GRAMMY® winner. Elder statesman of indie rock. Pretty awesome for a "Loser."
Beck Video Essentials
Strap yourself in.
Beck: Chill
Lean back and relax with some of the mellowest cuts.
Beck: Deep Cuts
The eccentric sonic chameleon leaves no genre untouched.
Inspired by Beck
His quirky brilliance unites alt-rock and hip-hop.
Beck: Influences
These songs and artists helped inform and inspire Beck's brilliant vision.
At Home with Beck: The Playlist
“There's something of the world that goes into the music of this time.”
Beck's Summer Odyssey Tour Set List
Listen to the hits performed on their blockbuster tour.
Beck: Sing
Grab the mic and sing along with some of their biggest hits.
About Beck
Artist Biography
Since the early ’90s, Beck has traveled a decidedly idiosyncratic path—and it has taken him from slacker-pop iconoclast to genre-melding elder statesman. Born in 1970, Beck Hansen got his musical start in New York’s anti-folk scene; his relocation to Los Angeles led to him incorporating hip-hop-inspired sounds, a combo that helped “Loser,” his chugging yet surrealistic breakthrough, go from college-radio oddity to one of 1994’s defining singles. Over the ensuing years, Beck became known for defying any expectations “Loser” had placed on him; he went back to his indie roots on 1994’s One Foot in the Grave before getting maximalist on 1996’s ambitious Odelay, exploring bossa nova and blues on Mutations two years later, and reveling in grooves on the following year’s Midnite Vultures. All the while, his high-energy live sets became the stuff of Lollapalooza legend, and his eye-catching videos were staples of MTV. In 2002 he released the stripped-down Sea Change, an introspective album that, to great acclaim, showed off the sensitive side of someone previously pegged as an ironist. Beck settled into being a pop explorer after that, releasing sterling singles—the sun-dappled “Girl,” the breezy “Gamma Ray,” the stadium-ready “E-Pro”—that anchored hook-filled albums. He put his songwriting prowess forward on Song Reader, which was released as a book of sheet music in 2012, and on Morning Phase, which called back to the Sea Change era with its subdued vibes. As the decade progressed, Beck incorporated ideas borrowed from big-ticket pop, working with producers such as Pharrell Williams and Greg Kurstin on his albums Colors and Hyperspace—but he retained the wide-ranging approach that’s made him one of the alt-rock boom’s most enduring stars.
Hometown
Los Angeles, CA, United States
Genre
Alternative
Similar to: Beck
Discover more music and artists similar to Beck, like Radiohead, Beastie Boys, Spoon