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3 posts categorized "Danger Mouse"

May 12, 2011

Album review: 'Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi Present Rome'

3.5 stars (out of 4)

The projects by serial collaborator Danger Mouse, a k a producer-songwriter Brian Burton, have ranged from cultish (“Dangerdoom” with rapper MF Doom) to spectacularly (if unexpectedly) commercial (the 2006 Gnarls Barkley album, “St. Elsewhere”). Almost all of them have yielded music that shows omniverous range and a sure feel for melody.

On “Rome” (Capitol), Danger Mouse joins composer Daniele Luppi to revisit the golder age of Italian film scores, specifically the “Spaghetti Westerns” of Ennio Morricone. This is about big-picture soundscapes rather than individual star turns, so even high-profile guests such as Jack White and Norah Jones meld into the concise but richly detailed songs (Jones’ self-effacing personality is well-suited toward that sort of approach, while White allows his voice to become just another creepy texture on “The Rose With a Broken Neck”).

Burton and Luppi are wise to employ many of the original musicians and singers featured on classic ‘60s soundtracks such as “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” and “Once Upon a Time in the West.” They also recorded in Rome’s Form Studios, founded by Morricone. The wordless harmonizing by Alessandro Alessandroni’s choir, the evocative vocals of soprano Edda Dell’Orso, the melancholy chime of a celesta, the queasy rumble of a carnival organ, clipped guitars playing against a swooning string section – each of these sounds connects with a beloved, bygone era. But “Rome” does one better than conjure nostalgia; it puts those vintage signifiers in service of fine, contemporary songs.

greg@gregkot.com

July 13, 2010

Album review: 'Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse Present Dark Night of the Soul'

2 stars (out of 4)

After a troubled past in which legal hassles delayed its release by a year, the musical portion of “Dark Night of the Soul” is finally receiving an official unveiling (an accompanying art book by movie director David Lynch was released in 2009).

The occasion is nonetheless bittersweet because one of the album’s creators, Mark Linkous, a k a Sparklehorse, committed suicide last March, which leaves “Dark Night of the Soul” (Capitol) as his unintended epitaph. The artist wrote, performed and produced the music with multi-instrumentalist Brian Burton, a k a Danger Mouse. They then assigned songs to about a dozen singers, including the Strokes’ Julian Casablancas, the Shins’ James Mercer, Iggy Pop and Suzanne Vega, who contributed lyrics and melodies.

Unfortunately, the ambitious concept proves too unwieldy to work as a consistent album. The opening trio of tracks, as sung by the Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne, Super Furry Animals’ Gruff Rhys and ex-Grandaddy front man Jason Lytle, set up a certain level of expectation – a wan, wistful blend of introspection, dread and biting candor – that is disrupted by noisier tracks from Black Francis and Pop and a couple of low-fi throwaways with Lynch on vocals.

The album briefly regains its bearings with “Insane Lullaby,” in which Mercer brings a sense of improbable longing to a track that whirs like a noisy washing machine. But the most resonant moment belongs to Vic Chesnutt, whose “Grim Augury” unspools over Linkouse’s hypnotic Optigan keyboard-playing. Chesnutt, who committed suicide only a few weeks before Linkous died, turns a Norman Rockwell-like domestic scene into a twisted nightmare. It’s the kind of song and sentiment a master surrealist like Linkous surely must have appreciated.

greg@gregkot.com

March 05, 2010

Album review: Broken Bells, 'Broken Bells'

3 stars (out of 4)

Brian Burton, a k a Danger Mouse, is a fiend for collaboration, bringing his fondness for hip-hop-era pastiche, psychedelia and soul to projects with Cee-Lo Green (Gnarls Barkley), Damon Albarn (Gorillaz) and Beck. His latest partner is Shins singer James Mercer, a master pop craftsman who like Burton disdains excess of any kind.

Little wonder that their “Broken Bells” (Columbia) project, on which they play all the instruments, packs 11 meticulously orchestrated songs into less than 38 minutes. Burton puts a little wobble on just about every sound he conjures and Mercer pushes his voice outside its comfort zone, particularly in the upper register, making this a chilled little side-trip of an album.

The first half slides from one coolly laid-back melody to the next. Burton and Mercer organize a great many beautiful yet understated moments into surprisingly concise tunes without breaking a sweat. These songs feel like they could be much longer with their multi-part constructions; add a few solos to “Your Head is On Fire” and you’d have a decent progressive-rock suite. Instead, you get a nearly perfect three-minute pop song that plays like an homage to Brian Wilson at the height of his powers, a slightly woozy mix of strings, distorted keyboards, and inventively orchestrated voices, from monks-in-the-abbey moans to surf’s-up sighs. By the time Mercer breaks out a falsetto for the near-funky “Ghost Inside,” the album feels unstoppable.

The buzz wears off a bit in the second half, as a few pedestrian tunes (“Citizen,” “October”) mar the flow. Then along comes “Mongrel Heart” with a Spaghetti Western-style interlude that – much like this album – arrives as an unexpected yet completely worth-it detour.

greg@gregkot.com
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Music is life. Just ask Tribune music critic Greg Kot. "Turn It Up" is his guided tour through the worlds of pop, rock and rap.
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•  Album review: 'Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi Present Rome'
•  Album review: 'Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse Present Dark Night of the Soul'
•  Album review: Broken Bells, 'Broken Bells'

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