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The Information

 
Album Review: The Information

  • Artist: Beck
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: October 03, 2006
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Beck began work on 2006's The Information after Sea Change but before he reunited with the Dust Brothers for 2005's Guero, eventually finishing the album after Guero was generally acclaimed as a return to Odelay form. So, it shouldn't come as a great surprise that The Information falls somewhere between those two records, at least on sonic terms. Musically, it's certainly a kindred spirit to Guero, meaning that it hearkens back to the collage of loose-limbed, quirky white-boy funk-rock and rap that brought Beck fame at the peak of the alt-rock revolution, with hints of the psychedelia of Mutations and the folk-rock that was the basis for Sea Change. Since this is a Nigel Godrich production, it's meticulous and precise even when it wants to give the illusion of spontaneity, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, since it also pulls the album into focus, something that the generally fine Guero could have used. Guero had many strengths, but its biggest weakness was the general sense that it was unfinished, a suspicion fostered by its endless issues in deluxe editions and remixes. Beck embraced these changes, most extravagantly on the cover of Wired, where he was hailing the future of the album, which would now no longer be seen as finished: it would be a project that covered a certain amount of time, the artist would package it one way, then listeners would offer their own spin. That is precisely what Guero turned out to be, so it would have made sense that The Information would run further down that field, particularly because it has a design-your-own-art for its cover and is supplemented by a DVD filled with quick-n-dirty videos for each of its songs. But Beck isn't so easily pigeonholed: as it turns out, The Information is far more of a proper album than Guero, coming fully equipped with recurring themes and motifs, feeling every bit the concept album Sea Change was. Credit might go partially to his collaboration with Godrich -- who is nothing if not a taskmaster, helping to sharpen and focus erratic talents like Paul McCartney and Stephen Malkmus (for good in the former, not as good in the latter) -- but this also feels like the work of a refocused Beck, who shook off the cobwebs by reuniting with the Dust Brothers, thereby getting his "return to Odelay form" notices out of the way, and then getting down to the real work here on The Information, as he tackles the hyper-saturated info-world of the new millennium here.

If it initially seems like surprises are in short supply on The Information -- even when the tracks take a left turn, it doesn't feel like Beck and Godrich are wandering off the map -- the craft is strong and assured, and closer listens reveal the depth of the detail within the album, whether it's in the construction of the production or how those productions illuminate Beck's themes. Ever the obscurist, Beck's meanings aren't always crystal clear, which is no doubt deliberate, but his overall intent is easier to ascertain, especially when "Cellphone's Dead" juts up against "Nausea." There's a greater sense of craft here, and while craft isn't necessarily the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Beck, it's what happens when an eccentric sticks around for over a decade: he turns pro. He's done his exploring and now he's learning how to apply what he's discovered. While this may have the inevitable side effect of making his music a little less bracing and exciting, at least on first listen -- and that's especially true when he's in his pop chameleon mode as he is here, since it often seemed like his collages were quickly thrown together instead of immaculately assembled as they are here -- it nevertheless makes for a well-constructed, intriguing, and satisfying album, which The Information assuredly is. Upon first listen, it might seem to slide by a little bit on texture and sound instead of song, but that doesn't necessarily mean it feels even as groove-oriented and hip-hop-driven as Guero (let alone Midnite Vultures), despite the fact that many of the best tracks are built on muscular, intricate rhythms, like the dense, paranoid "Nausea" or the opening fanfare of "Elevator Music." But those further listens -- something that a neo-concept album like this demands anyway -- reveal the complexity within the productions, and how Beck is bridging the two sides of his personality, finding a common ground between his folk roots and art rock sides. All those little details give each cut a dramatic flow, and as the cuts pile up, they all add up to something. Like a picture where you have to stare intently to find the hidden item buried in a seas of colored dots, it can be far too easy on The Information to look at the individual dots and not see the big picture -- but at least here the dots are interesting in and of themselves. And if you give it time, The Information eventually reveals itself as Beck's tightest, most purposeful album yet. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks



CD 1

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Elevator Music (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:38)
Think I'm in Love (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:19)
Cellphone's Dead (Lyrics) Beck Beck (4:45)
Strange Apparition (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:48)
Soldier Jane (Lyrics) Beck, Nigel Godrich Beck (3:58)
Nausea (Lyrics) Beck Beck (2:55)
New Round (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:25)
Dark Star (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:45)
We Dance Alone (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:56)
No Complaints (Lyrics) Beck Beck (3:00)
1000BPM (Lyrics) Beck Beck (2:29)
Motorcade (Lyrics) Beck, Nigel Godrich Beck (4:15)
The Information Beck Beck (3:45)
Movie Theme (Lyrics) Beck, Nigel Godrich Beck (3:53)
The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton Beck, Nigel Godrich Beck (10:36)


CD 2

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Bonus Material [DVD][*] Beck

Credits

Michael Gillette (Performer), Jason Falkner (Moog Bass), Elisha Skorman (Vocals (Background)), Sage Mears (Vocals (Background)), Melanie Pullen (Performer), Roberto Cani (Strings), Joey Waronker (Vocals (Background)), Tiffani Fest (Vocals (Background)), Adam Tullie (Performer), David Campbell (String Arrangements), Kensei Yabuno (Performer), Gerard Saint (Art Direction), Nigel Godrich (Engineer), Nigel Godrich (Mixing), Alex Acuña & the Unknowns (Vocals (Background)), James Gadson (Vocals (Background)), Nigel Godrich (Drums), Jason Falkner (Percussion), Nigel Godrich (Scratching), Stevie Blacke (Vocals (Background)), Alex Acuña & the Unknowns (Percussion), Juliette Cezzar (Performer), Greg Kurstin (Keyboard Bass), Justin Stanley (Percussion), Jasper Goodall (Performer), Jason Falkner (Drums), Joey Waronker (Percussion), Josephina Vergara (Strings), Rouble Kapoor (Assistant Engineer), Rudolph Stein (Strings), Tereza Stanislav (Strings), Stevie Blacke (Slide Guitar), Suzie Katayama (Strings), Chris Steffen (Assistant Engineer), Bob Ludwig (Mastering), James Gadson (Percussion), David Foldvari (Performer), James Gadson (Drums), Mat Maitland (Design), Greg Kurstin (Synthesizer), Stevie Blacke (Percussion), Stevie Blacke (Cello), Jason Falkner (African Drums), Nigel Godrich (Vocals (Background)), Vania Zouravliov (Performer), Natalie Leggett (Strings), Justin Stanley (Guitar (Acoustic)), Justin Stanley (Vocals (Background)), Nigel Godrich (Percussion), Larry Corbett (Strings), Sean Davis (Bass), Jason Falkner (Bass), Jason Falkner (Guitar (Electric)), Greg Burne (Artist Coordination), Cosimo Hansen (Talking), Stevie Blacke (Violin), Mat Maitland (Performer), Joey Waronker (Drums), Richard Newton (Artist Coordination), Charlie Bisharat (Strings), Aleksey Shirokov (Performer), Nigel Godrich (Effects), Joel Derouin (Strings), Greg Kurstin (Piano), Will Sweeney (Performer), Parra (Performer), Harvey Mason, Sr. (Drums), Armen Garabedian (Strings), Justin Stanley (Flute), Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Sound Consultant), Greg Kurstin (Vocals (Background)), Gerardo Hilera (Strings), Greg Kurstin (Berimbau), David Campbell (Conductor), Nigel Godrich (Whistle (Human)), Nigel Godrich (Programming), Jason Falkner (Vocals (Background)), Zach Kasik (Assistant Engineer), Mercedes Helnwein (Performer), Seth Waldmann (Assistant Engineer), Jason Falkner (Guitar (Acoustic)), Darrell Thorp (Engineer), Mat Maitland (Art Direction), Nigel Godrich (Keyboards), Nigel Godrich (Tambourine), Kam Tang (Performer), Stevie Blacke (Esraj), Greg Kurstin (Keyboards), Nigel Godrich (Kalimba), Rachel Shelley (?), Harland "Stoney" Lee (Performer), Nigel Godrich (Producer), Greg Kurstin (Guitar (Acoustic)), Justin Stanley (Guitar (Electric)), Geneviéve Gauckler (Performer), Estelle & Simon (Performer), Kimi Reichenberg (Vocals (Background)), Gay Ribisi (Performer)
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Wikipedia: The Information
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The Information
Studio album by Beck
Released October 3, 2006
Recorded Winter 2003 – Spring 2006
Genre Alternative
Length 61:33
Label Interscope
Producer Nigel Godrich
Professional reviews
Beck chronology
Guerolito
(2005)
The Information
(2006)
Modern Guilt
(2008)

The Information is the tenth (and seventh major-label) studio album by American alternative rock musician Beck, released in October 2006 on Interscope Records. It was produced and mixed by longtime Beck collaborator Nigel Godrich. Recording began in 2003 concurrently with Guero, but the album was not completed until 2006. Rolling Stone magazine has named it the 24th best album of 2006, while Spin magazine ranked it number 10 on their 40 Best Albums of 2006.

The album reached #7 on the US's Billboard 200, #6 in Canada and #31 on Australia's ARIA Chart. As of July 2008, The Information has sold 434,000 copies in the United States.[1]

Contents

Release history

Before its release, Beck said the album was not a "stripped down" record, in contrast with his previous Godrich collaborations Mutations and Sea Change.[2] According to Beck, "Nigel [Godrich] said he wanted to do a hip-hop record" before they began work on the album. "And in a way it is, and in a way it isn't. It has hip-hop songs, and my previous work with him was Mutations and Sea Change, these sort of introspective records, and so this new one is sort of bringing those two worlds together."[3]

In an interview with the BBC,[4] Beck said the album had been "painful" to make:

It started out painless, and ended up being painful. It's as if we made the album once, and we made it again, and we made it a third time. We started the record in 2003, and we got together annually, the producer [Nigel Godrich] and I. We combed over everything, and got rid of the things we were tired of, the things that seemed trite.

The first single in North America was "Nausea," which officially went to radio on September 5, 2006.[5] The first single in the UK was "Cellphone's Dead", with an official video directed by Michel Gondry;[6] the track samples Primal Scream's hit single "Loaded". "Think I'm In Love" went to US radio as the second and final single and became a Modern Rock and Triple A radio hit, garnering renewed interest in The Information.

On February 27, 2007, a "deluxe version" of the album was released. It contained the original album plus three songs only available internationally, six remixes, a complete printing of the lyrics, a DVD with all the studio-released videos plus bonus non-studio-released videos of "Nausea" and "Cellphone's Dead," and four different sticker sheets for the album cover.

Music videos

Some copies of the album include a bonus DVD of specially filmed music videos, one for each track on the record.[2] In the Wired interview[7], Beck explained the making of these videos, which would also appear on video-sharing site YouTube:

We filmed a series of very low-budget, homemade videos for all the songs on the record. We got a bunch of cameras and a $100 video mixer off eBay and shot 15 silly, impromptu videos against a green screen. We even invited our friends and family into the studio to be a part of the action — my mother-in-law did the lighting, and my son and nieces and nephews are running around acting crazy. It was just a complete free-for-all, done on the fly. We're putting all the videos together right now with the idea of having a visual version of the record that we'll put on the Internet. I'm totally curious to see how the videos will add to the experience of listening to the album. Or maybe they'll actually detract from the experience. That would be funny.

Artwork

The "blank canvas" of Beck's 2006 album The Information displayed here with all four different sheets of decals.

The album was issued with a blank sleeve and booklet and one of four different sheets of stickers for fans to make their own album art. Beck explained to Wired magazine[7] he wanted no two copies of the CD cover to be the same: "The artwork is going to be customizable. The idea is to provide something that calls for interactivity." However, because the album art concept was seen as a gimmick to bolster retail sales, The Information was deemed ineligible to enter the UK Albums Chart.[8]

Track listing

All songs by Beck, except where noted.

  1. "Elevator Music" – 3:38
  2. "Think I'm in Love" – 3:20
  3. "Cellphone's Dead" – 4:46
  4. "Strange Apparition" – 3:48
  5. "Soldier Jane" (Beck, Nigel Godrich) – 3:59
  6. "Nausea" – 2:55
  7. "New Round" – 3:26
  8. "Dark Star" – 3:45
  9. "We Dance Alone" – 3:57
  10. "No Complaints" – 3:00
  11. "1000BPM" – 2:32
  12. "Motorcade" (Beck, Godrich) – 4:15
  13. "The Information" – 3:46
  14. "Movie Theme" (Beck, Godrich) – 3:53
  15. "The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton" (Beck, Godrich) – 10:36

Deluxe version

Disc one

  1. "Elevator Music" – 3:38
  2. "Think I'm in Love" – 3:20
  3. "Cellphone's Dead" – 4:46
  4. "Strange Apparition" – 3:48
  5. "Soldier Jane" – 3:59
  6. "Nausea" – 2:54
  7. "Dark Star" – 3:45
  8. "Movie Theme" – 3:53
  9. "We Dance Alone" – 3:57
  10. "No Complaints" – 3:00
  11. "1000BPM" – 2:30
  12. "Motorcade" – 4:15
  13. "The Information" – 3:46
  14. "New Round" – 3:26
  15. "The Horrible Fanfare/Landslide/Exoskeleton" – 10:36
  16. "Inside Out" - 3:43
  17. "This Girl That I Know" - 2:43
  18. "O Menina" - 2:09

Disc two

  1. "Cellphone's Dead" (Ellen Allien remix) - 5:37
  2. "Nausea" (Bumblebeez remix) - 2:28
  3. "Dark Star" (David Andrew Sitek remix) - 4:08
  4. "Nausea" (The Chap remix) - 3:55
  5. "Cellphone's Dead" (Jamie Lidell Limited Minutes remix) - 4:32
  6. "Cellphone's Dead" (Ricardo Villalobos remix) - 14:38

Disc Three

The third disc of the album contains some of Beck's homemade music videos.[1]

Personnel

Certifications

Country Certification Sales/shipments
Canada Gold[9] 50,000

References

External links


 
 
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