Depression Cherry
Depression Cherry is the fifth studio album by the American dream pop duo Beach House, consisting of vocalist and keyboardist Victoria Legrand and guitarist Alex Scally.[1] Released on August 28, 2015, through Sub Pop Records, the album was recorded at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana, from November 2014 to January 2015.[1] It features nine tracks, including "Levitation," "Space Song," and "Days of Candy," and represents a deliberate return to simplicity with melody-focused songs and minimal live drums, diverging from the more expansive production of their previous release, Bloom.[1][2] The album explores themes of loss, time, and existence, drawing inspiration from literary and philosophical sources such as Banana Yoshimoto, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Van Morrison.[1] Co-produced by the band and Chris Coady, Depression Cherry emphasizes their core strengths in crafting ethereal, trance-like soundscapes with lush synths, reverb-heavy guitars, and Legrand's haunting vocals.[3][2][4] Critically acclaimed upon release, the album received widespread praise for its emotional depth and sonic refinement, earning a score of 8.4 from Pitchfork, which designated it "Best New Music" and described it as an "impeccably measured step forward."[3] Tracks like "Space Song" became fan favorites and achieved significant streaming success in subsequent years.[3]Background
Development
Following the expansive production scale of their 2012 album Bloom, Beach House, consisting of Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally, decided to pivot toward a simpler sound for their next project, emphasizing intimacy and minimalism to recapture the essence of their early work. This shift was motivated by a desire to strip away the complexities that had accumulated, focusing instead on core elements like melody and atmosphere without the weight of larger arrangements.[5][6] In interviews, Legrand and Scally described Depression Cherry as a deliberate "reset" to their dream pop roots, allowing the duo to reconnect with the organic, two-person creative process that defined their debut albums. Scally noted that the band felt "burdened by the presence of drums," which had overshadowed subtler aspects during performances, prompting a return to experimentation reminiscent of their initial days together. Legrand echoed this, highlighting the album's role in evolving naturally amid their 30s, free from commercial pressures.[6][7] The writing process began in autumn 2013 and continued through 2014, with initial demos centered on melodic structures and atmospheric textures, such as the early composition "10:37," which set the tonal foundation. This timeline followed a period of recovery, as the extensive touring for Bloom and prior releases left the band fatigued, leading them to adopt a more insular, studio-centric approach rather than outward expansion.[8][6][7]Title origin
The title Depression Cherry was coined by Beach House during the album's early creative stages as a phrase that intuitively captured its core emotional and artistic essence. Victoria Legrand, the band's vocalist and keyboardist, described in a 2015 interview how the words emerged spontaneously to her, instantly clicking together in a way that felt serendipitous and unprecedented. "It was a phrase that had come to me—these two words just worked next to each other immediately. It was a crazy moment," Legrand explained, adding that she and guitarist Alex Scally verified its novelty by searching online, where the combination had never appeared before. This discovery solidified their choice, as Scally noted, "We fell in love with it straight away... We kept trying other titles but nothing represented the feeling of the record anywhere near as well as this does." The title thus embodies a state of emotional rawness and authenticity in the art-making process, drawing from the band's personal experiences of vulnerability and unfiltered expression to evoke a bittersweet, introspective tone.[7] Legrand further elaborated on the title's multifaceted appeal, calling it "visual" and "unusual," capable of signifying "many things" that aligned with the album's hazy, melancholic atmosphere. This raw, unadorned quality mirrored the duo's intent to strip back production for a more direct connection to their inner world, prioritizing genuine feeling over polished artifice. The phrase's duality—pairing the weight of "depression" with the delicate allure of "cherry"—encapsulates the album's blend of sorrow and fleeting tenderness, fostering a sense of pure, unguarded creativity that permeates the record's sound and themes.[7] The associated artwork features a chrome-red cardboard jacket with holographic foil-stamped lettering.[1] Released through Sub Pop, this visual choice uses the vivid yet subdued red hue as a central motif.[1]Recording and production
Studio process
The recording sessions for Depression Cherry took place primarily at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana, spanning November 2014 to January 2015.[2] This isolated rural setting allowed the band to focus intensely, crossing the anniversaries of John Lennon's and Roy Orbison's deaths during the process, which added a reflective layer to the workflow.[2] The sessions reflected the duo's desire for simplicity cultivated in the development phase, prioritizing melodic structures with fewer instruments than prior works.[9] Beach House—Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally—co-produced the album with longtime collaborator Chris Coady, marking his third project with the group.[10] The daily workflow centered on a trance-like immersion, where the pair would repeat foundational elements like chords or beats for extended periods, permitting organic evolution without external pressures.[11] Live drum takes were incorporated but played a diminished role compared to Bloom, as the band found traditional kits constrained the subtle arrangements they sought.[12] Overdubs were used selectively, including a notable 24-part harmony on "Days of Candy" recorded with eight singers from nearby Pearl River Community College.[9] Initial tracking wrapped by early 2015, with mixing handled subsequently at Sunset Sound in Hollywood, California, except for "Beyond Love," which was mixed at Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, Texas, completing the album in time for its August release.[13] The self-reliant duo process demanded experimentation, building tracks incrementally without a full live band setup, ensuring each element served the album's intimate dream pop essence.[12]Production choices
In the production of Depression Cherry, Beach House opted for a return to simplicity, structuring songs around core melodies and a limited palette of instruments to emphasize intimacy over grandeur. This approach marked a deliberate shift from the more expansive sound of prior albums like Bloom, where the band resisted the urge to inflate arrangements simply due to their growing resources. Co-produced by the duo and Chris Coady, the album was kept concise at 44 minutes across nine tracks to ensure a seamless, cohesive flow that maintains momentum without excess.[5] A key decision involved minimizing live drums, which played a far lesser role compared to previous works, in favor of programmed elements and old drum machines to create a subtle, evocative rhythm section.[5][14] This choice contributed to the album's dream pop texture, enhanced by reverb-heavy guitars that deliver a spacy, reverberated quality—evident in tracks like "Levitation," where slide guitars add a brittle, ethereal edge without overpowering the mix.[5][3][15] Victoria Legrand's organ work emerged as a central element, with prominent vintage-organ patches providing dissonant washes and upfront presence, as heard in "Sparks," where it injects a layer of discomfort amid the haze. Her vocals were layered extensively in the mix, with backing harmonies positioned closer to the foreground to evoke worried whispers that ground the soaring lead lines, fostering a dense yet intimate sonic depth.[3][16][3] Coady and the band pursued a hazy, analog aesthetic through an organic recording process at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana, emphasizing tape-based capture and minimal post-production editing to preserve raw emergence. This involved repeating foundational elements like chords until natural developments arose, avoiding heavy manipulation to retain a warm, soulful authenticity akin to vintage community theater or silent-film scores.[11][5]Composition
Musical elements
Depression Cherry exemplifies Beach House's signature dream pop aesthetic, infused with shoegaze elements that create a hazy, immersive soundscape through swirling synths, echoing vocals, and steady mid-tempo grooves.[3][16] The album's sonic palette draws on vintage keyboards like organ washes and buzzing synthesizers, layered with bejeweled guitar effects that add texture and depth without overpowering the arrangements.[3][16] Victoria Legrand's multitracked vocals float ethereally above the mix, often grounded by subtle piano chords and machine drum patterns that maintain a somnambulant rhythm.[16][3] Key tracks highlight these elements distinctly; for instance, "Space Song" features a hypnotic, buzzing synthesizer riff that propels its trance-like progression, while "Levitation" builds an ethereal atmosphere from a saturated guitar chord and underlying drone.[3] Alex Scally's guitar work, processed through reverb and delay effects, contributes to the album's prismatic glides and repetitive motifs, evoking shoegaze's wall-of-sound without aggressive distortion.[3][16] Legrand's keyboard contributions, including organ and piano, provide harmonic foundations that emphasize ambiance over sharp hooks.[16] The album comprises nine tracks averaging around five minutes each, prioritizing hypnotic repetition and atmospheric immersion to foster a cohesive, trance-inducing flow.[2] Production techniques, such as layered reverb, enhance the overall haze, allowing the music to unfold gradually like a series of abstract expressionist canvases.[3]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of Depression Cherry revolve around recurring themes of love, loss, introspection, and escapism, presented in an abstract and poetic style that invites personal interpretation.[17] Beach House frontwoman Victoria Legrand has described the album as centered on "love, pain, getting older, dealing with loss, letting go," emphasizing emotional vulnerability and the passage of time.[17] These motifs often manifest through evocative, open-ended imagery that blurs the boundaries between reality and dream, fostering a sense of melancholic release.[3] In tracks like "Sparks," the lyrics explore fleeting connections and the ephemerality of emotional sparks, with lines such as "And then it’s dark again/ Just like a spark" capturing the transient nature of intimacy and its inevitable fade into obscurity.[17] Similarly, "PPP" evokes a surreal longing through its fragmented, spoken-word delivery and abstract phrases like "Body electric, body electric," suggesting a disorienting yearning for connection amid uncertainty.[9] Other songs, such as "Space Song," delve into loss with poignant reflections on heartbreak—"Tender is the night for a broken heart"—while "Levitation" hints at escapism by promising transport to an undefined place, underscoring introspection and the desire to transcend personal turmoil.[3] Legrand's breathy, melancholic vocal delivery plays a crucial role in deepening the emotional resonance of these themes, blending soaring highs with intimate, grounded tones that convey both vulnerability and fatalistic calm.[3] Her androgynous, languid phrasing—often layered in harmonies or shifted to spoken-word—amplifies the introspective mood, making the abstract lyrics feel viscerally personal.[17] This style draws from her wide vocal range, which shifts fluidly to evoke the album's hazy emotional landscape.[9] The word choice and motifs are influenced by Legrand's personal experiences, including relationships that inspire lovesick memories, as well as her nomadic upbringing and immersion in Baltimore's bohemian scene, infusing the lyrics with a sense of emotional authenticity tied to themes of change, grief, and letting go.[17][9] The musical backdrop of droning guitars and organs subtly amplifies this lyrical mood without overpowering its poetic subtlety.[3]Release and promotion
Marketing strategies
Beach House announced Depression Cherry on May 26, 2015, through their label Sub Pop Records, revealing the album's tracklist, release date of August 28, 2015, and accompanying world tour dates.[10][18] Pre-orders opened immediately following the announcement, offering limited edition clear vinyl pressings alongside standard black vinyl, CD, and digital formats bundled with instant access to select tracks. These exclusive physical editions, limited in quantity to drive collector interest, were promoted through Sub Pop's online store and select retailers to generate early buzz among fans.[19][20] The band utilized social media platforms to share teasers, including close-up snippets of the album's distinctive red velvet sleeve, as well as behind-the-scenes studio photographs from the recording sessions in Bogalusa, Louisiana. These posts on Facebook and Instagram built anticipation by emphasizing the tactile, luxurious packaging and the album's intimate production aesthetic.[18][21] Following the expansive promotion of their previous album Bloom in 2012, Beach House adopted a more streamlined, self-directed promotional strategy for Depression Cherry, focusing on direct fan engagement via social channels and label partnerships rather than extensive traditional media outreach. This approach aligned with the album's title, which evoked themes of raw emotional vulnerability and was subtly woven into the marketing narrative around simplicity and introspection.[20][10]Singles
The lead single from Depression Cherry, "Sparks", was released digitally on July 1, 2015, through Sub Pop Records, accompanied by an official audio stream on YouTube and SoundCloud.[22][23] A promotional CD single was also issued to select recipients.[24] "Space Song" was released as a promotional single on August 28, 2015, coinciding with the album's release, available as a digital download and on promotional CD.[25][26] The track later gained significant viral traction through memes on platforms like TikTok—most notably a widely shared clip featuring actor Pedro Pascal—and licensing placements in television series including Atlanta, Euphoria, and Wednesday.[27][28][29] Subsequent promotional singles included "PPP", released on October 30, 2015, and "Beyond Love", released on September 28, 2015, both available digitally and as promotional CDs.[30][31] Both "Sparks" and "Space Song" were distributed exclusively in digital and limited promotional formats, with no 7-inch vinyl editions, b-sides, or remixes produced, reflecting Beach House's indie label approach under Sub Pop that prioritized the album's integrated listening experience over traditional single-driven radio promotion.[5][32]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release on August 28, 2015, Depression Cherry garnered generally positive reviews from contemporary critics, who praised its return to the intimate, atmospheric dream pop that defined Beach House's early work. The album earned an aggregate score of 82 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 34 reviews, signifying "universal acclaim" for its lush, restrained soundscapes.[33] Pitchfork rated the album 8.4 out of 10, commending its atmospheric purity and balance of dim, lush tones that progress at a deliberate pace, marking an impeccably measured evolution while retaining the band's signature dreaminess.[3] Reviewers widely viewed the record as a return to form, emphasizing how the pared-down production—eschewing the grander arrangements of Bloom (2012)—allowed the duo's emotional core to shine through more vividly. AllMusic echoed this sentiment, highlighting the album's emotional resonance and noting that, though it lacks the full melodic impact of prior releases like Teen Dream (2010), it delivers a confident exploration of vulnerability and introspection.[34] The publication described it as a "grower" that rewards close listening with its subtle, evocative layers. However, some outlets offered mixed assessments, critiquing the album's perceived repetitiveness in adhering closely to familiar tropes. The Guardian, for instance, pointed out that Beach House appeared "stuck in a groove," producing consistently gauzy pop without bold departures, which could feel like "non-specific pastels" to listeners not fully immersed.[16] Rolling Stone lauded frontwoman Victoria Legrand's vulnerability throughout, observing that the album masterfully evokes bliss and loss in equal strength, with her seductive croon anchoring tracks that build subtle tension without resolution.[35] Overall, the critical consensus celebrated Depression Cherry for refining the band's ethereal style into something intimately immersive.Accolades
Upon its release, Depression Cherry earned widespread critical acclaim, culminating in several notable honors and rankings from prominent music publications. Pitchfork awarded the album its prestigious Best New Music designation, praising its hazy synth textures and emotional depth as a refined evolution of Beach House's dream pop sound.[3] It also ranked at number 28 on Rough Trade Shops' year-end Top 100 Albums of 2015, reflecting strong support from the independent music retail community.[36] In critic polls, Depression Cherry placed at number 33 on The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop ballot, an annual aggregation of votes from hundreds of music journalists that underscored the album's resonance within indie and alternative circles. Despite its positive reception, the album received no nominations at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards in 2016, a notable omission amid categories like Best Alternative Music Album.[37]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Depression Cherry debuted strongly in the United States, entering the Billboard 200 at number 8 in September 2015, marking Beach House's second consecutive top 10 album on the chart.[38] The album also performed well on alternative and indie-focused charts, reaching number 2 on the CMJ Top 200 and reflecting its appeal within the dream pop and independent music communities.[39] Internationally, it charted modestly, with entries driven primarily by digital downloads and streaming availability upon release.[39] The album's chart performance was bolstered by the release of singles like "Sparks" and "PPP," which increased visibility through radio play and online promotion.| Chart (2015) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 8 |
| US CMJ Top 200 | 2 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 17 |
| UK Independent Albums (OCC) | 2 |
| Australian Albums (ARIA) | 34 |
Certifications and sales
In the United States, Depression Cherry achieved RIAA Gold certification on May 23, 2023, recognizing 500,000 equivalent album units, which include a combination of physical sales, digital downloads, and streaming equivalents.[40] The album's first-week sales totaled 27,000 units in the US, propelled significantly by high demand for its vinyl release, which debuted at number eight on the Billboard 200.[38] In the United States, the album has sold over 500,000 copies as of 2023 estimates.[40] As of November 2025, the album has surpassed 1.87 billion streams on Spotify, contributing substantially to its commercial longevity.[41] The popularity of special vinyl editions, such as the limited clear pressing with a red velvet-flocked jacket and the accompanying flocked CD reissue, has driven collector interest and secondary market value, with these variants often commanding premiums due to their scarcity.[42]Album content
Track listing
The standard edition of Depression Cherry consists of nine tracks with a total runtime of 44:49. All tracks were written by Beach House's Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally. The album was published by Sub Pop in the United States and Bella Union internationally.[5] The initial release includes no bonus tracks, and the digital deluxe edition is identical to the standard version.[2]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Levitation" | Legrand, Scally | 5:55 |
| 2 | "Sparks" | Legrand, Scally | 5:21 |
| 3 | "Space Song" | Legrand, Scally | 5:20 |
| 4 | "Beyond Love" | Legrand, Scally | 4:25 |
| 5 | "10:37" | Legrand, Scally | 3:49 |
| 6 | "PPP" | Legrand, Scally | 6:09 |
| 7 | "Wildflower" | Legrand, Scally | 3:39 |
| 8 | "Bluebird" | Legrand, Scally | 3:55 |
| 9 | "Days of Candy" | Legrand, Scally | 6:16 |