THAVIUS BECK

MANNING BOTH THE MIC AND THE BOARDS ON AN ENTIRE ALBUM FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A DECADE, THAVIUS BECK'S THIRD FULL-LENGTH FOR MUSH RECORDS FINDS HIM WITH TOO MUCH TO SAY TO LEAVE IT UP TO SOMEONE ELSE.

"I'm of the opinion that if you have a platform to say something, don't just say some bullshit. Use that platform to say something worthwhile - it doesn't have to always be ultra-conscious or serious, but if every song you make is about bitches, cars, and drugs, you either live a very empty life or you're a huge liar. Either way, I think an MC should be able to draw on their life experiences and translate them into meaningful songs, maybe even grow a bit after reflecting on it during the song writing process." - Thavius Beck

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thavius Beck, like many of Los Angeles' independent MCs,
cut his teeth at the Project Blowed open mic workshop in LA's Liemert Park. But even in the 1990s, when Beck was a member of Global Phlowtations (along with Mikah-9, Sach, and a handful of others), and went by the handle Adlib, his sights were fixed on the future of music. His debut release, Vs., showcased his ability to both conjure maximal sonic impact with limited means, and his ability to write intricate rhymes and deliver them with an effortless flow (for a good example, check "The Spot" which features Sach).


Since the late 1990s, however, Beck has focused much more on the production side of his skill set, releasing full-lengths under the monicker Adlib including Save Us, Experience Experiments, and Manipulator, as well as two full-lengths as Thavius Beck on Mush Records, 2004's Decomposition and 2006's Thru.

Beck spent 2007 contributing production work on Saul Williams' Niggy Tardust full-length with Trent Reznor. In 2008, he entered the studio with new LA resident K-The-I???, producing K's entire full-length Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow. The album was licensed by UK hip-hop powerhouse Big Dada, the label that brought you Spank Rock, TTC, Roots Manuva and many more.

Between studio sessions, Beck was taking to the road, traveling Europe and the United States as both artist and DJ. His facile live hip-hop beat construction have earned him much recognition among the electronic music community, eventually leading to sponsorships from M-Audio and Ableton, the creators of ubiquitous beat software Live. Beck's relationship with Live has grown to the point that his tour stops often include him booking Ableton Live instructional workshops in many of the cities he stops in.

In late 2008, Beck wrapped up recording his latest solo full-length, titled Dialogue. Unlike previous efforts, which have featured appearances from Saul Williams, Cedric Bixler-Zavala (The Mars Volta), Subtitle, and many more, the only voice on Dialogue is Beck's own.

Across fifteen tracks, including two instrumentals, Thavius cleverly critiques many of America's ills with a dry, satirical wit that never falls into preachiness. "I think an MC should be able to draw on their life experiences and translate them into meaningful songs, maybe even grow a bit after reflecting on it during the song writing process. The writing and recording of Dialogue was a very therapeutic process for me for those very reasons: I took what I was going through in my life and put it on paper; I released my demons and let them dance over my beats."

Sonically, the album reaches new heights for Beck. Taking months to mix, Dialogue is Beck's biggest sounding album to date. Every track bleeds immediacy with warm bass kicks and aggressive highs that sound something like if the Bomb Squad had called Miami home. On his production influences, Beck notes: "I really like prog-rock, weird jazz/rock fusion hybrids, heavy metal, industrial stuff, etc., but I also like soul and funk, older hip hop, grime, some roots reggae. There was an earlier period when I was really influenced by drum-n-bass, and the more pretentiously named Intelligent Dance Music."

Beck's longtime roots in the Los Angeles underground music do manifest in the graphic design of the album, which was created by Sonny Kay, owner of GSL Records, the legendary label that spawned such acts as the Rapture, !!!, the Mars Volta, The Locust, Out Hud and a host of others. The two first worked together when Thavius was producing for GSL's first and only hip-hop signee, Subtitle - who would team up with Beck as Lab Waste for 2005's Zwarte Achtegrond.

For fans of iconoclastic music of any stripe, Thavius Beck presents Dialogue, and proves that the only musical boundaries he sees are ones he has already left behind.

**********************************************************************
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT DIALOGUE:

It's a frothing, funky monster showcasing the kind of imaginative stop/start production that Lil Wayne would be proud of. Jay-Z might have the profile then but Thavius Beck, as he continues to prove, has ideas to spare - BBC / Thavius Beck's in ultra-concentrated form for a solo album with an iron core... focused and ferocious - LA City Beat / Smashing boundaries within electronic music and hip-hop heads and dance music fans. Buy it, play it, freak yourself out - The Skinny / This album is another release, alongside the likes of P.O.S. and Atmosphere, which could well appeal to rock, punk and metal fans as well as meaningful hip-hop fans, just on the intensity and passion - Big Cheese

**********************************************************************

Dialogue Tracklist:
01. Intro/Cracking The Shell
02. Away
03. Go!
04. Money
05. Violence
06. Burn
07. And The Beat Goes On
08. Painful
09. Hardcore
10. IDC
11. Sheepish
12. Transmission
13. Sometimes
14. Pressure
15. 4 Part 2
Go!/Away Tracklist:
01. Go!
02. Go! (Offshore Remix)
03. Away!
04. Away (Flying Lotus Remix)