We Think We Know You Synthesia

2013 live album by Bo Burnham

what.
Bo Burnham what.jpeg
Live album by

Bo Burnham

Released December 17, 2013 (2013-12-17)
Genre Comedy
Length 1:15:56
Label One-act Central Records
Producer Bo Burnham, Christopher Storer
Bo Burnham chronology
Words, Words, Words
(2010)
what.
(2013)
Make Happy
(2016)

what. (also called Bo Burnham: what. ) is a 2013 stand-up comedy routine and album past American comedian Bo Burnham. It is his first show following his 2010 comedy special Words Words Words. Like the majority of Burnham's live piece of work, the show consists of musical comedy, prop one-act, miming, observational jokes, and the inversion of established comedy clichés. Information technology received positive reviews.

The live operation debuted at the Regency Ball Room in San Francisco on December 17, 2013,[ citation needed ] while the album is derived from a live performance of the aforementioned ready at the Barrymore Theatre in Madison, Wisconsin. In improver to the live performance, the anthology has v studio tracks: "Repeat Stuff", "Eff", "Nerds", "Channel five: The Musical", and "Hell of a Ride". Dissimilar the other tracks, "Repeat Stuff" was performed during the live testify (as a piano-only version) and was afterwards released every bit a single with a music video. what. was released on YouTube and Netflix on December 17, 2013, and the album was released via iTunes the next day.

Groundwork [edit]

Burnham rose to fame for posting songs on his YouTube page with satirical, funny, and offensive slants. He signed to Comedy Central Records and released his debut EP, Bo fo Sho, in 2008. He released his debut anthology, Bo Burnham, in 2009. He toured extensively during this time, gathering fabric for his get-go official Comedy Fundamental stand up-up hour. Words Words Words was recorded in 2010 at the House of Dejection in Boston and received acclaim. Burnham later published a New York Times Best Selling book of verse titled Egghead: Or, You Can't Survive on Ideas Alone and wrote and starred in the mockumentary series Zach Stone Is Gonna Be Famous on MTV.

Burnham spent three years writing what., which was released on YouTube and Netflix for complimentary on Dec 17, 2013,[1] with money Burnham fabricated from touring used to finance the special.[2] The YouTube video has over 23 million views equally of Oct 2021.[iii] Burnham experienced 12 panic attacks while touring for what. but had never had panic attacks prior to this. This influenced the writing of his adjacent stand up-up performance, Make Happy (2016), afterward which he quit live comedy until returning with Inside (2021).[4] [5]

Album [edit]

what. was released by One-act Primal Records equally a download on both Amazon and the iTunes Store on December 17, 2013. The album features five new studio songs: "Echo Stuff", "Eff", "Nerds", "Aqueduct 5: The Musical", and "Hell of a Ride". Unlike the other tracks, "Repeat Stuff" was performed during the live show (every bit a piano-but version) and was later released equally a unmarried with a music video which has gained over 16 1000000 YouTube views as of October 2021.[6]

Track listing [edit]

No. Title Length
one. "Intro" 9:29
2. "Deplorable" iv:23
three. "I F--k Sl--ts" three:21
4. "WDIDLN?" 1:56
five. "Left Brain, Right Brain" 6:34
six. "#deep" 4:04
7. "Beating Off in A Small-scale" 2:30
8. "Poems" 3:27
9. "From God'southward Perspective" 4:21
10. "Andy the Frog" 3:13
xi. "Out of the Abyss" 3:twoscore
12. "Repeat Stuff" 5:21
thirteen. "Nosotros Recall We Know You" 6:54
14. "Repeat Stuff" (Studio) 4:58
15. "Eff" (Studio) two:50
16. "Nerds" (Studio) 3:26
17. "Channel 5: The Musical" (Studio) 4:32
18. "Hell of a Ride" (Studio) 4:24

Reception [edit]

Reception to what. has been positive. Mark Monahan of The Telegraph writes, "If his Edinburgh debut was more than impressive than it was express mirth-out-loud funny, this lightning-fast, constantly incorrect-footing, even more aggressive follow-up is supremely both", and gave the show 5 out of 5 stars.[7] Brian Logan of The Guardian gave the show 4 out of five stars, describing information technology as a "total-frontal assault of music and meta-comedy that leaves yous gasping for air", with "non a line out of place, nor one that isn't in there for destabilising comic effect", though Logan noted that "Burnham'due south comedy has a depressive streak, and his cloth is often base".[8] Some other writer in The Guardian summarised the show past writing, "Burnham mixes the utterly base with the sophisticated, meshing hip-hop-influenced songs that reference Shakespeare, and feature plenty of dick jokes."[9] Jason Zinoman of the New York Times writes that the show has a "manic satirical fashion", which is "ambitious, and sometimes inspired" merely contains "a tension at the core of this prove that remains unresolved".[10]

Nautical chart positions [edit]

what. debuted on the Billboard One-act Albums chart at position #ii, on Jan iv, 2014,[11] peaking at #1 on January 18, 2014,[12] and remaining on the chart for 77 weeks.[xiii] It was on the Independent Albums chart for 4 weeks, peaking at position #31.[fourteen] what. had showtime week sales of ten,000 copies.[ citation needed ]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Kroeger, Jake (December 17, 2013). "BO BURNHAM'S WHAT. RELEASED TODAY ON NETFLIX AND YOUTUBE". Nerdist. Nerdist Industries. Archived from the original on 13 July 2018. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  2. ^ Soren, Emma (Dec 18, 2013). "Talking to Bo Burnham About His New Special, the Pursuit of Fame, and Hereafter Plans". Splitsider . Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  3. ^ Burnham, Bo (Dec 17, 2013). what. (Bo Burnham FULL Prove HD). YouTube . Retrieved May six, 2017.
  4. ^ Flim-flam, Jesse David (ii July 2018). "Headgum // Proficient 1: A Podcast Near Jokes: Bo Burnham'due south Can't Handle This". HeadGum . Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  5. ^ Zinman, Jason (June 3, 2016). "Bo Burnham, Discovered on the Net, Now Challenges Information technology". The New York Times . Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  6. ^ Echo Stuff , retrieved 2021-12-09
  7. ^ Monahan, Mark (August 12, 2013). "Bo Burnham: What, Pleasance, review". The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  8. ^ Logan, Brian (August 12, 2013). "Bo Burnham – Edinburgh festival 2013 review". The Guardian . Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  9. ^ Kettle, James (November 2, 2013). "This calendar week's new alive comed". The Guardian . Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  10. ^ Zinoman, Jason (December 25, 2013). "Evolving Young Satirist Stands Upward to Convention". The New York Times . Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  11. ^ "Comedy Albums". Billboard. January 4, 2014. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  12. ^ "Comedy Albums". Billboard. January 18, 2014. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  13. ^ "Bo Burnham - Chart History - Comedy Albums". Billboard . Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  14. ^ "Bo Burnham - Chart History - Independent Albums". Billboard . Retrieved May seven, 2017.

External links [edit]

  • what. on YouTube
  • what. at Netflix
  • So Burnham: what. at IMDb

woodsoneness1948.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What.

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