eMusic Review 0
In 1995, written off as a one-hit wonder with a frat boy base and, as SPIN once put it, "a generation's consolation prize after the death of Kurt Cobain," newly minted slacker avatar Beck was stumped. He recorded a tentative, folky follow-up to Mellow Gold with producers Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf, but disliked the moody results and shelved the album. From the ashes came the most important album of 1996. A chance encounter with E.Z. Mike and King Gizmo, aka The Dust Brothers, spurned a new direction, and the three began assembling Odelay from the trash cans of culture, slicing up musical ephemera from sources as varied as Them, Mantronix, Pretty Purdie, and Rasputin's Stash and began rebuilding them with massive chords, a thundering collection of drum hits, and nonsensical but memorable abstractions from Beck, a visionary linguist and prankster poet. The Dust Brothers famously defined the sample-stoked era with the Beastie Boys' staggering Paul's Boutique six years earlier — but this was something different, both more precise and sloppier.
There are genuine pop hits that begged to be received as such, like the buzzy spy theme, "The New Pollution," the stripped disco thwomp of "Devil's Haircut," and the… read more »
