![]() During the song's break, there is a sample of a line of dialogue from the 1991 Steve Hanft-directed film Kill the Moonlight, which goes "I’m a driver/I’m a winner/Things are gonna change, I can feel it". John's " I Walk on Guilded Splinters" from the 1970 album Ton-Ton Macoute!. The song's drum track is sampled from a Johnny Jenkins cover of Dr. Club's Annie Zaleski opines that the song imitates abstract hip hop, while James Reed from The Boston Globe called it an alternative rock anthem, and Veronica Chambers for Vibe magazine described the song as a " folk-based hip hop song." "Loser" revolves around several recurring musical elements: a slide guitar riff, Stephenson's sitar, the bassline, and a tremolo guitar part. ![]() I knew my folk music would take off, if I put hip-hop beats behind it." He had also perceived similarities between Delta blues and hip hop, which helped to inspire the song. Problems playing this file? See media help.īeck acknowledged the impact of folk on the song, saying "I'd realized that a lot of what folk music is about taking a tradition and reflecting your own time. According to Beck, the line that became the song's chorus originated because "When played it back, I thought, 'Man, I'm the worst rapper in the world, I'm just a loser.' So I started singing 'I'm a loser baby, so why don't you kill me.'" According to Rothrock, the song was largely finished in six and a half hours, with two minor overdubs several months later. For the song's vocals, Beck attempted to emulate the rapping style of Public Enemy's Chuck D. At that point, Beck began writing and improvising lyrics for the recording. Stephenson then added his own sitar playing and other samples. Stephenson recorded a brief guitar part from one of Beck's songs onto an 8-track, looped it, and added a drum track to it. ![]() It was accidental, but it was something that I'd been working toward for a long time." Beck played some of his songs for Stephenson Stephenson enjoyed the songs, but was unimpressed by Beck's rapping. Although the song was created spontaneously, Beck has claimed to have had the idea for the song since the late 1980s he once said, "I don't think I would have been able to go in and do 'Loser' in a six-hour shot without having been somewhat prepared. "Loser" was written and recorded by Beck while he was visiting Stephenson's home. ![]() 'Loser' was an extension of that." Tom Rothrock, co-owner of independent record label Bong Load, expressed interest in Beck's music and introduced him to Carl Stephenson, a record producer for Rap-A-Lot Records. "I'd be banging away on a Son House tune and the whole audience would be talking, so maybe out of desperation or boredom, or the audience's boredom, I'd make up these ridiculous songs just to see if people were listening. In order to keep indifferent audiences engaged in his music, Beck would play in a spontaneous, joking manner. Described by biographer Julian Palacios as having "no opportunities whatsoever", Beck worked low-wage jobs to survive, but still found time to perform his songs at local coffeehouses and clubs. He returned to his hometown of Los Angeles in early 1991, due to his financial struggles. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Beck was a homeless musician in the New York City anti-folk scene. The song was subsequently released on the 1994 album Mellow Gold. The song performed well internationally, reaching number one in Norway and the top 10 in Australia, Austria, Canada, Iceland, New Zealand, and Sweden. After the song's re-release under DGC, the song peaked at number 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in April 1994, becoming Beck's first single to hit a major chart. When it was first released independently, "Loser" began receiving airplay on various modern rock stations, and the song's popularity eventually led to a major-label record deal with Geffen Records-subsidiary DGC Records. "Loser" was initially released as Beck's second single by independent record label Bong Load Custom Records on 12-inch vinyl format with catalog number BL5 on March 8, 1993. It was written by Beck and record producer Carl Stephenson, who both produced the song with Tom Rothrock. " Loser" is a single by American musician Beck.
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