Beach
House
170
Russell, Melbourne
Thursday
11 February 2016
$63
Beach Party
If you’re looking for a band to back up Martin Mull
and Elvis Costello’s assertion that you can’t dance to architecture, then
perhaps Beach House is it. Named after an architectural edifice, Beach House
are many things – lush, elegant, spectral, majestic and atmospheric – but they’re
not going to get the dance floor heaving. Gently swaying, perhaps, even quietly
emoting, but heaving, no, as the tame mosh-pit at this gig illustrated.
But if you have to go down in flames, Beach House
could quite possibly be the perfect soundtrack. There’s a soothing, ethereal
quality to their music, the sort of music that might be appropriate as your
soul slipped away. Elegy For The Void
might be a suitable track for them to play to see us all out.
In raising the idea of shaking off ones mortal coil
I’m cognisant of comparisons that might be made between Beach House’s sound and
that of 1980s English collective, This Mortal Coil. Likewise perhaps with The
Cocteau Twins, Dead Can Dance and The Cure’s slow keyboardy songs. While they
all share a certain celestial, other-worldly quality, Beach House have their
own sound and they do it all without a black lace fingerless glove in sight.
Indeed when the band took the stage at 170 Russell, singer
and keyboard player, Victoria Legrand, appeared in an immaculate white suit with
calf length coat. Maintaining their indie credentials, however, Alex Scally, and
the other band members – Skyler Skjelset and Graham Hill – were adorned in standard
rock ‘n’ roll black.
Legrand’s all white outfit, however, didn’t make it
any easier to see her given the ill-lit stage. The entire band was submerged in
the shadows that were only fleetingly illuminated throughout the gig. For the
most part we just saw silhouettes on stage. The inky pitch was occasionally relieved
by a simple light show; alternating panels of primary colours, a starry
backdrop and the occasional moving projection casting shapes and more shadows over
the band.
The gloomy mood lighting at least served to focus
attention on the music, which from the first notes of Levitation was mesmerizing and performed with precision, intensity
and a generous soaking of reverb.
I’m not particularly au fait with the bands complete discography,
having come to them only after seeing them perform One Thing on The Late Show
with Stephen Colbert in late 2015. I was impressed by their dense, layered sound
and picked up the album from which it was taken, Thank Your Lucky Stars, as well as Depression Cherry, the album they’d released only a few months earlier.
I particularly like TYLS but both are very good. However, whereas on record I
find that my attention can drift in and out, live their sound was more muscular
and powerful and packed more of a punch than I expected – partly due to energetic
and precise drumming of Graham Hill who brought Scally’s guitar reverb and Legrand’s
waves of keyboard wash into sharper focus.
The set featured songs from across their career, with
notable highlights being Space Song, All Your Yeahs and a gripping 10 Mile Stereo that built to a dramatic
crescendo. Elegy for The Void, was
the feature of the night and perhaps would have been a good song to end on, not
just because of its majestic climax, but because once you’ve reached the void,
where is there left to go?
They did continue however, and the encore began with
just Legrand and Scally performing 10.37 and then the full band playing a manic
version of Sparks, with Scally channeling his inner Reid brother to wrench very
last bit of fuzzy feedback from his instrument.
In saying goodnight Legrand referred to playing one
last gig at Laneway “before we leave Melbourne forever”, a phrase that sparked
immediate consternation and conspiracy theories among those around me. She might
have just meant before they head off to Perth in a couple of days, but her use
of the word ‘forever’ generated a buzz of speculation.
If they are retiring, breaking up or just taking a
rest, it was a fitting note on which to take it and I’m glad I saw them before
the end.
Encore: In
an age when musicians routinely carp on about people downloading albums
illegally, or not receiving suitable royalty payments from streaming services,
Beach House have hit upon an ideal solution – rather than whinge and moan about
it, they made the cover of Depression
Cherry in a deep, cherry coloured velvet. It’s as much a tactile experience
as an aural one - you can’t get that from streaming.
Setlist
Levitation
Walk in the Park
PPP
All Your Yeahs
Space Song
Silver Soul
Myth
Elegy to the Void
10 Mile Stereo
Wishes
- - - - - - -
10.37
Sparks
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