i think someone incorrectly thought i had a connection with this band ona one to watch 2006 thread a whil back, i wish i was connected to this, does that count?!
here is the story so far. i hope this turns out to be as good as ive told my mates. been wrecking their heads about it.
thought someone here might be interested or whatever. if not, well,..sorry i suppose!
Norah Jones Curses Up A Storm For New Mike Patton Project
02.09.2006 6:52 PM EST
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1523855/20060207/jones_norah.jhtml?headline
s=true
Songstress is one of many guests on ex-Faith No More singer's pop album.
Mike Patton
Even though he's slowed down in his golden years, James Brown will always
be
known as the hardest working man in show business. And while Mike Patton's
not
exactly gunning for the infamous nickname, he's definitely been giving
Brown a
run for his money.
Patton — of Faith No More, Fantômas, Tomahawk and about 30 other deranged
and
wondrous projects — has to work. It's what he does. In addition to running
his
Ipecac Records label, the anti-rock-star rock star's been putting the
finishing
touches on the self-titled debut from Peeping Tom, his
four-years-in-the-making,
long-overdue multi-genre pop masterpiece.
Oh, and he's also tracking vocals for three tunes that'll appear on Massive
Attack's forthcoming seventh album, Weather Underground. The one song he's
finished thus far for the trip-hoppers "is like a really slow, dirty ballad
with mostly acoustic guitar," he said.
Plus he's composing soundtracks for two films (one being friend Melanie
Lee's
"Pinion"), he recently lent his voice box to the in-development PlayStation
3
game "The Darkness," and he's been writing material for the next Tomahawk
LP.
And then there's that trip he's planning to Italy, where — with help from a
string orchestra and a full choir — he'll record an album's worth of "my
arrangements of '60s Italian pop tunes, which should be fun." He'll also
spend
some time with composer Eyvind Kang for a collaborative classical choir
piece.
That's just the stuff he can remember off the top of his head. "You know, I
always forget about some of the things I've done, because you do 'em, and
sometimes they don't come out and ... most of it's almost like daily chores
or
something," Patton explained. "You check it off your list and then it's
gone."
And when your list's as long as Mike's, you can't be expected to remember
every
little thing you've been involved with. Besides, the last four months of
Patton's life have been devoted exclusively to finishing the first of three
Peeping Tom records in the works, which is due May 30.
"I'm overjoyed to finally have this out of my hair," Patton said. "It's
almost
cathartic for me — more than any other project I've had. These projects,
they're almost like problems. You have them on your work table and they're
really fun for a minute, and then you get sick of 'em and you finish 'em
off
and move on to something else. This one has lingered for a lot of different
reasons."
One of the reasons has been major-label trickery. "There were offers from
major
labels, and I made the grave error of entertaining some of those offers,
and
that cost me about a year of wining, dining, singing and dancing and
ultimately, I was left holding my n--s," he said. "And I deserved it. I
should
have known better."
Plus, Patton recruited a laundry list of collaborators, sending tracks
across
the globe to have other artists add their personal touches. "It was a melee
getting all this stuff back," he said.
The initial 11-track Peeping Tom outing will feature a spate of underground
and
mainstream experimentalists, including Kid Koala; Odd Nosdam; Doseone and
Jel
of the Bay Area hip-hop collective Anticon; Dale Crover of the Melvins;
Massive
Attack; Gorillaz beat maestro Dan "The Automator" Nakamura; human beatbox
Rahzel
the Godfather of Noyze; Cypress Hill's DJ Muggs; Amon Tobin; Brazilian
chanteuse
Bebel Gilberto; Brooklyn's Dub Trio; DJ Disk of the Invisibl Skratch Piklz;
and
rapper Kool Keith (see "General Mike Patton Drafts X-ecutioners And An Army
Of
Other Collaborators").
"It's very streamlined, very slick — it's a groove record," Patton said. "I
used
programmers and producers from the electronic world and the hip-hop world,
in
some cases. If there's a sound to , it leans into those worlds.
There are simple structures. I'm singing, there's lyrics — to me, it's a
pop
record. It's something I'd want to turn on the radio and hear."
One of the album's highlights, Patton said, is "Sucker," which boasts the
pipes
of Norah Jones. "It's a pretty vulgar song," he said, laughing. "You don't
recruit someone like that unless you ... I mean, I had something real
specific
in mind for her, and I wanted to take her out of her element and put her in
a
new environment and make it exciting, and she loved it. She did great. But
yeah, you won't recognize Norah. She's cussing her ass off. It's insane.
She's
like a cruel vamp, and it's super sexy, hot and, yeah, cruel."
After Peeping Tom's unveiling, Patton said he'll reunite with Nakamura to
begin
work on the second Lovage record — the follow-up 2001's lounge-flavored
Music
to Make Love to Your Old Lady By. He said there's no word yet on whether
Elysian Fields frontwoman Jennifer Charles would be reprising her role as
the
Cher to his Sonny, but discussions are ongoing.
And Tomahawk are in "go mode," he added. "There are three or four tunes for
the
record that are done, and we'll be in the studio by the end of the year.
Most
of the music's based on old Native American motifs. It's going to be a real
quiet, strange record."
— Chris Harris
Message #11743
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