A collaboration between Georgia-bred producer/musician Danger Mouse (a.k.a. Brian Burton, a Gorillaz confederate and creator of the archetypal mashup The Grey Album) and Cee-Lo Green (of Goodie Mob/Dungeon Family fame), Gnarls Barkley was intended to provide both artists with a therapeutic role-playing exercise an opportunity to fly the freak flag displayed on their May debut album, St. Elsewhere. Like the One Ring's effect of rendering the wearer invisible, DM and 'Lo sublimated their identities to fuel a haunted mythology of empowerment through confronting insecurities as well as delivering uncharacteristically menacing thoughts about suicide, stalking, and necrophilia, and even a cover of the Violent Femmes' "Gone Daddy Gone" to a grimy bounce.
"My heroes had the heart to lose their lives out on a limb/And all I remember is thinking I want to be like them," Cee-Lo announces two minutes into "Crazy." And a survey of the press materials in which orchestral live performances have been almost as ubiquitously embraced as "Crazy" reveals that Gnarls Barkley has seemingly translated this desire into reality, assuming the group's idols include various duos such as Wayne and Garth, Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees, and Napoleon Dynamite and Pedro Sanchez.
The duo dressed as these characters, as well as many others, in a press campaign that attempted to shift scrutiny from their separate achievements. Of course it would have been cheeky and prescient of DM and 'Lo to dress as Big Boi and André 3000, considering the reception of Gnarls Barkley as the new freak-funk avatars. The Gnarls Barkley aesthetic certainly embraces the overdriven apocalypse of the Sixties/Seventies funk-soul scene, in the way the songs present struggle and forging a new identity as vital.
As part of Goodie Mob, Cee-Lo was integral in Southern hip-hop's challenge to create a slowed-down, socially minded MC identity, always looking at himself as rhyme-, not rap-, oriented. Cee-Lo embraces a psychedelic flow and curve across the divergent soul-hop on St. Elsewhere, and with an almost gospel giddiness attempts to bridge ebullient eras. Danger Mouse produces beats for Cee-Lo's individual interpretations. Together they have provided each other with a womb where flailing and introspective sounds can reflect, repent, and reside in safety.
The rest of St. Elsewhere doesn't so much stand up to "Crazy" as stand near it. Within the witches' brew, Danger Mouse and Cee-Lo indulge their inner golems paranoid delusions and musical sketches under the cover of alternate identities. Yet perhaps the duo's greatest misstep is not having shot publicity stills dressed as Frodo and Sam, for it is nigh inconceivable that St. Elsewhere would be anything more than a collection of dysfunctional sketches without a mutual commitment to fantasy and perseverance. If nothing else, Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy" will be remembered as the One Ringtone that for a time bound them.