Hip-hop collides with Comic-Con as subconscious loiterer/indie-microphone-god MF Doom meets Beatle-plunderer Danger Mouse in the whacked-out and ostensibly weird world of Adult Swim. The gravelly ...
Danger Mouse busts out the British library-music funk, Doom makes like Doom (“Cut the cranky attitude/When I’m like a handkerchief on a stanky fatter dude”), and drama-rap kingpin Ghostface sounds ...
“Mark and I worked on a lot of music together,” Danger Mouse commented in a statement. “But it was the song that he and I wrote and recorded with MF DOOM that really resonated with him. It was one of ...
A cartoonish character in his own right, Donn – who sports a metal mask and frequently uses comic samples on his albums – and Danger Mouse, the infamous mastermind behind the Grey Album (the ...
Danger Doom, the duo that makes up MF Doom and Danger Mouse (Brian Burton), will be releasing a reissue of their 2005 collaborative project The Mouse & the Mask in May. The reissue is dropping on May ...
In 2005, MF Doom and Danger Mouse dropped the legendary cult hip-cop classic collaboration project Dangerdoom. Their lone album, The Mouse & The Mask, saw the producer’s whimsical Adult Swim ...
In 2005, Danger Mouse and MF DOOM teamed up for Danger Doom, a collaborative project that yeilded the acclaimed album, The Mouse & The Mask. That record will be reissued this May on Metalface Records ...
MF Doom, Danger Mouse and cartoon characters converge for a rap classic “I might be buggin’, but it seem to me, that cartoons be realer than reality TV,” raps guest MC Talib Kweli on The Mouse and the ...
Artsy rap duo Danger Doom will release a free EP via Cartoon Network that features their contributions to the channel’s popular Adult Swim shows. The as-yet-untitled project will feature voices from ...
Is this CD the first rap infomercial? Does it take musical product placement to a new extreme? And if so, is that bad? The answer to each of these questions leans toward “yes.” Nevertheless, this ...
Since 2003, the year hasn’t been complete without a much-hyped underground hip-hop collaboration. The first was a disappointing duet between superproducers Jay Dee and Madlib, neither of whom brought ...
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