Best Producer: Danger Mouse

How Gnarls Barkley's maestro discovered the soundtrack for a new America, from Rolling Stone's Best of Rock 2008

BRIAN HIATTPosted May 01, 2008 3:30 PM

Brian Burton didn't get much sleep last night, and it's all Beck's fault. On a Wednesday morning in early March, Burton is trudging toward a Starbucks near his Los Angeles recording studio, where he wrapped up a session for the next Beck album just a few hours earlier. "Some of it was fun, some of it wasn't," is all he will say about the evening's work. Inside the coffeehouse, Burton — who is better known as the virtuosic, boundary-breaking producer Danger Mouse — orders a ham, egg and cheese sandwich but no coffee. He never drinks it. A caffeine boost "seems too easy," Burton says, eyes bleary behind aviator shades: He has been working almost nonstop for the past few years, only recently starting to take weekends off.

Danger Mouse is the perfect hitmaker for Obama's America — a hip-hop fan whose life was changed by the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix and Pink Floyd. "Hip-hop was what I knew really well," Burton says, drinking Vitamin Water back in his studio's control room. "But it's not what inspired me to make music. It was the older rock stuff I started to hear." His sound blurs the line between samples and live instruments, slipping warped hip-hop beats under the orchestral twang of Ennio Morricone, the analog punch of the Beatles and the unhinged freedom of psychedelic rock. Singer-rapper Cee-Lo and Burton just released The Odd Couple, their second album as the experimental rock-R&B duo Gnarls Barkley. The album may not spawn a hit on the order of 2006's smash "Crazy," but its futuristic combination of fractured robo-beats and go-go-booted Sixties textures does manage to sound like no other music in recent memory. "My initial audience is Danger, and Danger alone," says Cee-Lo. "He has impeccable taste. I aspire to impress him."

Though he's become one of the most famous producers in the world, Burton, 30, doesn't churn out hits for superstars — the high-profile Beck gig is an anomaly. He turns down most big-name offers, reserving his colorful, cinematic production style for more personal projects. "I only go with what I really am passionate about," he says. "I want to be around for a long time, not necessarily the hot guy." Burton's other current album is Attack & Release, by the Black Keys — on it, he essentially became a third member of the Akron, Ohio, indie blues-rock duo. "It was total teamwork," says singer-guitarist Dan Auerbach. The band was impressed both by Burton's musical prowess and by his willingness to spend his Gnarls money: One night in an Ohio Wal-Mart, Burton bought a fifty-inch TV so he could watch DVDs while he was in town.


Comments

Photo

More Photos

Photograph by James Dimmock


Advertisement

News and Reviews

More News

More News

Advertisement


Advertisement

Advertisement