Gnarls Barkley Discography
Gnarls Barkley , the collaboration between vocalist CeeLo Green and producer Danger Mouse
5. "Would Be Killer" A haunting, minimal track. The beat is just a shaker and a bass drum. Synth pads drift in and out like fog. CeeLo sings about a love that turned murderous: "It would be killer, if it wasn't so sad." This is noir soul at its finest.
EPs and singles (selected, with release context)
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More importantly, St. Elsewhere and The Odd Couple stand as a perfect binary: the sound of a creative explosion and the sound of the hangover afterward. They are two sides of the same broken, beautiful coin. gnarls barkley discography
However, their B-sides and one-offs are essential:
2. "Crazy" What can be said? Co-written by both members, the song is built on a sample of the string section from Gianfranco Reverberi’s “Last Man Standing” (from a 1968 Spaghetti Western). Lyrically, it is a meditation on solipsism and mental health disguised as a dance track. "Does that make me crazy?" It became the first UK single to top the charts on downloads alone, and Rolling Stone later named it the #1 song of the 2000s decade. Gnarls Barkley , the collaboration between vocalist CeeLo
Atlanta (2026): Their long-awaited final studio album, released after an 18-year break. Extended Plays (EPs) & Notable Singles
Track-by-Track Breakdown
1. "Go-Go Gadget Gospel" The album opens not with a beat, but with a space-age synth sweep and a choir. Then, it explodes into a frantic, foot-stomping gospel number. CeeLo screams, "You got to get up, get up!" over a driving organ. It’s a mission statement: this is not your grandmother’s soul music. More importantly, St
5. Visual Aesthetics and Performance Style
An analysis of Gnarls Barkley’s discography is incomplete without mentioning their visual presentation. They consistently subverted expectations of how an R&B/Hip-Hop act should look.