Categories
Classic Album Review

Classic Album Review: Odelay by Beck

A favorite artist of mine since I was a middle school child, I’ve always found comfort in Beck’s diverse genre-bends in the 1990’s. I still greatly enjoy his work to this day, but he is far more hit-or-miss lately, with an unfortunate emphasis on the misses.

Despite how I view his music now, his seminal 1996 record “Odelay” fully shows his true potential in the “anti-???” genre of his time. Now, the actual term he was scooped up into, against his liking, would be the slacker generation and the anti-folk movement, but I put question marks in what I define him as because Beck is certainly no slacker.

Having been near-homeless despite working constantly many times in the 1980’s and early 1990’s, and because Beck himself appears to be anti-label of most kinds. He hated the slacker label and always adhered to the opposite of what would result in immediate success.

Something is nuts with this album. Either in the mind of its maker or in its concept itself. We start with the aggressive yet jingly “Devil’s Haircut” and in an instant get taken into “Hotwax,” a rap rock song using only acoustic guitars and harmonica. Later, “The New Pollution” goes into alternate reality bubblegum pop, which is backed by smooth alto sax and a demented sound of isolation.

The album on paper is all over the place but becomes cohesive in the hands of Beck and producers The Dust Brothers (one might be familiar with their work making Fight Club’s soundtrack and Beastie Boys sophomore record) through its experimentation in weirdness.

“Novacane” is a perfect example of Beck being his anti-anything self: live performances featured him in a fancy button-up suit paired with a old school harmonica, the song itself has a minute plus long outro of pure noise, and the song itself speaks of nothing whilst sounding important.

Many of Beck’s lyrics follow this ironic style, as he famously used in what remains his only true mainstream success through Loser in 1994. Songs like “Where’s It’s At” or “High Five (Rock the Catskills)” are catchy, although ear-splitting, jams thanks to dance-inducing beats, clever sampling, and high frequency tones. What on Earth could “I’ve got two turntables and a microphone” mean? Nothing. That’s why the song is awesome. The rule of cool strikes again.

Nonsense lyricism might be the basis for the record but Beck’s musical prowess in sampling and skills in the genre switch-up show he has depth. Combined with the talented Dust Brothers, Beck traverses a vast landscape of samples with his own original instrumentation in ways few artists have attempted to replicate. The very concept of rock music utilizing samples is an under explored genre in my opinion.

Diving deeper, the album’s closer “Ramshackle” (if you don’t count the hidden track of bleep bloops at the end, labeled as “Computer Rock” on streaming platforms) is its only track to contain heavy lyrics. Previous songs may be filled with ironic or post-ironic (maybe even post-post-ironic) nonsense but cracks show into who Beck is and his experiences. “Jackass,” “Sissyneck,” and “Lord Only Knows” reflect on his time going from menial job to a new, uniquely soul sucking other.

“Ramshackle” continues this theme but in more detail. A more clear picture is presented here, of people falling out of his life forever and a feeling of no guidance for what comes next. But, as the chorus picks up, unity is described. Unity that we all face the unknown. We all face the uncertain, terrifying world and keep moving forward. We will lose the world we stand on, but will push on. We might even succeed.

“Odelay” is a fantastic rock, hip-hop, folk- or really, whatever you want to call it- record. It was nominated at the 1997 Grammy awards for Album of the year and ended up winning Best Alternative Music Performance as well as Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for the single “Where It’s At.”

Favorite tracks:
1. “Ramshackle”
2. “Where It’s At”
3. “Novacane”
4. “High Five (Rock the Catskills)”

Categories
Band/Artist Profile

Artist Profile: Red Vox

“Red Vox is a Staten Island, New York based independent rock band led by- now, get this- a streamer” I say to a crowd of unamused friends of mine listening to my presentation about the group. Oh. That’s not the reaction I anticipated. Especially not one from a made up crowd. 

Despite that story’s fictional status- I have heard this reaction before. This makes more sense now upon reflection as eight years ago when I found the band, a content creator led project designed to be taken seriously and also happening to succeed at such a goal was mere novelty; very few acts accomplished such a feat. 

Red Vox was a rare exception to be taken seriously by fans and critics alike. Now, this story is sung ad nauseum. Plenty of streamers, YouTubers, Instagrammers, TikToker’s and other forms of “influencer” have successfully built careers in multiple fields, becoming major forces in the music scene.

Streamers Vinny “Vinesauce” and Jabroni Mike formed the band in 2015 alongside fellow musicians Joe and Bill. No last names have ever been given out, so when the band added new members in the 2020s for studio sessions and touring, they were simply called Jerrold and “New” Joe. Excellent. Jabroni Mike later left the band indefinitely in 2025, citing health issues.

Despite how common the story of the group has become, the band’s initial breakthrough is still something that should be celebrated. Vinesauce was already a successful streamer, which can make it easier to launch a career off of, but not so when the music is unconventional to what most fans of the streamer might enjoy. Most successful creators transitioning into music tend to go for a pop or rap sound in order to find success in those fields. Red Vox went a different route. 

Released in 2016, debut album “What Could Go Wrong” tells stories of adolescent anxiety, being ghosted, failing at bar hookups, and dreaming about your crush. In the kindest way it can be described, this album makes the singer sound like a nerd, especially with its obvious influences from classic acts like The Cars, Pink Floyd, and Blur. While the first album may be amateur and cliche at points, it was well-received and remains a great listen with the grungy “Atom Bomb,” the deepened hole in the Earth sound of “Ghost Page,” its pop closer “In A Dream,” and its multi-part psychedelic experiments on “Job In The City” and “She Missed The Beat.”

The band established itselves not as a group wishing to follow any kinds of trend, not a buck hungry side-project for a couple of content creators and friends, instead a worthwhile attempt to create meaningful tunes with passionate homage to acts of the past. While the first album won over Vinny and Mike’s fans, Red Vox’s second release “Another Light”(2017) was no sophomore slump, winning the band critical acclaim and relative sales success, earning a charting position at the back-end of Billboard’s Heatseekers album chart.

“Another Light” follows a maturing of sound more focused on the combination of what made WCGW wrong- or, I’m sorry. What made it right. That experimentation is even more present here, with each song connecting into one another, through theme or through literal intermediate transition. The title track, “Settle For Less,” and “Memories Lie” has a seamless release between each other akin to a “long-song” type of album. Exploration of the process of creation, dueling guitars in left and right channels, mandolin used on multiple tracks, improved harmonies, deeper dives into electronic rock through the use of vocoder and synthesizer, screaming, and a better separation from Red Vox’s influences by a greater emphasis on the mix. 

This maturity and positive reception only continued with the release of 2018’s “Stranded”- a cut nine-minute long track from AL about being left alone in Space- and further albums. 2019 Gave the surprise release of the haunting, stripped-back acoustic record “Kerosene,” 2020’s bouncy synth-driven “Realign,” and the back-to-basics yet firmly current-moment grungy, dirty double album “Visions” and “Afterthoughts” (released in two parts as “Visions”: 2022, “Afterthoughts”: 2023). 

The band has teased an upcoming record to come out with two singles released this year and more live shows than the band has ever done before. Notoriously among fans, up until 2024 the band had only performed about three times since its inception. I saw the band perform in Jersey City, New Jersey this past June and was lucky enough to hear several songs from their upcoming record as well. 

In the future, I’ll give a bigger overview into Red Vox’s career to further explore how its sound evolved and established it as a major force among the big sea of content creators turned musicians. Red Vox continues to impress as it moves forward in its career.

Live by peace DJ Mithrax