Beck - Odelay (Geffen)
by Ric Stewart
Beck
Beck has done it again. First there was "Loser," some
two and half years ago, but it verged on novelty. You thought he was
just lucky to lay down a slide guitar monster groove. But nooo! Beck
Hansen has polished his craft on Odelay coming out punching
like a round 15 Sylvester Stallone on "Devil's Haircut"-- a monster
groove revisited. This albums presents hip-hop as a fine art, just
one listen to "The New Pollution" and you see the dance, the trippy-ness
and the cute-ness coalescing into hip pop.
Using the studio as an instrument, Beck (who graciously
acknowledges source material such as the sample from Mantronix in
"Where It's At") makes a flowing rhythmic tapestry with his off-kilter
personality and bemused lyrical style stiching it together. He would
be like Dylan, a self-confessed 'song and dance' man, but he dances
and sings better (tossing in some Prince - while we are still in
Minnesota). But on the other hand, he plays with DJ's and producers
like the Dust Brothers and the music is about appropriation and
re-deployment of the tried and true genres of Folk, Pop, Funk, Soul
and Delta Blues. It's hard to do it all but Beck Hansen is making
a run for the roses.
Like his peers the Beastie Boys, Beck has raised
the ante in the sampling game, turning bits and pastiches of lost
tracks into a research and assemblage process that easily ranks
with cut outs, found objects, and dada as a creative use of things.
Fact of the matter is, most of that early century found object art
didn't retain its appeal with repetition the way these well crafted
songs will. Odelay is full of daring yet catchy hooks. Early
single "Devil's Haircut" veers dangerously off its verse and chorus
to offer a half minute detour into some favorable chaos. This cd
will get you up to speed on the nineties music scene. On the country
style "Lord Only Knows" Beck admonishes "Put your skeletons in jail,"
over a carefree pop groove embellished with some suave stylings
on the slide guitar.
The cd art proclaims "Je suis un revolutionaire"
a statement of a troubador folkie singing "Odelay" over his mellow
beats. A legend in the making.
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