Beach House-thank Your Lucky Stars-2015--album-... Official
By the second song, “She’s So Lovely,” she was crying. Not the violent, ugly cry of the first night, but a quiet, leaking thing. It was the line: “It will take time / You know it well.” She thought of Paul’s hands. The way he’d tap his ring on the kitchen counter when he was annoyed. The way she’d stopped looking at his face months ago.
She sat on a splintered bench facing the Atlantic. The waves were heavy, dark, folding over themselves with a sound like a lullaby being strangled. She thought of the album’s cover—the blurred image of a figure on a stage, a guitar, a curtain. There was no clarity there. No answer. Just the beautiful, blurry feeling of being between things. Beach House-Thank Your Lucky Stars-2015--Album-...
She had simply been here. And that, she realized, was the entire point of Thank Your Lucky Stars . It was not an album of resolutions. It was an album of lingering. Of letting the cold wind hit your face. Of admitting that the rug had been pulled, and you were still floating in the air, and that was okay. By the second song, “She’s So Lovely,” she was crying
The boardwalk was a ghost. The ferris wheel stood frozen, its cages swinging slightly in the salt wind. A single arcade still glowed green at the far end, its “OPEN” sign buzzing like a trapped fly. Elara walked toward the water. The album played on inside her head, track three: “PPP.” “Someone once told me / In love, you must be / The one who leaves last.” She stopped. She had left first. But Paul had left long before she walked out the door. He’d just been too polite to say it. The way he’d tap his ring on the