Music Review: Native Echoes by Beach Day
If you asked me to describe the state of rock ânâ roll today in one word, that word would be âlifeless.â Whether itâs habit or the insane hope of a religious zealot, each week I continue to rummage through yet another batch of new releases and hear nothing but synthetic garbage by people who mime the conventions of rock ânâ roll and have no feel for it whatsoever. Often Iâll sample an album, song by song, and mutter with bitter repetition, âThatâs crap. Thatâs crap. Thatâs crap.â
I think my neighbors believe I own a parrot.
I tried very hard not to get my hopes up for Beach Dayâs new album because I didnât want to filter my impressions through the desperate expectations of an orphaned rock chick in rock-deprived Paris. Since itâs genetically impossible for me to sit on my ass and do nothing, I decided to spend the time immersing myself in the âgirl groupsâ of the early 1960âsâThe Chiffons, The Shirelles, The Crystals, The Shangri-Lasâin preparation for an upcoming series on women artists. This decision was a logical progression from Beach Day since their first album, Trip Trap Attack, contained strong echoes of those pioneers, particularly The Shangri-Las. When I needed a change of pace, I buried myself in Patti Smithâs first two albums: Horses and Radio Ethiopia.
Right before Native Echoes came out, though, I started to wonder if that was a wise thing to do and that maybe I had set up Beach Day to fail by juxtaposing their music with the music of two of the most intense and powerful acts in rock history. Whether you like them or not, you canât deny that Patti Smith and The Shangri-Las are compelling, memorable and deeply influential.
So I followed my prescription for getting the psychedelic era out of my head after I finished The Psychededlic Series and gave myself an aural enema. I spent the last two days before the release of Native Echoes listening to classical music. No throbbing beats, no guitars, no erotic vocals, no attitude. I listened to twelve hours of Mozart, Schubert, Saint-Saens, Wagner, Haydn, Bach, Rodrigo and a host of others, and during that entire period, my ass didnât wiggle, my feet remained firmly in place and I had no urge to jack off. I like classical music, but itâs more of an intellectual/higher emotions experience, and not the letâs-get-down-and-fuck-our-brains out experience of core rock ânâ roll.
Therefore, I approached Native Echoes with the attitude of the impatient virgin and wanted to hear something that would figuratively pop my cherry.
I was not disappointed, but I was definitely surprised. Thatâs good!
What did piss me off was a paragraph from the pre-launch hoo-hah for Native Echoes, which puts way, way too much emphasis on the producer:
On this new LP, theyâve become greater than the sum of their throwback influences. After a year of touring in anticipation and support for their dĂŠbut, Trip Trap Attack, Beach Day headed to Detroit â mecca for both garage rock and the girl group sound â and into the studio of Jim Diamond (the Sonics, the Dirtbombs, the White Stripes). Guided by the experienced hand of Jim Diamond, Beach Day dropped the bits of Northern Soul that appeared on their dĂŠbut and replaced it with feedback, foot stomps, and an electric 12-string guitar run through an Allen Gyrophonic speaker to make it sound like a synth. And so, Native Echoes emerges packing more modern grit. With more instrumental sophistication and all-tape recording, the album features more atmosphere and patina to deepen its new octane.
Kimmy Drake and Skyler Black arenât even mentioned, giving the reader the impression that they were replaced by androids and that the real hero of the album is the Iâm-shocked-they-didnât-say-âlegendaryâ producer Jim Diamond.
That is breathtakingly astonishing bullshit. If anything, Native Echoes is successful in spite of the production, which at times interferes with the music. Sometimes the effects are overdone, and once you get past âOh, that sounds cool,â you realize that the effect took you on a detour away from the feel of the song, without adding much in return. The hype for the album makes a big deal out of the fact that this is an analog recording, but tape canât turn shitty music into great music. There are songs where Diamondâs production adds bottom and texture to the mix, but what really makes this record work is the continuing development of Kimmy Drake as a singer and songwriter and more powerful and effective drumming from Skyler Black.
Look. George Martin was a great producer, but if he had been stuck with Bobby Sherman or Fabian instead of Lennon and McCartney, he sure as shit wouldnât be Sir George Martin. I think this is part of the problem with rock today: the emphasis is on production and not on the talent (0r glaring lack thereof). What makes Native Echoes work is talent, and I think Beach Day could have recorded the album on swiss cheese and hired Fred Flintstone to produce it and it still would have come out just fine.
Itâs the artists, stupid!
Native Echoes is a very different album than Trip Trap Attack, even when you account for the production differences. Beach Day still rocks but the content is less beach party and more reflective of the uncomfortable truth that relationships with other human beings are often fraught with pain and misunderstanding. Itâs not a dark album, but it does explore soured friendships and the unbelievable frustration of trying to relate to people who have no there there. There are times when Kimmy Drake sounds positively tiredânot in the sense of her performance, which is always characterized by full-throttle commitmentâbut tired of the bullshit, traditions and mediocrity that often contaminate human relations.
âAll My Friends Were Punksâ gets things off to a great start with its strong hand-clapping beat, rough bottom and a confident, cocky vocal from Kimmy. Skyler Black really drives this sucker with a relentless beat with well-timed variations. The song is more attitudinal than lyrical, and the primary focus is on Kimmyâs vocal talents. Her âoohsâ in the âDo you remember?â choruses are to die for, and the contrast with the more leather-jacketed sass in the verses demonstrates her seemingly effortless versatility. Kimmy is handling the backup vocals as well, and while she sounds great, I think it will be better in the long run for Beach Day to get a second female vocalist to add contrast and make Kimmyâs lead vocals sound even more stunning than they already are (yes, even if they decide not to choose me for the part). Kimmy also plays a pretty mean guitar, and both the crunchy rhythm guitar and soaring lead solo are ab-fab.
Itâs followed by âDonât Call Me on the Phone,â noticeable at first for an interesting synthesized effect that sounds like it could have fit well on a Freddy Cannon number if Freddy had ever dropped acid at Palisades Park. The style here is more Spectorish girl-group, making it one of the stronger bridges to Trip Trap Attack. The bass and drums form a tight, thumping rhythm, and I love the decision to stop the music in the middle of the last verseâKimmy sounds positively dominant in that brief a cappella moment. It was a solid enough number to have been selected as the pre-release teaser, but unlike most records where the pre-release teaser turns out to be the only decent song on the record, âDonât Call Me on the Phoneâ is really just an appetizer: there are much stronger tracks on Native Echoes.
One of the strongest is âBFF,â short for âBest Friends Forever,â one of those idiotic sentimental slogans that have kept Hallmark in business all these years. This was the first big surprise of the album, because this is nothing like Trip Trap Attack; it feels more like a mid-tempo Lou Reed garage song, with its rough edges and surprisingly rich melody. After the intro of just-plug-the-damn-thing-into-the-amp-and-play electric guitar chords, Kimmy enters with a vocal best described as low-burn irritation, a style she does extraordinarily well. Describing a falling out with a girlfriend, âBFFâ exposes all the sticky stuff that somehow gets attached to friendship and completely ruins it: expectations, rituals, and the refusal to let your friend change and grow because youâre hung up on the myth of âbest friends forever.â The song appears to open in mid-conversation; Kimmy has just heard the kind of bullshit women lay on each other when theyâre pissed off and bitchy, and Kimmy is simply not willing to play the game:
I know who I am and what I have
You canât make me feel bad
And if you want to leave me out
Well I can make it easy now
âCause I donât want to be your friend
Donât want to stay to the end
Donât want to be BFFâs
Donât want to stay forever
And ever and ever
The downside of having greater emotional intelligence is that few women are ever direct with one another; we tend to dance around the subject and avoid saying anything that might be perceived as âmean.â Well, fuck that shit, say I, and Kimmy apparently agrees. In the second verse she calls âbullshitâ on the common intensifier âforever,â something we use to express deep emotion because we slept through the vocabulary-building exercises in school. The problem with âforeverâ is that it implies a commitment that in turn becomes an obligation, and friendship should never be based on obligation. Kimmyâs repetition of âforever and forever and everâ is perfectly phrased, as if she finds the concept a bit boring and not a little bit absurd. I love the fade on this song; itâs a recitation of stuff girls do when theyâre together, bored and canât think of anything to do. When presented in this fashion on âBFF,â it exposes the emptiness of a friendship when all that holds it together is mindless shared activity:
And I donât want to watch a movie
And I donât want to watch some TV
And I donât want to braid your hair
And I donât want to put on make up
âBFFâ is an absolute knockout performance and a clear demonstration of Kimmy Drakeâs development as a songwriter.
We get back to more of the basics with âIâm Just Messinâ Around,â a Skyler Drake-driven rocker that might have made a good fit on a Seeds album, though Iâll take Kimmyâs voice over Sky Saxonâs any day. The lead solo section features a full band bash in double-time, followed by a quick transition to a drums-and-vocal segment that is perfectly executed. Itâs followed by âGnarly Waves,â a sort of intermission piece featuring heavily-reverbed guitar playing a melancholy passage over the sound of waves hitting the beach. There are actually two wave-enhanced tracks on the album, and while the effect is not too much of a distraction here, it does become somewhat problematic in the closing number.
âPrettyâ can best be described as kind of an internal dialogue about the dichotomy between the pretty girls and the not-pretty girls, a competition that is truly a useless and obsolete remnant of female evolution, rather like a psychological version of the appendix. Hereâs what happens: the culture defines who is pretty and who is not, depending on whatâs in vogue at the time. The not-pretty girls hate the pretty-girls, who in turn learn to hate themselves for being pretty because a.) all the other girls envy them and b.) no one takes a pretty girl seriously. Some of the pretty girls are snobs, and they look down at the not-so-pretty girls, which leads the not-so-pretty girls to loathe the pretty ones even more as a way of compensating for their new self-esteem problem. Fucking silly, isnât it? As one who has been branded âa pretty one,â I have felt both the jealousy and resentment from members of my own gender and the refusal of men to think of me as anything more than an empty-headed piece of ass or a future trophy wife. While I relieve men of those fantasies pretty quickly and have learned that I have to make an extra special effort to make friends with women who resent me at first sight, the point is that the dynamic is absurd and destructive. No beauty lasts forever, and whatâs beautiful this year may not be so next year. The point is the expectation that women should always âlook prettyâ is a drag, because it focuses on appearance and ignores whatâs inside. Being pretty also takes a lot of effort, no matter how ânaturally beautifulâ you may be. In âPretty,â Kimmy is talking to herself, echoing the neurotic reality that all women feel due to culturally-imposed self-consciousness. The music here kicks ass, with screaming guitars and thunderous drumming from Skyler.
âThe Lucky Oneâ is definitely more girl-group than garage, with Kimmyâs voice on heavy reverb and the wall of sound firmly in place. Featuring a lovely melody that sticks in your head (as does nearly every song on Native Echoes), this is one arrangement that really could have used two or three backup singers Ă la The Shangri-Las. âFades Awayâ features a thin organ reminiscent of the organ on â96 Tears,â and is probably the most interesting composition on the record in terms of the contrasting chord structures on verse and chorus. Another song about the disappointments of friendship, âFades Awayâ raises the problem of having a friend who has zero self-awareness and is trapped in her own version of reality:
I heard about all the things you said
You donât know what it was like
To be your friend
Doomed to live a double life
And doomed to lie
Darkness surrounds you
And only you know why
This is hard stuff to tell a friend, and itâs pretty unlikely that the friend will hear it.
âLost Girlâ also features the organ and the musical drama of the girl group genre. I love Skylerâs precise and powerful drumming here, combining steadiness with superb punctuation. Kimmyâs vocal starts in the lower register as she confronts a mixed-up friend who suffers from uncertainty due to a gaggle of âfair weather friends.â This is a person without a strong sense of self who needs validation from others to survive, and while Kimmy once again lays out the unadorned truth for her, she also tries to get her to move on: âDonât you want to be/Donât you want to be at peace?â Her voice on those lines is achingly beautiful, displaying her remarkable range and expressive flexibility. Native Echoes ends with âHow Do You Sleep at Night,â which is fortunately not a cover of John Lennonâs mean-spirited attack on McCartney, but a very pretty yet sad song addressed to a friend who canât shake the addiction of living a life based on a façade. The problem I have with the mix is that the waves are far too loud, particularly when listening on headphones. Iâd love to hear this song stripped to Kimmyâs pretty harmonies and guitar.
Native Echoes is strong follow-up record that confirms Beach Dayâs exceptional talent and their willingness to explore new possibilities in their music without sacrificing their fundamental commitment to rock ânâ roll. Itâs an album that demonstrates noticeable growth, reveals new possibilities for the future and gets better every time you listen to it.
You canât ask for much more than that.
Original post on altrockchick.com
Music Review: Native Echoes by Beach Day was originally published on 50thirdand3rd