Description

1LP Vinyl – 0602547933782

From the nervy opening chords of "Devil's Haircut" (based on the garage-rock classic "I Can Only Give You Everything") to the signature sax riff of "The New Pollution" (lovingly pilfered from forgotten tenor player Joe Thomas's "Venus"), Odelay is the album every record-diving MPC-phile wants to make. Though the LP was a huge commercial success, its sound was never successfully equaled by savvy opportunists. Chalk it up to the increasingly complicated legalities of sampling, as Beck explained in a 2005 interview: "Back [on Odelay] it was basically me writing chord changes and melodies, and then endless records being scratched and little sounds coming off the turntable. Now it's prohibitively difficult and expensive to justify your one weird little horn blare that happens for half of a second one time in a song and makes you give away 70% of the song and $50,000." And, of course, it's the little lifts– the sex-ed dialogue on "Where It's At", the snippet of Schubert's "Unfinished Symphony #8 in B Minor" on "High 5", the dozens (hundreds?) of unique drum hits and perfectly placed sonic scribbles– that makes Odelay such a deep and engaging listen even after all the headphone sessions and Best Album of the 90s accolades. Tellingly, when Beck and the Dust Brothers tried to recreate their signature style on 2005's Guero they couldn't pull it off, inadvertently reinforcing Odelay's lasting appeal in the process.