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MojoSea Change aches too thoroughly to be mere career shift. It's the kind of album that at times seems too sad for the singer's own good. [Album of the Month, Oct 2002, p.90]
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One of his finest efforts to date.
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Many of these harrowing tunes, like "Lonesome Tears" and "Guess I'm Doing Fine" have the lonely blues feel of Beck's similar-sounding Mutations, and they definitely get better with repeated play.
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Beck has rarely performed with such maturity and confidence, breathing a rich, often haunting baritone into songs that seem to follow a plotline thread of despair after the end of a relationship.
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Here, as on Mutations, he confuses lyrical simplicity and standard-tuning, key-of-C songwriting with the unpretentious directness of his idols.
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BlenderA great record to play at 3 A.M. [#10, p.112]
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An emotive, often sorrowful work that features his most personal lyrics to date.
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Certainly his most personal record, arguably his best.
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What's startling about Sea Change is how it brings everything that's run beneath the surface of Beck's music to the forefront, as he's unafraid to not just reveal emotions, but to elliptically examine them in this wonderfully melancholy song cycle.
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SpinA supremely dainty-assed achievement that jerks real tears. [Oct 2002, p.111]
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Beck swaddles the hurt in a lush assortment of elements that would sound like Babel under anyone else's direction.
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Sea Change not only signals a pinnacle in his career but may just be remembered, in an environment fueled by accelerating cycles of disposable culture, as one of this young decade's best records.
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Sea Change joins Weezer's Maladroit and the Red Hot Chili Peppers' By the Way on the list of beautiful-but-sad 2002 L.A. LPs.
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For the first time in his career he has made an album that is clearly not a product of Beck, the single-syllabled entertainer, but rather that of Beck Hansen, the person.
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A perfect treasure of soft, spangled woe sung with a heavy open heart.... It's the best album Beck has ever made.
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Its startling brand of dreamlike space-folk, while reminiscent of earlier efforts like Stereopathic Soul Manure, is a wholly unique venture.
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Sea Change, while still a very good disc, is a disappointment in that it marks the first time Beck has ever retraced his steps.
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With repeated listenings, the sluggish ditties transform into a beautiful, mournful hymn of love won and lost.
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Q MagazineOnce you've let it grow on you, Sea Change is largely so lovely that you'll forgive him. [Oct 2002, p.98]
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This is beautiful music set in minor keys.
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An overproduced, sapped-down album that sounds really nice but fails to stick.
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It improves on Mutations with sparkling variation and a depth of emotion Beck seldom seems to achieve.
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Sea Change is different (and, in a way, less interesting) than everything Beck has previously done, but he has a rare gift that he shares with precious few artists, Prince and Bob Dylan amongst them: no matter what he does, Beck will always be interesting.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 158 out of 176
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Mixed: 8 out of 176
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Negative: 10 out of 176
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Aug 11, 2011
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Mar 13, 2012
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WesF.Jun 15, 2007