Beck album

Album   Released Publisher Rating
Sea Change (Bonus Track) 2009 Mobile Fidelity
One Foot in the Grave (Expanded Edition) 2009 Geffen/K/Iliad
Odelay (Circuit City Exclusive) 2008 Universal
Mutations (Digital Version) 2008 Geffen
Odelay (Deluxe Edition) 2008 Geffen
The Information (Deluxe Edition) 2007 Interscope
The Information (Alternate Cover) 2006 Interscope
Guero (Japan Bonus Tracks) 2006 Universal
Guerolito (Bonus Tracks) 2005 Universal International
Guero (UK Bonus Tracks & DVD) 2005 Universal International
Guero (Deluxe Version) 2005 Interscope
Guero (German Bonus Track) 2005 Interscope
Sea Change (Japan Bonus Track) 2003 Geffen
Sea Change (DVD Audio/Video) 2003 DGC
Odelay (Bonus Track) 1999 Universal
Mutations (Japan Tracks) 1998 Universal
Mutations (German Bonus Tracks) 1998 Geffen
Mellow Gold (Clean) 1994 Geffen
Back to the topSea Change (Bonus Track)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
June 30, 2009
Label:
Mobile Fidelity
Rating:
Styles:
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
Beck has always been known for his ever-changing moods -- particularly since they often arrived one after another on one album, sometimes within one song -- yet the shift between the neon glitz of Midnite Vultures and the lush, somber Sea Change is startling, and not just because it finds him in full-on singer/songwriter mode, abandoning all of the postmodern pranksterism of its predecessor. What's startling about Sea Change is how it brings everything that's run beneath the surface of Beck's music to the forefront, as if he's unafraid to not just reveal emotions, but to elliptically examine them in this wonderfully melancholy song cycle. If, on most albums prior to this, Beck's music was a sonic kaleidoscope -- each song shifting familiar and forgotten sounds into colorful, unpredictable combinations -- this discards genre-hopping in favor of focus, and the concentration pays off gloriously, resulting in not just his best album, but one of the greatest late-night, brokenhearted albums in pop. This, as many reviews and promotional interviews have noted, is indeed a breakup album, but it's not a bitter listen; it has a wearily beautiful sound, a comforting, consoling sadness. His words are often evocative, but not nearly as evocative as the music itself, which is rooted equally in country-rock ( alt-country), early-'70s singer/songwriterism, and baroque British psychedelia. With producer Nigel Godrich, Beck has created a warm, enveloping sound, with his acoustic guitar supported by grand string arrangements straight out of Paul Buckmaster, eerie harmonies, and gentle keyboards among other subtler touches that give this record a richness that unveils more with each listen. Surely, some may bemoan the absence of the careening, free-form experimentalism of Odelay, but Beck's gifts as a songwriter, singer, and musician have never been as brilliant as they are here. As Sea Change is playing, it feels as if Beck singing to you alone, revealing painful, intimate secrets that mirror your own. It's a genuine masterpiece in an era with too damn few of them. [This album was reissued with the bonus track "Ship in the Bottle."]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 The Golden Age 4:46 Beck [1]
2 Paper Tiger 4:42 Beck [1]
3 Guess I'm Doing Fine 4:58 Beck [1]
4 Lonesome Tears 5:40 Beck [1]
5 Lost Cause 3:51 Beck [1] Ringtone
6 End of the Day 5:08 Beck [1]
7 It's All in Your Mind 3:10 Beck [1]
8 Round the Bend 5:24 Beck [1]
9 Already Dead 3:19 Beck [1]
10 Sunday Sun 4:47 Beck [1]
11 Little One 4:30 Beck [1]
12 Side of the Road 3:31 Beck [1]
13 Ship in the Bottle (*) 3:23 Beck [1]
Price: $29.98     496 Reviews
24K Gold CD, Numbered Limited Edition Mini-LP-Style Packaging. The rare bonus track, 'Ship in a Bottle' (previously only made available on the Japanese pressing) is also included. ...
Back to the topOne Foot in the Grave (Expanded Edition)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
April 14, 2009
Label:
Geffen/K/Iliad
Rating:
Styles:
Lo-Fi
Indie Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
Recorded prior to Mellow Gold but released several months after that album turned Beck into an overnight sensation, One Foot in the Grave bolsters his neo-folkie credibility the way the nearly simultaneously released Stereopathetic Soul Manure accentuated his underground noise prankster credentials. One Foot is neatly perched between authentic folk-blues -- it opens with "He's a Mighty Good Leader," a traditional number sometimes credited to Skip James, and he rewrites Rev. Gary Davis' "You Gotta Move" as "Fourteen Rivers Fourteen Floods" -- and the shambolic, indie anti-folk coming out of the Northwest in the early '90s, a connection underscored by the record's initial release on Calvin Johnson's Olympia WA-based K Records, and its production by Johnson, who also sings on a couple of cuts. Parts of One Foot in the Grave may be reminiscent of other K acts, particularly the ragged parts, but it's also distinctively Beck in how it blurs lines between the past and present, the traditional and the modern, the sincere and the sarcastic. Certainly, of his three 1994 albums, One Foot errs in favor of the sincere, partially due to those folk-blues covers, but also in its overall hushed feel, its muted acoustic guitars and murmured vocals suggesting an intimacy that the words don't always convey. Much of the album is about mood as much as song, a situation not uncommon to Beck, which is hardly a problem because the ramshackle sound is charming and the songwriting is often excellent, channeling Beck's skewed sensibilities into a traditional setting, particularly on the excellent "Asshole," which is hardly as smirking as its title. It's that delicate, almost accidental, balance of exposed nerves and cutting with that sets One Foot in the Grave apart from Beck's other albums; he'd revisit this sound and sensibility, but never again was he so beguilingly ragged. [The 2009 expanded reissue of One Foot in the Grave doubles the size of the album with the addition of 16 bonus tracks, all but three -- -- the K 7"s "It's All in Your Mind," "Whiskey Can Can," and "Feather in Your Cap" -- previously unreleased. All this material falls within the boundaries of One Foot in the Grave, but it tends to move toward extremes, frequently accentuating Beck's Bob Dylan influence, at times piling on much louder guitars than anything on the album proper. "Close to God" even finds Beck playing around with electronically tweaked vocals, something common on Stereopathetic Soul Manure and Mellow Gold but unheard on One Foot, but that's an exception to the rule: most of this is simply an acoustic guitar and a voice, all the percussion coming from stomping the floorboard. So, it's essentially more of the same, but that's no bad thing because it maintains the same endearingly ramshackle charms of the main album, turning this expanded edition into a double album of small gems, frayed edges, and winning throwaways.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 He's a Mighty Good Leader 2:41 Beck [1]
2 Sleeping Bag 2:15 Beck [1]
3 I Get Lonesome 2:49 Beck [1]
4 Burnt Orange Peel 1:38 Beck [1]
5 Cyanide Breath Mint 1:37 Beck [1]
6 See Water 2:22 Beck [1]
7 Ziplock Bag 1:44 Beck [1]
8 Hollow Log 1:54 Beck [1]
9 Forcefield 3:30 Jayne, Beck [1]
10 Fourteen Rivers Fourteen Floods 2:54 Beck [1]
11 Asshole 2:32 Beck [1]
12 I've Seen the Land Beyond 1:41 Beck [1]
13 Outcome 2:10 Beck [1]
14 Girl Dreams 2:04 Beck [1]
15 Painted Eyelids 3:06 Beck [1]
16 Atmospheric Conditions 2:10 Johnson, Beck [1]
17 It's All in Your Mind (#) 2:54 Beck [1]
18 Whiskey Can Can (#) 2:12 Johnson, Beck [1]
19 Mattress (#) 2:31 Beck [1]
20 Woe on Me (#) 3:10 Beck [1]
21 Teenage Wastebasket (#) 2:28 Beck [1]
22 Your Love Is Weird (#) 2:27 Beck [1]
23 Favorite Nerve (#) 2:05 Beck [1]
24 Piss on the Door (#) 2:05 Beck [1]
25 Close to God (#) 2:28 Johnson, Beck [1]
26 Sweet Satan (#) 1:45 Beck [1]
27 Burning Boyfriend (#) 1:12 Beck [1]
28 Black Lake Morning (#) 2:25 Jayne, Beck [1], Bertram
29 Feather in Your Cap (#) 1:13 Beck [1]
30 One Foot in the Grave (#) 3:18 Beck [1]
31 Teenage Wastebasket (#) 1:27 Beck [1]
32 I Get Lonesome (#) 1:56 Beck [1]
Price: $17.99     6 Reviews
Expanded edition of the Pop/Rock uber-genius' 1994 album including 16 bonus tracks (13 of them previously unreleased). This 15th Anniversary edition comes housed in an expanded and...
Back to the topOdelay (Circuit City Exclusive)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
July 01, 2008
Label:
Universal
Rating:
Styles:
Lo-Fi
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
Club/Dance
Alternative/Indie-Rock
Beck's debut, Mellow Gold, was a glorious sampler of different musical styles, careening from lo-fi hip-hop to folk, moving back through garage rock and arty noise. It was an impressive album, but the parts didn't necessarily stick together. The two albums that followed within months of Mellow Gold -- Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave -- were specialist releases that disproved the idea that Beck was simply a one-hit wonder. But Odelay, the much-delayed proper follow-up to Mellow Gold, proves the depth and scope of his talents. Odelay fuses the disparate strands of Beck's music -- folk, country, hip-hop, rock & roll, blues, jazz, easy listening, rap, pop -- into one dense sonic collage. Songs frequently morph from one genre to another, seemingly unrelated genre -- bursts of noise give way to country songs with hip-hop beats, easy listening melodies transform into a weird fusion of pop, jazz, and cinematic strings; it's genre-defying music that refuses to see boundaries. All of the songs on Odelay are rooted in simple forms -- whether it's blues ("Devil's Haircut"), country ("Lord Only Knows," "Sissyneck"), soul ("Hotwax"), folk ("Ramshackle"), or rap ("High 5 [Rock the Catskills]," "Where It's At") -- but they twist the conventions of the genre. "Where It's At" is peppered with soul, jazz, funk, and rap references, while "Novacane" slams from indie rock to funk and back to white noise. With the aid of the Dust Brothers, Beck has created a dense, endlessly intriguing album overflowing with ideas. Furthermore, it's an album that completely ignores the static, nihilistic trends of the American alternative/independent underground, creating a fluid, creative, and startlingly original work. [The 2008 Circuit City Exclusive edition included an iron-on album art transfer.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Devils Haircut 3:13 N/A Ringtone
2 Hotwax 3:52 N/A
3 Lord Only Knows 4:14 N/A
4 The New Pollution 3:39 N/A Ringtone
5 Derelict 4:11 N/A
6 Novacane 4:38 N/A
7 Jack-Ass 4:00 N/A
8 Where It's At 5:25 N/A Ringtone
9 Minus 2:32 N/A
10 Sissyneck 4:02 N/A
11 Readymade 2:43 N/A
12 High 5 (Rock the Catskills) 4:10 N/A
13 Ramshackle 4:49 N/A
Back to the topMutations (Digital Version)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
June 03, 2008
Label:
Geffen
Rating:
Styles:
Lo-Fi
Indie Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
According to party line, Beck never intended Mutations to be considered as the official follow-up to Odelay, his Grammy-winning breakthrough. It was more like One Foot in the Grave, designed to be an off-kilter, subdued collection of acoustic-based songs pitched halfway between psychedelic country blues and lo-fi folk. Once Beck became an international celebrity -- shortly after Geffen's hitmaking machine began to dry up -- it was impossible for him to release an independent record, so Geffen snapped up his Bong Load contract, releasing Mutations in the fall of 1998 while stressing that it was the official follow-up to Odelay. The presence of producer Nigel Godrich, the man who helmed Radiohead's acclaimed OK Computer, makes such claims dubious. Godrich is not a slick producer, but he's no Calvin Johnson, either, and Mutations has an appropriately clean, trippy feel. There's little question that the blues, country, psych, bossa nova, and folk that comprise Mutations was never meant to be a commercial endeavor -- there's no floor-shaker like "Where It's At," nor does it trade in the junk culture that brought Odelay to life. It's a small, spacy, low-key album that is a world away from the dense kaleidoscope of sound that has distinguished his previous Geffen work, yet it unmistakably bears his signature stamp. Mutations has shambling folk as its foundation, as most of his albums do, but it's more elastic, trippy, and self-contained. Recording with his touring band -- marking the first time he has entered the studio with a live band -- does result in a different sound, but it's not so much a departure as it is a side-road that is going in the same direction. None of the songs explore new territory -- Beck test-drove the bossa nova of "Tropicalia" on "Deadweight," his unjustly overlooked contribution to the Life Less Ordinary soundtrack -- but they're rich, lyrically and musically. There's an off-the-cuff wit to the songwriting, especially on "Cancelled Check" and "Bottle of Blues," and the performances are natural, relaxed, and laid-back, without ever sounding complacent. In fact, one of the nifty tricks of Mutations is how it sounds simple upon the first listen, then reveals more psychedelic layers upon each play. Beck is not only a startling songwriter -- his best songs are simultaneously modern and timeless -- he is a sharp record maker, crafting albums that sound distinct and original, no matter how much they may borrow. In its own quiet, organic way, Mutations confirms this as much as either Mellow Gold or Odelay. [A digital version was also released.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Cold Brains 3:41 Beck [1]
2 Nobody's Fault But My Own 5:02 Beck [1]
3 Lazy Flies 3:43 Beck [1]
4 Canceled Check 3:14 Beck [1]
5 We Live Again 3:04 Beck [1]
6 Tropicalia 3:20 Beck [1]
7 Dead Melodies 2:35 Beck [1]
8 Bottle of Blues 4:55 Beck [1]
9 O Maria 4:00 Beck [1]
10 Sing It Again 4:19 Beck [1]
11 Static 4:18 Beck [1]
12 Diamond Bollocks 6:00 Beck Hansen
Back to the topOdelay (Deluxe Edition)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
January 29, 2008
Label:
Geffen
Rating:
Styles:
Lo-Fi
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
Club/Dance
Alternative/Indie-Rock
Unlike Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave, the indie albums that followed his debut Mellow Gold by a mere matter of months, Odelay was a full-fledged, full-bodied album, released on a major label in the summer of 1996 and bearing an intricate, meticulous production by the Dust Brothers in their first gig since the Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique. Odelay shared a similar collage structure to that 1989 masterpiece, relying on a blend of found sounds and samples, but instead of lending the album its primary colors, the Dust Brothers provided the accents, highlighting Beck's ever-changing sounds, tying together his stylistic shifts, making the leaps from the dirge-blues of "Jack-Ass" to the hazy party rock of "Where's It's At" seem not so great. Like Mellow Gold, Odelay winds up touching on a number of disparate strands -- folk and country, grungy garage rock, stiff-boned electro, louche exotica, old-school rap, touches of noise rock -- but there's no break-neck snap between sensibilities, everything flows smoothly, the dense sounds suggesting that the songs are a bit more complicated than they actually are. Most of the songs here betray Beck's roots as an anti-folk singer -- he reworks blues structures ("Devil's Haircut"), country ("Lord Only Knows," "Sissyneck"), soul ("Hotwax"), folk ("Ramshackle") and rap ("High 5 [Rock the Catskills]," "Where It's At") -- but each track twists conventions, either in their construction or presentation, giving this a vibrant, electric pulse, surprising in its form and attack. Like a mosaic, all the details add up to a picture greater than its parts, so while some of Beck's best songs are here, Odelay is best appreciated as a recorded whole, with each layered sample enhancing the allusion that came before.

[Like so many albums from the mid-'90s, Beck's Odelay was supported by a succession of multi-part singles in the U.K. and Europe, plus he had several cuts appearing on soundtracks and compilations, so there were plenty of stray songs to be assembled for an expanded reissue. Enough to spill over onto two-discs, actually, as the Deluxe Edition of his 1996 masterpiece -- appearing in January 2008, about a year and a half too late for a proper tenth anniversary -- contains 33 songs in its double-disc length. The very length of this set suggests that the reissue is a clearinghouse for all existing B-sides, but that's not quite true, as there are several cuts that are absent. Many of the missing B-sides are remixes or reinventions that aren't missed, and what's here is often is delightful, whether it's Beck mocking Stephen Malkmus' affectless delivery on "Thunder Peel," laying into a languorous groove on "Feather in Your Cap," easing into country-blues on "Devil Got My Woman" and "Trouble All My Days," or joking around with the south-of-the-border pastiche "Burro" and a piss-take on "Jack-Ass." None of these extra tracks are finessed by the Dust Brothers' seamless production, yet they fit the wild, careening vibe of Odelay and their inclusion makes the album a richer, better experience.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Devil's Haircut 3:15 King, Simpson, Beck Ringtone
2 Hotwax 3:49 King, Simpson, Beck
3 Lord Only Knows 4:15 Beck
4 The New Pollution 3:39 King, Simpson, Beck Ringtone
5 Derelict 4:13 King, Simpson, Beck
6 Novacane 4:37 King, Simpson, Beck
7 Jack-Ass 4:12 King, Simpson, Beck
8 Where It's At 5:30 King, Simpson, Beck Ringtone
9 Minus 2:32 Beck
10 Sissyneck 3:57 King, Simpson, Beck
11 Readymade 2:37 King, Simpson, Beck
12 High 5 (Rock the Catskills) 4:11 King, Simpson, Beck
13 Ramshackle 4:47 Beck
14 Hidden Track 0:43 King, Simpson, Beck
15 Deadweight (*) 6:12 King, Simpson, Beck
16 Inferno (#)(*) 7:03 King, Simpson, Beck
17 Gold Chains (#)(*) 4:59 King, Simpson, Beck
18 Where It's At (U.N.K.L.E. Remix) 12:26 King, Simpson, Beck
19 Richard's Hairpiece (Aphex Twin Remix of DeVil's Haircut) 3:19 King, Simpson, Beck
20 American Wasteland (Mickey P. Remix of DeVil's Haircut) 2:42 King, Simpson, Beck
21 Clock 3:17 King, Simpson, Beck
22 Thunder Peel 2:40 Beck
23 Electric Music and the Summer People 4:38 King, Simpson, Beck
24 Lemonade 2:21 Beck
25 SA-5 1:53 Beck
26 Feather in Your Cap 3:46 Beck
27 Erase the Sun 2:56 Beck
28 .000.000 5:25 Beck
29 Brother 4:47 Beck
30 Devil Got My Woman 4:34 James
31 Trouble All My Days 2:25 Beck
32 Strange Invitation 4:06 Beck
33 Burro 3:13 Beck
Price: $29.98     11 Reviews
Beck'S major label debut, MELLOW GOLD, introduced him in 1994 but it was ODELAY two years later that became a bellwether for the alternative rock movement. Now, a dozen years after...
Back to the topThe Information (Deluxe Edition)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
February 27, 2007
Label:
Interscope
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Experimental Rock
Beck began work on 2006's The Information after Sea Change but before he reunited with the Dust Brothers for 2005's Guero, eventually finishing the album after Guero was generally acclaimed as a return to Odelay form. So, it shouldn't come as a great surprise that The Information falls somewhere between those two records, at least on sonic terms. Musically, it's certainly a kindred spirit to Guero, meaning that it hearkens back to the collage of loose-limbed, quirky white-boy funk-rock and rap that brought Beck fame at the peak of the alt-rock revolution, with hints of the psychedelia of Mutations and the folk-rock that was the basis for Sea Change. Since this is a Nigel Godrich production, it's meticulous and precise even when it wants to give the illusion of spontaneity, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, since it also pulls the album into focus, something that the generally fine Guero could have used. Guero had many strengths, but its biggest weakness was the general sense that it was unfinished, a suspicion fostered by its endless issues in deluxe editions and remixes. Beck embraced these changes, most extravagantly on the cover of Wired, where he was hailing the future of the album, which would now no longer be seen as finished: it would be a project that covered a certain amount of time, the artist would package it one way, then listeners would offer their own spin. That is precisely what Guero turned out to be, so it would have made sense that The Information would run further down that field, particularly because it has a design-your-own-art for its cover and is supplemented by a DVD filled with quick-n-dirty videos for each of its songs. But Beck isn't so easily pigeonholed: as it turns out, The Information is far more of a proper album than Guero, coming fully equipped with recurring themes and motifs, feeling every bit the concept album Sea Change was. Credit might go partially to his collaboration with Godrich -- who is nothing if not a taskmaster, helping to sharpen and focus erratic talents like Paul McCartney and Stephen Malkmus (for good in the former, not as good in the latter) -- but this also feels like the work of a refocused Beck, who shook off the cobwebs by reuniting with the Dust Brothers, thereby getting his "return to Odelay form" notices out of the way, and then getting down to the real work here on The Information, as he tackles the hyper-saturated info-world of the new millennium here.
If it initially seems like surprises are in short supply on The Information -- even when the tracks take a left turn, it doesn't feel like Beck and Godrich are wandering off the map -- the craft is strong and assured, and closer listens reveal the depth of the detail within the album, whether it's in the construction of the production or how those productions illuminate Beck's themes. Ever the obscurist, Beck's meanings aren't always crystal clear, which is no doubt deliberate, but his overall intent is easier to ascertain, especially when "Cellphone's Dead" juts up against "Nausea." There's a greater sense of craft here, and while craft isn't necessarily the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Beck, it's what happens when an eccentric sticks around for over a decade: he turns pro. He's done his exploring and now he's learning how to apply what he's discovered. While this may have the inevitable side effect of making his music a little less bracing and exciting, at least on first listen -- and that's especially true when he's in his pop chameleon mode as he is here, since it often seemed like his collages were quickly thrown together instead of immaculately assembled as they are here -- it nevertheless makes for a well-constructed, intriguing, and satisfying album, which The Information assuredly is. Upon first listen, it might seem to slide by a little bit on texture and sound instead of song, but that doesn't necessarily mean it feels even as groove-oriented and hip-hop-driven as Guero (let alone Midnite Vultures), despite the fact that many of the best tracks are built on muscular, intricate rhythms, like the dense, paranoid "Nausea" or the opening fanfare of "Elevator Music." But those further listens -- something that a neo-concept album like this demands anyway -- reveal the complexity within the productions, and how Beck is bridging the two sides of his personality, finding a common ground between his folk roots and art rock sides. All those little details give each cut a dramatic flow, and as the cuts pile up, they all add up to something. Like a picture where you have to stare intently to find the hidden item buried in a seas of colored dots, it can be far too easy on The Information to look at the individual dots and not see the big picture -- but at least here the dots are interesting in and of themselves. And if you give it time, The Information eventually reveals itself as Beck's tightest, most purposeful album yet. [The 2007 Deluxe Edition includes bonus tracks.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Elevator Music 3:38 Beck
2 Think I'm in Love 3:19 Beck Ringtone
3 Cellphones's Dead 4:45 Beck
4 Strange Apparation 3:48 Beck
5 Soldier Jane 3:58 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
6 Nausea 2:55 Beck Ringtone
7 Dark Star 3:45 Beck
8 Movie Theme 3:53 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
9 We Dance Alone 3:56 Beck Ringtone
10 No Complaints 3:00 Beck Ringtone
11 1000 BPM 2:29 Beck Ringtone
12 Motorcade 4:15 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
13 The Information 3:45 Beck Ringtone
14 New Round 3:25 Beck Ringtone
15 The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton 10:36 Beck, Godrich
16 Inside Out 3:44 Beck
17 This Girl That I Know 2:44 Beck
18 O Menina 2:09 Beck
19 Cellphone's Dead (Ellen Allien Remix)(*) 5:37 Beck
20 Nausea (Bumblebeez Remix)(*) 2:28 Beck
21 Dark Star (David Andrew Sitek Remix)(*) 4:08 Beck
22 Nausea (The Chap Remix)(*) 3:55 Beck
23 Cellphone's Dead (Jamie Lidell Limited Minutes Remix)(*) 4:32 Beck
24 Cellphone's Dead (Ricardo Villalobos Remix) 14:38 Beck
25 Elevator Music (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
26 Think I'm in Love (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
27 Cellphone's Dead (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
28 Strange Apparation (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
29 Soldier Jane (DVD)(*) N/A Beck, Godrich
30 Nausea (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
31 Dark Star (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
32 Movie Theme (DVD)(*) N/A Beck, Godrich
33 We Dance Alone (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
34 No Complaints (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
35 1000 BPM (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
36 Motorcade (DVD)(*) N/A Beck, Godrich
37 The Information (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
38 New Round (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
39 The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton (DVD)(*) N/A Beck, Godrich
40 Inside Out (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
41 This Girl That I Know (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
42 Cellphone's Dead (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
43 Nausea (DVD)(*) N/A Beck
Price: $22.99     2 Reviews
The Information - DELUXE VERSION Includes the following: * All songs from the The Information, including 3 songs only available internationally * 6 remixes * A combination graph pa...
Back to the topThe Information (Alternate Cover)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
October 03, 2006
Label:
Interscope
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Beck began work on 2006's The Information after Sea Change but before he reunited with the Dust Brothers for 2005's Guero, eventually finishing the album after Guero was generally acclaimed as a return to Odelay form. So, it shouldn't come as a great surprise that The Information falls somewhere between those two records, at least on sonic terms. Musically, it's certainly a kindred spirit to Guero, meaning that it hearkens back to the collage of loose-limbed, quirky white-boy funk-rock and rap that brought Beck fame at the peak of the alt-rock revolution, with hints of the psychedelia of Mutations and the folk-rock that was the basis for Sea Change. Since this is a Nigel Godrich production, it's meticulous and precise even when it wants to give the illusion of spontaneity, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, since it also pulls the album into focus, something that the generally fine Guero could have used. Guero had many strengths, but its biggest weakness was the general sense that it was unfinished, a suspicion fostered by its endless issues in deluxe editions and remixes. Beck embraced these changes, most extravagantly on the cover of Wired, where he was hailing the future of the album, which would now no longer be seen as finished: it would be a project that covered a certain amount of time, the artist would package it one way, then listeners would offer their own spin. That is precisely what Guero turned out to be, so it would have made sense that The Information would run further down that field, particularly because it has a design-your-own-art for its cover and is supplemented by a DVD filled with quick-n-dirty videos for each of its songs. But Beck isn't so easily pigeonholed: as it turns out, The Information is far more of a proper album than Guero, coming fully equipped with recurring themes and motifs, feeling every bit the concept album Sea Change was. Credit might go partially to his collaboration with Godrich -- who is nothing if not a taskmaster, helping to sharpen and focus erratic talents like Paul McCartney and Stephen Malkmus (for good in the former, not as good in the latter) -- but this also feels like the work of a refocused Beck, who shook off the cobwebs by reuniting with the Dust Brothers, thereby getting his "return to Odelay form" notices out of the way, and then getting down to the real work here on The Information, as he tackles the hyper-saturated info-world of the new millennium here.

If it initially seems like surprises are in short supply on The Information -- even when the tracks take a left turn, it doesn't feel like Beck and Godrich are wandering off the map -- the craft is strong and assured, and closer listens reveal the depth of the detail within the album, whether it's in the construction of the production or how those productions illuminate Beck's themes. Ever the obscurist, Beck's meanings aren't always crystal clear, which is no doubt deliberate, but his overall intent is easier to ascertain, especially when "Cellphone's Dead" juts up against "Nausea." There's a greater sense of craft here, and while craft isn't necessarily the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Beck, it's what happens when an eccentric sticks around for over a decade: he turns pro. He's done his exploring and now he's learning how to apply what he's discovered. While this may have the inevitable side effect of making his music a little less bracing and exciting, at least on first listen -- and that's especially true when he's in his pop chameleon mode as he is here, since it often seemed like his collages were quickly thrown together instead of immaculately assembled as they are here -- it nevertheless makes for a well-constructed, intriguing, and satisfying album, which The Information assuredly is. Upon first listen, it might seem to slide by a little bit on texture and sound instead of song, but that doesn't necessarily mean it feels even as groove-oriented and hip-hop-driven as Guero (let alone Midnite Vultures), despite the fact that many of the best tracks are built on muscular, intricate rhythms, like the dense, paranoid "Nausea" or the opening fanfare of "Elevator Music." But those further listens -- something that a neo-concept album like this demands anyway -- reveal the complexity within the productions, and how Beck is bridging the two sides of his personality, finding a common ground between his folk roots and art rock sides. All those little details give each cut a dramatic flow, and as the cuts pile up, they all add up to something. Like a picture where you have to stare intently to find the hidden item buried in a seas of colored dots, it can be far too easy on The Information to look at the individual dots and not see the big picture -- but at least here the dots are interesting in and of themselves. And if you give it time, The Information eventually reveals itself as Beck's tightest, most purposeful album yet. [This version of the album featured different artwork.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Elevator Music 3:38 Beck
2 Think I'm in Love 3:19 Beck Ringtone
3 Cellphone's Dead 4:45 Beck Ringtone
4 Strange Apparition 3:48 Beck Ringtone
5 Soldier Jane 3:58 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
6 Nausea 2:55 Beck Ringtone
7 New Round 3:25 Beck Ringtone
8 Dark Star 3:45 Beck
9 We Dance Alone 3:56 Beck Ringtone
10 No Complaints 3:00 Beck Ringtone
11 1000BPM 2:29 Beck Ringtone
12 Motorcade 4:15 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
13 The Information 3:45 Beck Ringtone
14 Movie Theme 3:53 Beck, Godrich Ringtone
15 The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton 10:36 Beck, Godrich
16 Bonus Material (DVD)(*) N/A N/A
Back to the topGuero (Japan Bonus Tracks)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
October 02, 2006
Label:
Universal
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Ever since his thrilling 1994 debut with Mellow Gold, each new Beck album was a genuine pop cultural event, since it was never clear which direction he would follow. Kicking off his career as equal parts noise-prankster, indie folkster, alt-rocker, and ironic rapper, he's gone to extremes, veering between garishly ironic party music to brooding heartbroken Baroque pop, and this unpredictability is a large part of his charm, since each album was distinct from the one before. That remains true with Guero, his eighth album (sixth if you don't count 1994's Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave, which some don't), but the surprising thing here is that it sounds for all the world like a good, straight-ahead, garden-variety Beck album, which is something he'd never delivered prior to this 2005 release. In many ways, Guero is deliberately designed as a classicist Beck album, a return to the sound and aesthetic of his 1996 masterwork, Odelay. After all, he's reteamed with the producing team of the Dust Brothers, who are widely credited for the dense, sample-collage sound of Odelay, and the light, bright Guero stands in stark contrast to the lush melancholy of 2002's Sea Change while simultaneously bearing a knowing kinship to the sound that brought him his greatest critical and commercial success in the mid-'90s. This has all the trappings of being a cold, calculating maneuver, but the album never plays as crass. Instead, it sounds as if Beck, now a husband and father in his mid-thirties, is revisiting his older aesthetic and sensibility from a new perspective. The sound has remained essentially the same -- it's still a kaleidoscopic jumble of pop, hip-hop, and indie rock, with some Brazilian and electro touches thrown in -- but Beck is a hell of a lot calmer, never indulging in the lyrical or musical flights of fancy or the absurdism that made Mellow Gold and Odelay such giddy listens. He now operates with the skill and precision of a craftsman, never dumping too many ideas into one song, paring his words down to their essentials, mixing the record for a wider audience than just his friends. Consequently, Guero never is as surprising or enthralling as Odelay, but Beck is also not trying to be as wild and funny as he was a decade ago. He's shifted away from exaggerated wackiness -- which is good, since it wouldn't wear as well on a 34 year old as it would on a man a decade younger -- and concentrated on the record-making, winding up with a thoroughly enjoyable LP that sounds warm and familiar upon the first play and gets stronger with each spin. No, it's not a knockout, the way his first few records were, but it's a successful mature variation on Odelay, one that proves that Beck's sensibility will continue to reap rewards for him as he enters his second decade of recording. [A Japanese version included bonus tracks.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 E-Pro N/A N/A Ringtone
2 Que Onda Guero N/A N/A
3 Girl N/A N/A Ringtone
4 Missing N/A N/A
5 Black Tambourine N/A N/A
6 Earthquake Weather N/A N/A
7 Hell Yes N/A N/A
8 Broken Drum N/A N/A
9 Scarecrow N/A N/A
10 Go It Alone N/A N/A
11 Farewell Ride N/A N/A
12 Rental Car N/A N/A
13 Emergency Exit N/A N/A
14 Send a Message to Her (*) N/A N/A
15 Chain Reaction N/A N/A
16 Clap Hands N/A N/A
Back to the topGuerolito (Bonus Tracks)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
December 13, 2005
Label:
Universal International
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
When all is said and done, Beck's Guero might be the quintessential album of 2005. Not the best, nor the one that captured the sound of the year, but the album that illustrates that in 2005, there was no such thing as a finished album -- that a set of songs could be packaged and repackaged in so many forms, it never really seems to as a finished work. That's because in the course of the year there were roughly five different incarnations of the album. At the beginning of the year, the unfinished album was leaked on the Internet, causing such a commotion that it was reviewed on the front page of Salon. A couple months later, the album was officially released as a 13-track edition, along with a greatly expanded 20-track special edition, containing a few remixes and several songs that didn't appear on the 13-track album but appear on the leaked bootleg. Then, after a couple of import editions containing various bonus tracks, Guerolito appeared at the end of the year. Guerolito is a remix of the entire album, with each track being remixed by a different act, including Air, Boards of Canada, Octet, and Ad-Rock. Sometimes these songs bear different titles than their source material -- "E-Pro" became "Ghost Range," for instance; this practice was in place for the deluxe version of Guero as well -- and Guerolito itself had its own alternate edition, which was packaged and sequenced slightly different from its main edition, plus an import with a bonus track. All this packaging and repackaging, mixing and remixing, titling and retitling has the effect of diluting a good set of songs by Beck -- there may be many ways of enjoying these songs, but having them exist in different physical and musical forms makes them harder to grasp, not easier to appreciate. And while the mixes on Guerolito are, by and large, good, they neither illuminate the original songs, nor do they offer much new -- they don't expand the songs, they still try to keep the basic structure in place, so it's not a good showcase for the remixers. Instead, they just reconfirm the suspicion that this set of songs was never quite finished or sequenced, it was just released. And while that may be a very 2005 experience, that doesn't mean that each grouping makes for satisfying listen. After all, given all the capabilities you have at home these days, why not make your own mixes and play lists of the Guero material? The deluxe edition of Guero even gives you the ability to remix it on your computer -- which means there may be many more versions than five of this album floating out there in the ether. [The CD was also released with bonus tracks.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Ghost Range (E-Pro) 4:23 N/A
2 Que Onda Guero 2:28 N/A
3 Girl 3:53 N/A Ringtone
4 Heaven Hammer (Missing) 4:54 N/A
5 Shake Shake Tambourine (Black Tambourine) 3:36 N/A
6 Terremoto Tempo (Earthquake Weather) 3:46 N/A
7 Ghettochip Malfunction (Hell Yes) 2:39 N/A Ringtone
8 Broken Drum 5:35 N/A
9 Scarecrow 4:36 N/A
10 Wish Coin (Go It Alone) 3:44 N/A
11 Farewell Ride 4:51 N/A
12 Rental Car 2:59 N/A
13 Emergency Exit 3:18 N/A
14 Crap Hands 3:19 N/A
15 Missing 3:07 N/A
16 Que Onda Guero 4:44 N/A
Price: $16.98
Exclusive UK 16-track pressing features two bonus tracks, 'Que' Onda Guero' (Nortec Collective Remix) (UK and Japanese Bonus track) and one exclusive to this pressing, 'Hell Yes' (...
Back to the topGuero (UK Bonus Tracks & DVD)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
May 31, 2005
Label:
Universal International
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Ever since his thrilling 1994 debut with Mellow Gold, each new Beck album was a genuine pop cultural event, since it was never clear which direction he would follow. Kicking off his career as equal parts noise-prankster, indie folkster, alt-rocker, and ironic rapper, he's gone to extremes, veering between garishly ironic party music to brooding, heartbroken Baroque pop, and this unpredictability is a large part of his charm, since each album was distinct from the one before. That remains true with Guero, his eighth album (sixth if you don't count 1994's Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave, which some don't), but the surprising thing here is that it sounds for all the world like a good, straight-ahead, garden-variety Beck album, which is something he'd never delivered prior to this 2005 release. In many ways, Guero is deliberately designed as a classicist Beck album, a return to the sound and aesthetic of his 1996 masterwork, Odelay. After all, he's reteamed with the producing team of the Dust Brothers, who are widely credited for the dense, sample-collage sound of Odelay, and the light, bright Guero stands in stark contrast to the lush melancholy of 2002's Sea Change while simultaneously bearing a knowing kinship to the sound that brought him his greatest critical and commercial success in the mid-'90s. This has all the trappings of being a cold, calculating maneuver, but the album never plays as crass. Instead, it sounds as if Beck, now a husband and father in his mid-thirties, is revisiting his older aesthetic and sensibility from a new perspective. The sound has remained essentially the same -- it's still a kaleidoscopic jumble of pop, hip-hop, and indie rock, with some Brazilian and electro touches thrown in -- but Beck is a hell of a lot calmer, never indulging in the lyrical or musical flights of fancy or the absurdism that made Mellow Gold and Odelay such giddy listens. He now operates with the skill and precision of a craftsman, never dumping too many ideas into one song, paring his words down to their essentials, mixing the record for a wider audience than just his friends. Consequently, Guero never is as surprising or enthralling as Odelay, but Beck is also not trying to be as wild and funny as he was a decade ago. He's shifted away from exaggerated wackiness -- which is good, since it wouldn't wear as well on a 34-year-old as it would on a man a decade younger -- and concentrated on the record-making, winding up with a thoroughly enjoyable LP that sounds warm and familiar upon the first play and gets stronger with each spin. No, it's not a knockout, the way his first few records were, but it's a successful mature variation on Odelay, one that proves that Beck's sensibility will continue to reap rewards for him as he enters his second decade of recording. [This U.K. release of the album contains bonus tracks and a DVD.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 E-Pro N/A N/A Ringtone
2 Que' Onda Guero N/A N/A
3 Girl N/A N/A Ringtone
4 Missing N/A N/A
5 Black Tambourine N/A N/A
6 Earthquake Weather N/A N/A
7 Hell Yes N/A N/A
8 Broken Drum N/A N/A
9 Scarecrow N/A N/A
10 Go It Alone N/A N/A
11 Farewell Ride N/A N/A
12 Rental Car N/A N/A
13 Emergency Exit N/A N/A
14 Send a Message to Her (Non-LP Version) N/A N/A
15 Chain Reaction (Non-LP Version) N/A N/A
16 Clap Hands (Non-LP Version) N/A N/A
17 Girl (Remix by Octet) N/A N/A
18 Broken Drum (Remix by Boards of Canada) N/A N/A
19 Still Missing (Remix by Royskopp) N/A N/A
20 Fax Machine Anthem (Remix by Dizzee Rascal) N/A N/A
21 Bonus Material (DVD) N/A N/A
22 E-Pro N/A N/A Ringtone
23 Black Tambourine N/A N/A
Price: $65.49     1 Review
Beck's "Guero" is a Remarkable Addition to an Already Prestigious Career. It Has Been Heralded as One of his Finest Albums and Marks the Return to the Producer's Chair(S) of the Du...
Back to the topGuero (Deluxe Version)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
March 29, 2005
Label:
Interscope
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Ever since his thrilling 1994 debut with Mellow Gold, each new Beck album was a genuine pop cultural event, since it was never clear which direction he would follow. Kicking off his career as equal parts noise-prankster, indie folkster, alt-rocker, and ironic rapper, he's gone to extremes, veering between garishly ironic party music to brooding heartbroken Baroque pop, and this unpredictability is a large part of his charm, since each album was distinct from the one before. That remains true with Guero, his eighth album (sixth if you don't count 1994's Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave, which some don't), but the surprising thing here is that it sounds for all the world like a good, straight-ahead, garden-variety Beck album, which is something he'd never delivered prior to this 2005 release. In many ways, Guero is deliberately designed as a classicist Beck album, a return to the sound and aesthetic of his 1996 masterwork, Odelay. After all, he's reteamed with the producing team of the Dust Brothers, who are widely credited for the dense, sample-collage sound of Odelay, and the light, bright Guero stands in stark contrast to the lush melancholy of 2002's Sea Change while simultaneously bearing a knowing kinship to the sound that brought him his greatest critical and commercial success in the mid-'90s. This has all the trappings of being a cold, calculating maneuver, but the album never plays as crass. Instead, it sounds as if Beck, now a husband and father in his mid-thirties, is revisiting his older aesthetic and sensibility from a new perspective. The sound has remained essentially the same -- it's still a kaleidoscopic jumble of pop, hip-hop, and indie rock, with some Brazilian and electro touches thrown in -- but Beck is a hell of a lot calmer, never indulging in the lyrical or musical flights of fancy or the absurdism that made Mellow Gold and Odelay such giddy listens. He now operates with the skill and precision of a craftsman, never dumping too many ideas into one song, paring his words down to their essentials, mixing the record for a wider audience than just his friends. Consequently, Guero never is as surprising or enthralling as Odelay, but Beck is also not trying to be as wild and funny as he was a decade ago. He's shifted away from exaggerated wackiness -- which is good, since it wouldn't wear as well on a 34 year old as it would on a man a decade younger -- and concentrated on the record-making, winding up with a thoroughly enjoyable LP that sounds warm and familiar upon the first play and gets stronger with each spin. No, it's not a knockout, the way his first few records were, but it's a successful mature variation on Odelay, one that proves that Beck's sensibility will continue to reap rewards for him as he enters his second decade of recording.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 E-Pro 3:22 Beastie Boys, Beck, Dust Brothers [1] Ringtone
2 Qué Onda Guero 3:29 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
3 Girl 3:29 Beck, Dust Brothers [1] Ringtone
4 Missing 4:43 Lyra, DeMoraes, Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
5 Black Tambourine 2:47 Beck, Blacknell, Dust Brothers [1]
6 Earthquake Weather 4:26 Adams, Washington, Webster, Beck, Hicks
7 Hell Yes 3:17 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
8 Broken Drum 4:29 Beck
9 Scarecrow 4:15 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
10 Go It Alone 4:08 Beck, Dust Brothers [1], White
11 Farewell Ride 4:18 Beck
12 Rental Car 3:06 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
13 Emergency Exit 4:03 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
14 Just a Message to Her 4:30 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
15 Chain Reaction 3:28 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
16 Clap Hands 3:21 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
17 Girl (Octet Remix) 3:53 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
18 Broken Drum (Boards of Canada Remix) 5:39 Beck
19 Still Missing (Röyksopp Remix) 4:58 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
20 Fax Machine Anthem (Dizzee Rascal Remix) 3:07 Beck, Dust Brothers [1]
Price: $29.99     44 Reviews
(not actual Deluxe Version Artwork) TWO-DISC DELUXE COLLECTOR'S EDITION OF "GUERO" INCLUDES: - Full album plus seven exclusive bonus tracks - An exquisite 52 page booklet of art...
Back to the topGuero (German Bonus Track)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
2005
Label:
Interscope
Rating:
Styles:
Dance-Rock
Indie Rock
Alternative Dance
Alternative Pop/Rock
Ever since his thrilling 1994 debut with Mellow Gold, each new Beck album was a genuine pop cultural event, since it was never clear which direction he would follow. Kicking off his career as equal parts noise-prankster, indie folkster, alt-rocker, and ironic rapper, he's gone to extremes, veering between garishly ironic party music to brooding heartbroken Baroque pop, and this unpredictability is a large part of his charm, since each album was distinct from the one before. That remains true with Guero, his eighth album (sixth if you don't count 1994's Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave, which some don't), but the surprising thing here is that it sounds for all the world like a good, straight-ahead, garden-variety Beck album, which is something he'd never delivered prior to this 2005 release. In many ways, Guero is deliberately designed as a classicist Beck album, a return to the sound and aesthetic of his 1996 masterwork, Odelay. After all, he's reteamed with the producing team of the Dust Brothers, who are widely credited for the dense, sample-collage sound of Odelay, and the light, bright Guero stands in stark contrast to the lush melancholy of 2002's Sea Change while simultaneously bearing a knowing kinship to the sound that brought him his greatest critical and commercial success in the mid-'90s. This has all the trappings of being a cold, calculating maneuver, but the album never plays as crass. Instead, it sounds as if Beck, now a husband and father in his mid-thirties, is revisiting his older aesthetic and sensibility from a new perspective. The sound has remained essentially the same -- it's still a kaleidoscopic jumble of pop, hip-hop, and indie rock, with some Brazilian and electro touches thrown in -- but Beck is a hell of a lot calmer, never indulging in the lyrical or musical flights of fancy or the absurdism that made Mellow Gold and Odelay such giddy listens. He now operates with the skill and precision of a craftsman, never dumping too many ideas into one song, paring his words down to their essentials, mixing the record for a wider audience than just his friends. Consequently, Guero never is as surprising or enthralling as Odelay, but Beck is also not trying to be as wild and funny as he was a decade ago. He's shifted away from exaggerated wackiness -- which is good, since it wouldn't wear as well on a 34-year-old as it would on a man a decade younger -- and concentrated on the record-making, winding up with a thoroughly enjoyable LP that sounds warm and familiar upon the first play and gets stronger with each spin. No, it's not a knockout, the way his first few records were, but it's a successful mature variation on Odelay, one that proves that Beck's sensibility will continue to reap rewards for him as he enters his second decade of recording.
Track # Track Time Composer
1 E-Pro 3:22 Beatsie Boys, Dust Brothers, Beck Ringtone
2 Qué Onda Guero 3:29 Dust Brothers, Beck
3 Girl 3:29 Dust Brothers, Beck Ringtone
4 Missing 4:43 DeMoraes, Dust Brothers, Lyra, Beck
5 Black Tambourine 2:47 Dust Brothers, Beck, Blacknell
6 Earthquake Weather 4:26 Adams, Dust Brothers, Washington, Webster, Beck, Hicks
7 Hell Yes 3:17 Dust Brothers, Beck
8 Broken Drum 4:29 Beck
9 Scarecrow 4:15 Dust Brothers, Beck
10 Go It Alone 4:08 Dust Brothers, Beck, White
11 Farewell Ride 4:18 Beck
12 Rental Car 3:06 Dust Brothers, Beck
13 Emergency Exit 4:03 Dust Brothers, Beck
14 Send a Message to Her (*) 4:28 Dust Brothers, Beck
Price: $21.99     1 Review
International edition features one bonus track, 'Send a Message to Her'. 14 tracks in all. Interscope. 2005.
Back to the topSea Change (Japan Bonus Track)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
July 22, 2003
Label:
Geffen
Rating:
Styles:
Alternative Pop/Rock
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
Beck has always been known for his ever-changing moods -- particularly since they often arrived one after another on one album, sometimes within one song -- yet the shift between the neon-glitz of Midnite Vultures and the lush, somber Sea Change is startling, and not just because it finds him in full-on singer/songwriter mode, abandoning all of the postmodern pranksterism of its predecessor. What's startling about Sea Change is how it brings everything that's run beneath the surface of Beck's music to the forefront, as if he's unafraid to not just reveal emotions, but to elliptically examine them in this wonderfully melancholy song cycle. If, on most albums prior to this, Beck's music was a sonic kaleidoscope -- each song shifting familiar and forgotten sounds into colorful, unpredictable combinations -- this discards genre-hopping in favor of focus, and the concentration pays off gloriously, resulting in not just his best album, but one of the greatest late-night, brokenhearted albums in pop. This, as many reviews and promotional interviews have noted, is indeed a breakup album, but it's not a bitter listen; it has a wearily beautiful sound, a comforting, consoling sadness. His words are often evocative, but not nearly as evocative as the music itself, which is rooted equally in country-rock ( alt-country), early-'70s singer/songwriterism, and Baroque British psychedelia. With producer Nigel Godrich, Beck has created a warm, enveloping sound, with his acoustic guitar supported by grand string arrangements straight out of Paul Buckmaster, eerie harmonies, and gentle keyboards among other subtler touches that give this record a richness that unveils itself more with each listen. Surely, some may bemoan the absence of the careening, free-form experimentalism of Odelay, but Beck's gifts as a songwriter, singer, and musician have never been as brilliant as they are here. As Sea Change is playing, it feels as if Beck is singing to you alone, revealing painful, intimate secrets that mirror your own. It's a genuine masterpiece in an era with too damn few of them. [The Japanese version features a hidden track.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 The Golden Age 4:36 Beck
2 Paper Tiger 4:35 Beck
3 Guess I'm Doing Fine 4:49 Beck
4 Lonesome Tears 5:37 Beck
5 Lost Cause 3:47 Beck Ringtone
6 End of the Day 5:03 Beck
7 It's All in Your Mind 3:05 Beck
8 Round the Bend 5:15 Beck
9 Already Dead 2:58 Beck
10 Sunday Sun 4:44 Beck
11 Little One 4:26 Beck
12 Side of the Road 3:24 Beck
13 (Untitled Hidden Track) 3:11 N/A
Back to the topSea Change (DVD Audio/Video)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
2003
Label:
DGC
Rating:
Styles:
Alternative Pop/Rock
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
Beck has always been known for his ever-changing moods -- particularly since they often arrived one after another on one album, sometimes within one song -- yet the shift between the neon glitz of Midnite Vultures and the lush, somber Sea Change is startling, and not just because it finds him in full-on singer/songwriter mode, abandoning all of the postmodern pranksterism of its predecessor. What's startling about Sea Change is how it brings everything that's run beneath the surface of Beck's music to the forefront, as if he's unafraid to not just reveal emotions, but to elliptically examine them in this wonderfully melancholy song cycle. If, on most albums prior to this, Beck's music was a sonic kaleidoscope -- each song shifting familiar and forgotten sounds into colorful, unpredictable combinations -- this discards genre-hopping in favor of focus, and the concentration pays off gloriously, resulting in not just his best album, but one of the greatest late-night, brokenhearted albums in pop. This, as many reviews and promotional interviews have noted, is indeed a breakup album, but it's not a bitter listen; it has a wearily beautiful sound, a comforting, consoling sadness. His words are often evocative, but not nearly as evocative as the music itself, which is rooted equally in country-rock ( alt-country), early-'70s singer/songwriterism, and Baroque British psychedelia. With producer Nigel Godrich, Beck has created a warm, enveloping sound, with his acoustic guitar supported by grand string arrangements straight out of Paul Buckmaster, eerie harmonies, and gentle keyboards among other subtler touches that give this record a richness that unveils more with each listen. Surely, some may bemoan the absence of the careening, free-form experimentalism of Odelay, but Beck's gifts as a songwriter, singer, and musician have never been as brilliant as they are here. As Sea Change is playing, it feels as if Beck is singing to you alone, revealing painful, intimate secrets that mirror your own. It's a genuine masterpiece in an era with too damn few of them. [Sea Change is also available in a DVD-Audio/Video edition that features live performances and bonus material.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Lost Cause (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
2 Guess I'm Doing Fine (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
3 Little One (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
4 Round the Bend (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
5 Lonesome Tears (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
6 The Golden Age (Multimedia Track) N/A Beck
7 The Golden Age (DVD) N/A Beck
8 Paper Tiger (DVD) N/A Beck
9 Guess I'm Doing Fine (DVD) N/A Beck
10 Lonesome Tears (DVD) N/A Beck
11 Lost Cause (DVD) N/A Beck
12 End of the Day (DVD) N/A Beck
13 It's All in Your Mind (DVD) N/A Beck
14 Round the Bend (DVD) N/A Beck
15 Already Dead (DVD) N/A Beck
16 Sunday Sun (DVD) N/A Beck
17 Little One (DVD) N/A Beck
18 Side of the Road (DVD) N/A Beck
Back to the topOdelay (Bonus Track)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
January 19, 1999
Label:
Universal
Rating:
Styles:
Alternative Pop/Rock
Club/Dance
Alternative/Indie-Rock
Indie Rock
Lo-Fi
Dance-Rock
Beck's debut, Mellow Gold, was a glorious sampler of different musical styles, careening from lo-fi hip-hop to folk, moving back through garage rock and arty noise. It was an impressive album, but the parts didn't necessarily stick together. The two albums that followed within months of Mellow Gold -- Stereopathetic Soul Manure and One Foot in the Grave -- were specialist releases that disproved the idea that Beck was simply a one-hit wonder. But Odelay, the much-delayed proper follow-up to Mellow Gold, proves the depth and scope of his talents. Odelay fuses the disparate strands of Beck's music -- folk, country, hip-hop, rock & roll, blues, jazz, easy listening, rap, pop -- into one dense sonic collage. Songs frequently morph from one genre to another, seemingly unrelated genre -- bursts of noise give way to country songs with hip-hop beats, easy listening melodies transform into a weird fusion of pop, jazz, and cinematic strings; it's genre-defying music that refuses to see boundaries. All of the songs on Odelay are rooted in simple forms -- whether it's blues ("Devil's Haircut"), country ("Lord Only Knows," "Sissyneck"), soul ("Hotwax"), folk ("Ramshackle"), or rap ("High 5 [Rock the Catskills]," "Where It's At") -- but they twist the conventions of the genre. "Where It's At" is peppered with soul, jazz, funk, and rap references, while "Novacane" slams from indie rock to funk and back to white noise. With the aid of the Dust Brothers, Beck has created a dense, endlessly intriguing album overflowing with ideas. Furthermore, it's an album that completely ignores the static, nihilistic trends of the American alternative/independent underground, creating a fluid, creative, and startlingly original work. [Odelay is also available in an import release.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Devils Haircut 3:14 Beck, King, Simpson Ringtone
2 Hotwax 3:49 Beck, King, Simpson
3 Lord Only Knows 4:14 Beck, King, Simpson
4 The New Pollution 3:39 Beck, King, Simpson Ringtone
5 Derelict 4:13 Beck, King, Simpson
6 Novacane 4:37 Beck, King, Simpson
7 Jack-Ass 4:11 Beck, King, Simpson
8 Where It's At 5:30 Beck, King, Simpson Ringtone
9 Minus 2:32 Beck, King, Simpson
10 Sissyneck 3:52 Beck, King, Simpson
11 Readymade 2:36 Beck, King, Simpson
12 High 5 (Rock the Catskills) 4:10 Beck, King, Simpson
13 Ramshackle 5:45 Beck, King, Simpson
14 Diskobox 3:36 Beck, King, Simpson
Back to the topMutations (Japan Tracks)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
December 08, 1998
Label:
Universal
Rating:
Styles:
Alternative Pop/Rock
Indie Rock
Lo-Fi
According to party line, neither Beck nor Geffen ever intended Mutations to be considered as the official follow-up to Odelay, his Grammy-winning breakthrough. It was more like One Foot in the Grave, designed to be an off-kilter, subdued collection of acoustic-based songs pitched halfway between psychedelic country blues and lo-fi folk. The presence of producer Nigel Godrich, the man who helmed Radiohead's acclaimed OK Computer, makes such claims dubious. Godrich is not a slick producer, but he's no Calvin Johnson, either, and Mutations has an appropriately clean, trippy feel. There's little question that with the blues, country, psych, bossa nova, and folk that comprise it, Mutations was never meant to be a commercial endeavor -- there's no floor-shaker like "Where It's At," and it doesn't trade in the junk culture that brought Odelay to life. Recording with his touring band -- marking the first time he has entered the studio with a live band -- does result in a different sound, but it's not so much a departure as it is a side road that is going in the same direction. None of the songs explore new territory, but they're rich, lyrically and musically. There's an off-the-cuff wit to the songwriting, especially on "Canceled Check" and "Bottle of Blues," and the performances are natural, relaxed, and laid-back, without ever sounding complacent. In fact, one of the nifty tricks of Mutations is how it sounds simple upon the first listen, then reveals more psychedelic layers upon each play. Beck is not only a startling songwriter -- his best songs are simultaneously modern and timeless -- he is a sharp record-maker, crafting albums that sound distinct and original, no matter how much they may borrow. In its own quiet, organic way, Mutations confirms this as much as either Mellow Gold or Odelay. [The Japanese edition features three bonus tracks.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Cold Brains 3:42 Beck
2 Nobody's Fault but My Own 5:02 Beck
3 Lazy Flies 3:43 Beck
4 Canceled Check 3:14 Beck
5 We Live Again 3:03 Beck
6 Tropicalia 3:20 Beck
7 Dead Melodies 2:35 Beck
8 Bottle of Blues 4:55 Beck
9 O Maria 4:00 Beck
10 Sing It Again 4:19 Beck
11 Static 4:19 Beck
12 Electric Music and the Summer People 3:35 Beck
13 Diamond Bollocks 6:02 Beck
14 Runners Dial Zero 4:03 Beck
Back to the topMutations (German Bonus Tracks)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
November 03, 1998
Label:
Geffen
Rating:
Styles:
Lo-Fi
Indie Rock
Alternative Pop/Rock
According to party line, Beck never intended Mutations to be considered as the official follow-up to Odelay, his Grammy-winning breakthrough. It was more like One Foot in the Grave, designed to be an off-kilter, subdued collection of acoustic-based songs pitched halfway between psychedelic country blues and lo-fi folk. Once Beck became an international celebrity -- shortly after Geffen's hitmaking machine began to dry up -- it was impossible for him to release an independent record, so Geffen snapped up his Bong Load contract, releasing Mutations in the fall of 1998 while stressing that it was the official follow-up to Odelay. The presence of producer Nigel Godrich, the man who helmed Radiohead's acclaimed OK Computer, makes such claims dubious. Godrich is not a slick producer, but he's no Calvin Johnson, either, and Mutations has an appropriately clean, trippy feel. There's little question that the blues, country, psych, bossa nova, and folk that comprise Mutations was never meant to be a commercial endeavor -- there's no floor-shaker like "Where It's At," nor does it trade in the junk culture that brought Odelay to life. It's a small, spacy, low-key album that is a world away from the dense kaleidoscope of sound that has distinguished his previous Geffen work, yet it unmistakably bears his signature stamp. Mutations has shambling folk as its foundation, as most of his albums do, but it's more elastic, trippy, and self-contained. Recording with his touring band -- marking the first time he has entered the studio with a live band -- does result in a different sound, but it's not so much a departure as it is a side-road that is going in the same direction. None of the songs explore new territory -- Beck test-drove the bossa nova of "Tropicalia" on "Deadweight," his unjustly overlooked contribution to the Life Less Ordinary soundtrack -- but they're rich, lyrically and musically. There's an off-the-cuff wit to the songwriting, especially on "Cancelled Check" and "Bottle of Blues," and the performances are natural, relaxed, and laid-back, without ever sounding complacent. In fact, one of the nifty tricks of Mutations is how it sounds simple upon the first listen, then reveals more psychedelic layers upon each play. Beck is not only a startling songwriter -- his best songs are simultaneously modern and timeless -- he is a sharp record maker, crafting albums that sound distinct and original, no matter how much they may borrow. In its own quiet, organic way, Mutations confirms this as much as either Mellow Gold or Odelay. [Mutations is also available in an import release with bonus tracks.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Cold Brains 3:43 N/A
2 Nobody's Fault But My Own 5:02 N/A
3 Lazy Flies 3:44 N/A
4 Canceled Check 3:13 N/A
5 We Live Again 3:04 N/A
6 Tropicalia 3:20 N/A
7 Dead Melodies 2:35 N/A
8 Bottle of Blues 4:55 N/A
9 Oh Maria 3:58 N/A
10 Sing It Again 4:20 N/A
11 Static 4:18 N/A
12 Diamond Bollocks 6:02 N/A
13 Runners Dial Zero 4:05 N/A
Price: $20.98     243 Reviews
Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) pressing includes two bonus tracks. Universal. 2008.
Back to the topMellow Gold (Clean)
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Released:
March 01, 1994
Label:
Geffen
Rating:
Styles:
Alternative Pop/Rock
Experimental Rock
Alternative/Indie-Rock
Indie Rock
Lo-Fi
From its kaleidoscopic array of junk-culture musical styles to its assured, surrealistic wordplay, Beck's debut album Mellow Gold is a stunner. Throughout the record, Beck plays as if there are no divisions between musical genres, freely blending rock, rap, folk, psychedelia, and country. Although his inspired sense of humor occasionally plays like he's a smirking, irony-addled hipster, his music is never kitschy, and his wordplay is constantly inspired. Since Mellow Gold was pieced together from home-recorded tapes, it lacks a coherent production, functioning more as a stylistic sampler: there are the stoner raps of "Loser" and "Beercan," the urban folk of "Pay No Mind (Snoozer)," the mock-industrial onslaught of "Motherf--er," the garagey "F---in With My Head," the trancy acoustic "Blackhole," and the gently sardonic folk-rock of "Nitemare Hippy Girl." It's a dizzying demonstration of musical skills, yet it's all tied together by a simple yet clever sense of songcraft and a truly original lyrical viewpoint, one that's basic yet as colorful as free verse. By blending boundaries so thoroughly and intoxicatingly, Mellow Gold established a new vein of alternative rock, one that was fueled by ideas instead of attitude. [Mellow Gold was also released in a "clean" edition, containing no profanities or vulgarities.]
Track # Track Time Composer
1 Loser 3:55 Beck Ringtone
2 Pay No Mind (Snoozer) 7:33 Beck
3 %*! @?# With My Head 3:14 Beck
4 Whiskeyclone, Hotel City 1997 3:41 Beck
5 Soul Suckin' Jerk 3:28 Beck
6 Truckdrivin' Neighbors Downstairs (Yellow Sweat) 3:56 Beck
7 Sweet Sunshine 2:55 Beck
8 Beercan 4:17 Beck
9 Steal My Body Home 4:00 Beck
10 Nitemare Hippy Girl 5:33 Beck
11 &*$^?#%*@! #^ 2:55 Beck
12 Blackhole 2:05 Beck
Price: $18.98     6 Reviews
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