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Peeping Tom

 
Album Review: Peeping Tom

  • Artist: Peeping Tom
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: May 30, 2006
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Mike Patton's "pop" project Peeping Tom kept fans waiting for a really, really long time. Consequently, the four years between its inception around 2002 and fruition in 2006 were a gestation period for urban-legend speculation about the record's sound to flood the public consciousness. Was he really working with Norah Jones? What did he mean by "pop record"? Given the thrashing, acidic nature of Patton's other projects like Mr. Bungle, Faith No More, and Tomahawk, nobody expected this album to be "Mike Patton Sings Boyz II Men," and most fans figured the notoriously enigmatic musician was just messing around. Peeping Tom makes a good case for itself as a pop\rock record or even as an alternative hip-hop record, but honestly, the most telling way to describe the album is as a Mike Patton record. As usual, the esoteric songster has used a new project as the means to create an entirely fresh and distinct rock style. The hip-hop presence on the disc is obvious, but Patton has assimilated it into his project so nimbly that the music isn't easily classifiable as hip-hop, rock, or pop. For instance, on "Mojo," the album's first single, gangsta-style squealing synths and reverb bass push ahead while Patton embraces a slicker and smoother incarnation of his Faith No More-era voice, slinking through the song with his trademark blend of clean vibrato, nasal tension, and belting clarity. This is not any kind of rap-rock that's been heard before and bears no likeness to Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock, or even Faith No More.

This track also serves as a good example of the self-deprecation that pervades the project. When Patton sings "Roll it up and smoke it again/Bottoms up and drink it again/Fix it up and shoot it again/I can't believe I did it again," he is keenly aware of the way the way it sounds for such an avant-garde songwriter as himself to recite perfect rock & roll clichés. His lyrics mock the self-important coolness of the music industry and self-parody his own place in it. The last line of the chorus is a particularly smart addition, painting on still another layer of sarcasm in how it parallels Britney Spears' "Oops...I Did It Again" -- which he quotes directly at the very end of the track. Patton is self-aware: the Britney shout-out shows that he knows this is the closest he's been to writing anything near radio material in 15 years. Simply put, the man understands irony: he knows exactly what he's doing in convincing waify songbird Norah Jones to sing "The truth kinda hurts, don't it motherf*cker?" on "Sucker," and he knows just how faux-clever it comes off when he sings "I know that assholes grow on trees/But I'm here to trim the leaves" on "Don't Even Trip." Of course, all this smirking could be interpreted as Patton thinking he's better than everybody else, but it could just as easily be an acknowledgement that the prestige he's garnered in the rock world for being so experimental and arty is really no more meaningful than the vanilla-flavored teen pop stardom thought to be his antithesis. This very debate has kept fans and critics talking for years, and whether you think Patton is a narcissist or a walking slice of humble pie, it adds a satisfying dimension to what is his most accessible record since Mr. Bungle's 1999 album, California. That album, like this one, still sounds a little like psychotic carnival music, but that's why listeners love him. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Five Seconds Mike Patton Odd Nosdam, Peeping Tom (4:20)
Mojo (Lyrics) Mike Patton, Dan the Automator Dan the Automator, Rahzel, Peeping Tom (3:40)
Don't Even Trip Mike Patton Amon Tobin, Peeping Tom (5:46)
Getaway (Lyrics) Mike Patton, Keith Thornton Kool Keith, Peeping Tom (3:22)
Your Neighborhood Spaceman Mike Patton Jel, Odd Nosdam, Peeping Tom (5:45)
Kill the DJ Mike Patton Massive Attack, Peeping Tom (4:09)
Caipirinha Mike Patton Bebel Gilberto, Peeping Tom (2:46)
Celebrity Death Match Mike Patton Kid Koala, Peeping Tom (3:42)
How U Feelin? Mike Patton Doseone, Peeping Tom (2:44)
Sucker Mike Patton, Dan the Automator Norah Jones, Peeping Tom (2:33)
We're Not Alone [Remix] Stuart Brooks, Mike Patton, Joe Tomino, D.P. Holmes Peeping Tom, Dub Trio (5:10)

Credits

Massive Attack (Producer), Dale Crover (Drums), Bebel Gilberto (Vocals), Neil Davidge (Programming), Robert "3D" del Naja (Synthesizer), Robert "3D" del Naja (Guitar), Robert "3D" del Naja (Keyboards), Robert "3D" del Naja (Programming), DJ Disk (Turntables), Amon Tobin (Synthesizer), Amon Tobin (Percussion), Amon Tobin (Producer), Amon Tobin (Drum Programming), Gavin Lurssen (Mastering), Kid Koala (Turntables), Norah Jones (Vocals), Martin Kvamme (Artwork), Martin Kvamme (Layout Design), Stu "Bassie" Brooks (Bass), Stu "Bassie" Brooks (Keyboards), Stu "Bassie" Brooks (Effects)
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Wikipedia: Peeping Tom (album)
Top
Peeping Tom
Studio album by Peeping Tom
Released May 30, 2006
Recorded 2000–2006
Genre Pop music
Trip-hop
Hip hop/Electro
Length 44:03
Label Ipecac Recordings
(IPC77)
Producer Mike Patton, Dan The Automator, Amon Tobin, Odd Nosdam, Massive Attack, Dub Trio, Jel
Professional reviews

Peeping Tom is an avant-garde trip hop/hip hop album by Mike Patton's collaboration group, Peeping Tom. It was released May 30, 2006 on Patton's own record label, Ipecac Recordings. The album was produced by swapping song files through the mail[citation needed] with collaborators such as Norah Jones, Kool Keith, and Massive Attack, among others.

The album, and the band associated with it, is named after Michael Powell's 1960 film Peeping Tom, which Patton has mentioned liking.[1]

Contents

General description and history

Peeping Tom debuted #12 mainstream album ARIA charts & #1 ARIA urban album chart on June 7, 2006. The first single from the self-titled record is "Mojo". It is accompanied by a music video featuring appearances by Danny DeVito, Mark Hoppus, Rachel Hunter as well as song collaborators Dan the Automator and Rahzel.[citation needed] The video was created by music video director Matt McDermitt. The song featured in the pilot episode of "Californication".

The album has multiple influences, including hip hop, alternative rock, trip hop, G-Funk, electro, ghettotech, soul music, pop music, ambient music, lounge[2], and experimental rock.

For the week ending June 17, 2006, Peeping Tom was the top debut on the Billboard 200 albums chart, appearing at #103 with 10,000 units shipped. This is the highest-ever entry on this chart for the Ipecac Recordings label.[citation needed]

Track listing

All songs written by Mike Patton

  1. "Five Seconds" (featuring Odd Nosdam) – 4:20
  2. "Mojo" (featuring Rahzel and Dan The Automator) – 3:40
  3. "Don't Even Trip" (featuring Amon Tobin) – 5:46
  4. "Getaway" (featuring Kool Keith) – 3:22
  5. "Your Neighborhood Spaceman" (featuring Jel and Odd Nosdam) – 5:45
  6. "Kill the DJ" (featuring Massive Attack) – 4:09
  7. "Caipirinha" (featuring Bebel Gilberto) – 2:46
  8. "Celebrity Death Match" (featuring Kid Koala) – 3:42
  9. "How U Feelin?" (featuring Doseone) – 2:44
  10. "Sucker" (featuring Norah Jones) – 2:33
  11. "We're Not Alone" (remix) (featuring Dub Trio) – 5:10

Chart positions

Album

Year Chart Peak
2006 Billboard 200 103
2006 Billboard Top Heatseekers 1
2006 Billboard Top Independent Albums 3
2006 Billboard Australian Official Chart 12

Singles

Year Single Chart Peak
2006 "Mojo" Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 40

References

External links

See also


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Peeping Tom (album)" Read more