Tag Archives: ramshackle

#1089: Beck – Ramshackle

Beck’s Odelay is a trip of an album. With the help of the Dust Brothers production team, Beck puts forward 13 tracks, the majority of which are layered, sort of off-kilter with a hip-hop influence, propelled by loops and samples and other audible oddities that keep its momentum going and at the very least make every song on there interesting to listen to. Some would consider it a 10/10. A classic. I wouldn’t argue with them. However, Odelay initially started out a totally different project, one where the songs within took a more acoustic and subdued route. ‘Ramshackle’ was one of those numbers recorded in those beginning sessions and chosen to close out the final LP, acting as the slow, sobering comedown after the album’s party has ended.

I myself didn’t really appreciate ‘Ramshackle’ until revisiting Odelay again sometime in 2017. It had been in my iTunes library for years up to that point. ‘Devils Haircut’, ‘Hotwax’ and ‘The New Pollution’ were already firm favourites of mine. But the album was just sitting there, and it had been a while since I’d listened to it in full. When ‘Ramshackle’ arrives, 47 or so minutes in after a conveyor belt of one upbeat track after another, the sudden appearance of upright bass and slowly strummed acoustic guitars are a total mood shifter. So slow, you feel like you might just start sinking into whatever you’re sitting in as the music continues. But it makes the dynamic that much more emphatic. Also helps that the melody Beck chooses to sing the lyrics inserts itself almost immediately. Wouldn’t be wrong to say it’s nearly nursery rhyme-like in its simplicity.

I have no solid idea what this song is about. What I see when hearing the music and listening to the lyrics is this sort of lone ranger type going through this shell of a town, looking at the waste around him and just going on his way because he’s meant to roam. There’s a western, cowboy theme here that I get, which I don’t know is felt by anyone else. That’s what I’ve been going with anyway. I think it may be about the weariness of life in general, how the big and small things can get us down. Our possessions, relationships, living our days until we pass away and go on to another plane of existence. Or not. Like all the other songs on Odelay, the meanings within lyrics aren’t all that obvious. The focus is more on how the words sound together and the imagery they convey. Whatever the meaning is here, it’s nothing to get pent up on. The track calms me down, and sometimes that’s what we all need.