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Entertainment Weekly is offering a special list of their 10 Favorite Beck Songs (you need to use the current webaccess code [] or be a subscriber). It's a good...
March 30, 2005

The Essential Beck

Beck's Disco Box

Entertainment Weekly is offering a special list of their 10 Favorite Beck Songs (you need to use the current webaccess code [
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] or be a subscriber).

It's a good list, but here's a better one, in chronological order:

Loser (Mellow Gold, 1994) // the song that made him a strong candidate for one-hit wonder status is still his most infectious pop composition. "Soy un perdedor!"
download from iTunes

Beercan (Mellow Gold, 1994) // bouncier and slightly less lyrically perplexing than "Loser," this sample-heavy track compels you to "shake your boots and let it all get loose."
download from iTunes

The New Pollution (Odelay, 1996) // from the opening notes, this herky jerky mix of electro, sixties pop and jazz (that wonderful saxophone sample) grabs your attention and doesn't let go.
download from iTunes

Jack-Ass (Odelay, 1996) // this ballad is like nothing else on Beck's remarkable "sophomore" album (at least not until the last minute), and hints at the East-meets-West sound of 1998's Mutations
download from iTunes

Deadweight (A Life Less Ordinary - Soundtrack, 1997) // light, airy and seemingly disposable, this summery psychedelia was the best thing from a pretty good soundtrack, and the video, directed by Michel Gondry, was better than the forgettable movie

Nobody's Fault But My Own (Mutations, 1998) // this dirge reintroduced Beck as a folkie with a broken heart; it was his most naked vocal and lyrical performance to date and holds its own against the similarly themed Sea Change
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Debra (Midnite Vultures, 1999) // a kitschy, cheeky disco/funk/soul album that has detractors and admirers of equal intensity, Vultures is best remembered for this comic slice of Princely soul (Jimmy Fallon, eat your heart out).
download from iTunes

The Golden Age (Sea Change, 2002) // full of scorn and pain, this song somehow remains hopeful in bleak times; the perfect album opener, it sets the stage for Beck's second masterpiece
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Already Dead (Sea Change, 2002) // sparse drums and layered guitar take this rueful and morose kiss-off in the vein of Alanis Morrisette's "You Oughta Know" or Green Day's "Time of Your Life (Good Riddance)" to a place of unexpected honesty and beauty
download from iTunes

Everybody's Gotta Learn Sometime (Eternal Sunshine - Soundtrack, 2004) // It may sound like a Sea Change b-side, but this track, the theme from my favorite movie of 2004, stands apart with an attitude less tortured and vindictive, more at peace with the reality of a breakup
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Earthquake Weather (Guero, 2005) // breezy but never slight, this is the standout of many excellent tracks on Beck's newest; the shimmering guitar and driving beats belie lyrics like "we've been driving through a desert looking for a life to call our own"
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And since no list would be complete without 13 items, here are my three favorite Beck songs not written or recorded by Beck:

Lonesome Whistle (Sounds Eclectic, 2001) // written by Beck favorite Hank Williams, this slice of old country reminds you of Beck's days as a folk singer on One Foot in the Grave and makes you wish he'd record a country album someday...I mean, why not?

Frontin' On Debra (DJ Reset Mashup/iTunes exclusive, 2004) // Jay-Z and Pharrell join Beck to reimagine this gem as a straightforward (if playful) love song for all ages
download from iTunes

True Love Will Find You In the End (The Late Great Daniel Johnston - Discovered Covered, 2004) // quite simply one of the greatest covers I have ever heard; Johnston was a talented songwriter and off-the-wall performer, but even he couldn't express the simultaneous hope and melancholy of this song like Beck can
download from iTunes

Posted by Queuetipp at March 30, 2005 11:54 AM

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