×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0098787112221
$9.99
$15.99
Save 38%
Current price is $9.99, Original price is $15.99. You Save 38%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
9.99
In Stock
Overview
It's easy for artists in any medium to be seduced into believing their latest project must be more elaborate than what came before. On Depression Cherry, however, Beach House reject the notion that bigger is inherently better. Where Bloom took their crystalline dream pop to lavish heights, these songs revisit the simpler approach of Beach House and Devotion. While it's a bold choice, the results are delicate: even by Alex Scally and Victoria Legrand's standards, these songs are remarkably poignant and insular. Throughout the album, the duo conjures a feeling of intimacy surrounded by vastness, with "Space Song"'s arpeggiated keyboards suggesting stars shooting through an endless sky. Beach House's return to the unabashedly artificial sound of their early albums is a potent reminder of how well they contrast with Legrand's lush, empathetic vocals; on "Bluebird," she sings "I would not ever try to capture you" over a busy rhythm that calls attention to how clunky and mechanical it is. Her ability to sound at once comforting and heartbreaking on the bookends "Levitation" and "Days of Candy" speaks to the sensuous nature of Depression Cherry's, and Beach House's, melancholy; it's like a flavor or color that can be savored, even in its simplest incarnations. Scally and Legrand reintroduce some of Bloom's fullness on "PPP" -- which almost sounds like it was produced by Phil Spector compared to the rest of the album -- and "Sparks," which with its dense keyboards and cooing vocal harmonies could be a collaboration between Stereolab and My Bloody Valentine. Elsewhere, the influence of the duo's more recent work is more subtle, revealing itself in the sophisticated minimalism of songs such as "10:37." While it may not be as immediately inviting as Bloom or Teen Dream, Depression Cherry is more than just an admirable exercise in challenging conventional notions of success. It's a grower that demands and rewards close listening -- especially under headphones, where it unfolds like a spell cast just for the listener.
Product Details
Release Date: | 08/28/2015 |
---|---|
Label: | Sub Pop |
UPC: | 0098787112221 |
catalogNumber: | 71122 |
Rank: | 3998 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Beach House Primary ArtistAlex Scally Group Member
Victoria Legrand Group Member
Graham Hill Percussion,Drums
Chris Bear Drums
Technical Credits
Chris Coady ProducerBeach House Arranger,Composer,Producer
Victoria Legrand Composer
David Tolomei Engineer
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
This is one case where the legend really precedes the record itself. Cut for about ...
This is one case where the legend really precedes the record itself. Cut for about
600 dollars in Jack Endino's studio over just a matter of days, this captures Nirvana at a formative stage, still indebted to the murk that ...
It's a strange paradise, Victoria LeGrand sings at one point on Beach House's fourth album
Bloom, and there isn't a more apt description of the beautifully heartbroken mood that she and Alex Scally create here. Reuniting with Teen Dream engineer ...
As J. Tillman, indie folk crooner Joshua Tillman painted sparse, often melancholic fever dreams that
paired the wounded isolation of Nick Drake with the star-crossed country romanticism of Gram Parsons, a sensibility he also brought to the table as the ...
When the grunge scene was incubating in the Pacific Northwest during the '80s, it often ...
When the grunge scene was incubating in the Pacific Northwest during the '80s, it often
seemed like an outsized response to the increasing polish of alternative rock and the rarely acknowledged influence of primal hard rock and metal. But while ...
Following 2017's Pure Comedy, God's Favorite Customer is the fourth album from American singer/songwriter and ...
Following 2017's Pure Comedy, God's Favorite Customer is the fourth album from American singer/songwriter and
musician Father John Misty. Composed of hypnotic vocal work, bright guitar, and sweet piano melodies, the record also features his signature iconoclastic lyrics. Produced with ...
On 2012's Fear Fun, Josh Tillman introduced audiences to Father John Misty, a jaded and ...
On 2012's Fear Fun, Josh Tillman introduced audiences to Father John Misty, a jaded and
erudite, faux-bohemian retro-pop confectioner with a strong surrealist bent and an aptitude for capturing the American zeitgeist via wry couplets concerning the culturally and morally ...
Reverend Horton Heat (aka Jim Heath) always wanted to sound like the wildest, noisiest rockabilly ...
Reverend Horton Heat (aka Jim Heath) always wanted to sound like the wildest, noisiest rockabilly
guitarist on Earth, so it was fortunate that he crossed paths with Ministry braintrust Al Jourgensen during his brief spell as an advocate of roots ...
Although it was Nirvana that spread the smell of teen spirit far and wide across ...
Although it was Nirvana that spread the smell of teen spirit far and wide across
the land, making grunge an MTV buzzword and flannel an early '90s fashion statement, Mudhoney in the late '80s was perfecting its own recipe for ...