Artist
CeeLo Green
Imbued with a guttural falsetto, CeeLo Green wraps Southern hip-hop and R&B in magnanimous soul. Born Thomas DeCarlo Callaway-Burton in 1975, the Atlanta-raised artist began the first part of his musical career as part of Goodie Mob, a rap quartet who were also members, along with Outkast, of famed rap collective Dungeon Family. The group's first two albums, <i>Soul Food</i> (1995) and <i>Still Standing</i> (1998), established a distinctly down-home brand of hip-hop, with Green's expressive raps and spurts of disembodied vocals infusing it with a folksy aura of wisdom. By 2002, Green started releasing solo albums, with projects like <i>Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections</i>, an LP featuring tightly wound raps, R&B and kaleidoscopic funk. He teamed up with producer Danger Mouse to form Gnarls Barkley, a duo who released poignant, existential tracks like "Crazy" beginning with the 2006 album, <i>St. Elsewhere</i>. Whether singing, rapping or operating somewhere in between, Green serves up powerful, soul-searching anthems with Southern grace and elegant power.