Mike Patton

Mike Patton (born Michael Allen Patton, January 27, 1968) is an American musician. He is best-known as the lead singer of Faith No More from 1988 to 1998, but has also handled lead vocals for Mr. Bungle, Tomahawk and Fantmas. He often produces side projects in collaboration with other musicians, such as John Zorn, Dan the Automator, The Melvins, Dillinger Escape Plan, Melt-Banana, Sepultura, and Merzbow, Lovage, Maldoror, Weird Little Boy, Rahzel, and Kaada. He is also the co-founder of Ipecac Recordings. Patton possesses a remarkable range of vocal textures and styles (from Sinatra-esque crooning to aggressive death metal growling), and his avant-garde leanings have earned him a large and loyal cult following. Growing up in Eureka, California, Patton and friends formed Mr. Bungle circa 1985. They recorded a few demos and earned a small local following. Patton joined Faith No More in January of 1989 and filled the vocal void left by the unreliable and recently fired Chuck Mosley (Cement). Faith No More's The Real Thing was released later the same year. The album reached the top ten on the charts thanks largely to MTV's heavy rotation of the video for the song "Epic." Despite consistent critical success over the next half-decade, Faith No More never matched the level of commercial success experienced by The Real Thing. After a series of interesting but poorly promoted albums (Angel Dust; King For A Day... Fool For a Lifetime; and Album of the Year), Faith No More officially disbanded in 1998. During the long demise of Faith No More, Patton had resumed collaborating with Mr. Bungle. His success in mainstream rock and metal ultimately helped secure Mr. Bungle a record deal with Warner Bros. The band released a self-titled album (produced by John Zorn) in 1991, and the highly surreal Disco Volante in 1995. Their final album was titled California, and was widely regarded an essential record by such mainstream publications as Maxim magazine and Rolling Stone magazine. Patton's other projects have included two "experimental" solo albums on John Zorn's Tzadik label (Adult Themes for Voice in 1996 and Pranzo Oltranzista in 1997). He's appeared many times on other Tzadik releases with Zorn and others. Recently, Patton has worked with Bjrk and the beat boxer Rahzel. He is often featured on new releases, and is regarded as extremely hard working. Along with Greg Werckman, Patton also runs a record label called Ipecac Recordings.

Discography

Only the albums on which Patton appears throughout are listed, albums on which he made a guest appearance on some songs aren't, neither are Faith No More and Mr. Bungle albums. Refer to those articles for complete information about those bands. Patton, Mike Patton, Mike

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
1735 in literature
1736 in literature
1737 in literature
1738 in literature
1739 in literature
1740 in literature
1741 in literature
1742 in literature
1743 in literature
1744 in literature
1745 in literature
1746 in literature
1747 in literature
1748 in literature
1749 in literature
home office
john arne riise
henrik wergeland
fraser island
swiss transport museum
bac tsr 2
mahesh ramasubramanian
adrian hunter
british coin third guinea
rhein hunsrck
photocopying
alt.sex.bondage
honeywell
negative proof
british coin quarter guinea
1750 in literature
1751 in literature
1752 in literature
1753 in literature
1754 in literature
1755 in literature
1756 in literature
1757 in literature
1758 in literature
1759 in literature
1760 in literature
1761 in literature
1762 in literature
1764 in literature