Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Album Review: Beck - Morning Phase

When Beck first came on the MTV radar in 1994, the perfect poster child for the eternally disaffected generation X, very few would have predicted that he would outlive his kneejerk one-hit wonder status – a label that many great musicians have suffered under and some have even been tarred with for their entire professional lives. Even fewer still would have thought that in 20 years’ time he would be considered by some as one of the most restless and innovative players of his era.

If you only know Beck as that gangly weirdo that brought us ‘Loser’ in the 90s then what you’ll find in Morning Phase might come as a shock. The gorgeous, swollen arrangements in ‘Blackbird Chain’ are night to ‘Devil’s Haircut’s day. Those who have followed his work more closely over the last 20 years are more likely to see this new album in terms of his natural progression as an artist. The willful wackiness of yesterday has been dialed right back which leaves the focus squarely on his song-writing abilities and the pretty melodies therein. This is “the process” in action and at its finest.

He has already spent some time (and entire records) inhabiting the realms of country blues, junkyard hip-hop, alterna-rock, and sleazy funk, so the shift to soft rock almost seems inevitable. When taken in as a whole, it’s easy to see how Morning Phase can fill the role of spiritual successor to Sea Change (an opinion widely heralded in the months leading up the album’s release) without coming off as a re-tread of old ground. The key to that sense of newness comes from not only the fact that it’s been a decade since he released an album of this sort, but also how different Beck treats the material in 2014 compared to 2002.

Firstly these tracks are more fully fleshed out, often far detached from the bare bones acoustic sketches he had done in the past. Secondly, the underlying resolve in his music today is not only stronger than before but also better deserved. This is an older, wiser, and more resolute Beck than we have ever heard before. He succeeds at this due in part to the fact that he hasn’t subscribed rigidly to any one denomination (or definition) of ‘easy listening’. Sometimes it comes in the form of a gentle country pop number (‘Say Goodbye’ for instance), a friendly sing-along number prompting lighters to be waved in the air. Others still come from the perspective of crystalline electronica. A track like ‘Unforgiven’ could have been a dirge if it wasn’t for the granule of hope that lies at its core, bouncing around amidst the rolling keyboards. It bleeds right into ‘Wave’, a grandly orchestrated number wrapped up in its layers of synthesizers like a safety blanket. Others still cherry pick bits and pieces from all of these concepts and more besides. At a first listen these layers don’t readily expose themselves to the listener but they slowly begin to unravel with multiple plays through.

Morning Phase is very much a story of Beck reminding us that he is a vital, restless artist even if he never again reaches the popularity of his so-called 90s heyday. He might not be gyrating madly on our screens and singing about how modern life makes him want to obliterate his mind with crack cocaine any longer, but we have learned to never count him out in the freak department. Did you ever hear his last album, Song Reader? To do so you pretty much had to perform it yourself as it was only ever released in sheet music form. Beck seems content nowadays to bounce between the various extremes of his musical personality, flaunting his impressive versatility at every turn with every new release. The great thing about Beck is that you are never sure what to expect until it arrives. Morning Phase might not be everyone’s cup of tea but in a world where in-your-face strangeness risks becoming passé, then a gentle and friendly album like this is its own kind of rebellion.

Rating: B
Recommended tracks: Unforgiven, Blackbird Chain

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