Running Head: Bands, Influences, and Performances 1
Bands, Influences, and Performance: The Diversity of Cee-Lo Green
Alex Smith
Synthesis Essay (Draft)
College Writing 2
Kent State University
September 14, 2013
Bands, Influences, and Performances Smith 2
Outline
Thesis: Ultimately, to understand Cee-Lo Green, one must explore the unique, unclassifiable nature of his musical groups, influences, and performance style.
I. Genre Pushing Musical Groups
A. Goodie Mob.
B. Gnarls Barkley.
C. Solo Career.
II. Diverse Musical Influences
A. Gangsta Rap.
B. British Alternative Rock.
C. Androgynous Musicians.
III. Unusual Musical Performances
A. High, precise voice.
B. Weird performances with gospel tinge.
Bands, Influences, and Performances Smith 3
Bands, Influences, and Performance: The Diversity of Cee-Lo Green
Cee-Lo Green is becoming known for a song as potentially offensive as it is catchy:
“F**k You.” From the streets of Atlanta, Georgia, to sharing the stage with Muppets and
Gwyneth Paltrow, an academy award winning actress, at the 2011 Grammy Awards, Green
has had an interesting trajectory towards musical fame and fortune. His journey has been
as unpredictable as it has been diverse. He periodically remakes himself so that, every few
years, we can expect a new Cee-Lo Green on stage in front of us. For this essay, we will
examine three articles “Gnarls Barkley goes ‘crazy’” (Braiker, 2006), “If I wasn’t famous, I’d
be a hitman or a pimp” (Rifkind, 2011), and “Crazy for ‘Crazy’” (Rosen, 2006) to understand
the unique, unclassifiable nature of Green’s musical groups, influences, and performance
style.
Cee-Lo’s diversity is obvious in the musical groups he has been a part of. To date, he
has been a member of two professional groups (Goodie Mob and Gnarls Barkley) as well as
his solo act, which has produced three records. First, as mentioned above, was Goodie Mob
which Green joined when still a teenager. This band created the “Dirty South sound” in hip-
hop (Braiker, 2006, para. 3). Rifkind (2011) tells us Green’s music during this period was
“hip-hop that sounded like hip‐hop” (para. 23). The next group was Gnarls Barkley, an “odd
duo” formed with DJ Danger Mouse (Rifkind, 2011, para. 6). Whereas his early music was
hip‐hop, his Gnarls Barkley sound was a mix of electronica and soul, even mixing in “DJ
deconstructions” of their own songs (Rosen, 2006, para. 3). During his solo career, his
sound has been classified by Rifkind (2011) as “pop outrage” (para. 9). Hip-hop, soul, and
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pop are important parts of his past and present. As a result, many bands cover Green’s
songs, as well. With such diversity in musical groups, who knows what Green’s sound will
next be?
Cee-Lo Green must have had many musical influences being as diverse as his style is,
but it is surprising what they are. His first musical influence was street life as he was a
gangsta rapper from the streets of Atlanta, which was covered above. In addition to hip-‐‐
hop music, Green draws influence from a diverse set of other influences, ranging between
the Cure (a British alternative rock band) and Boy George (the androgynous lead singer of
the 1980’s band Culture Club) to rock band Queen (as cited in Rifkind, 2011, para. 23-26).
Moreover, Green has done a Violent Femmes (1980’s alternative rock band) cover, written
songs about undead creatures, and lyrics that sound like poet Stanley Kunitz, the tenth poet
laureate of the United States. Some of his sound and themes stem from the band Parliament
Funkadelic that played a mixture of soul, funk, and rock (Braiker, 2006, para. 6; Rosen,
2006, para. 5). So, we can add horror, funk, teen angst, and poetry to the list of
androgynous alternative and mainstream influences that built the diverse Cee-Lo Green we
see before us today.
Finally, how does the diversity manifest in a Cee-Lo performance, and how will his
diverse musical influences combine to build the show? These days, we will not see hip-‐‐
hop. Rifkind (2011) tells us Green, “doesn't really do hip-‐‐hop any more” and that he now
uses a “high, precise voice” (para. 25). On some songs, Rosen (2006) says, Green gives a
“weird performance filled with long pauses and gospel-style stutters and exclamations”
(para. 5). “Crazy,” Braiker (2006) says, is “all soul” that is better called “sanging” then
singing because it is coming from a deeper, rough, and elemental place inside of him (para.
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5). When Green performs, we can expect an “undeniable groove” and a “catchy chorus”
(Rosen, 2006, para. 6). We can also expect theatrics. In a photoshoot for the album “Crazy,”
Green wore a wedding dress (Rifkind, 2011, para. 31). The costuming is reproduced on
stage. For example, Green and his bandmate Danger Mouse most notably dressed as Star
Wars characters on stage. Green was wearing a Darth Vader costume. Danger Mouse was
dressed as Obi-‐‐Wan Kenobi. Quite often, they perform in similarly movie-‐‐inspired
costumes, creating a “weirdly unclassifiable,” “hip shtick” performance and persona
(Rosen, 2006, para. 7). In other words, expect the unexpected from a Cee-Lo Green
performance. Diversity is his hallmark.
All in all, Cee-Lo Green is a chameleon who changes with the environment he finds
himself in, mixing and matching bands, influences, and performance style in interesting and
unclassifiable ways. He is willing to break with tradition. This is the reason why his song
“Crazy” was simultaneously on the pop, R&B/hip-hop, adult contemporary, and modern-rock
charts (Rosen, 2006). Green does not take fame seriously. What he does take seriously is the
music he makes that reaches across borders just as he extends beyond the borders in his own life.
The music he makes is somewhat a map of his life that shows where he is at any particular time.
He has not hinted what his next musical step will be, but with his diversity and sense of musical
freedom, it will be a surprise, I assure you.
Bands, Influences, and Performances Smith 6
References
Braiker, B. (2006, May 19). Gnarls Barkley goes ‘crazy.’ Newsweek. Retrieved from
http://music.newseek.com/2006/05/19/gnarls-barkley-goes-crazy.html.
Rifkind, H. (2011, January 29). If I wasn’t famous, I’d be a hitman or a pimp. The Times (UK).
Retrieved from http://entertainment.times.com/2011/01/29/c-lo-green-if-i-wasn’t-
famous/clg_iiwf.html.
Rosen, J. (2006, September 7). Crazy for “Crazy.” Slate Now. Retrieved from
http://now.slate.com/2006/09/07/clg-crazy.for.crazy.htm.