Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Mouse and the Mask is the only studio album by Danger Doom, a collaboration between the hip hop artists Danger Mouse and MF Doom.It was released in Europe on October 10, 2005, and on October 11, 2005 by the independent punk label Epitaph Records in the United States.
Sofa King is a pun on "so fucking" and may specifically refer to: "Sofa King" (song) , a song in the Danger Doom album The Mouse and the Mask Sofa King, a gag name of a hypothetical furniture store used during a Saturday Night Live skit
Spat what he knew, energy for true. To all fake rappers, twenty-three skidoo - "Sofa King" by Danger Doom, lyrics by MF Doom; John Prine uses the phrase as an address in the chorus of his song, "Jesus, the Missing Years" from the album of the same name. ("They all reside down the block inside of 23 Skidoo.")
Occult Hymn is the only EP by Danger Doom, released in 2006 as the follow-up to their debut album, The Mouse and the Mask. [4] It contains seven tracks and was released as a free download on Adult Swim's website on May 30, 2006. Its name is a reference to a line in Danger Doom's song "A.T.H.F.", and intentionally rhymes with "Adult Swim."
During Dumile's most prolific period, the early to mid-2000s, he released the acclaimed Mm..Food (2004) as MF Doom, as well as albums released under the pseudonyms King Geedorah and Viktor Vaughn. Madvillainy (2004), recorded with the producer Madlib under the name Madvillain , is often cited as Dumile's magnum opus and is regarded as a ...
Danger Doom was an American hip hop supergroup consisting of Danger Mouse and MF DOOM. Their first album, The Mouse and the Mask , was released October 10th, 2005, [ 2 ] and followed by the Occult Hymn EP in 2006.
Unexpected Guests is a compilation album by British-American rapper/producer MF Doom, released under the shortened pseudonym Doom.The album is made up of a collection of songs performed by, produced by or featuring Doom and previously released at various points throughout his career.
Pitchfork ranked the album at number 13 in their list of the top 100 albums of 2000–2004, commenting, "While Madlib's special power played tricks on your ears – a sample you were sure was the sound of cars rolling by on the street might sound like the hiss of a record on a different day ("Rainbows") – MF Doom unfurled his clever lyrics ...