Sub Pop – SP1240
While Beach House's sound has always focused on hypnotic melodies and
Victoria Legrand's rich vocals -- and likely always will -- they've
found different ways to explore this potent combination on each album.
Legrand and Alex Scally delivered some of their most dramatic
experiments on 2015's Depression Cherry and Thank Your Lucky Stars,
which presented a surprising amount of sides to their music even as they
stripped it down to the basics. If possible, they're even more
committed to change on their aptly named seventh album. To make 7, Beach
House opted to work with Sonic Boom instead of longtime producer Chris
Coady; brought their live drummer James Barone into the studio; and
recorded songs as soon as they were done writing them instead of waiting
to record all of them at once. This creative liberation resonates on
every track, whether Scally and Legrand build up the instrumentation or
pare it back, touch on their familiar sounds or invent new ones. 7's
sequencing spotlights just how wide its range is, juxtaposing songs that
sound wildly different, but equally like Beach House. The galactic
whoosh of "Dark Spring" -- a key example of Boom's influence -- sounds
all the more vast next to "Pay No Mind," the band's warmest, most
down-to-earth love song yet. Similarly, "L'Inconnue"'s blissful
call-and-response contrasts nicely with the edgy "Drunk in LA," where
the beats and synths evoke rain-slicked streets and city lights. Then
there are the songs that feel completely new: with its warping synths
and enigmatic vibe, "Lemon Glow" gives the Beach House mystique a sci-fi
update, while the sleek "Black Car" incorporates hints of dance and
R&B without sounding like the duo is chasing trends. "Dive" is
another standout, shifting from rainy-day contemplation to speeding down
the road with the windows down in a way that's seamless and
exhilarating. Elsewhere, Legrand uses 7's eclectic sounds as an
opportunity to experiment with different lyrical perspectives that add
depth to the album's dreamy surfaces, as on "Girl of the Year," where
its cavernous sweetness echoes its tale of a young woman famous for
self-destruction. Throughout 7, Beach House feel more concerned with
capturing moments fully rather than conforming to notions of what a
cohesive album is. That these songs sound like they came from different
albums is ultimately more refreshing than disorienting, and the
excitement that courses through each track is palpable. Scally and
Legrand could have only made 7 at this point in their career -- not only
do they have the skill to change things up, but the wisdom to know how
and when to do so.

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