The Beach House catalogue and influence has expanded over the years since this debut was released in 2006. Then a duo, Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally originally met while part of another Baltimore band that eventually broke up. Surrounded by organs/keyboards and a guitar, the duo recorded their first batch of songs in Scally’s basement on a 4-track recorder. More spare than their later elaborate recordings, the heart of the dream pop sound is there right from the beginning.
Opening track “Salt Water” about unrequited love using Legrand’s deadpan vocals as she sings, “you couldn’t lose me if you tried” before the song abruptly stops. “Auburn and Ivory” uses a harpsichord to give it a dark whimsical sound, “Apple Orchard” uses a pulsing beat with Legrand invoking a 60s chanteuse vibe. “Childhood” sounds like a charming 70s country song playing on a Casio keyboard.
“Master of None” is the track that really stands out as the future direction of the band and one later sample by The Weeknd. The echoey drumbeat and cascading keyboard sound, it includes the best vocal performance on the album. At times, sounding more like demos, the self-titled debut from Beach House is subtly engaging, already with a warmth in their sound that would later glow far brighter than the dimly basement they started in.
7.5/10




