The Lowdown: Beach Bunny have often been regarded as Liz Phair-like, quintessential âsad-girlâ music, and, more recently, a Tik-Tok phenomenon. Yet, none of these comparisons really do them justice. On the Chicago-based outfitâs 2018 EP, Prom Queen, lead singer and songwriter Lili Trifilio wrestles with anxieties of unfair beauty standards and the inevitability of growing up. Yet, the quartet’s debut album, Honeymoon, is more streamlined. The album is a requiem for a dream. Itâs a reckoning of an idealistic vision where the sparks that once ignited a relationship can eternally maintain their flame. It’s a submission into a reality where love is complicated, terrifying, and unstable. But at the same time, it’s a jump off a cliff, a plunge into the unknown. If you take the risk, Trifilio suggests that you might end up on âCloud 9â. On their first album from Mom + Pop, the band doesnât feel like Liz Phair, Snail Mail, or any of the other lazy comparisons often given to them. They simply feel like Beach Bunny.
(Buy: Tickets to Upcoming Beach Bunny Shows)
The Good: In an interview for the album, Trifilio detailed that you can listen to Honeymoon âfrom the top to the bottom for a happy story or in reverse for a bleaker narrative.â Following her guide, Honeymoon reels you in with an already divisive track in âPromisesâ. Trifilio is plagued by the memory of a past relationship, often coming to her âlike a reoccurring dreamâ or a nightmare. At first, weâre invited into a bedroom with gentle, twinkled rifts and a singular hi-hat that holds broken âpromises.â Soon, the tempo speeds up into a chanty, declarative chorus thatâs pretty traditional for Beach Bunny (“Part of me still wants you/ Part of me wants to fall asleep/ Part of me still hates you). There is an apprehension to move out of the dream or, perhaps, a greater need to share it with the one who caused it. The bridge then swells with expectation until it’s too bloated and spills over with Trifilioâs repeated pleas to âthink of me.â
As predicted, the final track ties a neat bow around the âhappy storyâ as Trifilio finally finds herself on âCloud 9â. With lower-mixed guitars highlighting a pounding drumbeat and a bridge full of a silvery bass line and residual applause, Trifilioâs thoughts begin to feel steady again. She acknowledges her rocky history — the dreams and nightmares — but at the end of the day, her partner will âalways be [her] favorite form of loving.â
But it isn’t an easy road to get to âCloud 9â. Trifilio treks over a more distorted, 1975-type grunge-pop riff, worried sheâs âgetting too closeâ on âCuffing Seasonâ (âSometimes I like being on my own/ Iâm afraid of winding up alone). On the sunny surf-rock tune âAprilâ, Trifilio flounders in the oppressive daydream, constantly âwishing you were here.â It isnât until the emotional crescendo of âRearviewâ that Trifilio exits the guised memory of her past relationship: âYou loved me/ I loved you/ You donât love me anymore, I still do.â
The Bad: The throughline of exiting and entering the honeymoon stage overall works in the bandâs favor. The songâs seamlessly string together, building upon one another to execute the general feeling of moving from fearing to fearless. Yet, sonically, there is little deviation from Beach Bunnyâs tried-and-true formula of a slow-building verse to a shouted chorus. Few songs delineate from the pocket that the band seem all too comfortable in. The most obvious distinction is âRacetrackâ, a gossamer lullaby where the fragile notes seem to float around Triflioâs gentle realization that she âalways winds up in second place.â
The Verdict: Itâs much safer to live in your own bubble — impervious, unaffected by outside elements that threaten to puncture the parameters of solitude. In this space, we can shield ourselves from uncertainty. But oftentimes, we still end up alone. On Honeymoon, Trifilio finally invites someone into her bubble, into her dream. With a ceaseless, buoyant energy that swims across a candid narrative, Trifilio flexes her masterful songwriting on an album bound to win the hearts of emo-punks and TikTok girls alike.
Essential Tracks: âPromisesâ, âAprilâ, and âColorblindâ
Album Review: Beach Bunny Skydive to Love on Debut Honeymoon
Matt Melis