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The fog hanging over Crummock Water is swelling with morning and curlews calling I rub the rheum from my eyes... There Must Be A Road Nearby

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Always soft spoken/Your words, pearls on a string/E(s)cho in my sleep, always on repeat
Escho x Jeremih
H O W L 5.0
Pboi JID

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Sharing this roughly 10 years after the Incident...
Beach House
The Schnitzel Incident
Leaving behind the comparatively massive, more band-based approach they unleashed on âBloomâ (2012), Baltimore-based duo Beach House are about to return with an album that embraces their more minimalist roots and thus opens up new spaces for other things: On their forthcoming âDepression Cherry,â Victoria Legrandâs incredible voice not only oscillates between melancholy and sweetness, but she also speaks into the mic (for the first time ever?), and generally ventures on into melodic territories sheâs never set foot in before. Slowly, steadily, deliberately propelled forward by Alex Scallyâs silvery guitars, his trademark vintage keyboard sounds and some wild drum machine scenarios that seem to hit harder with every listen, itâs an album of statements and a statement in itself. Little did we know, itâs a statement made by two Schnitzel eaters â who arrived half an hour late for our conversation because the waiter apparently didnât expect them to be Schnitzel eaters eitherâŚ
How was the Schnitzel?
V: Excellent. So youâve heard about The Schnitzel Incident?
Honestly, I didnât expect you to be Schnitzel eatersâŚ
V: I am not a Schnitzel eater.
It doesnât sound like music made by Schnitzel eaters.
V: Weâre just human beings eating.
A: Yeah, weâre here, and itâs a thing here, so⌠we never ever have it.
V: (Looking at a water bottle) Oh-oh.
A: Bubble?
V: Itâs okay, letâs just do it.
A: Does âClassicâ mean bubbly?
Over here it does, yeah.
V: Oh well, itâs good for your digestion.
A: Okay.
So, howâs life been since the last time we spoke? Has it been âdays of candyâ all the way? Or have there been difficult days?
V: Itâs definitely been days. Many days. Many work-filled days. A lot of labor and love and energy. And now weâre a little bit older.
A: And this new feeling that is coming into our life as weâre getting older, which is such a cool feeling, like, everythingâs kind of richer and deeper.
Thatâs good to hear.
A: Do you feel that too?
Iâm not sure actually.
A: You donât feel things are getting more beautiful and rich in these weird ways?
In some ways, yeah, I guess, but letâs talk about you guys.
V: Well, weâve been doing this, working together now for 10 years, and I think itâs pretty fascinating what we have learned from the things that weâve done.
What have you learned?
V: Weâve learned all different aspects of our career; weâve learned about the live shows, weâve learned about how playing live can affect songwriting, and weâve learned that some things that we just did naturally in the past and that weâve always done are some of the things that we really do enjoy and that they are very much a part of who we are. And that you can always return to yourself, because you always â kind of have yourself; youâre still there. And itâs been there all along. And granted, every record has changed and evolved in little ways, but because of how natural we are about stuff, I think weâre lucky because weâve been able to kind of feel changes, but then if we want to go back the other way, we can, because we have some sort of⌠we have a core.
So if âTeen Dreamâ was about going back to that teenage energy, is this one about going back to the early-days energy, does it quite consciously tap into that with the drum machine sounds, the instrumentation? I mean there are so many things that are different, but still thereâs this whole aesthetic, do you know what I mean?
A: For us it feels like thereâs no way we could have gotten to these songsâŚ
⌠at an earlier point. Â
A: Yeah. The themes, the depth of certain musical things, just the energy fields that permeated us as we created these songs would never have existed before this point.
Yeah. That makes sense.
A: But yeah, there are some similarities, like, maybe certain instrumentations are reminiscent of the past, certain drum sounds or guitar sounds, but itâs also many new things, new evolutions are happening, new keyboards we found on the road, stuff like that.
V: Same instruments, but utilizing, like, more distortion orâŚ
I see what you mean, and it seems to get more intense with every listen. First I thought itâs pretty soft or minimalist or something, but then it isnât at all in some ways.
V: Thatâs true.
A: I like that review.
V: Thatâs the ideal vision of something, itâs soft but itâs also this other thing.
Itâs actually quite banging. A song like â10:37â, to me thatâs crazily intense although itâs so stripped down.
V: We played that song and a couple of others on the Northern Exposure Canada tour that we did last year, so even though we had time off we were still working and trying new things and touring and stuff⌠just in parts of the world that we didnât get to on other tours. We played â10:37â and âSparksâ and âPPPâ live, and with that song itâs interesting, because playing it live definitely felt very⌠â it doesnât feel small. At all.
Iâm still not so sure whether itâs an album about A: arriving at a place, or B: leaving something behind, things dissolving or falling apart, or C: about time in general, which sort of incorporates A and B. Which is it? Or is it all of it?
V: Yeah, I think so.
A: Well, something I realized in doing these interviews, which have been actually really great because weâre getting to hear how all these intelligent people feel about the record, which is so enjoyable for us, because we worked so hard, and to hear peopleâs opinions about it is so cool. But for us, talking about this, I think Victoria and I feel really differently about what the songs mean, you know? And weâre creating them together.
Donât you talk about this kind of stuff while creating them?
A: We work in an abstract manner.
How abstract?
V: Itâs all about a feeling, and the feeling can be emotion or it can not. Itâs just a feeling. Itâs like when you look at something, the form of it⌠itâs just a gut (thing).
A: I think we have a phobia of trying to place too much what exactly a theme might be.
I see, and yet there were a few lyrics that sort of jumped at me, that seemed to stand out: âThere is no right timeâ, for example, or âit wonât last forever/but maybe it willââŚ
V: ⌠from âPPPâ.
Yeah, do you get a clearer view of what this whole thing means now that itâs finished and done, and you can look back at it?
A: Well, I love that line so much that Victoria wrote because you could be talking about something horrible or something great. It could be great or a horrible period youâre going through, and someoneâs just saying, âit wonât last forever/ââŚ
V: ⌠âbut maybe it willââŚ
A: ⌠maybe it fuckinâ will. And this is a perfect example of the abstract universe.
V: Some people say, ânothing lasts foreverâ â but I believe that some things do.
Last time around you said that when album is done, itâs a period when you donât have any questions, because the album is an answer in itself. What about this time?
V: Iâm sure there are still questions, but I think that, particularly with this record because this is what has been our life for the last three years, and more than that, just in terms of the depth of the work, but when you get older you start to really kind of be able to call things what they are and give it a name or something, and it really is just like: theyâre statements. They are all statements, statements of feelings, and itâs not that there are so many questions that I need to have answered, itâs just that every time you make an album itâs a âphysicalization,â a visualization of that period of our life. And itâs huge. I think itâs always huge in some way. Itâs always huge. Itâs never just like â49th street barâ â and thatâs the title of the song. For us, I think for now and it has been for a long time, that itâs always these big, sort of artistic statements. And thatâs why itâs always hard for us to try to pinpoint exactly what each little thing is, because itâs really an amalgamation of philosophy and things weâve seen and things weâve been inspired of and past trauma and maybe even future trauma we donât even know itâs going to happen.Â
A: Weird moods that are moving through.
V: Weâre just, like, little antennae or mediums of other peopleâs pain. I personally feel very sensitive to other peopleâs pain and things Iâve heard in my life, read about, whether itâs in movies or books; there are things that stay with you for a reason, and when that happens you feel the need to express that somehow.
And yet your life could be so carefree and painless, I guess. Making the music that you love, and obviously not really having to care about standard industry rulesâŚ
V: I think it is pretty carefree. Are you saying our existence could be carefree â or it is?
Well, it sounded like the way you deal with these things youâve heard, the pain, like thatâs clearly weight on your shoulders, right?
V: Maybe, or itâs just that some people feel things really intensely, and some people donât.
Whatâs the word? Empathy?
V: Yeah, and empathy is not something that all humans have for one another. Some people have it more than others. Maybe thatâs linked to being creative.
And is that why you called it âDepression Cherryâ? Because the whole spectrum, from the sweetness of the cherry to the darkness of the depression, is there, on this album?
V: Sure.
A: That sounds like a good way to describe it.
V: I couldnât come up with these beautiful articulate sentences.
A: Weâve been realizing this thing, and maybe you can think about this for your writing about trying to understand the title: What else would you call this record?
Phew, yeah, thatâs a tough one.
A: Yeah, try to find a better name. I donât think there is one. So âwhy this title?â Because there is no better title for us.
V: The closest one, the other day someone said âLevitationâ. But even after a few minutes they realized that itâs not that good. Itâs good for a song.
A: Yeah, at points we thought that one of the song titles might be the album title. But no, none of them ever surpassed âDepression Cherryâ.
V: Or âBeyond Loveâ or something, but itâs too much information. It dictates something; itâs like you already know something about it.Â
How did you manage to keep it fresh for yourselves? Itâs been five albums, after all, and you worked with Chris Coady once againâŚ
A: I think that one way we kept it fresh was we realized that bringing a drum kit into our tiny world was stifling creativity. So, âsee you later drum kit!â And that really helped to excite our writing this time around; it helped bring subtlety back into focus.
V: Putting it back in its place.
A: Yeah, putting it back in its place, theyâre still drums, but theyâre used more as an effect.
V: Itâs much more like âDevotionâ in that sense.
A: Or âTeen Dreamâ. You bring these things in just where theyâre needed, and you donât just have them because somebodyâs sitting there. So that was one thing that was exciting.
V: Maybe âBloomâ is the closest weâve come to the traditional rock band type of thing, as a band. We were like, âOkay, whatâs the kit going to do? How can the kit help the song arrangement?â
A: When we looked back on âBloomâ we realized all these crazy things that we didnât even know of, because you never know whatâs happening when theyâre happening. But when we looked back on âBloomâ we realized our favorite song was the one with no drums: âOn The Seaâ.
That was also my favorite track.
A: And we also realized that so many of the guitar parts were so dull because there was so little room when thereâs cymbals and all these drums â room just disappears, thereâs no room for anything. And then also singing, you have to sing so hard to move past drums, just all these things that drums do to music that we didnât even know: It was very natural how we got there, and then it was very natural how we left there. If I did a little thing on the guitar, I wanted to be able to hear it, and you canât hear it if there is a crashing drum sound.
V: You know, you try very naturally to not repeat the past.
So was it more a reaction to the record before this one â or to the live thing?
V: A bit of both.
A: Probably the live thing, because when we made the record it was what we were making but then you play it a 100 times, and youâre like, âIâm sick of this.â
V: True, it is more the live thing and not the record because it was while we were playing live that we noticed this.
A: We didnât have any of these feelings after we made the record or while we wrote it; it was just on the road that we realized howâŚ
V: ⌠how we kind of missed being two on stage. It was very illuminating â and I donât think Iâve said that word yet. Illumination is good for the realization, little things make a big difference.
I saw that thereâve been only two images on your Instagram this year⌠so youâre still not particularly fond of the internet?
V: We just use it in moderation, I suppose.
Good for you!
V: Weâre not starting a fight with the internet.
Last time around you sounded like you pretty much hate everything it stands for. Although there were times when you were more active in that respect.
A: Right at the beginning, before we saw what was going on. But weâre going to use it very âinformationallyâ. And we also have actually a few plans to do things related to the web that we canât share at this point. Some things we thought up that we think are really good uses of the internet.
I mean, the day the Eric Wareheim-directed video dropped, I loved the internet that day. That was so sick in the best of ways.
A: Yeah, heâs great.
V: But as for the criticism, I think it is important. Maybe thatâs the French in me, but I just think that itâs important to be critically-minded. Itâs not even being negative, itâs just âwhat are the good things, and what are the bad thingsâ? And to be educated about it and not just blindly like everything just because thatâs whatâs happening.
A: Yeah, and I think there are great things the internet provides â all the time. Maybe itâs easier to see them now, but also there are so many bad things happening to things on there, soâŚ
I know what you mean, but getting older and saying no to some of those things, some days it can actually make you feel a little old.
V: Because you think youâre missing out on something?
No, not missing out, and not now, but maybe in the future if I keep rejecting certain developments and platforms, donât you think?
V: Yeah, and for us itâs the same with streaming: Itâs something we donât want to reject either because there is a lot of young people and thatâs how they find out about music. Itâs a more complicated time compared to what it was like in the eighties, when people had to embrace VHS. That was the biggest development they had to embrace. âNow we have a VCR,â and everyoneâs like, âWhoooâ, and I feel, like, for us, nowadays, we need to embrace something every three months, six months, new technology, new programs. Itâs just a lot to process, and I think thatâs kind of why there are such vehement reactions to things, especially from certain artists: because itâs just a lot to think about. And as an artist youâre just trying to think about how to, like, take care of what you do and be sensitive about it, and if youâre constantly being honest â itâs pretty constant that youâre asked, âare you okay with this, are you okay with this?â, and itâs coming from all angles â so itâs a lot to process, and I think itâs not just us, itâs new bands that want to get out there. Theyâre like, âhow do I do that?â And I would just say: go on tour! Because thatâs what we did. When we came out, you know, we had a little buzz from websites and stuff like that, but we just wanted to tour. And all the internet stuff has definitely changed since then, but touring is still just as important, so itâs kind of the only thing you have to hold on to. Itâs the physical, real side of stuff: the vinyl, CDs, and itâs like cross your fingers that thatâs always important to human beings. And that we donât completely become holograms or whatever. You know what I mean? Weâre all struggling with processing all this.
A: I would say, to answer your question directly: We are in a much better place for the internet, because weâve just gotten to that older place where⌠I think getting older is just so much cooler because every interaction and every reaction is more measured and intelligent. Like, the internet: okay Iâm going to take the good things, and Iâm going to ignore the bad things. Iâm going to preach against the bad things to people who want to talk about it but not to people who donât; Iâm not going to stand on a soap-box here. You know, that whole soap-box thing is such an ignorant part of being young.
V: Thatâs just on Facebook though.
A: We want to try and find the best ways to use the internet â and do that only.
Sounds like a plan. Five years ago, you said that you were actually too dirty to play in churches â because you were repeatedly asked to play there â and too clean for⌠something I canât remember. What are you too dirty and too clean for now, having arrived at this older place?
V: Hmm, itâs more that the pristine thing still feels a little funny because I donât think I feel comfortable with people feeling trapped or something. You know, where people sit in the theater, and weâve done those shows â a lot of them have gone great because people start seated, but then we always encourage people to feel freeâŚ
A: Like VolksbĂźhne.
V: Yeah, and Fredericton. I loved that show at VolksbĂźhne, but so itâs a challenge, but thereâs always a way I think⌠and I really enjoy hearing the things that Iâve said: âdirtyâ?
A: I donât know if weâre too dirty or too clean for anything. Are we?
V: I donât think so.
A: Maybe weâre too dirty for mainstream radio, or too clean forâŚ
V: Baby boomers.
A: No, Super Bowl commercials. Weâre just trying to really make sure that commercialization doesnât become too tied to our entity in any way, because thatâs a big trend now. Having every bit of your existence tied to some commercial venture.
Why donât you play smaller venues then, for example, on your next tour?
A: Well, we are mostly.
V: Same or smaller.
A: We told our booking agents never to take us above a certain point, because at a certain point the fans donât enjoy themselves. And I donât think shows are commercial. People have to pay for a show because it actually costs a ton for us to employ seven people for a year and have a bus and fly all of our gear, and we try to keep our ticket prices low compared to what our booking agent and other people tell us we could charge, but I donât see that as commercial. When I talk about being over-commercialized I mean the branding of everything. You know, we donât want to be a brand.
Is that even possible in this day and age?
A: You just donât sell your style and your thoughts.
V: Weird, I donât think I even understand what branding is, I just think itâs letting corporations use your entire identity.
A: Another thing is we have no choice what ads are played before our videos play on YouTube. Thatâs something so horrible. People just want to listen to your music, and they have to sit there and take in advertisements. I donât think our videos have any ads because you have a choice, because you get paid if you check the box, so our particular page doesnât have that, but all of our songs are on YouTube for everybody else, and those people have all checked the box, so this just shows how commercialization is invading every crack where it can grow.
Did you meet some people along the way who wanted to give you the kind of advice to go the other way? To do things you actually hate?
A: Weâve ignored and repelled a lot of advice from people close to us.
V: We do it in a peaceful and our own, like, strong-willed way. You know, our path is our path, and weâre not here to preach, and weâre not examples. Like Fiona Apple said many years ago when she accepted an award: âThis is bullshit.â
Oh c'mon, really?
What a week to get cruzafied.
#qwerty. thx for pic ;)
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