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Darkhorse

Darkhorse is the second studio album by American rap rock band Crazy Town. It was released through Columbia Records/Sony Music on November 12, 2002. The album had two singles, "Drowning", which was a minor hit in several countries, and "Hurt You So Bad", which did not chart. Darkhorse peaked at No. 120 on the US Billboard 200, and No. 164 in the UK, achieving considerably less success than their debut album The Gift of Game. The band was subsequently dropped by Sony/Columbia in 2003, and went on hiatus.

The band initially wanted to record the album in 2001, but were undecided on which producer to choose, wanting to work with either Rick Rubin or Don Gilmore. By the time they settled on Howard Benson, it was already into 2002. The album was recorded and mixed from April to August 2002, with additional work on b-sides and remixes lasting into September 2002.

The album's working title was Nothing Comes from Nowhere, which are lyrics from the song "Decorated." A limited-edition version of Darkhorse came with a bonus DVD which included a making-of-the-album documentary, as well as the music videos for "Drowning," "Butterfly," and "Revolving Door."

According to Mazur, Black Eyed Peas' will.i.am was a guest on one of the songs (presumably dropped from the record). Rivers Cuomo of Weezer provided a guitar solo on the song "Hurt You So Bad." Members of Orgy (who had previously collaborated on the song "Black Cloud" from The Gift of Game) also collaborated on the song "Boom Box Gang War," which was recorded during Darkhorse's production and initially reserved for a soundtrack album; it was eventually included on the "Hurt You So Bad" single in 2003. Another b-side, "Deja Vu," (released on singles for both "Drowning" and "Hurt You So Bad") features Jesse McFaddin of Rize. Producer Paul Oakenfold, with whom Binzer had collaborated earlier in 2002 on the single "Starry Eyed Surprise," did a remix of the song "Hurt You So Bad," released on the single. Rap group Dirty Unit (which had previously collaborated on the song "Think Fast" from The Gift of Game) provided vocals on the b-side "Suck on My Gun," which was used on the singles for both "Drowning" and "Hurt You So Bad." Max Sadeghi played the santoor on "Sorry," while the album's producer Howard Benson provided additional keyboards on multiple songs.

In late July 2002, the band did a ten-hour promotional photo shoot at six different locations in the desert outside Lancaster, California. The pictures were used in the booklet design for Darkhorse as well as the accompanying singles, in addition to being distributed for press coverage. In August 2002, the band provided a demo version of the song "Battlecry" for exclusive airing on Jay Gordon's D1 Music internet radio station.

On September 24–25, 2002, the band shot the music video for the lead single, "Drowning" with directors Emmett and Brendan Malloy.

The band only toured briefly (under 25 shows) in promotion of the release, starting with a few dates in Europe and the United Kingdom from mid-October to early-November 2002 (though 3 weeks were initially proposed), which Valli described as "a promo tour where we just do interviews, TV shows and a couple of short performances." This was followed by a festival date in Brazil on December 3, 2002, and a festival date in San Diego, California on December 6, 2002. The band later reflected they felt their management and record label had already given up on promoting Darkhorse by the time they returned from Europe, before it was even released. The band held a live chat with their fans on their website on the night of the release date, and later appeared on the Rockline radio show on November 25, 2002. A proper European tour was planned for December 2002 but fell through.

Crazy Town performed headlining shows in the American West Coast spanning January 6–23, 2003, supported by Hotwire. They also played one show in Australia on January 27, 2003, two shows at Magic Rock Out Festival in Japan on February 7–8, 2003, and two dates in Europe (including one at MTV's Winterjam Festival) on March 14–15, 2003.

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