Beck
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In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
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Beck Biography
One of the most inventive and eclectic figures to emerge from
the '90s alternative revolution, Beck was the epitome of postmodern
chic in an era obsessed with junk culture. Drawing upon a kaleidoscope
of influences -- pop, folk, psychedelia, hip-hop, country, blues,
R&B, funk, indie rock, noise rock, experimental rock, jazz, lounge,
Brazilian music -- Beck created a body of work that was wildly
unpredictable, vibrantly messy, and bursting with ideas. He was
unquestionably a product of the media age -- a synthesist whose
concoctions were pasted together from bits of the past and present, in
ways that could only occur to an overexposed pop-culture junkie. His
surreal, free-associative lyrics were laced with warped imagery and a
sardonic sense of humor that, while typical of the times, only rarely
threatened the impact of his adventurous music. Beck appropriated
freely from whatever genres he felt like, juxtaposing sounds that would
never have co-existed organically (and his habitual irony made clear
that he wasn't aiming for authenticity in the first place). If his
musical style was impossible to pigeonhole, his true identity lay in
that rootless, sprawling diversity, that determination to acknowledge
no boundaries or conventions; everything he did bore the stamp of his
distinctively skewed viewpoint. Beck caught his big break when the
bizarre Delta blues/white-boy-rap pastiche Loser spawned a national
catch phrase in early 1994. His debut album, Mellow Gold, became a hit,
and the official follow-up, the Dust Brothers-produced Odelay, was
widely acclaimed as one of the decade's landmark records. Beck followed
those touchstones with genre exercises in folk and funk that still
managed to dazzle with their variety, solidifying one of the most
creatively vital oeuvres in alternative rock -- or all of modern pop
music, for that matter.
Beck David Campbell was born July 8, 1970, in Los Angeles, and came
from strong creative stock. His father, David Campbell, was a conductor
and string arranger (who later worked on his son's records); however,
he left the family early on, and Beck adopted the last name of his
mother Bibbe Hansen, a regular on Andy Warhol's Factory scene who
appeared in the Warhol film Prison. Moreover, his grandfather Al Hansen
was an important figure in the Fluxus art movement, best known for
launching the career of Yoko Ono. The young Beck Hansen grew up mostly
in Los Angeles, also spending some time with both sets of grandparents
(Al Hansen in Europe, and his other grandfather -- a Presbyterian
minister -- in the Kansas City area). He dropped out of school in tenth
grade, and began playing acoustic blues and folk music as a street
busker, as well as trying his hand in the poetry-slam scene; in 1988,
he produced a cassette of home recordings called The Banjo Story. In
1989, he moved to New York and tried to break into the city's
short-lived anti-folk scene, a punk-influenced movement of acoustic
singer/songwriters that included Roger Manning and Michelle Shocked.
Finding the going tough, he returned to Los Angeles after about a year,
and attempted to gain exposure at rock clubs by playing a few songs in
between the regular sets.
In the summer of 1991, Beck was discovered separately by Bong Load
label owners Tom Rothrock (at one of his club performances) and Rob
Schnapf (at the Sunset Junction street fair). The two approached him
about cutting some folk songs backed with hip-hop beats, and Beck
agreed. Gathering in the kitchen of up-and-coming hip-hop producer Karl
Stephenson, Beck recorded Loser and a selection of other tracks. In
1992, Beck traveled to Olympia, WA, to record for Calvin Johnson's K
label, and also inked a publishing deal with BMG. At the beginning of
1993, Beck finally saw his first official releases: the single MTV
Makes Me Want to Smoke Crack on Flipside, and the full-length,
cassette-only Golden Feelings on Sonic Enemy. In September, Bong Load
finally released Loser as a 12 single, and it became an instant
smash on L.A.'s independent radio stations, so much so that Bong Load
had trouble pressing enough copies to keep up with the demand.
Combining a funky drum-machine track and Beck's nonsense raps with
bluesy slide guitar and a sample of Dr. John's I Walk on Gilded
Splinters, Loser sounded like nothing else. Word spread quickly,
helped out by Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore, who raved about Beck after
seeing him perform at a backyard party. A major-label bidding war
ensued, and Beck signed an innovative contract with Geffen that allowed
him to continue releasing uncommercial material on smaller independent
labels. In the meantime, another indie album, the 10 record A Western
Harvest Field by Moonlight, was released in January 1994 by Fingerpaint.
Beck's major-label debut, Mellow Gold, was released in March 1994, and
Geffen also reissued Loser on a national level. Instantly labeled an
anthem for the so-called slacker generation, the song was a sensation,
climbing into the Top Ten and hitting number one on Billboard's modern
rock chart. Mellow Gold was a hit, climbing into the Top 20 and
eventually going platinum. Initial reviews were somewhat mixed; many
critics raved over the album, but others were reluctant to lavish
praise on an artist they weren't sure would ever be anything more than
a one-hit novelty. Meanwhile, Beck immediately took advantage of his
Geffen deal to release two more indie albums in 1994. Stereopathetic
Soul Manure, issued on Flipside, consisted of lo-fi noise rock, while
One Foot in the Grave -- which included the material from Beck's 1992
session for K Records, fleshed out with new recordings -- was a
bare-bones acoustic folk collection. Later that year, Bong Load
released another indie single, Steve Threw Up. Beck's low-budget body
of work, especially his indie recordings, seemed to place him as part
of the emerging lo-fi aesthetic, whose other adherents included
Pavement, Sebadoh, and Liz Phair.
In the summer of 1995, Beck undertook his first major promotional tour,
appearing as part of the fifth edition of Lollapalooza. For his second
major-label album, he entered the studio with producers the Dust
Brothers, who'd been a significant force behind the Beastie Boys'
groundbreaking masterpiece Paul's Boutique. Odelay was released in June
1996 to massive acclaim, and wound up topping many year-end critics'
polls; it was commercially successful as well, reaching the Top 20,
selling over two million copies, and spinning off a string of MTV hits
that included Where It's At, Devil's Haircut, Jack-Ass, and The
New Pollution. Where It's At went on to win a Grammy for Best Male
Rock Vocal, and Odelay also won for Best Alternative Music Performance.
Late in 1997, Beck contributed the single Deadweight to the
soundtrack of the film A Life Less Ordinary, which starred Ewan
McGregor and Cameron Diaz. In the spring of 1998, Beck's artwork was
featured in a joint show with that of his late grandfather.
Also in 1998, Beck began work on a new, folk-styled album -- in the
vein of One Foot in the Grave -- that was originally slated for release
on Bong Load. However, excited by the results and the presence of
Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, Geffen stepped in and released the
album themselves that November. Titled Mutations, the record's quiet,
gently trippy tone and relatively straightforward approach made it an
unlikely progression from Odelay, and indeed both Beck and Geffen made
it clear that the record was never intended as the official follow-up.
Although everything about Mutations was low-key, it still became Beck's
third straight Top 20 major-label album. In early 1999, lawsuits
between Geffen, Bong Load, and Beck began to fly over the abrupt
release change of Mutations, but were eventually worked out in friendly
fashion. That summer, Beck recorded a duet with Emmylou Harris on Sin
City, a track featured on the Gram Parsons tribute album Return of the
Grievous Angel.
The official
follow-up to Odelay took an exhausting total of 14 months to record.
Released in November 1999, Midnite Vultures was designed as a party
record, running the gamut of variations on funk and allowing Beck to
play the roles of R&B loverman and horny Prince disciple. Reviews
ranged from glowing to indifferent, and Midnite Vultures didn't sell
quite as well as its predecessors. Mutations won Beck another Grammy
for Best Alternative Music Performance in early 2000, and he embarked
on an extensive international tour in support of Midnite Vultures. In
2001, Beck recorded a cover of David Bowie's Diamond Dogs with
cutting-edge hip-hop producer Timbaland, and also contributed to French
electronic popsters Air's 10,000 Hz Legend album.
His next project was another folk-styled album, titled Sea Change,
again recorded with Mutations producer Nigel Godrich and released by
Geffen in September 2002. Beck promoted Sea Change with a brief
acoustic tour beforehand, then announced that he had hired the Flaming
Lips as his backing band for the more extensive official tour following
its release. For the follow-up to Sea Change, Beck re-enlisted the Dust
Brothers as producers; the resulting album, titled Guero, was released
in March 2005. Guero spawned hits like E-Pro and Hell Yes and was
seen as a conscious return to the sound and feel of Beck's Odelay days.
Guerolito, a remixed version of the album, appeared in December 2005.
Godrich was back for 2006's The Information, a hip-hop-influenced
effort. The album came with a blank cover and a sheet of stickers that
fans could use to make their own cover art. ~ Steve Huey, All Music
Guide
Written by Steve Huey