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Guero

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (213 ratings)
Guero album cover
01
E-Pro
3:24
$1.29
02
Que' Onda Guero
3:29
$1.29
03
Girl
3:30
$1.29
04
Missing
4:44
$0.99
05
Black Tambourine
2:46
$1.29
06
Earthquake Weather
4:27
$0.99
07
Hell Yes
3:18
$1.29
08
Broken Drum
4:30
$0.99
09
Scarecrow
4:16
$0.99
10
Go It Alone
4:09
$1.29
11
Farewell Ride
4:19
$0.99
12
Rental Car
3:05
$0.99
13
Emergency Exit
4:03
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 50:00

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eMusic Review 0

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Sean Fennessey

eMusic Contributor

Director of Merchandising, emusic.com

11.16.10
Diverse, but oddly predictable
2005 | Label: Geffen

Three years passed between the bonhomie bonanza of Sea Change and 2005's spirited Guero, and the time off made many wonder if Beck could regain the same manic brilliance he'd held for so many years in the '90s. Reteaming with the Dust Brothers, who gave Odelay its brilliant-slash-n-build aesthetic, Beck does recapture some glory here, fusing pastiche-funk on "Que Onde Guero" and "E-Pro," a deadringer for "Devil's Haircut." And on the Nintendo-blooping "Girl," Beck does finally find a way to marry his emotional side with his eccentric pop instincts. Guero is hardly ever boring, its songs are laced with a veritable catchiness, monstrous hooks, and an audible professionalism. But that is also the problem with it. Though the sound is diverse, it's oddly predictable. Here is a crazy new Beck album! Like the ones you love! it seems to be saying. But while it's easy to admire, Guero remains difficult to truly love.

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They Say All Music Guide

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. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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Activity

  • 05.08.13 Beck | Rolling Stone | Samsung http://t.co/hZT1OS3Ipp via @rollingstone #thenextbigthing
  • 04.16.13 Thank you for these versions of “We All Wear Cloaks” and “Just Noise” http://t.co/WqD55rb8ZP
  • 04.11.13 The Song Reader Issue – presented by @McSweeneys @PopUpMag & @Beck. SF’s Symphony Hall on 5/20. Tix on sale 4/24 http://t.co/ey7mojupli.
  • 04.09.13 Beck will be playing a solo acoustic show at Rio Theatre in Santa Cruz, May 19th. Tickets go on sale Friday at 10am - http://t.co/5yrsHVhjs4
  • 03.07.13 Thank you for this version of “Eyes That Say I Love You” http://t.co/DvQzTsxeV6!
  • 03.01.13 At 10:10am, Beck’s segment from his Song Reader Exhibition Opening will air on KCRW’s “Morning Becomes Eclectic”. http://t.co/AcslL4i2hA
  • 02.22.13 Introducing the new official website for Beck Hansen’s Song Reader: http://t.co/B4gYAynhDU
  • 02.21.13 Immerse yourself in Song Reader & leave your own interpretation as part of a new exhibition at @Sonos Studio LA. http://t.co/h7U8sbc0hq
  • 02.19.13 The 360° “Sound and Vision” viewing can now be seen here: http://t.co/VjEayHbD
  • 02.11.13 Beck says #HelloAgain to David Bowie’s “Sound and Vision”. Watch the full performance here: http://t.co/W28KHUGs
  • 02.09.13 Behind The Scenes: Beck Reimagines David Bowie’s “Sound and Vision”. Watch Full Performance on February 10th http://t.co/be99BM4s
  • 02.02.13 Beck is working with Chris Milk on a special one-time performance of David Bowie's "Sound and Vision" http://t.co/kOLspEQT