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Jon Quijano

The website of St. Croix Valley photographer and storyteller Jon Quijano

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78. "Elevator Music" by Beck

"Little worse for wear, but I'm wearing it well."

A lyrical gem from Beck.

The drum and bass play basically the same fun, funky part for the whole song. Many songs have adopted this principle now: One progression that varies simply by changing singing melody and the supporting instrumentation. It's a technical challenge all its own but I have an uneasy feeling that pop stars today do this to avoid wasting more than one profitable chord progression per purchasable unit. Ironic that the lyrics of Beck's song seem to criticize mass-produced plasticity.

tags: Beck, music, Music writing, 365 day music challenge
categories: Music writing
Wednesday 03.29.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

76. "Earthquake Weather" by Beck

My friends on West Coast USA and other seismic zones may be able to confirm this, but apparently "earthquake weather" is a real thing. Not real as in accurate, but an existing pseudoscientific belief shared by many in those regions. There is apparently this notion that a certain type of weather tends to precede earthquakes, either caused by the impeding event or some even have believed directly causing the event. I'd like to know any of your experiences with this concept. It's a bit of regional flavor that compels me.

Is this song about earthquake weather beyond the title? The lyrics are all over the place creating evocative motifs. Do they add up to a whole?

The first verse tends to focus on failings of modernity, and of people looking for a new way of life. The choruses seem to talk about maybe the afterlife being an illusion (and that consequently maybe the world we have is the only heaven we will get). The second verse does allude to the weather and the notion of something ominous coming. Is it an earthquake? Comparing it to a riptide that could rip "us" away suggests a general societal threat that traps us before we realize it. Hmm... What topic could unite the concepts of weather and general societal threat? It's a tricky one.

Lots of call outs to Beck's hometown of LA: Earthquakes, deserts, rip tides. Seeing the world in his backyard.

My single favorite line is the first: "Spaceships can't tame the jungle." Never, ever for get that, you modernists.

The music is just simply some of the coolest music Beck recorded. The ideas build this little ecosystem of sounds - is that sitar being pitch bent all over the place? It's the song's signature sound. Catchy small guitar phrases at key times, fun crowd background noise in the breakdown, funky little organ as a payoff. Excellent melodies. That drum beat is so simple, but man, at that pace, just slow enough to put some space between the quarter notes, every time that snare cracks it just satisfies.

tags: Beck, music, Music writing, 365 day music challenge
categories: Music writing
Wednesday 03.29.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

68. "Diamond Bollocks" by Beck

Before media players, we had compact discs. These items contained a single album apiece. An album, as a reminder, was a collection of songs by an artist representing a tonally unified conceptual mission or a specific chronological period of creative output. Well, these compact discs (CDs for short) weren't that much different than the vinyl records that preceded them, other than sound quality - and one other key detail: Unlike a record, you could not see the grooves of sound etched into a CD. That meant that, on the album's final track, if you included an unlisted "secret" recording after a period of silence, there is no way anyone could tell just by looking at the disc. Listeners would find this track simply by letting their CD play on some lazy Saturday afternoon, forgetting to immediately eject the disc after the completion of the final listed track, and abruptly hearing a personal little encore in their kitchen.

Not only are secret songs impossible now, but they are philosophically obsolete, as no musician would simply give away a track of music these days, when single track sales are the only thing that music is. You don't realize how old you're going to be until time starts passing.

In my opinion, the clear greatest secret song of the secret song era is "Diamond Bollocks" by Beck, stashed on his Mutations album.

Most secret songs were throwaway half-ideas, jokes, studio jams, or some other type of novelty. Beck's secret song was one of the greatest songs he's ever written. A 6-minute-long, multi-section epic composition. Hidden. On a concept album that sounds absolutely nothing like it. Mutations is an acoustic-based surreal folk album. "Diamond Bollocks" is an electric fuzz bombast attack.

Beck has sadly faded from many people's memories, but to those even who remember him, even who are endeared to him, it may be surprising to think of him as a hard rock musician. Folk musician, sure. Rapper, fine. Alternative dance and funk song maestro, of course. A producer of alien sounds and, how shall we say it? Obtainer of rare antiquities.

But he can also rock a place to the ground.

Here we have him, on his folk record, absolutely decimating things in his secret song. I won't go into extreme detail, but I do want to point out my favorite moment of the song.

The song has come through a jaunty harpsichord-based introduction and a pounding verse that crests with long singing harmonies. Then the song freaks out into a ridiculous thrashfest, the drumming stupidly out of control, a flailing bass, and a tremolo guitar having an over-oscillated breakdown. That part is great, and then the progression intensifies into its heaviest moment. It is a classic principle of heaviness: Two notes, large interval. Beck knows his heaviness. Note one is fuzzed-out guitar with a suddenly focused, driving drum part. Note two is a dastardly ugly interval down, and this should be the most savage part of the whole thing. But it only lasts for two beats.

Then (spoilers) the whole song jump-cuts to nothing but the sound of a bird chirping, for five eternal seconds. 

All the fine heaviness he spent so much of his craft developing for that peak moment. And he flippantly destroys it with the most hilarious, inappropriate sample - the most appropriate. The bird is extinguished with a burst back into the driving heaviness at an even lower note, and you think maybe you're back on track. The music builds.

Then the build undercuts the conventions of builds, ending after only four short beats and rushing us unready into a goofy downbeat section featuring a harpsichord solo. Typical. 

It's not enough to just know the conventions and obstruct them with weirdness. This song is fantastically cool-sounding. Everything that is conceptually challenging is, I think, also just great music.

Okay, and there is my other other favorite moment, the last sweet melody of the song and the words sung in that soft moment, repeating on irregular groupings of four beats: "Looking back on some dead world that looks so new."

Why did he hide this song? I guess if you're gonna use a bird sample, better do it right.

tags: Beck, music, Music writing, 365 day music challenge
categories: Music writing
Wednesday 03.29.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

63. "Dark Star" by Beck

Beck's "Cellphone's Dead" borrows from Herbie Hancock for its main verse music, and "Dark Star" on the same album (The Information) takes Stevie Wonder's "Have a Talk With God" for a spin (https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zseNYzCi1EQ). In both cases, the differences are as interesting as the similarities.

While Stevie Wonder's murky bass line has nearly the same groove and same tempo, to the same drum accompaniment, his song progresses through a 12-bar blues pattern. Beck's bass line holds that original chord through the whole verse, then sinks into pure Beck-ian choruses of echoing singing and curling strings in harmonic minor.

Stevie Wonder's verse vocal is a lively, bluesy delivery embodying the key message of spiritual rejuvination during hard times. Beck's verse vocal is a cool, whisper-rap that delves into its own discussion of spiritual crisis, whithout the easy confidence of the (ironic word choice alert) inspiring work.

Stevie Wonder's lyrics are plain and easy to understand, targeted at a wide audience that he clearly intends to reach and teach. Beck's lyrics are winding puzzles of poetic invention, resulting in maybe a message not so easily digestable, much less preachable (and maybe this is the meaning of why they are so softly whispered), but full of inspired word invention. And when you ask me what "God" is to me, creativity like this comes close without even having to talk about it.

Look at these phrases:

"An indigent mindset of belligerent silence"

"A Judas train wreck, anonymous suspect"

Every line of the second verse:

"Autopilot drivers riding out on the ice age
Infidels swallowed in a vanishing point
Ammunition souls shooting holes in the ozone
Widow's tears washing the soldier's bones
Sterilized egos delirium sequels
Punctured by the arrows of American eagles
Robot to teach you all the rules that delete you
Backspace my brain, my equilibrium guns"

This is from an artist who I would not characterize as a liberal or a conservative. He would probably most identify with the ideology of "musician" above anything, a musical prankster at that. Hey, maybe he'd just go with "loser." And yet, while he chuckles at ideology, he sees true spirutual challenges posed by issues such gun violence, aggressive nationalism, and the dehumanization of technolgy. You can read into it all if you want to, but unlike Stevie Wonder, he won't get in your face. The bass line is free to enjoy for all.

tags: Beck, music, Music writing, 365 day music challenge
categories: Music writing
Wednesday 03.29.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

50. "Cold Brains" by Beck

The opening song to Beck's surreal gift to humankind, the album Mutations.

It's just a little acoustic guitar number, with vocals, some lead electric guitar, bass, drums, a few escalating electronic sound signatures, etherial keyboards, xylophone, oscillating pulses, ringing cosmic pulses, dozens of other electronic textures, and harmonica.

There are these warm verses that break into these huge choruses with such bold, heavy chord changes and imaginative singing. So much originality in 3.5 minutes.

tags: Beck, Music writing, music, 365 day music challenge
categories: Music writing
Wednesday 03.29.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 
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