By CHRIS NIXON
Danger Mouse, aka Brian Joseph Burton, is in the midst of a personal dilemma. After working his way into the top echelon of music producers, the 30-year-old artist now has the resources to take time off and relax, but chances to work with Beck, The Black Keys and Damon Albarn don't come around often.
“I have more opportunities to do more stuff than I ever have,” said Burton on a recent tour stop in Forence, Italy, with his current project, Gnarls Barkley. “So, I've been taking advantage of those opportunities instead of taking time off. I just can't get myself to stop.”
Since he gained notoriety for his seminal 2004 mash-up disc “The Grey Album,” (instrumental tracks from The Beatles' “White Album” with rhymes and vocals from Jay-Z's “Black Album”), Burton produced 2005's “Demon Days” for Gorillaz (nominated for Grammy as best producer of the year), The Rapture's 2006 disc “Pieces of the People We Love” and Sparklehorse's “Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain” in 2006, not to mention a fruitful collaboration between Danger Mouse and rapper MF Doom as DANGERDOOM.
In 2007, he produced with the supergroup The Good, the Bad and the Queen's self-titled album, working with Damon Albarn, Clash bassist Paul Simonon, The Verve's Simon Tong and Fela Kuti's drummer Tony Allen. Just in 2008 (so far), Danger Mouse turned the dials for The Black Keys' “Attack & Release,” The Shortwave Set's “Replica Sun Machine,” Martina Topley-Bird's “The Blue God” and Beck's latest opus, “Modern Guilt.”
Read more of the UNION-TRIBUNE event review by Chris Nixon.
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last modified July 24, 2008Reader reviews
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