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Product Details
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| 1. Elevator Music |
| 2. Think I'm In Love |
| 3. Cellphone's Dead |
| 4. Strange Apparition |
| 5. Soldier Jane |
| 6. Nausea |
| 7. New Round |
| 8. Dark Star |
| 9. We Dance Alone |
| 10. No Complaints |
| 11. 1000bpm |
| 12. Motorcade |
| 13. Information |
| 14. Movie Theme |
| 15. Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton |
| 16. Inside Out |
| 17. This Girl That I Know |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Getting better all the time...,
By
This review is from: The Information (Audio CD)
While Beck's earlier work (who can look at Odelay and not say "masterpiece?") was brilliant in a raw way, I think he's gotten more refined and yet has developed more depth over the years. I totally fell in love with Guero and wondered if he could keep the pace going. To my surprise, I like parts of The Information even better. It's more techno, which I like, and yes, darker. What I get out of this CD is a love/hate affair with technology & the alienation it brings to our lives. We can cross the world in seconds thanks to the net, and yet we are more distant, isolating within ourselves. This is a CD for the current day...it's wired, and so are we. And there's no going back.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Everything you ever loved about Beck, and his best since the 90s,
By
This review is from: The Information (Audio CD)
Though I'd hardly say he's hardly floundering, Beck's last two albums were a bit of a disappointment for me. The gloomy, downbeat songwriting on Sea Change was an interesting and surprising turn, but in the end it seemed like Beck trying to do a Nick Drake impersonation that, while adequate, was no substitute for the real thing, and didn't really play to Beck's strong suits. Guero, on the other hand marked a return to the Beck we all know and love, but it seemed like a retreat, and an attempt to recapture past success. To that effect it worked: Guero sold a lot of copies, and it had a handful of great songs, but many of the songs sounded too much like sideways versions of old Beck songs and it lacked the creative spark Beck is so known for.
Now I still love the guy, but I was slightly apprehensive when I heard his new album was coming so shortly after the last. But my worries were laid to rest upon first listen. This album is everything I've come to love about Beck. It's manages to bring together the atmospherics and songwriting of Mutations and Sea Change and pull them together with the kind of experimental electronica and toe-tapping beats pioneered on Odelay, and in so doing creates a completely new sound that should satisfy fans on both sides. The album begins suitable with the languid and distant hip hop of Elevator Music. This sets the tone for the album perfectly. This album is layered, and funky, but never high energy. It's the other end of the spectrum from Midnite Vultures with an aloof sounding Beck rhyming over some echoey, eerie, and atmospheric beats. Choirs and cello strings regularly accompany the synthesizers and turntables. Beck evokes a similar funk ennui in Cell Phone's Dead and We Dance Alone, both very strong tracks. There are pop moments as well, though. Beck puts his freestyle flow aside for the second track, Think I'm In Love, which could be the follow up to last year's Girl. It has an infectious chorus backed by bubbly ivory tickling, and a cello-backed bridge that cements the tracks as pop gold. He follows it up with the even more upbeat Strange Apparition, which evokes shades of Fatboy Slim's Praise You. The album does sag a bit at the end of the disc. Motorcades tinny racket falls to connect, and the synth cheese of Movie Theme proves too overbearimg. The disc closes with a 10-minute medley of 3 songs, the middle of which is worth listening too and the ending of which comes off as either vapid pot talk or Scientologist proselytizing, I'm not sure which. But the bottom line is abundantly clear: This is Beck's strongest album in many years, and a far better heir to Odelay than the trying-too-hard Guero. It manages to be a step forward for the artist, while still playing to his strong suits. The production is slick, everything about it is quintessentially Beck, and it doesn't sound like anything else out there. We have a winner.
21 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT MUSIC BAD PACKAGING,
By MindSewer "a force of Nature" (Torrance CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Information (Dlx) (Slip) (Audio CD)
First let me say that Beck's music and video creations are clearly the most advanced artistic expressions in rock, IMO. I'm the biggest Fan of Mr. Hansen in the Universe, and I will *automatically* Buy His Product. BUT the packaging on this "deluxe edition" is truly a train wreck, and *those about to buy* should know about this up front, to avoid disappointment. The outer box is really flimsy cardboard; it's difficult to open and I put a crease in my copy on the very first opening. This packaging is designed to fall to pieces, which makes the sticker aspect even more comical, like I'm really going to mess with this stuff. The two cds and one expanded dvd are all in cardboard slip cases, and the cases are sized wrong, it's really hard to even get the disks out of the covers! Also included is a lyrics booklet and a blank graph-paper booklet for presumed Art Fun. The four sets of stickers satisfy the curiosity about what graphics were in the other three editions (besides the one copy I bought) of the original release of the album. This package is a HUGE step down from the deluxe hardbound book edition of "Guero" , unfortunately. It really looks cheap and destined for disposability. Perhaps that was part of the aesthetic, who knows. This is another case of burning copies of all the disks and filing the fragile original edition away, rarely to be touched. Of course the music is all that matters anyway; Mr. Hansen recently mentioned on NPR that doing this kind of packaging should make the album interesting and attractive to obtain rather than just downloading the music. I don't think this album's packaging succeeds in achieving this goal.
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