The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2002-10-24
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

[image]
Previous Issues

News
U of C's new VP External Relations
Student irked at Residence
Campus assault
U-Pass eases parking
Kyoto: action wanted
David Pratt's military suggestions
U.K. strategic defence
Don't pipette by mouth
Student club supports Paul Martin
Roadside archaeology
It's flu season again

Opinions
Christina Aguilera supports Thai sex trade?
A university report does good
Framing the mid-term elections
Through a different, prejudiced eye
Letter: Signs of research
Letter: Krafty falls short
Letter: Engineers get no Charity

Sports
Dinos take the Bronze
Dinos make poor contractors
Lady Dinos play at the cup
Dinos put their sticks in the closet
Dinos smell playoffs, taste nothing
It's Charlotte's world
Dinos trade crotch kicks with West Coast rivals
So much for lucky sevens
Hockey men second in Canada
No Blumell? No Dinos victory

Entertainment
Emm Gryner: In a league of her own
Did you hear that?
Moore Bowling for pins on the right
Young and intelligent hip hop?
Bloodthirsty talent
Beck, Sea Change
Beck, Sea Change (Part Two)
Dayna Manning, Shades
JJ72, I To Sky
Hot Water Music, Caution
The Corb Lund Band, Five Dollar Bill
Cassius, Au Reve

Features
Unearthing Calgary's past


AP
Television worth watching
It ain't gettin' any easier

  Beck, Sea Change (Part Two)
(Geffen)




[Print] Print this story
Beck, Sea Change (Click for larger image.) Beck, Sea Change

Credit: (Geffen)  


ADVERTISMENT
A lot has been made of the fact that Beck's new album is the product of a break-up. What's usually implied is that since Bob Dylan's masterpiece, Blood on the Tracks, is a direct reaction to the end of his marriage, Beck's album must also be, well, an instant classic. To a certain extent, this is true.

Sea Change, on its own, is a stunning album, full of plaintive beauty and mournful musings without dwelling on what went wrong. The problem: in creating an album of such emotional honesty, Beck has shed the personality infused in the rest of his albums. The greatest thing about Beck's albums was the fact they couldn't have been done by anyone else. With Sea Change, this individuality has been replaced by a collection of songs that try to be timeless, and in doing so become somewhat faceless. It's like seeing your best friend after a rough breakup: you might find some hidden depths, but you're also eager for him to get over it.

See Myke Atkinson's review, too. He thinks Peter Hemminger is wrong... what do you think?

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

No comments found. Be the first!

 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.



ADVERTISMENT



ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.