Review: Depression Cherry
The following is my submission to a contest hosted by Phoenix's popular record store, Stinkweeds, inviting reviews of Beach House's Depression Cherry for a chance to win an exclusive version of the album on vinyl. I lost, but WAS named runner-up, which is cool.
“Where do they go from here?” It’s been a legitimate
question to ask along the timeline of magnificent Beach House productions. The
Baltimore duo has, impressively, been able to answer that question quite
resoundingly with each release. After achieving a modern masterpiece with their
Sub Pop debut, Teen Dream, Alex
Scally and Victoria Legrand doubled down on their dream pop progression with Bloom, taking the band from the quiet comfort
of indie darlings to, if not the mainstream, something more ambitious. Never
has the “Where do they go from here?” question been more apropos than following
Bloom; assuredly something grander
than that would weigh the “dream pop”
scale too heavily to the latter. (And by the way, while some may meet the dream
pop label with an eye roll, I’m sorry—it fits Beach House like a velvet glove.)
Where they went from there is Depression Cherry, the first album that doesn’t answer its
predecessor resoundingly. Rather, it’s a slow burn of a response, or, more likely,
not a response at all. Scally and Legrand, after all, don’t seem as concerned
with their evolution as they are with making meaningful music, which has made
their evolution natural and unforced. It’s
easy to mistake the album as the duo retreating to the subtle nuances of their
self-titled debut and sophomore effort—indeed, Depression Cherry seemingly fits better in between Devotion and Teen Dream than as a follow-up to Bloom—but the album is revelatory in its admission that less is
more.
If the title doesn’t prove as much—“Depression Cherry” is
pretty far from the burgeoning, overt beauty of something called “Bloom”—the opening
track will. You can rightly expect “Levitation” to ascend, but it will only do
what it promises: levitate. Whether you experience that as disappointment or delicate,
refined splendor will ultimately determine how you perceive Depression Cherry. It’s my suspicion, if
you’re listening to Beach House in the first place, you will opt for splendor.
That’s not to say the album is understated throughout. “PPP”
and lead single “Sparks” are more authoritative in their mission. As someone
who’s been mildly obsessed with Beach House’s penchant for making one track
seem like two with an artful turn—for what it’s worth, I consider the latter
part of “Used to Be” off Teen Dream
among the most gorgeous slices of music I’ve heard—the elongated, guitar-aided
conclusion of “PPP” is a wonder. Still, the riffs of “Beyond Love” and steady
tick of “Bluebird” are carefully crafted, something you grow to adore as they
remain in your subconscious like, oh I don’t know … a dream.
In interviews coinciding with the album’s release, Legrand maintains
that the songwriting is interpretative, definable only to the listener. And I
don’t interpret Depression Cherry to
be depressing at all. Indeed, on “Levitation,” when Legrand croons, in her
signature, haunted best, “There’s a place I want to take you,” it’s a cordial
invite to a mysterious yet exquisite landscape. But depression itself is
something beneath the surface, something that transcends the hallow pleasures
of everyday life, and that’s where Beach House has always made its bones. This
album might be the cherry on top of that aesthetic, perfectly nestling itself
within an enchanting catalog.
A good friend of mine introduced me to my wife. He also, a
few years later, introduced me to Beach House. There are times I feel almost as
indebted to him for the latter as I do the former. It was love at first sight
in both cases. Is that a tired cliché? Beach House might think so, which may
explain why Depression Cherry is not
as easily recognizable. Rather, it cordially invites you to something deeper. Something,
as one of its tracks suggests, beyond love. The journey is quite worth it, even
if it leaves you with the nagging question, “Where do they go from here?”
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