Showing posts with label beach house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach house. Show all posts

The Ocean Blue

Back Into the Blue
The Ocean Blue's David Schelzel Discusses His Band's First New LP in 14 Years
By Andrew Clayman
Published in The Big Takeover, March 2013
















As a contemplative, somewhat introverted teenager in the late 1980s, David Schelzel was hardly unique in his adoration for bands like The Smiths and Echo & The Bunnymen. Rather than being content to sit in his bedroom and listen to his heroes, however, Schelzel and his pals set their sights on joining them. And sure enough—in a feat that only looks more miraculous in retrospect—four high school kids from Hershey, PA, were inked to a three-record deal with Seymour Stein and Sire Records. 

That was 1988. Twenty-five years later, The Ocean Blue lives on, with their first LP in more than a decade—Ultramarine—due out this month. It’s a surprisingly energized return to form for a band that’s experienced all the obligatory highs, lows, and indefinite hiatuses that often follow immediate good fortune. At their commercial peak on Sire [including their 1989 self-titled debut, 1991’s Cerulean, and 1993’s Beneath the Rhythm & Sound], the band consistently moved 100,000 units, got regular college radio and MTV airplay, and made the rounds on the late night circuit. In the late ‘90s, as the line-up evolved into the current four-piece of singer-guitarist Schelzel, guitarist/keyboardist Oen Ronne, bassist Bobby Mittan, and drummer Peter Anderson, it became increasingly difficult to find that consistency—whether with a label, a sound, or an audience. Unless you count 2004’s Waterworks EP, there hasn’t been a proper, full-length Ocean Blue release since 1999’s Davy Jones Locker. And yet, as often happens with the best bands of dream-pop’s hey-day, the Ocean Blue fanbase—while perhaps smaller than 20 years ago—is more devoted and enthusiastic than it’s ever been.

Accordingly, singer/songwriter and Minnesota-based lawyer-by-day, David Schelzel, has high hopes that his band’s new record will connect not just with the old fan base, but with younger fans of current music born from similar “DNA,” as he puts it. The Big Takeover spoke with Schelzel shortly before the March 19 release of Ultramarine, to talk about his inspiration for the new album, the strangeness of performing songs he wrote as a teenager, and the pros and cons of that remarkable early success.

ANDREW CLAYMAN: Seeing you in Chicago a few weeks ago, it really sounded like you hadn’t missed a beat, despite the years between shows, let alone albums. How long does it generally take—or how difficult is it-- to get back in sync like that with the rest of the band after a long layoff?

DAVID SCHELZEL: Ha, you know, I guess it doesn’t take that long. I mean, I can play stuff off our first four records in my sleep. I just played it so much for so many years that—as far as me just getting up there with a guitar and singing—that’s really not an issue. The newer songs are a little trickier because they haven’t been played that much. In fact, we hadn’t played some of those live at all until we played Chicago, so they took a little more time. We played a show in Seattle this weekend that was great, though, and I think we were a lot better than we were in Chicago. So hopefully we just keep improving with the new material.

AC: One thing that sort of stood out to me at the show—obviously fans were excited to hear some of the old favorites—but I couldn’t help but wonder how it feels for you to be performing a song like “Between Something and Nothing,” which you wrote as a teenager. Does it seem sort of surreal, or does it still feel like a natural part of your current self?

DS: I think it feels surreal [laughs]. Almost everything I’ve been doing since getting out there again has been kind of surreal. I mean, recording felt pretty natural. I’ve been writing and recording since I was a kid. But now that I’m out performing and talking with press and doing some of the things we used to do, it’s a little bit weird, for sure.

AC: Sort of along those lines, I know you’ve talked about the new record Ultramarine as a callback to the Cerulean days in a lot of ways, and I can certainly hear a lot of those elements. In terms of songwriting and particularly lyric writing, though, how does your approach or subject matter differ now from what it may have been 20 years ago?

DS: Yeah, that’s a great question. I think in a lot of ways it’s the same, because I’m the same person. But in a lot of other ways, you’re right. It’s very different. For one, I’m not a teenager anymore or a twenty-something. You know, I’m a forty-something. And I have a much older perspective on just about everything. I’ve experienced a lot more of life than when I was younger. And probably, in some ways, more life than most people could relate to. I think when I was younger I kind of hadn’t done a lot of the things that most people did. We got our record deal right of high school. And I did go to college in between making all those records, but I didn’t have a lot of the same experiences that most folks have, because I was doing all this stuff with the band. So yeah, I think lyrically things are different. But I’m going to contradict myself and say, ‘but they’re still the same, too!’ [laughs] Because I’m the same guy.

AC: Since you mentioned it, what do you see as the overall pros and cons now of getting signed to Sire Records at such a young age?

DS: Yeah. That’s probably the way I’d break it down. There were great things about it and there were not great things about it. I think I appreciate more now how remarkable our experience was and how super lucky we were. I mean, we were signed to—in my view—the greatest label in the world at that time, right out of high school, without a lot of years of slogging it out. This was the label all my favorite bands were on, and here we were as teenagers becoming a part of that. And we immediately had success, too, with radio and MTV and everything else. All those things were great. I mean, we really had a great major label experience. I’m sure you talk to a lot of artists that have horror stories about different labels. We just didn’t have that. It was a wonderful experience, we sold a lot of records, and we were all friends and got along really well in the beginning. So those were all things on the pro side. But the con side is that I just think we were really green. I mean, I can’t listen to our early works without being like, ‘oh my gosh, I wish I could have done a better job singing that or playing that,’ or ‘that part sounds kind of goofy right there.’ So I wish in some ways I could get to do that all over again and do it better. That’s kind of the con of it-- you’re a kid and you’re green and you make stupid decisions about some things, and you’re naïve about other things.


AC: Well, jumping back to the present day, now that you do have that wisdom on your side, what do you see as the sort of mission statement for this new album? What, basically, are you hoping to accomplish with Ultramarine?

DS: Well, it’s funny. From our perspective, the album is done, and we’re just sharing it with the world now. But from everyone else’s perspective, they haven’t even heard it yet, so we’re just beginning. So there is this weird stage for artists, I think, when you’ve worked a long time on a record and you’re maybe sick of it and ready to move on, and yet now you’re just starting to share it with the world and relive it. But yeah, for me, there are really two main groups of people we want to reach. The first is the hundreds of thousands of people who bought our records over the years and probably have lost touch with us. We want to share with them the music that we’re making now, which hopefully they’ll like. And then the other group of people are those who’ve never heard of us before, but who may like what we’re doing. And I think there’s some interesting potential there, because in the musical landscape right now, there are an awful lot of artists who we’d fit in right next to. You know, they either like the same kind of music we like, or—whether they know it or not—sound a bit like us. Or we sound like them. It was interesting when we played Seattle, for example-- there were forty-somethings asking for autographs after the show and there were twenty-somethings. So it’s an interesting mix of people. And yeah, I think the musical landscape right now is good for us.

AC: Obviously, there have been some major technological factors that have changed a great deal since even Davy Jones Locker came out. One would be the way music is recorded itself—basically allowing you guys to make this record while living in different cities-- and another is the way it’s marketed and distributed, with social media having blown up basically in the past five years or so. How big an impact have those two things had on Ultramarine so far?

DS: Oh man, well we could never do what we’re doing now if things hadn’t changed. We would have had to go out and find a new substantial record deal. And it’s tough to do that. I would be very open to working with a label again, but we kind of thought, ‘hey, maybe we should try this one on our own.’ So we formed a co-op label [Korda] with some friends here in Minneapolis and decided to put the record out that way. Now, we’ve still got a publicity firm and distribution and radio people and that kind of thing. But for the most part, it’s just us kind of doing it on our own. And if the changes hadn’t happened in recording technology, where we could essentially make a record that sounds comparable to the records we’ve always made—maybe even better—or with digital distribution, where can throw something up on Bandcamp and sell it directly to people; or with Facebook, where we can communicate directly with people who like us… I mean, those things are just great tools. Now, ask me three months from now how effective I think those tools are, and I’ll be able to tell you a lot better [laughs]. You know, I think it’s still hard to get above the noise sometimes and distinguish yourself from the crowd. But I think we have an advantage there, too, because—for better or worse—we’re a known quantity for a lot of people. Every day we get notes from people saying, “oh my gosh, I can’t believe you’re back!’ Or, ‘I hadn’t listened to you guys in years and then I found you on Facebook,’ etc. etc. That kind of thing. And that’s pretty cool.

AC: How important was the internet fan base in keeping the band alive over the years? Were there ever times you thought maybe there wouldn’t be any more albums, or was that always a goal?

DS: Yeah, I don’t know. I think what drives us and why we’re doing this has always had more to do with the fact that we all still like making music together. Because frankly, we don’t have a very big social media base, relative to most bands. I mean, I hope it gets bigger over the coming year. But it certainly wasn’t like we had 100,000 likes on Facebook and thought, ‘Oh man, we got to do another record!’ You know, I always write and record music. I never stopped. And it just got to a point where I felt I had enough material that could become a new record for the band, and that, yeah, we all still would want to do some shows. It was more of that kind of process.

AC: You mentioned earlier feeling like you fit in with a lot of contemporary bands. I actually read one interview where Beach House was brought up as sounding a bit like the Ocean Blue. As a Beach House fan myself, I had never made that connection, but after reading that, I actually did feel like there was at least a similar sort of ethereal quality there that was definitely comparable.

DS: Yeah, I mean, vocally maybe not so much, because she [Victoria Legrand of Beach House] has such a unique voice. But even so, melodically and certainly-- as [guitarist] Oed [Ronne] has been told before-- it’s mostly the guitars. And they’re from our neck of the woods, which is kind of fun. I like that about them. But yeah, I’m a huge Beach House fan. And there are tons of other bands making music right now that I think, ‘yeah, that just fits right in to the kind of music that’s in our DNA, too.’

AC: Could you eventually see using the Korda label as a way to take some of those younger, similarly minded bands under your wing in the years ahead?

DS: Um, I don’t know. We’ve certainly had a lot of interest from people, but I think it’s kind of funny—well not that funny. But we just have decided we’re going to release these four records among the bands that started it [The Ocean Blue, Starfolk, Jim Ruiz Set, and Typsy Panthre] and then kind of ask that question, and see if we have anything to offer anybody else. I mean, that’s the biggest thing I don’t really know—whether we could really help anybody all that much. What we do is encourage each other, share knowledge, share the load on certain things. And that could certainly grow into something. I know I don’t have the time to run a label myself [laughs]. But maybe Allison [LaBonne, of Starfolk] does.

AC: Okay, for this last bit, it’s not free association exactly. But I have chosen a handful of songs from The Ocean Blue catalog, and was hoping you could just share any random insights or memories related to the writing, recording, or performing of it. Whatever you please.

DS: Alright.

”Blow My Mind” from the new LP, Ultramarine
DS: Well, it’s probably the coolest drum take on the record. It’s a single performance by Peter [Anderson], and he really kind of gave the whole song almost a Dave Brubeck kind of feel. I had sort of written it more as a straighforward jazz waltz, and he really stepped it up when I started singing the bah-bahs in the middle, and it really became something more unique. It’s probably the most lo-fi recording on the album, too. He probably only used two or three mics on his kit, and yet, to me, his drums on that tracks sound totally huge and cool. Then Eddie did these wild, swirly guitars that are awesome. So yeah, I like that track a lot.

”Denmark” off of the Denmark EP, 2000
DS: Ah, interesting. Yeah, that’s a song I really like lyrically. “Denmark” is an interesting song. Musically, the whole track is actually an older song of ours played backwards. And I can’t tell you which one, either, because I don’t want to be sued for copyright infringement. So I’ll leave it as a secret. [Since Schelzel is also a professional copyright lawyer, his strategy here is understandable]. But the lyrics—I wrote them in Denmark around the time we were making probably the biggest transition of our career, going from being on Sire to leaving Sire and losing our keyboard player Steve [Lau], who I’d started the band with. So a lot of stuff was changing at that time. [Lau later accused his ex-bandmates of discrimination based on his sexual orientation, which the band strongly denied. All parties have since buried the hatchet].

”Whenever You’re Around” from the LP See The Ocean Blue, 1996 [AC: probably my favorite Ocean Blue song, by the way]
DS: Oh wow. Good for you, Man. I love that track, and I don’t say that about a lot of my tracks. I think that’s one of the coolest recordings we ever did. I just love the way the recording came out, and I think it’s the only one on See the Ocean Blue that was an original mix done by the guys that recorded it in Memphis. Yeah, I like the vibe on that one a lot.

”Sublime” from the LP Beneath the Rhythm & Sound, 1993
DS: That one, yeah—I guess I’m not thinking much about lyrics. Because as soon as you said that, I’m thinking, ‘that was a fun video!’ [laughs] We shot that video in Iceland over the course of a week. And we got to go to Blue Lagoon, which is this really cool natural thermal spring, and the water is kind of a milky blue color. We just posted a photo from that shoot on Facebook today, ironically. But yeah, that was our first single to kind of really break into the pop realm.

”Ballerina Out of Control” from the LP Cerulean, 1991
That’s a song I wrote when I was in Los Angeles, and we were mixing “Between Something and Nothing,” believe it or not. I guess I was out in L.A. to visit the label and red-do a few things on that song before it was released on the first record. So I went out one evening with the general manager of Sire and one of the assistants named Sandy. And we went and saw Nitzer Ebb—kind of this gothic, industrial band—and there was this woman in the crowd wearing a ballerina outfit, but all torn up and twisted as you might expect. So Sandy turns to me and says, “she’s a ballerina out of control.” And I just thought, ‘man, that is such a great phrase!’ And from that, it kind of bounced around in my head for a while until I constructed the song around a character in this sort of conflicted state. She appreciates the aesthetic but has some things clearly askew in her life.

”I Have Sung One Too Many Songs for a Crowd That Didn’t Want to Hear” from the LP Cerulean, 1991
DS: Well, as the title would suggest, that song is about singing in front of a crowd that doesn’t really want to hear you. I wrote it around the time we were doing some drudgery touring for the first record, just before our singles broke and we started playing for people who actually knew and liked our music. The lyrics are alluding to getting my mind off those early shows in smaller towns on that first tour. You know, it didn’t last long. We were lucky and didn’t play a lot of those shows. But we played a few, for sure.

You have to remember, growing up in central Pennsylvania, we were weird—really weird—in that we didn’t fit into the popular music around us at that time. It was mostly stuff that sounded like Bon Jovi. So we weren’t a hair metal band or an R&B band or Top 40. We were completely different, so you’re going to have those kinds of experiences getting started.


Beach House (2)

The Dream Team
Beach House Steps Out of the Shadows on "Teen Dream"
By Andrew Clayman
Published in The Cleveland Scene, June 2010


It’s not too often that one can pinpoint the exact moment when a band hops the fence from obscurity to celebrity, but for Beach House, it was probably this past January the 22nd.

Just a few days before the Baltimore duo’s Sub Pop debut Teen Dream hit shelves and raked in the praise, Victoria Legrand (vocals, keyboards) and Alex Scally (guitar) found themselves on the set of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon—performing on television for the first time in their career with the highly-rated final episode of Conan O’Brien’s Tonight Show as their lead-in. If Beach House’s first four years had taken place in a frying pan, this was most certainly the fire.

“It’s a little nerve-racking and bizarre to play like that—one song on national TV,” Legrand says. “But the crew and Jimmy himself were lovely and all chilled out. We brought our own lighting and our fur [stage] structures and they were cool about it. The whole thing had a surreal element to it, to be sure, but it was fun.”

Admittedly, “Beach House on Fallon” isn’t exactly on par with “Beatles on Sullivan,” but for a band that had mostly cultivated its cult status in the shadows over the course of two hypnotic, ethereal albums (2006’s Beach House and 2008’s Devotion), the TV gig was both a coming out party and a statement to the group’s existing devotees. With the iconic Sub Pop label behind them, things were about to change.

“Yeah, it was a practical decision,” Legrand says, referring to Beach House’s move from the respected but small Carpark label to Sub Pop. “[Sub Pop] had been interested since the first record, but Alex and I weren't interested in bigger labels. We didn't feel like waiting around for some stupid record deal that would take forever and then having to tour the record for two years like some bands do. We just wanted to put it out and start touring right away, and that's where Carpark came in. We've been DIY for over four years-- never used to having people do things for us. But moving to Sup Pop was about widening our artistic channel; getting a bigger house so our ideas-- our mental furniture-- could have more room to grow. It wasn’t a glamorous decision about blowing up.”

In fact, as Legrand sees it, Sub Pop may have had more to gain from the arrangement than she and Scally did.

“We definitely cultivated our fan base ourselves,” she says. “No label did that for us. If anything, labels need bands today. A band doesn't need a label if they're touring their asses off and cultivating their universe. Bands basically make labels look better. It's a great change from the way it used to be, I think.”

So, whether Beach House needed Sub Pop or vice versa, the result has been, by virtually all accounts, the best Beach House record to date. Halfway through 2010, many critics’ “Best of the Year” lists still include Teen Dream—an album that twisted and bent the band’s dream-pop templates enough to create a more cohesive and energized—but no less distinctive-- collection of songs; including the current college radio staples “Zebra,” “Norway,” and “10 Mile Stereo.”

“I think it's been a natural evolution for us,” Legrand says. “Teen Dream wouldn’t exist without the previous two albums. But a lot of it is also the result of lots of touring and the bottling of life and live energy that goes into that.”

If one song on Teen Dream epitomizes Beach House’s growth, it’s—appropriately enough— a track called “Used to Be.” Legrand and Scally actually released an earlier version of this song as a Carpark single in 2008, and it had all the classic Beach House elements in abundance—a grade-A pop melody, a Phillip Glass-style organ riff, droning atmospherics courtesy of Scally, and the otherworldly vocal aeronautics of the classically trained Legrand. When they started playing it live, however, “Used to Be,” like Beach House itself, began a slow metamorphosis.

“We felt that there was an emotional depth in the original that could be cultivated more,” Legrand says. “So we worked on it and changed its shape and bone structure and flesh. We worked with different sounds; we removed certain sounds, etc. In the end it was about transition in the arrangement. We wanted to bring ‘Used To Be’ to the level of a ‘Norway’ or any of the songs on Teen Dream, for that matter. …We're probably more intense now than ever before when we hear things we write. But fortunately, our ability to work obsessively on something together has remained the same.”

Five years into their passionate (but notably platonic) musical partnership, Legrand and Scally have also maintained a simple philosophy when it comes to playing music, no matter how big the audience gets.

“It’s not a job,” Legrand says matter-of-factly. “We don’t ever want it to feel like it is.”


For 2009 Beach House feature in Chicago Innerview Magazine, go here




Beach House - Teen Dream

Beach House
Teen Dream

Sub Pop

Last summer, I had the chance to speak with Beach House singer/keyboardist Victoria Legrand about her band’s notoriously melancholy reputation. She replied with what was essentially a mission statement for the album that became Teen Dream: “The melancholy thing is okay, but I think many other colors in the emotional rainbow are coming. I hope to start hearing new words other than ‘languid’ and ‘sleepy.’”

In fairness, those words never did Beach House’s first two albums any justice in the first place. The Baltimore-based duo of Legrand and guitarist Alex Scally have routinely had their superb pop sensibilities overshadowed with lazy comparisons to “audio Ambien,” thanks mostly to the admittedly dreamy combo of Scally’s weepy slide guitar and Legrand’s spooky church organ. On closer inspection, songs like “Master of None” from their 2006 self-titled debut and “Heart of Chambers” from 2008’s Devotion were startlingly catchy in their own slow-motion way. Still, there’s no denying that Teen Dream—Beach House’s third album and Sub Pop debut—will open up the adjective box for this band once and for all.

This is easily the best Beach House album to date, as well as the best indie album of the year thus far—a statement that just might hold true come December. Legrand and Scally, as promised, have moved into new territory, from the Cocteau Twins-ish lead single “Norway” to the Arcade Fire-y build-up of the epic “10 Mile Stereo.” Every song stands up alone, too, avoiding the coagulation that occasionally occurred on side two of the band’s earlier efforts. As for old fans who prefer their Beach House albums as the soundtracks to unmade David Lynch films, don’t fear. The chorus from “Silver Soul” (“It’s happening again”) sure seems like a Twin Peaks reference. And if that show could be on network TV, it only makes sense that Teen Dream will find the Billboard charts.

(Andrew Clayman)

Published in The Metro Pulse, January 2010

Beach House

Beach House
More Colors in the Emotional Rainbow
By Andrew Clayman
Published in Chicago Innerview, September 2009



As evidenced by the font-size discrepancy on the marquee, Beach House is merely opening for Grizzly Bear during the bands’ two-night stint at the Metro this month. Fans of the fast-rising Grizz should be warned, however—when Victoria Legrand starts singing, it’s easy to forget that anyone else is on the bill, or on the planet for that matter.

Legrand (vocals, organ) and Alex Scally (guitar) started Beach House back in 2004, and have since risen to the forefront of a thriving Baltimore indie scene. Both their self-titled 2006 debut and 2008 follow-up Devotion were hailed as dream-pop classics, with most of the emphasis falling on the duo’s classical training and ethereal, almost trance-inducing combination of organ and slide guitar. Chicago Innerview caught up with Legrand and Scally-- on tour in Europe-- at a lovely hotel in Amsterdam. . . eh hem, via email.

Andrew Clayman: Back in December, in this very publication, I proudly ranked Devotion the top album of 2008. Was I correct, or did I totally miss the boat on something far superior?

Alex Scally: Well shucks, thank you very much. There were so many records released that were really unique and great in different ways—there’s no way that I could get my brain to decide which was #1. That would just be silly.

Victoria Legrand: Thanks, Andrew! I heard you ranked on 2008's Hottest Men of the Year! (writer’s note: Victoria’s sources are not to be trusted)

AC: Based on the rare updates to your website and Myspace pages, I’m assuming Beach House is a bit more old school in its sensibilities. Do you pay much attention to reviews or online buzz about the band, or is that generally avoided?

Alex: We notice it sometimes. I am just not online very often without a specific task....i think the online music world has been great for spreading music with less "commercial appeal." I just hope that people are taking time to really listen.

Victoria: I don't like to look for internet spluge. I like to keep internet at a safe distance.

AC: A lot of critics tend to fixate on Beach House’s “dreamy” sound and classical background, but your skills as pop songwriters tend to get overlooked, I think. Do you see Beach House as a “pop” band?

Alex: Yes, we do. I am so glad that you say that because we do fancy ourselves to be pop writers. I think that every song that we’ve made has had that energy-- it's been there all along.

Victoria: Pop is music that makes you feel, and we have always responded to sounds and melodies that made us instantly feel something right inside of our chests. The classical knowledge is a great tool. But your natural instincts take over when you hear something right.

AC: Do you think it’s fair that you tend to get labeled as a “melancholy” band, or is that a mischaracterization?

Victoria: The melancholy thing is okay, but I think many other colors in the emotional rainbow are coming. I hope to start hearing new words other than "languid" and "sleepy.”

AC: After you get back from Europe you’ll be touring as the opener for Grizzly Bear. How close are you with those guys and what are you looking forward to about that experience?

Alex: They’ve been kind of like an older brother to us— we’ve learned a lot from them. I suppose I’m just excited to play in larger rooms and try to make it feel intense for ourselves, even with the loss of personal communication.

Victoria: Killer bros, those guys. We are looking forward to driving thousands of miles while they soar by in the big old bus. All joking aside... they have been nothing but natural from the start-- kind and thoughtful. Ed (Droste) is always blowing my mind.

AC: How’s the next Beach House record coming together?

Victoria: It’s cocooning splendidly!

Alex: We’ve finished recording and are hoping to release it in Jan or Feb.

AC: Considering Victoria’s pedigree (she is the niece of French film composer Michel Legrand) and Beach House’s sort of David Lynchian mood, it seems like you’d be perfectly suited to working on some film scores? Any discussions of something like that?

Alex: Yes, in our dreams....hopefully soon!

Victoria: I would love to work on a film. It's always been a dream of mine.

AC: Finally, as one of those much-ballyhooed “Baltimore bands,” are you generally proud ambassadors for the city, or does the association start to become a bit limiting?

Alex: I’m fine with it. We really love the community we’ve found in Baltimore—everyone is making such drastically different stuff, really.

Victoria: Yeah, Baltimore is just fine. I live there, my stuff is there-- so is my cat. I come and go. Great friends. It's never limiting-- just every couple of months I want to run screaming into the desert.



Beach House

Beach House
@ The Grog Shop, Cleveland, March 27

by Andrew Clayman
Published (with edits) in The Scene (Cleveland), March 2008



There’s party music, and then there’s music for the uninvited. The sad, dreamy ballads of Beach House certainly fall into the latter category.

Hailing from Baltimore, the duo of Alex Scally (guitar/keyboards) and Victoria Legrand (vocals/keyboards) look and sound more than a little like castaways from the set of There Will Be Blood. There’s a timelessness and Big Sky expanse to the band’s slow motion melodies that haven’t been heard since the mid ‘90s hey day of Mazzy Star. In fact, Beach House defies previously held logic by actually sounding a good degree more haunting than those brooders ever did.

Scally’s weepy slide guitars certainly play their role, but the extra wrinkle is some spookily sweet, dueling organs, which perfectly wrap around Legrand’s dreary but confident beltings.

Beach House has introduced a somewhat more dramatic sound on their new sophomore effort, Devotion. It’s still not party music, though, unless you’re going to an Addams Family outing or a séance at Ray Manzarek’s house. Dance moves are pretty much limited to a lonely sway or the occasional ghostly waltz.