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In the Studio: Beck Conjures 1960s Brit-Rock Vibe on Danger Mouse-Produced “Modern Guilt”

5/12/08, 11:45 am EST

“It was the most intensive work I’ve ever done on anything,” Beck says the day after finishing his new record, sounding slightly dazed. For his 10th studio disc, Beck worked with Brian Burton, better known as Danger Mouse — who’s overcommitted as both a producer and a member of Gnarls Barkley, which just released a record of their own. “It was like trying to fit two years of songwriting into two and a half months,” Beck says. “I know I did at least 10 weeks with no days off, until four or five in the morning every night.”

Burton remembers Beck’s stamina during their late-night sessions: “He’s like a machine. I always got tired before he did. I stayed pretty late, but I’d usually hear the next day how late it went.” The resulting album, tentatively titled Modern Guilt, is full of off-kilter rhythms and left-field breakdowns, with an overall 1960s British vibe. Beck’s vocals float over the music as if he’s singing along to some mystical radio station in the next room. The title track has the groove of a good Zombies single, while the twangy guitar and uptempo beat of “Beggars Shoes” make it sound like Beck’s cruising at maximum speed down Route 66. The lyrics include lines about the ice caps melting down (and “the transistor sound”), but there were many earlier versions. “I can’t tell you how many times I wrote and recorded a complete song,” Beck says, “and then just took everything away but the drumbeat and wrote a whole new song.”

Beck and Danger Mouse knew each other casually before making the record — some of Beck’s former musicians ended up playing with Gnarls Barkley — but they were both surprised at how naturally they worked together. “It felt like we could have been making our fourth record together,” Beck says. “It did help that we share a lot of musical references. We spent the first week just talking about different records. His knowledge is pretty deep, especially with some of the obscure late-Sixties, early-Seventies rock.”

The original vision for Modern Guilt was 10 short tracks. “I was hoping all the songs would be two minutes long,” Beck says, “but then I got rid of all the short songs.” Each song started with Beck playing acoustic guitar over a drumbeat: If it made the cut, they’d flesh out the music, usually with Burton playing keyboard bass and Beck playing most of the other instruments. There were just a few guests: Joey Waronker added drums to the epic “Chem Trails,” which would have fit in nicely on an early Pink Floyd record. And Cat Power’s Chan Marshall added backing vocals to a few tracks, including the melancholy “Walls,” which includes the lyric “Some days are worse than you can imagine.”

Modern Guilt doesn’t have an official release date yet, but sources close to Beck say that he’s likely to rush it out in June, much like the recent blitzkrieg of releases from Gnarls Barkley and the Raconteurs. For Beck, always eager to shake up music-industry practices, the disc marks the end of his major-label contract. “I’ve had this deal since my early 20s,” says Beck, 37. “I don’t have any plans at the moment. It’s anybody’s guess where things are going week to week with the music business.”


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Comments

synartinco | 7/11/2008, 2:47 pm EST

Listeners who have their own closed views and “boxed” musical expectations will not relate to Beck or connect with the deeper struggles an artist is challenged to balance.

If you are energized in considering how “man in mass” restrains, restricts and attempts to silence the man strong enough to stand alone this is a new one for you to add to the artist at work in life collection.

Enjoy!!!!

becktologist | 7/7/2008, 2:35 pm EST

i like beck’s music.

Mark Herwin | 7/4/2008, 3:56 am EST

The four horsemen Vangelis……..Listen to that and then chemtrails……its allthere like for like…however that said it might be pure chance…excellent track and I ordered the album on the back of that one track

shmeck | 6/30/2008, 8:13 pm EST

Oh man, Beck is the poster-boy for overrated.

He’s horrible and is perfectly used by the boomers in charge of record companies to make people his age seem like stoners and idiots who cant do anything or dont know anything. ever since “Loser” they’ve been parading him around like the king of the slackers.

Now that he’s got a “60s Brit-Rock vibe” (the ’60s were almost 50 years ago!) he’s come full circle. Half the kids who should be reading Rolling Stone (and ARENT) must be like, “WTF is Route 66?”

And a Scientologist too.

GAG.

Michael | 6/12/2008, 9:35 pm EST

You know, I love Beck’s music. Own all the albums. Got in via Mellow Gold and went back to all the old disks before the next one even came out. However, I honestly believe that Odelay is seriously overrated. Can’t help it. Doesn’t grab me like any of the other albums. When I heard it was getting the “redux” treatment, I said… why?!!?!?

mr. bread | 6/12/2008, 9:03 pm EST

enough with odelay already.
that album was good, but you all need to get over it.
geez!

SB | 6/10/2008, 12:05 am EST

“In the time of chimpanzees I was a mokkey”…brilliant I need more of that.

Mike G | 6/3/2008, 7:50 pm EST

I love Beck, and I’ll be buying this album, but Chemtrails, like most of The Information is just not that interesting. Hopefully he’ll go crazy when he’s out of his contract and release some seriously oddball stuff. He’s getting extremely “Listenable”, he’s almost more like Steely Dan than Prince or Bowie. I love Hip Hop, but I think Sea Change was his best album. I’d like to see him shed the Scientology, go insane, and make an excellent whiskey can shakedown country album.

ODELAY | 6/2/2008, 12:07 am EST

MAKE ANOTHER ODELAY. MAKE ANOTHER ODELAY. MAKE ANOTHER ODELAY.

Christopher | 5/31/2008, 4:32 am EST

Bring it on! I can’t wait!

Xg | 5/29/2008, 4:19 am EST

Chank Smith!

oceankeyboar | 5/27/2008, 5:03 am EST

to our a bit of I grew on me. they had A huge crashing down I go back a young forts turtle, having adventures. and we I remember

Phill | 5/26/2008, 7:09 am EST

The Chemtrail conspiracy theory claims that some trails left behind jet aircraft are different in appearance and quality from those of normal contrails, may be composed of harmful chemicals, and are being deliberately produced and covered up by the government. These unusual trails are referred to as “chemtrails” (a compound word for “chemical contrails”).

Phill | 5/26/2008, 7:07 am EST

Glad to see a major league artists singing about Chemtrails.

Bout time too.

NVG | 5/23/2008, 9:54 pm EST

First of all - Beck can be a little inconsistent. But after hearing Chem Trails off of the new record (on his website) I feel like he’s finally exorcised his crazy Urban-Hip Hop Demons once and for all. That’s right, you heard me, I can’t stand that crap. But psychedelic, spaced out, melancholic Beck is amazing. On par with some of the best psychedelic music out there - layered, with harmonies and melodies, and consistent tone. Also, his production is always warm with an almost modern day 70’s aesthetic (ever since he started working with Nigel). Check out Sea Change - I think his most consistent record thematically. Yeah it’s breakup music, but man is it awesome. You need good speakers to hear all the layers properly. His newest song Chemtrails is the first song i’ve heard by him where even the drums just shred. It’s not Pop like his other stuff — We’re in Rock territory now.

sean | 5/23/2008, 11:14 am EST

boring!

Michelle | 5/22/2008, 9:06 pm EST

Oh, man! I’m really looking foward to this album. I don’t get to say that a lot.

land pirates | 5/19/2008, 4:36 pm EST

Great musicians but i still cant see it being anywhere near odelay.

Helvis | 5/18/2008, 9:37 am EST

Where are the Billy Swan covers?

hotter than august | 5/18/2008, 2:03 am EST

talk about eddie money 2 of his songs, ‘take me home tonight’ and ‘baby hold on’ are much better than anything Ive ever heard by beck. the only good beck songs Ive ever heard are ‘loser’ and ‘where its at.’ i was given ‘odelay’ when it came out & I have no idea why that is a revered LP.
juss sayinn.
i love lloyd cole, morrissey, beach boys, nick heyward, burt bacharach, the jam, the spinners. thats great music. beck? psshh.

d00d | 5/17/2008, 5:29 pm EST

I love Beck so much. His independent releases were all I listened to for years and really got me through some tough times. All his albums are works of art. Will be grabbing the new CD the day it comes out.

Sea Change | 5/16/2008, 12:08 pm EST

Nothing like driving to Las Vegas listening to Sea Change. That album and the desert landscape go so well together.

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:04 pm EST

my bad

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:03 pm EST

crap

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:03 pm EST

crap

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:03 pm EST

woops

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:02 pm EST

woops

MANDELA 2 | 5/15/2008, 6:02 pm EST

wooops

MANDELA | 5/15/2008, 11:31 am EST

About the time that Midnite Vultures came out I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

MANDELA | 5/15/2008, 11:31 am EST

About the time that Midnite Vultures came out I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

Mandela | 5/15/2008, 11:31 am EST

Around the time that Midnite Vultures came out I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

Mandela | 5/15/2008, 11:29 am EST

Right around Midnite Vultures I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

Mandela | 5/15/2008, 11:29 am EST

Right around Midnite Vultures I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

Mandela | 5/15/2008, 11:25 am EST

Around Midnite Vultures I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

Mandela | 5/15/2008, 11:25 am EST

Around Midnite Vultures I was thinking Beck was our Bowie, and I was wrong. Bowie always jumped onto new trends and discovered new sounds he’d never shown any capacity for before. Beck’s career has always had the same elements, since his original style was a fusion of everything he would go on to explore. He has basically spent a decade and a half cultivating each style he showed initial aptitude for. In this I’ve decided that he is the alternative age’s own Prince, with everything that implies. Any of the traits lacking in Beck that define Prince (showmanship, ego, etc.) are representative of his era much as the excesses of Prince reflect the 80’s.

martyr | 5/15/2008, 3:17 am EST

i’ll blow myself up if this record bombs.

Balzac | 5/15/2008, 12:27 am EST

Beck can eat my nuts.

not-insane | 5/15/2008, 12:13 am EST

Beck rules!!!!!!Can’t wait to see you at Bumbershoot in Seattle, end of August…..Don’t stop being cool. Peace

Beck is the Shit | 5/15/2008, 12:10 am EST

We can’t wait to hear some new material at Bumbershoot Festival. We saw you last time you were there thanks for comeing back can’t wait to hear the new album.. Peace

Not Beck | 5/14/2008, 11:32 pm EST

Been along for the ride since Beercan. I can’t wait for what hopefully is the best release since Mutations.

Sissyneck | 5/14/2008, 3:16 pm EST

To Where It’s Not:

Guero is criminally underrated. I put that up there with Beck’s best! Never listened to The Information since it was never released on vinyl.

Can’t wait for this one!

Gaz | 5/14/2008, 6:02 am EST

Beck can pull off any style he wants & get away with it. He’s an enigma, a free agent, doesn’t need or have to prove anyone to anything to anyone..just do whatever the hell he want’s to do.
Usually pays off to his listeners…

ROB N. | 5/13/2008, 8:38 pm EST

Agreed, work is a great word to use mackenzie, he works his ass off and always produces the best possible record. THE most creative artist in the business, always has been, always will.
Cheers Beck!

Mackenzie | 5/13/2008, 5:04 pm EST

Under all the crazy sounds on his records are great songs, with great melodies. I love the work Beck has given us so far, and I will buy the new one the day its released. And with the clean sounds Mr Mouse put on the last Gnarls album, I think we are all in for a treat… I will use the headphones for sure!

Alex | 5/13/2008, 3:59 pm EST

Agreed. This dude doesn’t have a bad album in him. Even my least favorite Beck disc (that’d be the scattershot, sometimes-trying Midnite Vultures) is at least half-full of gems. I’d expect no less from this new one.

Beck | 5/13/2008, 3:55 pm EST

My new album will bring back the fans i lost and will bring new legions of fans. It’s that good of record. You’ll see.

Where it's Not | 5/13/2008, 3:52 pm EST

I hope i’m wrong but i think this album will be as dull as the last two. Beck prove me wrong. Sea change was the last decent album he put on. Guero/guerolito and information were mediocre at best. Prove me wrong beck. Put out a good record this time out.

no big deal | 5/13/2008, 3:47 pm EST

Beck is a loser baby so why don’t you kill him? Not literally but his music has been dead for some time now!

Amanda | 5/13/2008, 12:55 pm EST

Beck is amazing.

Everything he does is cool.

The Information was an amazing album. Frankly, Beck has never put out a bad one.

doy | 5/13/2008, 12:47 pm EST

I love Beck, and can’t wait to hear the record, but the way they’re describing it, it sounds like Caribou’s latest album, “Andorra”…not a slam…just an observation.

jrod | 5/13/2008, 8:35 am EST

beck is the ressurection for the music industry…if one of those songs is going to sound like an early pink floyd song?!? can’t even wait til this is released

Jack Rockwell | 5/13/2008, 2:59 am EST

I’m going to say Beck has not disappointed me yet. Every album becomes better with time. I doubted the Information so much when I first bought it… but it has grown on me. I think creatively, Beck is on a level that only The Beatles, Beefhart, Dr. John, Syd Barrett, and maybe Eddie Money reached. Ok, the Money Man reference was a joke (for all of you indie hipsters out there)… but seriously, if one artist from the 90s has transcended all expectations, forged a career based on whimsy and interesting mixes of textures… it’s Beck. I guess I’m really interested in Beck’s more “raw” vibe… that unpolished sound. I feel like a record with Rick Rubin is in order at some point. Thoughts?

Tyler | 5/12/2008, 11:44 pm EST

The Information was amazing. I’m hoping the new album is a mix between The Information and Sea Change. Sounds like it in the description.

wade | 5/12/2008, 9:47 pm EST

There’s nothing wrong with the Information…i don’t understand why that album gets such a bad rap. It’s no Odelay or Guero…but still, its a really good album

David | 5/12/2008, 5:48 pm EST

I definitely can’t wait although I hope the short running time doesn’t leave something to be desired. I’m sure it will be fine though. Got mad respect for Beck and Danger Mouse.

jordan catalano | 5/12/2008, 4:29 pm EST

Let’s just say that I’m someone close enough to the situation to say that this record is going to blow people away. These two have made something truly amazing together. Beck fans will be shedding tears of joy. He hasn’t sounded this inspired in a few records…

Rob J | 5/12/2008, 3:54 pm EST

I’m a huge longtime Beck fan.

As long as its better than ‘The Information’, I’ll be happy. I consider that to be the only misstep in his career. Just can’t listen to it.

The new album sounds pretty promising.

Nathan Oliver | 5/12/2008, 3:28 pm EST

This album is gonna rock.

ballsweat | 5/12/2008, 3:05 pm EST

if you need a taste of danger mouse’s best to be convinced of his awesomeness, ghetto pop life with Jemini is solid.

DC | 5/12/2008, 2:23 pm EST

I can’t wait!!

dedge | 5/12/2008, 2:22 pm EST

i’m in!

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