Background and recording
The album was written and recorded following the death of Ty Segall's father, Brian Segall. Following the album's release, Segall noted, "It was just therapeutic, really. It just was necessary for me to put that out there, recording a song or writing it down on a piece of paper to get it out of my head and body, so I could move on to other things." At this time, Segall became estranged from his mother, writing the track "Crazy" directly about her. Segall stated, "I hope she hears it, 'cause she needs to wake up and change what she does with her life. I'm a bit bitter about that relationship. I don't want to go into details, 'cause that's not classy. That's another reason I was like, "Should I put this out?" I'm directly calling out my mother and saying "Crazy" is about her. You only have one mother, technically, so that's pretty intense, but that's the thing. If she hears it and decides that she wants to change what she's doing with her life and wants to rethink what's going on, then there you go, that's great." Regarding ''Sleeper'' recording process, Segall noted, "It was like I didn't really know what I was doing. I thought at first it was all demos and then they eventually became songs. It was a lot of, "I don't know where this is going man," and then a lot of, "I don't know if people are going to dig this," and, "What is this?" and then, "Oh shit, I guess this is it." ..I didn't set out to do an acoustic thing." Segall elaborated, "I'd record with the eight-track in my house, and then I'd go over to a friend's house and record. My friend Eric Bauer was in San Francisco, and I'd go to his house three to four times a week. It was all very available to me. It felt good, to be able to work hard and really stretch out the whole production."Writing and composition
Regarding ''Sleeper'' overall acoustic aesthetic, Segall noted, "There wasn't any intention behind it, which is the weird thing. It's not like I set out to do an acoustic or mellow thing. It kind of just fit what was happening. It wasn't like a decision, it was kind of more of a response." According to Segall, the track, "She Don't Care", "is one of the more intense songs. It's about someone, but it's more about being brutal. I don't care if the specific person hears it and feels bad about it. It's more about me getting it out of my system. Not to sound spiteful, though."Alternative album titles
The album is given four alternative titles in album's liner notes: ''An Ode to the Man Man'', ''The Sleeper'', ''A Farewell to C.C. Crazy'' and ''Mr. Mercedes''.''Sleeper'' liner notesThe Sleeper Band
Although the album is performed almost entirely by Ty Segall, a specific backing band was formed for its live performances, entitled "The Sleeper Band". The band consisted of Nodzzz and White Fence guitarist Sean Paul, The Traditional Fools' bassist Andrew Luttrell, and regular band member and Fuzz guitarist Charles Moothart on drums. Regarding this touring configuration, Segall noted, "We're doing The Sleeper Band, which is the mellow version. It's not the Ty Segall Band, but The Sleeper Band. ..I don't think it'll be hard for us to do it, because I have a different band for this tour. egular band membersCritical reception
Writing forTrack listing
Personnel
Musicians
*Recording personnel
*Ty Segall - recording *John Golden - masteringArtwork
*Denee Petracek - artwork and portrait photographCharts
References
{{Authority control 2013 albums Ty Segall albums Drag City (record label) albums