Elephunk is the third studio album by the American hip hop group Black Eyed Peas, released on June 24, 2003, by A&M Records, Interscope Records, and will.i.am Music Group.[1][2] The album represented a stylistic pivot toward more accessible pop and R&B-infused hip hop, incorporating live instrumentation and collaborations that broadened the group's appeal beyond their underground roots.[3] It introduced vocalist Fergie as a permanent member, replacing former collaborator Kim Hill, and was primarily produced by will.i.am.[4]The record spawned major international hits, including "Where Is the Love?", which peaked at number eight on the US Billboard Hot 100 and topped charts in Australia, the Netherlands, and several European countries, addressing social issues like war and racism.[3] Follow-up singles "Shut Up" and "Hey Mama" further propelled its success, with the former reaching number two in the UK.[3]Elephunk debuted at number 14 on the Billboard 200 and has sold over nine million copies worldwide, achieving quadruple platinum certification in the United States by 2025 for shipments exceeding four million units.[5][6]Critically, the album received polarized reviews, lauded for its infectious hooks and party anthems but critiqued by some for diluting the group's earlier raw hip hop edge in favor of commercial pop crossover.[7][4] Despite this, its blend of upbeat tracks on partying and relationships with occasional socially conscious lyrics established Elephunk as the Black Eyed Peas' breakthrough, launching them to global stardom and paving the way for subsequent multi-platinum releases.[8]
Background and Development
Group Context Prior to Elephunk
The Black Eyed Peas originated in Los Angeles as the underground hip-hop collective Atban Klann in the early 1990s, with core members including will.i.am (initially known as Will 1X), apl.de.ap, and Taboo, alongside contributors like Mookie Mook and Dante Santiago. The group, whose name stood for "A Tribe Beyond a Nation," signed with Eazy-E's Ruthless Records around 1991 and recorded a debut album titled Grass Roots, but it went unreleased after Eazy-E's death in 1995 amid label instability.[9][10]Rebranding as Black Eyed Peas in 1995—dropping Mook from the lineup—the trio shifted focus to positive, socially conscious rap rooted in West Coast hip-hop traditions, signing with Interscope Records. Their debut album, Behind the Front, released on June 30, 1998, featured jazz-infused beats and themes of unity and anti-violence, but it garnered niche acclaim without mainstream breakthrough, selling an estimated 700,000 copies worldwide.[11]The follow-up, Bridging the Gap, arrived on September 26, 2000, incorporating guest spots from veterans like Mos Def, Cowboy from Fu-Schnickensy, and a sample from Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi," aiming to bridge hip-hop with funk and soul influences. Despite these efforts and moderate critical reception, the album replicated the prior commercial shortfall, moving roughly 700,000 units globally and failing to chart highly or produce significant radio hits.[11]These persistent underperformances—totaling under 1.5 million combined sales for the first two albums—intensified scrutiny from Interscope executives, who urged a pivot to more accessible, dance-oriented tracks to align with evolving pop-rap trends and secure radio play. Internally, will.i.am emerged as the driving force for adaptation, experimenting with solo projects like Lost Change (2001) while navigating group tensions that risked dissolution, as members grappled with sustaining relevance amid label demands and stagnant growth.[12]
Recording and Production Process
Recording sessions for Elephunk occurred intermittently from late 2001 through May 2003, beginning with foundational work at a rented house in Bodega Bay, California, where the group captured numerous initial tracks in a relaxed, isolated environment before relocating to professional studios in Los Angeles, such as Enterprise Studios in Burbank.[13][14] This phased approach, involving three distinct recording spurts yielding about eight songs per session, allowed for iterative refinement amid the group's evolving lineup and creative experimentation.[15]The album's production was led by will.i.am, who self-produced or co-produced all tracks, emphasizing hands-on control over beats, arrangements, and mixing to blend organic elements with electronic production techniques.[13]Ron Fair contributed as executive producer, providing A&R guidance and handling production duties on specific tracks, such as the bonus material in certain editions.[16] Technical choices included integrating live instrumentation—like guitars, bass, and percussion—with programmed digital beats and sampled loops from funk and jazz records, fostering dense, rhythmic layers without reliance on external high-profile collaborators for core sound design.[17] This DIY ethos, evident in the Bodega Bay house sessions and will.i.am's direct engineering involvement, reflected resource-conscious methods suited to the group's independent streak post their modestly selling prior albums.[13]
Musical Composition
Styles and Genre Elements
Elephunk blends hip-hop with pop, R&B, funk, rock, dancehall, and Latin influences, marking a deliberate departure from the group's prior underground-oriented hip-hop sound on albums like Behind the Front (1998) and Bridging the Gap (2000), which achieved limited commercial traction.[2][8] This hybridization, driven by will.i.am's production across all tracks, incorporates organic elements such as live drums, percussion, basslines, and guitars—ranging from flamenco-style to rock riffs—to augment synthesized beats and create accessible, groove-oriented structures.[8][18] The shift prioritized radio-friendly bounce and rhythmic repetition, as seen in funk-infused romps like "Smells Like Funk," reflecting a strategic pivot toward broader pop viability after earlier efforts failed to break mainstream barriers.[8][19]Specific tracks highlight the genre interplay, with "Anxiety" (featuring Papa Roach) delivering guitar-heavy rock dynamics over hip-hop foundations, while elements of early electro-funk and lo-fi rock appear elsewhere to evoke vintage dancefloor energy.[19][4] This eclectic production philosophy, emphasizing riffs, vocals, and beats in collaborative layers, enabled the album's crossover success by balancing hip-hop authenticity with pop polish.[4][20]
Lyrics and Thematic Content
The lyrics on Elephunk blend social commentary with personal introspection and celebratory escapism, reflecting the group's diverse backgrounds including will.i.am's urban Los Angeles roots, Taboo's Native American heritage, and apl.de.ap's Filipino immigrant experience. Conscious rap elements appear in tracks addressing unity and societal fractures, such as "Where Is the Love?", which critiques post-September 11, 2001 racism against Muslims, media-driven sensationalism of violence, and leadershiphypocrisy in promoting division over reconciliation, urging listeners toward empathy and collective responsibility without endorsing specific political ideologies.[21][22] The song draws from the band's observations of heightened xenophobia and cultural clashes during their 2001-2002 tours immediately following the attacks, emphasizing causal links between fear-mongering and eroded social cohesion.In contrast, party anthems like "Hey Mama" prioritize hedonistic release through directives to dance and embrace physicality—"Get on the floor and move your booty, mama"—positioning rhythm as a counter to daily stresses, with verses celebrating maternal figures alongside uninhibited fun rooted in hip-hop's party traditions.[23] This escapist vein balances the album's more reflective content, comprising roughly the minority of tracks focused on relational dynamics and lighthearted indulgence over systemic critique. Fergie's debut contributions introduce emotional layers to interpersonal themes, as in "Shut Up," where her verses dissect volatile romances—"Why does emotion gotta move so fast? Love is progress if you could make it last"—highlighting loss of control in partnerships amid attempts at harmony.[24]Personal narratives ground potentially platitudinous calls for unity in verifiable experiences, notably apl.de.ap's "The APL Song," an autobiographical reflection on poverty and familial bonds in the Philippines—"I remember days struggle, even through the pain"—before immigrating to the U.S., evoking diaspora challenges like cultural dislocation and economic hardship without romanticizing them.[25] Such verses derive authenticity from apl.de.ap's real-life relocation at age 11 from Sapang Bato, Angeles City, where he faced slum conditions, lending causal weight to themes of resilience over abstract moralizing.[26] Critics have noted superficiality in some empowerment refrains, yet the lyrics' emphasis on lived causality—linking personal trials to broader unity pleas—distinguishes them from detached preaching, as evidenced by the group's pre-fame hip-hopethos prioritizing narrative truth.[8]
Title, Artwork, and Conceptual Elements
Origin of the Title
The title Elephunk originated as a portmanteau of "elephant" and "funk," devised to encapsulate the album's signature heavy, groovy aesthetic that disrupted conventional hip-hop expectations with bold, memorable flair.[27] Group leader and producer will.i.am explained the choice by likening the elephant to the record's sonic profile: "An elephant ain’t the fastest, swiftest animal, but it walks smoothly. It’s fat. It’s heavy. Thump, thump... That’s the sound of the album. We have a lot of trombones, fat basslines, fat grooves, and nice, thick horn layers and arrangements. Just fat funk."[27] This imagery emphasized the deliberate, weighty rhythms over speed, aligning with the band's intent to fuse funk-infused elements into their evolving hip-hop framework during brainstorming sessions that rejected plainer alternatives in favor of phonetic play for market distinction.[28]Interscope Records executives initially opposed the title, along with tracks like "Where Is the Love?" and "Shut Up," viewing it as too quirky for commercial viability, yet the group persisted, prioritizing artistic eccentricity over safer naming conventions to signal their pivot toward accessible yet innovative pop-rap fusion.[28] The pun's ties to elephant motifs, while evoking broader cultural symbols of strength and memory in contexts relevant to members' diverse heritages, served primarily as a vehicle for sonic description rather than deep symbolism.[27] This decision underscored will.i.am's hands-on role in conceptualizing the project under his will.i.am Music Group imprint, where playful disruption of genre norms took precedence.[13]
Visual and Packaging Design
The front cover artwork for Elephunk presents the four Black Eyed Peas members—will.i.am, apl.de.ap, Taboo, and Fergie—in a collective pose emphasizing unity, dressed in vibrant, multicolored attire against a simple backdrop to convey energetic cohesion. Art direction was handled by BLK/MRKT, with the design incorporating bold, high-saturation colors such as reds, yellows, and blues to maximize visual prominence in retail environments.[29][15] Photography credits include contributions aligned with the album's 2003 production timeline, prioritizing shelf appeal through straightforward, attention-grabbing aesthetics over intricate symbolism.[30]Packaging for the original CD release utilized a standard jewel case format, accompanied by a booklet featuring track-specific illustrations that reinforce the album's themes of partying and social commentary through playful, graffiti-inspired graphics and lyric layouts.[31] Inner elements, including back cover artwork with band members positioned in corners around a central elephant head motif on a light blue background, extend the visual motif without deeper interpretive layers. Vinyl editions incorporate printed inner sleeves detailing lyrics and credits, enhancing tactile engagement while maintaining the core design consistency.[32]International variations include alternate covers and packaging for markets like the UKspecial edition and European releases, often with region-specific cataloging but retaining the primary bold color scheme and group imagery for brand uniformity.[31] These choices reflect pragmatic design for broad consumer accessibility, leveraging empirical principles of color contrast and compositional simplicity to boost recognizability and purchase impulse in physical retail settings, as evidenced by the album's commercial trajectory post-release.[29]
Release and Commercial Rollout
Initial Release Details
Elephunk was released on June 24, 2003, in the United States by A&M Records, Interscope Records, and will.i.am Music Group.[2][33] The initial commercial rollout focused on physical formats, primarily compact disc, reflecting standard industry practices for major label hip-hop and pop albums at the time.[31] Vinyl editions were also produced, though CD dominated early distribution channels.[34]International releases followed closely, with European versions issued under similar labeling in 2003, often prioritizing dance-oriented tracks in sequencing or bonus content to align with regional preferences for upbeat, club-friendly material.[35]Digitaldownload options emerged later, post-initial physical launch, as streaming infrastructure expanded beyond nascent platforms like early iTunes.[2]
Promotional Campaigns and Tours
The primary promotional effort for Elephunk involved the Elephunk Tour, a global concert series that began in late 2003 and continued through 2004, encompassing 59 performances in 2003 and 92 in 2004 across North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia.[36] This extensive touring schedule served as the album's main live endorsement, featuring high-energy sets that highlighted tracks from the record alongside earlier material to engage expanding audiences.[37]Television and award show appearances bolstered the campaign, including performances at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards on August 28, where the group debuted material from Elephunk, and the MTV Europe Music Awards on November 6 in Edinburgh, Scotland.[38][39] Additional broadcast exposure came via a live set on ABC's Good Morning America on August 13, 2004, which included selections from the album to sustain momentum post-release.[40]Marketing tie-ins integrated Elephunk into commercial contexts, such as licensing a track for Apple's iPod advertising campaign in late 2003, which amplified visibility through tech-savvy consumer channels.[41] Another key partnership involved adapting content for the 2004 NBA playoffs broadcast theme, aligning the group's sound with sports media reach to broaden demographic appeal.[26] These strategies emphasized symbiotic placements over traditional advertising, leveraging existing media platforms for organic buzz generation.
Singles and Associated Media
Key Singles and Chart Performance
The lead single from Elephunk, "Where Is the Love?", was released in May 2003 and peaked at number 8 on the US Billboard Hot 100.[42] It reached number 1 on the UK Singles Chart for six weeks starting August 30, 2003, and topped charts in Australia, Ireland, and several European countries.[43][44] The track, co-written in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, sold over 8.5 million equivalent album units globally by later estimates.[45]"Shut Up", released on November 17, 2003, followed as the second single and peaked at number 2 on the UK Singles Chart, with 14 weeks in the top 75.[46] It achieved number 1 positions in Australia, Austria, and eight other territories.[44]
"Hey Mama", the third single released in April 2004, reached number 23 on the USBillboard Hot 100 and number 6 on the UK Singles Chart, with top-5 placements in Australia, Austria, and Switzerland.[47][48] "Let's Get It Started", a remixed version of the album track "Let's Get Retarded" issued in June 2004, peaked at number 21 on the USBillboard Hot 100 and number 11 on the UK Singles Chart, including a number 2 in Australia.[49][50]In the early digital download era, these singles benefited from emerging online sales tracking, which extended their chart runs as platforms began incorporating download metrics into official compilations by 2005, sustaining positions beyond initial physical sales peaks.[51]
Music Videos and Title Changes
The music video for "Where Is the Love?", the lead single from Elephunk, was directed by will.i.am and released in 2003.[52] It employs a montage format, interspersing performance shots of the group in an urban warehouse setting with archival footage highlighting social issues such as war, terrorism, racism, and police brutality, aiming to provoke reflection on global unrest following events like the Iraq War and 9/11.[53] This visual approach extended the song's lyrical critique of societal divisions into a broader commentary on contemporary ills, though some observers noted its reliance on pre-existing clips limited originality.[52]The video for "Shut Up", directed by Brendan and Emmett Malloy (collectively known as The Malloys), premiered in 2003 and adopts a theatrical, stage-play style.[54] It depicts the Black Eyed Peas performing amid exaggerated comedic scenarios involving dysfunctional relationships and arguments, with guest appearances by figures like Travis Barker, emphasizing the track's themes of interpersonal conflict through stylized, ensemble-driven vignettes rather than narrative depth.[55] This format served as a lighthearted visual counterpoint to the album's more serious elements, prioritizing entertainment value in its choreography and humor.[56]For "Let's Get It Started", the re-edited single version, Francis Lawrence directed the 2004 video, which portrays a nighttime street party in Los Angeles featuring the group energizing a crowd with high-energy performances and urbandance sequences.[57] The visuals underscore the song's party anthem vibe, capturing spontaneous crowd interaction and pyrotechnics to amplify its crossover appeal for promotional contexts like NBA events.[58]A notable alteration involved the track originally titled "Let's Get Retarded" on Elephunk, which was re-recorded and retitled "Let's Get It Started" for its single release in 2004 to secure radio airplay.[59] The change stemmed from objections by disability advocacy groups, including The Arc, who deemed the word "retarded" pejorative toward individuals with intellectual disabilities, pressuring broadcasters and leading to de facto restrictions on the original version's rotation.[60] Evidence from 2004 programming logs and industry reports indicates limited U.S. radio play for the uncensored track prior to the edit, with stations avoiding it amid sensitivity campaigns, though the term derived from West Coast slang meaning to act wildly or energetically rather than literal impairment.[61] This edit, while enabling commercial success—including NBA playoff promotion—sparked minor debate over artistic censorship versus social accountability, with critics arguing it sanitized regional vernacular without addressing root linguistic contexts.[62]
Critical Evaluation
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release in June 2003, Elephunk received generally positive reviews from music critics, who highlighted the album's energetic production and infectious hooks as key strengths, though some noted a shift toward pop accessibility at the expense of the group's earlier hip-hop roots.[7][8] In PopMatters, Terry Sawyer described it as delivering "non-stop hook and hump, an album with almost no missteps and more than its share of undeniable, thumping joy," praising the Black Eyed Peas' flow for its "electrifying tactility" and the record's ability to uplift through funky, diverse beats incorporating hip-hop, funk, and global influences.[7] Similarly, RapReviews called it a "bouncy romp" tailored for pop appeal yet embedding "important questions about society most pop music wouldn't dare to ask," awarding it an 8 out of 10 for its lively execution and relevance beyond summer listening.[8]Critics in hip-hop-focused outlets appreciated the album's party-ready vibe and eclectic sampling but occasionally faulted its lighter lyrical depth and repetitive party anthems for diluting the edge of prior releases like Bridging the Gap.[4]HipHopDX commended the return to early-1990s hip-hop elements with "so many ideas" across tracks, making it broadly appealing, though tracks like "Latin Girls" were seen as lyrically simplistic.[4]PopMatters acknowledged minor flaws in closing tracks such as "Anxiety," critiqued for mismatched collaboration, and "Where Is the Love?," faulted for lacking rhythmic drive despite its social commentary.[7] This divided response echoed pre-release skepticism from Interscope executives, who reportedly viewed the group's pivot to more commercial sounds as risky, a concern that presaged the album's polarizing reception among purist hip-hop listeners wary of its pop-rap hybridization.[63]In broader outlets, Rolling Stone framed Elephunk as the Black Eyed Peas' calculated "bid to crack the big time," recognizing their alterna-rap origins but implying the glossy production and hooks marked a departure from underground authenticity toward mainstream viability.[63] Overall, contemporary assessments valued the album's high-energy cohesion and avoidance of filler in its core tracks, positioning it as a fun, genre-blending effort suitable for diverse audiences, even if it sacrificed some raw hip-hop grit.[8][4]
Criticisms of Artistic Direction
Critics have characterized Elephunk as a pivotal shift from the Black Eyed Peas' earlier conscious, alternative hip-hop sound—evident in albums like Behind the Front (1998) and Bridging the Gap (2000)—toward a formulaic blend of pop, R&B, and superficial rap elements, prioritizing repetitive hooks and party anthems for commercial viability over artistic substance.[64][65] This transformation was attributed to the pressures of hip-hop's increasing commercialization, where the group's previous releases sold fewer than 500,000 combined units, prompting a pivot to broader, radio-friendly production that some viewed as cynical homogenization.[66][67]The incorporation of Stacy Ferguson (Fergie) as a permanent member, following Kim Hill's departure after Bridging the Gap, drew specific ire for appearing as market-driven pandering, introducing polished R&B vocals to appeal to wider demographics and facilitate a "soft reset" of the group's identity toward pop accessibility.[64][65] Detractors argued this move diluted the original trio's underground ethos, replacing Hill's contributions with Fergie's style, which was critiqued in tracks like "Let's Get Retarded" (later re-edited as "Let's Get It Started") for employing earnest but mismatched crooning over insensitive or trivial themes.[64][67]Lyrical critiques focused on the album's non-romantic tracks, highlighting shallowness and lack of depth, such as in "Where Is the Love?", where simplistic political messaging equated gang members with the Ku Klux Klan and warned of "reverse racism," revealing a superficial engagement with social issues amid an overall emphasis on lowbrow, genre-cycling party fare.[64] This approach was seen as birthing a "homogenized pop music with superficial resemblance to rap," countering narratives of artistic evolution by evidencing a causal prioritization of sales metrics—Elephunk eventually certified multi-platinum—over the substantive lyricism of prior works.[64][67]Hip-hop purists leveled "sell-out" accusations, framing the album as an abandonment of backpack-rapper credibility for corporate appeal, though defenders countered that such adaptation was pragmatic given the niche limitations of their initial underground phase.[65][67] This tension underscored debates over whether the directional change represented genuine innovation or a concession to industry formulas, with empirical sales data post-release often invoked to validate the latter's efficacy despite artistic trade-offs.[66]
Commercial Success
Sales and Certifications
Elephunk achieved commercial success following its initial release, with worldwide sales exceeding 8 million copies by the mid-2000s, driven primarily by strong performance in Europe and Asia rather than an immediate U.S. breakthrough.[68] In the United States, the album had a slow start but ultimately shipped over 3 million units, bolstered by hits like "Where Is the Love?"; it was certified quadruple platinum by the RIAA in 2025, denoting 4 million units shipped.[69] Globally, estimates place pure sales at around 7.75 million across 46 countries, with the United Kingdom accounting for 1.5 million copies and the U.S. at 3.2 million in reported figures.[70]Certifications reflected regional demand variances, with upgrades occurring as shipments accumulated. In Australia, it earned 4× platinum status for 280,000 units, while Brazil awarded diamond certification for 500,000 shipments. The album reached platinum in the U.S. by 2004 based on earlier shipment thresholds, with subsequent multi-platinum escalations tied to post-release momentum.
Elephunk achieved its highest position on the USBillboard 200 at number 14, a ranking bolstered by the prolonged chart run of lead single "Where Is the Love?", which peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and maintained radio airplay momentum into 2004.[71] The album's trajectory reflected a gradual climb from an initial modest entry, with single-driven endurance evident in its presence on year-end summaries, as subsequent releases like "Shut Up" provided limited US lift but sustained overall visibility.[72]In the United Kingdom, Elephunk peaked at number 3 on the Official UK Albums Chart, entering strongly amid the debut of "Where Is the Love?" at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart, and logging a total of 76 weeks on the albums tally through consistent radio and download support.[48][43]The album's international performance showed varied peaks, often propelled by regional single successes, such as "Shut Up" reaching number 2 in the UK and topping charts in Australia and several European markets.[46][73]
The release of Elephunk in 2003 marked a pivotal shift for the Black Eyed Peas, propelling them from niche hip-hop status to mainstream pop-rap icons and influencing the genre's commercialization in the mid-2000s. Hits like "Where Is the Love?" and "Let's Get It Started" dominated radio airplay, with the former topping charts in multiple countries and embodying a socially conscious rap-pop hybrid that resonated amid post-9/11 anxieties about division and media sensationalism.[22][75] The track's critique of government policies, racism, and terrorism without partisan alignment positioned it as a rare apolitical cultural touchstone, inspiring covers and remixes that extended its relevance into later social unrest.[76]This fusion style on Elephunk—blending hip-hop rhythms with pop hooks, R&B, and global elements—helped mainstream pop-rap as a viable commercial format, paving the way for acts emphasizing melodic accessibility over lyricism.[2] The album's success, selling over 11 million copies worldwide by 2004, enabled the group's subsequent dominance with albums like Monkey Business (2005), which built directly on Elephunk's template of upbeat, collaborative anthems.[77]However, Elephunk faced retrospective criticism from hip-hop traditionalists for diluting urban music's edge, prioritizing catchy production over substantive content and contributing to a homogenized pop landscape that superficially mimicked rap aesthetics.[64] This shift alienated underground purists who viewed the Black Eyed Peas' pivot as abandoning "backpack-rapper" authenticity for broad appeal, a trade-off that arguably accelerated hip-hop's pop crossover but at the cost of genre depth.[78]
Reissues, Remasters, and Recent Recognition
In December 2023, an expanded digital edition of Elephunk was released, featuring 23 tracks including bonus material such as "Hands Up" and remixed versions like "Let's Get It Started (Spike Mix)."[33] This edition marked the album's 20th anniversary and made previously limited content more accessible on streaming platforms.[80]In February 2025, as part of the Black Eyed Peas' 30th anniversary celebrations, Elephunk received a limited-edition reissue on sea blue 2LP vinyl, pressed on 180-gram vinyl with gatefold packaging.[81][82] The same year, on April 24, the album was remastered in HD and uploaded to YouTube, with the band describing it as "remastered and recharged" after 22 years.[83][27]Retrospectives around the 20th anniversary in 2023 highlighted mixed assessments of the album's enduring relevance. A Reddit discussion praised the energetic production and samples on tracks like "Hands Up," crediting them for injecting vitality into the group's sound, though some participants noted its pop-leaning R&B elements felt dated compared to earlier hip-hop efforts.[26] Later user reviews in 2025 echoed this, commending the catchy beats and entertainment value while acknowledging imperfections in lyrical depth.[84][85]
Production Credits
Core Personnel
The core personnel for Elephunk comprised the Black Eyed Peas' lineup of will.i.am, apl.de.ap, Taboo, and Fergie, who provided the primary vocals, raps, and creative direction for the album.[86]will.i.am, the group's founder and leader, handled lead vocals, raps, executive production, and key instrumentation including keyboards, programming, and arrangements, shaping the album's hip-hop foundation with electro and funk elements.[86]apl.de.ap and Taboo contributed rap verses, background vocals, and percussion elements, drawing from their established roles as founding members focused on lyrical delivery and rhythmic support.[86]Fergie, joining the group in 2002, supplied the lead and harmonized vocals that introduced a pop-R&B dimension, marking her debut with the band on this project.[86][87]
Ron Fair contributed as executive producer and handled production on select tracks, including additional vocals production for "Shut Up" and string arrangements for "Anxiety".[88] He also performed piano duties and conducted strings, enhancing the album's orchestral elements.[89]Engineering was led by Dylan Dresdow, who engineered vocals and other elements across multiple tracks, with assistance from Christine Sirois and additional support from Tal Herzberg on Pro Tools and synthesizers.[88] Mixing credits included Chris Lord-Alge for "Bebot" and mastering by Brian Gardner, ensuring polished final mixes.[90] Frank Wolf recorded strings for "Anxiety", while Jun Ishizeki and Jason Villaroman handled engineering for specific tracks like "Audio Delite at Low Fidelity" and "Bend Your Back".[88]Additional musicians enriched the instrumentation: Ray Brady provided guitar on "Shut Up" and "Fly Away"; Mike Fratantuno played guitarron, bass, and acoustic guitar on "Latin Girls" and "Anxiety"; Printz Board contributed trumpet, clavinet, and Moog synthesizer to those tracks; Tim "Izo" Orindgreff added saxophone and flute to "Latin Girls"; Chuck Prada supplied percussion on "Latin Girls" and the hidden track; and Sergio Mendes played piano on "Sexy".[88] Guest vocalists included Tippa Irie on "Hey Mama", Noelle Scaggs and Terry Dexter on backing vocals for select songs, and Jacoby Shaddix of Papa Roach on "Anxiety".[91]Sample clearances were managed by Music Resources, Inc., facilitating the use of elements like the vocal sample from Kurtis Blow's "Tough" in "Shut Up".[92] Other samples, such as in "The Elephunk Theme" from S. Janaki and Malaysia Vasudevan's "Unakkum Enakkum", were integrated without noted clearance disputes.[93]