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Thread started 09/09/15 12:25pm

dancerella

New Beck Song!

Anyone heard it yet? It's called Dreams and it's actually upbeat. I really like it. He confirmed it's the first single from his forthcoming album. I hope this single is an indication as to what the album will sound like.
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Reply #1 posted 09/09/15 4:21pm

IstenSzek

avatar

it's been out since june 15 lol


i haven't listened to it too much since i figured i'd wait and see if it actually ends

up on the album, which i'd love to experience as entirely new smile

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #2 posted 09/09/15 4:38pm

dancerella

IstenSzek said:

it's been out since june 15 lol



i haven't listened to it too much since i figured i'd wait and see if it actually ends


up on the album, which i'd love to experience as entirely new smile




Considering how stuck in the 80s I am, trust me, it's new lol.
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Reply #3 posted 09/09/15 4:50pm

IstenSzek

avatar

dancerella said:

IstenSzek said:

it's been out since june 15 lol


i haven't listened to it too much since i figured i'd wait and see if it actually ends

up on the album, which i'd love to experience as entirely new smile

Considering how stuck in the 80s I am, trust me, it's new lol.

lol fair enough biggrin

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #4 posted 09/09/15 10:03pm

thedoorkeeper

Seems I hear it at least once a day since it was released.
And it's a MASTERPIECE
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Reply #5 posted 09/10/15 12:09am

dancerella

thedoorkeeper said:

Seems I hear it at least once a day since it was released.
And it's a MASTERPIECE



I must say I'm digging this song a lot. I'm happy he went in this direction. I can't down with his chill out jamz.
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Reply #6 posted 09/10/15 6:15am

IstenSzek

avatar

dancerella said:

thedoorkeeper said:
Seems I hear it at least once a day since it was released. And it's a MASTERPIECE
I must say I'm digging this song a lot. I'm happy he went in this direction. I can't down with his chill out jamz.


just curious, but do you know his albums pre-morning phase? because he's made this kind

of music before. if anything "morning phase" was very slow for him, although no a-typical,

since he already made "sea change" which is like a sister to "morning phase".

but albums like "midnite vultures", "guero" and "the information" have stuff reminiscent of
"dreams" on them. the man has such a great body of work. he's my 2nd favorit artist next

to prince.

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #7 posted 09/10/15 10:35am

dancerella

IstenSzek said:



dancerella said:


thedoorkeeper said:
Seems I hear it at least once a day since it was released. And it's a MASTERPIECE

I must say I'm digging this song a lot. I'm happy he went in this direction. I can't down with his chill out jamz.


just curious, but do you know his albums pre-morning phase? because he's made this kind


of music before. if anything "morning phase" was very slow for him, although no a-typical,


since he already made "sea change" which is like a sister to "morning phase".

but albums like "midnite vultures", "guero" and "the information" have stuff reminiscent of
"dreams" on them. the man has such a great body of work. he's my 2nd favorit artist next


to prince.




The only Beck album I had was Midnite Vultures which was funky and as u said, closest to Dreams. I know he's incredibly versatile. I've just been waiting for him to get funky again. Looks like he might be moving in that direction again. Finally!
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Reply #8 posted 09/10/15 10:47am

IstenSzek

avatar

dancerella said:

IstenSzek said:


just curious, but do you know his albums pre-morning phase? because he's made this kind

of music before. if anything "morning phase" was very slow for him, although no a-typical,

since he already made "sea change" which is like a sister to "morning phase".

but albums like "midnite vultures", "guero" and "the information" have stuff reminiscent of
"dreams" on them. the man has such a great body of work. he's my 2nd favorit artist next

to prince.

The only Beck album I had was Midnite Vultures which was funky and as u said, closest to Dreams. I know he's incredibly versatile. I've just been waiting for him to get funky again. Looks like he might be moving in that direction again. Finally!

you should really give "Guero" a try, it's so diverse and it's got such funky songs on it,
i'm quite sure you will love it. "the information" is also very good, very diverse and it's

got some of his best ever songs as well, and some funk to boot smile

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #9 posted 09/10/15 12:11pm

hifidelity67

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Reply #10 posted 09/10/15 1:17pm

Musicslave

hifidelity67 said:

-

Dope.

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Reply #11 posted 09/10/15 1:21pm

dancerella

IstenSzek said:



dancerella said:


IstenSzek said:



just curious, but do you know his albums pre-morning phase? because he's made this kind


of music before. if anything "morning phase" was very slow for him, although no a-typical,


since he already made "sea change" which is like a sister to "morning phase".

but albums like "midnite vultures", "guero" and "the information" have stuff reminiscent of
"dreams" on them. the man has such a great body of work. he's my 2nd favorit artist next


to prince.




Cool I'll check out Guero in the meantime til his next album drops. Do you have Morning Phaze? What's the deal with that album? People praised it hard.



The only Beck album I had was Midnite Vultures which was funky and as u said, closest to Dreams. I know he's incredibly versatile. I've just been waiting for him to get funky again. Looks like he might be moving in that direction again. Finally!


you should really give "Guero" a try, it's so diverse and it's got such funky songs on it,
i'm quite sure you will love it. "the information" is also very good, very diverse and it's


got some of his best ever songs as well, and some funk to boot smile


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Reply #12 posted 09/10/15 2:31pm

thedoorkeeper

And Modern Guilt.
Modern Guilt is really really good.
I'd pick
Midnite Vulture, Guero and Modern Guilt
as my top 3 favs.
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Reply #13 posted 09/10/15 2:57pm

IstenSzek

avatar

well, for me personally beck hasn't recorded a bad album since Odelay.

so pretty much any album of his that you pick has a nice mix of styles

and genres. kinda like prince, almost.

"morning phase" is just a very beautiful, quiet album. it's not all just

very slow songs. cuts like "heart is a drum" are nice mid tempo and

the songwriting is simply outstanding. great lyrics, beautiful atmosphere,

superb musicianship.

he did an album like that before, called "sea change", almost 10 years

earlier, which is one of my favorit albums by anyone, ever.

if you don't like slow songs, those albums pretty much aren't for you,

but if you give them a chance, they will grow on you. especially if you
spend some time with "sea change".

but i'm biased, perhaps. beck can't do wrong for me. smile

and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #14 posted 09/10/15 4:54pm

mjscarousal

music

Wow this sounds really good!!!

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Reply #15 posted 09/10/15 6:34pm

breakbeat

After being a Beck fan in the 90's to early 00's, then not listening for 10 years, over the last few years I think I'm becoming a fan again!

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Reply #16 posted 09/11/15 3:04pm

duccichucka

The music press adores this dude while it discounts Lenny Kravitz for doing the
same type of music: pastiche that is heavily indebted to the past and so far re-
moved from originality.

So, it must be the lyrics, where Beck can be ironic, and humorous, and playful.
Lenny Kravitz's lyrical analog is Dr Seuss.

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Reply #17 posted 09/12/15 9:02pm

theblueangel

avatar

I'm with Istenszek, in that I love everything Beck records. I even have a few favorite songs on "Stereopathetic Soul Manure." I mean, anytime Satan is serving up Mexican food, I'm down.

Like Prince, it's exceedingly difficult for me to choose my favorite Beck album, or even style, but "The Information" is great for more fast-paced funk jams.

And yes, "Dreams" has been my car song of the summer. Love it.
No confusion, no tears. No enemies, no fear. No sorrow, no pain. No ball, no chain.

Sex is not love. Love is not sex. Putting words in other people's mouths will only get you elected.

Need more sleep than coke or methamphetamine.
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Reply #18 posted 09/13/15 5:56am

novabrkr

duccichucka said:

The music press adores this dude while it discounts Lenny Kravitz for doing the
same type of music: pastiche that is heavily indebted to the past and so far re-
moved from originality.

So, it must be the lyrics, where Beck can be ironic, and humorous, and playful.
Lenny Kravitz's lyrical analog is Dr Seuss.


This is wrong.

Beck has his own style of music, which is the type of music he's done on albums like Mellow Gold, Odelay and Guero. He's done some pastiches along the years, but he usually mixes genres when he does that (e.g. funk mixed with bluegrass). While he often fuses older genres of music and references other people's songs you can't seriously make the claim that he wouldn't have a sound of his own that makes his music recognizeable.

Kravitz has gotten a lot of criticism that I don't think is fair. He started doing "retro" when it wasn't fashionable yet and the critics didn't re-evaluate their views on him even if most rock acts were doing some kind of retro stuff just a few years later. There was probably a little bit of racism involved there too, but let's not get into that. In any case, Beck is obviously the more ambitious one artistically and that's what the critics appreciate.

[Edited 9/13/15 5:57am]

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Reply #19 posted 09/13/15 6:50am

duccichucka

novabrkr said:

duccichucka said:

The music press adores this dude while it discounts Lenny Kravitz for doing the
same type of music: pastiche that is heavily indebted to the past and so far re-
moved from originality.

So, it must be the lyrics, where Beck can be ironic, and humorous, and playful.
Lenny Kravitz's lyrical analog is Dr Seuss.


This is wrong.

Beck has his own style of music, which is the type of music he's done on albums like Mellow Gold, Odelay and Guero. He's done some pastiches along the years, but he usually mixes genres when he does that (e.g. funk mixed with bluegrass). While he often fuses older genres of music and references other people's songs you can't seriously make the claim that he wouldn't have a sound of his own that makes his music recognizeable.

Kravitz has gotten a lot of criticism that I don't think is fair. He started doing "retro" when it wasn't fashionable yet and the critics didn't re-evaluate their views on him even if most rock acts were doing some kind of retro stuff just a few years later. There was probably a little bit of racism involved there too, but let's not get into that. In any case, Beck is obviously the more ambitious one artistically and that's what the critics appreciate.

[Edited 9/13/15 5:57am]


I disagree with you about Beck, as you can play "spot the influence" on most of his albums.
He's beholden to the past, the same as Kravitz is, and I'm not fooled into thinking that he is
so original just because he mixes two wholly discrete genres of music.

I agree with you about Kravitz who thinks he's stretching out creatively if he abandons 60s
pop and 70s hard rock for 70s funk and now 70s disco. But the lack of support he receives
from the music press (despite his string of Grammy wins in the early aughts) could be racism,
or, just an example of white people propping one of their own up in a pantheon dominated
by Black recording artists. But you're right about one regard concerning Beck: maybe critics
do appreciate him more than Kravitz because he is certainly ambitious with his pastiche.

Lenny Kravitz is definitely no original; but neither is Beck. Beck is rewarded for being more
adventurous, it appears, on top of being a better lyricist.


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Reply #20 posted 09/13/15 8:04pm

dancerella

duccichucka said:



novabrkr said:




duccichucka said:


The music press adores this dude while it discounts Lenny Kravitz for doing the
same type of music: pastiche that is heavily indebted to the past and so far re-
moved from originality.

So, it must be the lyrics, where Beck can be ironic, and humorous, and playful.
Lenny Kravitz's lyrical analog is Dr Seuss.




This is wrong.

Beck has his own style of music, which is the type of music he's done on albums like Mellow Gold, Odelay and Guero. He's done some pastiches along the years, but he usually mixes genres when he does that (e.g. funk mixed with bluegrass). While he often fuses older genres of music and references other people's songs you can't seriously make the claim that he wouldn't have a sound of his own that makes his music recognizeable.

Kravitz has gotten a lot of criticism that I don't think is fair. He started doing "retro" when it wasn't fashionable yet and the critics didn't re-evaluate their views on him even if most rock acts were doing some kind of retro stuff just a few years later. There was probably a little bit of racism involved there too, but let's not get into that. In any case, Beck is obviously the more ambitious one artistically and that's what the critics appreciate.


[Edited 9/13/15 5:57am]




I disagree with you about Beck, as you can play "spot the influence" on most of his albums.
He's beholden to the past, the same as Kravitz is, and I'm not fooled into thinking that he is
so original just because he mixes two wholly discrete genres of music.

I agree with you about Kravitz who thinks he's stretching out creatively if he abandons 60s
pop and 70s hard rock for 70s funk and now 70s disco. But the lack of support he receives
from the music press (despite his string of Grammy wins in the early aughts) could be racism,
or, just an example of white people propping one of their own up in a pantheon dominated
by Black recording artists. But you're right about one regard concerning Beck: maybe critics
do appreciate him more than Kravitz because he is certainly ambitious with his pastiche.

Lenny Kravitz is definitely no original; but neither is Beck. Beck is rewarded for being more
adventurous, it appears, on top of being a better lyricist.





What's wrong with Lennny's song writing? lol
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Reply #21 posted 09/15/15 5:02pm

duccichucka

dancerella said:

duccichucka said:


I disagree with you about Beck, as you can play "spot the influence" on most of his albums.
He's beholden to the past, the same as Kravitz is, and I'm not fooled into thinking that he is
so original just because he mixes two wholly discrete genres of music.

I agree with you about Kravitz who thinks he's stretching out creatively if he abandons 60s
pop and 70s hard rock for 70s funk and now 70s disco. But the lack of support he receives
from the music press (despite his string of Grammy wins in the early aughts) could be racism,
or, just an example of white people propping one of their own up in a pantheon dominated
by Black recording artists. But you're right about one regard concerning Beck: maybe critics
do appreciate him more than Kravitz because he is certainly ambitious with his pastiche.

Lenny Kravitz is definitely no original; but neither is Beck. Beck is rewarded for being more
adventurous, it appears, on top of being a better lyricist.


What's wrong with Lennny's song writing? lol


I'm not sure if you're fucking around with me, but I'ma give you an honest answer:

He's unimaginative. His songs are always straight-ahead and predictable: intro for four bars.
Verse. Chorus. Verse. Chorus. Solo. Chorus. Fade out. He does not dare make any harmonic
explorations - if a song is written in the key of C, then damnit, it will remain in the key of
C and he won't venture too far away from major chords or minor chords. Rarely will you
hear Kravitz toying around with diminished/augmented chords, or sevenths, or other thought
provoking chordal arrangements.

Recently, I was looking at the song structure of Jeff Buckley's "Lover, You Should've Come
Over." It was astonishing how he stretched out harmonically and covered so much ground
compositionally. Kravitz? Puh-lease. He's as interesting harmonically and compositionally
as mud baking in an oven. His compositional color is ecru. He's a great producer in the true
sense of the word as in he knows how to make aurally pleasing albums; he's got a great
ear for that type of thing (Kravitz can successfully and convincingly re-produce a 1965 Beatles
album, a 1970 Curtis Mayfield album, a 1975 Led Zeppelin album, and a 1979 Chic album,
for example).

All that being said, I'd rather listen to Kravtiz than Beck any day. Beck only fools white
people.

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