Midnite Vultures

发行时间:1999-11-16
发行公司:Geffen Records
简介:  By calling the muted psychedelic folk rock, blues, and Tropicalia of Mutations a stopgap, Beck set expectations for Midnite Vultures unreasonably high. Ironically, Midnite Vultures doesn't feel like a sequel to Odelay it's a genre exercise, like Mutations. This time, Beck delves into soul, funk, and hip hop, touching on everything from Stax Volt to No Limit but using Prince as his home base. He's eschewed samples, more or less, but not the aesthetic. Even when a song is reminiscent of a particular style, it's assembled in strange, exciting ways. As it kicks off with "Sexx Laws," it's hard not to get caught up in the rush, and "Nicotine Gravy" carries on the vibe expertly, as does the party jam "Mixed Bizness" and the full on electro workout "Get Real Paid," an intoxicating number that sounds like a Black Album reject. So far, so good the songs are tight, catchy, and memorable, the production dense. Then comes "Hollywood Freaks." The self conscious gangsta goof is singularly irritating, not least because of Beck's affected voice. It's the first on Midnite Vultures to feel like a parody, and it's such an awkward, misguided shift in tone that it colors the rest of the album. Tributes now sound like send ups, allusions that once seemed affectionate feel snide, and the whole thing comes off as a little jive. Musically, Midnite Vultures is filled with wonderful little quirks, but these are undercut by the sneaking suspicion that for all the ingenuity, it's just a hipster joke. Humor has always been a big part of Beck's music, but it was gloriously absurd, never elitist. Here, it's delivered with a smug smirk, undercutting whatever joy the music generates.
  By calling the muted psychedelic folk rock, blues, and Tropicalia of Mutations a stopgap, Beck set expectations for Midnite Vultures unreasonably high. Ironically, Midnite Vultures doesn't feel like a sequel to Odelay it's a genre exercise, like Mutations. This time, Beck delves into soul, funk, and hip hop, touching on everything from Stax Volt to No Limit but using Prince as his home base. He's eschewed samples, more or less, but not the aesthetic. Even when a song is reminiscent of a particular style, it's assembled in strange, exciting ways. As it kicks off with "Sexx Laws," it's hard not to get caught up in the rush, and "Nicotine Gravy" carries on the vibe expertly, as does the party jam "Mixed Bizness" and the full on electro workout "Get Real Paid," an intoxicating number that sounds like a Black Album reject. So far, so good the songs are tight, catchy, and memorable, the production dense. Then comes "Hollywood Freaks." The self conscious gangsta goof is singularly irritating, not least because of Beck's affected voice. It's the first on Midnite Vultures to feel like a parody, and it's such an awkward, misguided shift in tone that it colors the rest of the album. Tributes now sound like send ups, allusions that once seemed affectionate feel snide, and the whole thing comes off as a little jive. Musically, Midnite Vultures is filled with wonderful little quirks, but these are undercut by the sneaking suspicion that for all the ingenuity, it's just a hipster joke. Humor has always been a big part of Beck's music, but it was gloriously absurd, never elitist. Here, it's delivered with a smug smirk, undercutting whatever joy the music generates.