Beck- Sea Change

Posted almost 6 years ago

A couple of posts ago I told all of you I was a little concerned about picking a band a week, so this week I am going to try a little something different. I will be focusing on an album rather than an artist.

Beck

Sea Change

We’ve all been asked the question: “Who’s your favorite band?” or “What’s your favorite song?” This may be an easy answer for most, but for music nerds like me (and some people who read this blog) it’s an almost impossible question. Asking me to name my favorite song or artist is like asking a parent to pick their favorite child. I can usually come up with a top ten, but these are only the “top ten” of the moment. Next week I might have a whole new list of favorite songs or artists. There is one album that has remained one of my favorites since the first time I heard it. Becks- Sea Change.

This is easily in my top 5 favorite albums of all time. In my opinion Sea Change is the best album of the new Millennium. For those of you familiar with beck from his songs on the radio you know him as a high energy, electronic, and sometimes silly artist. His songs “loser” and “where it’s at” are pretty universally known. I was a casual fan of Beck, I owned Odelay and Midnight Voulchers, and I enjoyed him for the most part. This all changed with the release of Sea Change.

Sea Change is a folk rock album by Beck and was released in September 2002. According Beck he had just broken up with a longtime girlfriend and was in a big state of depression over the entire thing. Instead of sitting around his apartment feeling sorry for himself he went into the studio and recorded the album of his career. While listening to this album you can just feel every emotion he is going through. Every time I listen to this album I feel the same emotions that he is feeling. With his lyrics I am able to remember exactly what going through that type of situation is like. Here is an expert from the Rolling Stone review:

“But you can clearly hear Beck banging between bravado and paralysis all over Sea Change. He gives his departing other a grand send-off at the start of the album, in "The Golden Age" ("Put your hands on the wheel/Let the golden age begin"), then fills the rest of the song with his own fear of going nowhere fast: "These days I barely get by/I don't even try." Compared to other titles here, such as "Lost Cause" and "Already Dead," "Guess I'm Doing Fine" is happy talk. In fact, Beck is doing anything but; the low, slow way he sings on his way to the song's punch line -- "It's only tears that I'm crying/It's only you that I'm losing/Guess I'm doing fine" -- is a powerful admission of failure.”

I am having a very difficult time describing in words how amazing this album is; hopefully some people can help me out with some comments. This is an album that every music fan should have in their collection. In my opinion it is one of the best albums ever made, its musical perfection.

Cool Music Video to Paper Tiger

Golden Age Video

Lonesome Tears (My favorite song on the album)

Comments (2)

  1. Madboy says I dont know if me and my super inarticulate vocab can add anything, but with "Lonesome Tears" and "Guess I'm Doing Fine", along with the general tone of the album, Sea Change has to be one of the most awesomely melancholy albums ive heard. (run on sentence, i know)
    Permalink posted 06/27/2006
  2. mermonkey says Sea Change is my favorite example of production dollars well-spent! It is immaculate. Normally i don't go for the heavy production, but when it is done right, like this, it can be bloody magic. The heart and soul are not buried, but emphasized. I really like that beck is such a musical vagabond. His lo-fi stuff is still my favorite, but he seems pretty comfortable all over the place.
    Permalink posted 07/17/2006

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