Thursday, September 18, 2008

Review:Beck - Modern Guilt (2008)

Let’s face it; Beck needed a return to form. His last two long players (“Guerolito” and “The Information”) were cursed with so many weighty inconsistencies that even his most loyal followers must have questioned his wisdom. Fortunately, owing to his immense chameleonic abilities, one knew Hansen wouldn’t stand still for long. The Danger Mouse produced “Modern Guilt” is his most conventional, melody driven recording since 2002’s outstanding “Sea Change”, discarding the scattergun straddling genre experimentation at all costs in favour of a short, focused set of psychedelic Rock and Pop that may not be his best, but has genuinely halted the slide towards mediocrity that had dogged his recent works. At the heart of the record lies trademark minor key synth progressions, scratchy rhythms and Beck’s typically downcast lyrical melancholia. Danger Mouse adds his own brand of 60s tinny beat pop that served so well on his Gnarls Barkley projects. The opener (“Orphans”), takes the melody from Free’s 70s hit “Wishing Well”, and with authentic artistic creativity, genuinely sounds like the 60s fore runner it aspires to be.

The real star of the show is the spacious psyche rocker and lead off single “Chemtrails”, which drifts along with the kind of sparse beauty you’d have expected from a Nigel Godrich collaboration, its sombre atmospherics superbly enlivened by Joey Waronker’s outstanding drum accompaniment. Apparently inspired by Aphrodite’s Child’s 1972 prog rock song “The Four Horsemen”, from the vast concept album “666”, the song reminds the listener that at his best, Beck is still an illuminating talent. “Gamma Ray”, the second track and follow up single, harnesses tried and tested dualities of upbeat music and dark lyrics, as he ambiguously rambles of ecological disaster and Armageddon played out over a thudding bass rhythm and chiming keyboard fill. In addition, there are memorable moments from the more personal closer “Volcano”, and the title track.

There’s little for Beck fans to worry about, because “Modern Guilt” provides ample proof that he’s not lost his creative ‘mojo’. It’s more defined, carefully crafted, and ultimately the most complete listening experience since “Sea Change”.

7.0/10

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