Beach House
Depression Cherry


4.1
excellent

Review

by Rudy K. EMERITUS
August 28th, 2015 | 651 replies


Release Date: 2015 | Tracklist

Review Summary: We all float down here.

Beach House have always been more about a feeling than any particular message – like dream pop in general, theirs is an oddly non-specific ethos, powerful sounds evoking . . . something? The beauty is in filling in the blanks. It’s not a surprise that Beach House arrived on the scene seemingly fully formed, Victoria Legrand’s androgynous, ethereal vocals mixing sublimely with Alex Scally’s satin layer of synths and drum machines, built up to an impenetrable, woozy wall. Dream pop has always been somewhat formulaic; Beach House just cracked the code sooner than most. That they’ve lasted this long as torchbearers of a new generation speaks to their songwriting. No dream pop band was writing the kind of insidious hooks that Teen Dream put out, one after the other, and Bloom was a double down hailed as a masterpiece when a lesser band would have been accused of retreading the same ground. If anything, Depression Cherry, the band’s fifth album, is something of a regression. Legrand has rarely sounded this indecipherable, plunged back into the mix as often as she hovers above it. The melodies are still there, swaying softly and wrapping around Legrand’s omnipresent vocals, but rarely do they leap out and seize you like a “Lazuli” or a “Norway.” The most immediate thing here is probably the single “Sparks,” more for the caustic, shrill distortion of the guitar, confused and searching, than anything else. This is a more deliberate album, unfurling through bursts of sound and gradual ripples of guitar that seem to be in no particular hurry to make a song. Beach House’s music has always been in part about escape – it’s right there in the name – and Depression Cherry is no different. It’s just the kind of escape where you want to detach, float away, and forget.

“Mostly it is loss which teaches us about the worth of things,” reads a quote from philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer included in Depression Cherry’s press materials, and as much as themes can be imparted to Beach House’s invitingly blank space, loss is as good a one as any. Opener “Levitation” begins warm and thrilling, Legrand intoning over the kind of vast expanse that Beach House have always tended so carefully, an exciting array of possibilities just waiting. “You and me, with your long hair on the cold wall / after midnight we could feel it all / I go anywhere you want me to / you should see / there’s a place I want to take you.” Yet the track’s slow build disguises Legrand’s dawning realization (“You will grow too quick / then you will get over it”) and a losing struggle with self-doubt (“There’s a place I want to take you / I don’t want to control you”). It is perhaps Beach House’s most devastatingly gorgeous song.

The band has stated this record was influenced by trance, and that’s clear to see. Not the sounds of trance, obviously, but the feeling of surrender the music provokes, whether that’s in the distress flare guitar that arcs across “Beyond Love” or the claustrophobic blanket of sound that washes over Legrand’s lyrics on the stunning “PPP.” Depression Cherry is a startlingly easy record to get lost in. Some have called this a detriment, causing the record to blur together, to which I say: isn’t that the point? It allows for a cohesive, hypnotic experience, broken up only occasionally – the rather boring lullaby of “10:37” is a droning misstep – but always providing a place to lay your head. Even “Space Song,” the most open tune here, with its stumbling drunk of a guitar line painting zig zags over Legrand’s tearstained smile, is thrilling in its repetition, that hum of empty space waiting to be filled. “Were you ever lost, was she ever found?” Legrand asks, and the deep ache in her voice is like novacaine.

The record’s thesis statement, though, is found in its back end, where “Wildflower” hazily declares “you make something of it / the sky and what’s left above it / the way you want nothing of it.” It’s a bleak sentiment in one light and a release in another. The beauty in Beach House’s music is that you can take it either way and still find the empathy you’re looking for in the music, whether that’s in the major lift of the chorus of “Wildflower” or the narcotic lull pervading “Bluebird.” That Beach House close the record with “Days of Candy,” where a 24-piece a capella group bolsters Legrand’s voice to angelic levels to send off old and forgotten friends, shows that they don’t choose sides. The song is almost dirge-like, but as it nears its end the swell of production is a rising tide of bliss. “I know it comes too soon / the universe is riding off with you / a little bit of you would keep you close to me,” Legrand sings, the nostalgia painful but also sweet. It’s a resolution that feels essential. Sometimes loss can be liberating, too.



s
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3.7
great
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TyYamamoto (4.5)
“The universe is riding off with you”...

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Comments:Add a Comment 
klap
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


12409 Comments

Album Rating: 4.1

despite this being the least immediate Beach House record, it's definitely the one i've enjoyed the most right off the bat

Frippertronics
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


19513 Comments

Album Rating: 3.8

that summary

Gyromania
August 28th 2015


37017 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

yes

Supercoolguy64
August 28th 2015


11787 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

heard a lot of good things about this band, will check out

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
August 28th 2015


47597 Comments


potentially the greatest summary ever

should I check this klap/fripp/gyro?

Frippertronics
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


19513 Comments

Album Rating: 3.8

dunno, i haven't checked it yet. from what I've heard, it's good.

Gyromania
August 28th 2015


37017 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

rowan: definitely you should

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
August 28th 2015


47597 Comments


is their whole discog good?

Gyromania
August 28th 2015


37017 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

yes. bloom is my favourite.

klap
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


12409 Comments

Album Rating: 4.1

4.1 and 4.5 nah you probably shouldn't check it out



and i'm actually not a huge beach house fan although teen dream has grown on me.

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
August 28th 2015


47597 Comments


will avoid like the plague agreed

Keyblade
August 28th 2015


30678 Comments


bloom is amazing

had this dl'd since it leaked, need to hear soon. first 2 songs are a1 tho

MrNippleLipz
August 28th 2015


461 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

If you're going to get into Beach House don't start with this album.

Irving
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


7496 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

4.1!!!!!

Brostep
Emeritus
August 28th 2015


4491 Comments


so much higher than a 4.0

Comatorium.
August 28th 2015


5043 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

I got my vinyl of this in the mail yesterday... its all soft and fuzzy... they weren't bullshitting when they said they sleeve ws made of velvet.

JamieCTA
August 28th 2015


281 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

really enjoying this. I appreciate most of their albums to the 3.75 kind of level. This should fall right in there but I think it has the potential to be a grower for me and be one of my favorites from them. Though some people are not as happy with this sound, this is actually kind of where I've wanted them to head for a while and it's only a slight offshoot from where they've been in the past.

Gyromania
August 28th 2015


37017 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

i need to get this on vinyl

ParanoidAndroid96
August 28th 2015


1393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

the velvet is so nice agreed

Sinternet
Contributing Reviewer
August 28th 2015


26570 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This is pretty fantastic. Love PPP.



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