The Beaches Deftly Balance Anthems Alongside Tender Introspection in 'Blame My Ex'
Photo: Becca Hamel
The Beachesâ Blame My Ex, is finally here, and itâs a legacy in the making.
Referential title-track anthem, âBlame Brett,â opens the album with the familiar sass that has drawn hundreds of thousands of fans to The Beaches on TikTok. It sets the sly smile of the albumâs tone, simultaneously honest and avoidant with indie rock vigor. The Beaches dive headfirst through the beloved singles, âWhat Doesnât Kill You Makes You Paranoid,â âMe & Me,â and âEverything Is Boringâ before introducing listeners to a new one in âMy Body ft Your Lips.â
Just listening to the instrumentals, this song has all the makings of a swoon-worthy dedication, with romantic guitars strumming over sunny, pleasant-paced drums. But tuning into the lyrics reveals that âMy Body ft Your Lipsâ is anything but innocent. Lead singer, Jordan Miller, croons a sweet melody while she sings, âI wanna be your bitch / I wanna taste your spit⦠/ Leave a mark on my innocence.â The understated flirtation of it creates a moody kind of seductionâguiltlessly risqué, The Beachesâ signature brand. This track also features seasoned indie rock band, Beach Weather, adding a second voice to the breezy sensuality.
Next comes âKismetâ with lustful and desperate rhythmic guitar chords begging for a cosmic kind of love affair. Then the perfect follow-up, âShower Beerâ reflects on the need for attention, both the destructive and faultless sides of it. The Beaches juxtapose the messiness of lines like âFalling in love has never stopped me / from taking shots with lots of menâ with the sincerity of âBaby can you wash my hair? Iâve got my hands full, I was up all nightâ¦â Itâs youthfulness wrapped up into a song, tying an endearing bow around its toxic body.
âEdge of the Earthâ is fueled by queer longing, telling a wistfully sapphic story through lush layers of harmonies and an infectious chorus. Thereâs a bubblegrunge feel to âIf A Tree Falls,â sullen at one moment and yearning the next. Then, listeners are launched into a sprint of a drum groove, as âCigaretteâ picks up the pace for a steamy closer to Blame My Ex. This track is pure desire, in both sound and lyric, sketching out another sapphic story. Given the LGBTQIA+ presence within The Beachesâ fanbase and some of the band members themselves, itâs exciting to see such vibrant representation in this album. While queerness has become gradually more accepted in modern media, itâs often written about in the context of overcoming struggles. Throughout Blame My Ex, The Beaches give the queer community anthems about lusty infatuation and gut-wrenching crushesâanthems we deserve.
Blame My Ex is an instant classic for indie rock, punctuated with quips of The Beachesâ tongue-in-cheek cynicism while staying softened by an underlying current of youthful longing.
Listen to Blame My Ex below: