There are two blood-curdling screams within the first 15 minutes of Youâll Have to Lose Something, the harrowing fifth album from Philadelphia psych-punks Spirit of the Beehive. Neither sits prominently in the mix, so theyâre easy to miss amid the shapeshifting structures and shards of shattered noise. The first, wordless and caked in distortion, appears as the bottom falls out of opener âThe Disruption,â settling like thick smoke over the rubble of the stoner-rock breakdown. The second, which interrupts the uncanny 1960s pop single âLet the Virgin Drive,â is more forceful, a shredded-throat plea for help that sounds as though itâs wafting up from a basement of horrors.
In clammier hands, these moments would be bludgeons or cheap jumpscares, but Spirit of the Beehive weave them into their arrangements with a delicate touch. The way the band writesâstitching discordant sounds into a tangled, anxious wholeâfeels destabilizing but thoroughly considered, each spiky sample, effects-warped vocal take, or disquieting lyric placed just so. The sense of discomfort feels deliberate and well-earned, reflecting how maddening it feels to wake up and endure all over again. âIt exists in everyday life,â band member Zach Schwartz recently told The Fader. âDaily anxieties are part of the human experience.â
The band, founded by Schwartz and Rivka Ravede in 2014, started as a shoegaze act, seeking transcendence via pummeling din. By the time they released 2018âs Hypnic Jerks, theyâd lowered the decibel level, settling into a mode more Rorschach than Ride. During pandemic lockdown Schwartz and his bandmates traded files to create 2021âs ENTERTAINMENT, DEATH, its hallucinatory and frenetic sprawl mimicking the endless wash of social media and advertising. Schwartz and Ravede, whoâd been in a romantic relationship for over a decade, parted ways in 2022, throwing the bandâs future into question.
Youâll Have to Lose Something (as well as last fallâs EP iâm so lucky) is ostensibly a breakup album, though itâs less a collection of wallowing, where-did-it-go-wrong confessionals than an exploration of the confusion and terror that comes with suddenly entering a new phase of life. In this case, itâs three people trying to work out what it means when a romance, a working relationship, and a friendship simultaneously fail the stress test. In that same Fader interview, multi-instrumentalist Corey Wilchin explains how writing the album helped the trio process its new dynamic: âCollectively, weâre not the most communicative bunchâ¦Weâre writing about each other and what weâre going through when we canât talk about things or donât want to talk about them.â âDevotion is a cancer,â Ravede sings during the Deerhunter psychedelia of âStranger Alive.â Once it shifts into a brawny krautrock groove, Schwartz responds, âThe path behind you is lit from the side.â There are perspectives and angles only understood in hindsight.