Beck
Odelay
Play Odelay
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MOG Editorial Review
Beck had already solidified his status as a Gen X icon when he released Mellow Gold, but no one could have seen his complete meteoric rise coming before the release of Odelay. Though he still left plenty of his alt-folk sound on the record, the Dust Brothers-producedOdelay is so much more than that, a proper encapsulation of everything that was interesting around the time of its 1996 release. There was the white-boy funk of "Where It's At," the borderline-hip-hop of "Hotwax," and the upbeat modern rock of "Devil's Haircut," all of which only scratch the surface. Beck has made a career of shape-shifting and pulling off new sounds in only the way he can, and you truly see that reputation made with each and every song on this impossibly diverse landmark.
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AMG Review of Odelay
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
All Music GuideUnlike 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.
















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