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Track Listing 1. Five Seconds 2. Mojo 3. Don't Even Trip 4. Getaway 5. Your Neighborhood 6. Spaceman 7. Kill the DJ 8. Caipirinha 9. Celebrity Death Match 10. How U Feelin? 11. Sucker 12. We're Not Alone
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Norah Jones | | Distributor: | Fontana Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel include: Norah Jones. An album literally years in the making, PEEPING TOM is the brainchild of the amazingly prolific and adventurous vocalist Mike Patton, former frontman of the alternative-rock ensemble Faith No More. Following his departure from FNM in the late 1990s, Patton immersed himself in a variety of noise/metal projects including Fantomas and Tomahawk, as well as avant-garde solo outings, tinkering with more accessible pop/rock tunes in his free time. This 11-track disc is the result of those on-and-off sessions, and features collaborations with an impressive array of pop, hip-hop, and electronica luminaries, ranging from Rahzel and Dan the Automator (the funky first single "Mojo") to Massive Attack (the sinister "Kill the DJ") to, surprisingly enough, Norah Jones (the slinky, sensual "Sucker"). Despite all of the high-profile guests, PEEPING TOM is indisputably Patton's own creation, with his versatile vocals and quirky, off-kilter sensibilities exhibited on every track of this bizarrely entertaining outing.
Industry Reviews Ranked #16 in Kerrang's 20 Greatest Albums of 2006 -- A pop-centric masterpiece, littered with star turns...
Patton sticks to the kind of catchy, nasal vocals he pioneered with his most famous band, Faith No More. This is the real thing.
PEEPING TOM keeps the energy up by whipsawing among styles and approaches....Patton sounds like he's having wicked fun...
From front to back, the weirdo-pop super-hits -- all composed through the mail with various collaborators -- just keep on coming.
3 stars out of 5 -- Kool Keith is on pleasingly incomprehensible form on 'Getaway' and the link-up with Dan the Automator on 'Mojo' recalls his former band at their best.
3 stars out of 5 -- The album is full of dark, beat-driven atmospherics that alternately evoke DJ Shadow, Nine Inch Nails and Prince Paul.
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