gnarls Barkley record," he says. "But
we are not the same person. I am Cee-Lo. I am a humble trumpet,
and the wind of God blows through me. You might consider Gnarls
the spit valve on the trumpet, were you inclined to consider
him at all." As he walked away, Cee-Lo could be heard
to mutter, "You want to know who he is? He's the
dude who owes me thirty-five dollars, that's who he
is."
Does
St. Elsewhere shed light on this mysterious personage, or
does it further obscure him? It's a complex record,
to be sure. It employs the full spectra of pop music and human
emotion. The warm, breezy single "Crazy" and the
spry finger-snapper "Smiley Faces" recall Songs
In The Key Of Life and "Good Vibrations"
in equal measure. "On Line," a lament for the
lonely and ambitious, could be a tricked-out G-funk holdover.
Often dark and unpredictable, St. Elsewhere nevertheless retains
its sense of joy throughout. Even Cee-Lo's darker moments,
his introspection on "Necromancer", and the chilling
"Just A Thought," on which our hero fights off
suicidal ideation, flourish in their lush, funky surroundings.
It constantly shifts its shape and never sacrifices momentum.
And it contains a mess of contradictory clues about just who
Gnarls Barkley actually is.
"I've made him my life's work," says
Milton Pawley, a Los Angeles music writer widely considered
the world's leading Barkley scholar. "And even
with all the evidence I've gathered, I'm still
not sure he really exists. Maybe Gnarls Barkley isn't
a person. Maybe he's out there in the wind. Maybe he's
inside of all of us. Like 'Bob' from "Twin Peaks",
only more funky and less evil."
Perhaps Gnarls Barkley will never fully reveal himself. But
if St. Elsewhere is any indication, his music bears Marvin
Gaye's depth of feeling, Jeff Buckley's emotive
theatrics, and wild courage not seen since Prince's
prime. Behold the most exciting debut of 2006. A psychedelic
soul masterpiece. Gnarls Barkley may not be easily located,
but he won't be a stranger.
Bio adapted from official site
Website: gnarlsbarkley.com
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