Of all the bands I’ve come across over the last few years there’s only one that defies all attempts to pigeon hole or classify. Philadelphia’s SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE have made some of the last decades most ground-breaking music across four stunning studio albums. Each album more confounding and spellbinding than the last. Entertainment, Death from 2021 moved that sound into another level with a mindboggling amount of intricacy ploughed into the construction of each track. That was followed by the single ‘The Door’ which came out the same year. It followed the same groove as the album and was an immersive listen both sides. With last years I’m So Lucky EP bringing that era of the band’s music to an end we were left wondering what would be next for these sonic adventurers.
Well, the answer to that question is YOU’LL HAVE TO LOSE SOMETHING. Zack Schwartz, Corey Wichlin, and Rivka Ravede return with their fifth album and this time it’s more of an emotional affair. This being the first album since Ravede and Schwartz ended their 10-year relationship. Reading the PR for this album throws up more question marks than answers. That’s just the SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE way though.

“The goal in making YOU’LL HAVE TO LOSE SOMETHING was to soften out some of the edges. “Less hard left turns,” says Wichlin. “We wanted to make something intentionally less antagonistic,” he jokes. In practice, this means the record has slightly fewer drastic arrangement changes, and it is more stripped down.”
A more stripped-down album? I’ll believe it when I hear it. Part of the joy of this band’s music is the anxious busy energy they maintain through the many layers of their productions. Right, no more dilly dallying. Let’s drop the needle and see what’s happening.
The album opener ‘THE DISRUPTION’ features an appearance from experimental synth punk band MSPAINT. The song is immediately archetypal SOTB multi layered, weird and shifts direction and pace on a dime. This is exactly what I was hoping for. There’s so much going on that I know multiple listens will be rewarded with new parts revealing themselves. For example, the luscious harmony vocals behind the hardcore screamo section.
The smash cut into ‘STRANGER ALIVE’ raises that anxiety level in time for the song to fly away with it. The switch from the sample mash up noise mosaic in Ravede’s lush vocal part is sublime. As is the trade to Schwartz and Wichlin to close out the song. Man, this is on point and here we are, five albums in and this band are still pulling rabbits out hats and leaving us breathless.
‘THE CUT DEPICTS THE CUT’ starts off all bleeps and bloops and a frenetic drum machine has a nervous breakdown unsure about what patch it’s meant to play, so it plays them all hoping to placate us. Ravede is sounding menacing in her delivery, almost mono tone yet finding colour in all the right places. After a short-rapped section over a breakbeat the eerie closing section strips it all back until a detuned acoustic remains strumming out the bass heavy outro.
A vocal harmony flourishes beckons us into lead single ‘LET THE VIRGIN DRIVE’. “Heaven is a lie cause you are earthly and you’re alive,” Schwartz sings at the song’s outset in after those signature, tightly auto tuned vocals. At first listen this could come across as a more straightforward song than we’re used to. Worry not the usual dynamic twists and turns arrive in the closing minute. As usual its that dark and wonderful vibe they disappear into before the song rises again like a phoenix. Check out the video here.
My album highlight follows in ‘SORRY PORE INJECTOR’. Starting like some late-night radio call in show all smoky sax and moody keys it slowly evolves into it a driving slacker classic. The chord choices here are inspired and the changes unexpected. The song constantly eats itself and regurgitates a new form, always with a tie to that original theme. It’s a classic piece of SOTB inventiveness with one eye on evolving their approach and one on maintaining that atmosphere we know and love.
‘FOUND A BODY’ is a relatively stripped back affair in contrast. All glitchy beats and vocal treatments. There’s minimal instrumentation here, but the vocal interplay is where the magics at. There’s something quite cinematic in the closing section of the song that I love and makes me smile every time I hear it. I wouldn’t be surprised if this ends up on a soundtrack one day.
There’s also a very sweeping, cinematic intro to ‘SUN SWEPT THE EVENING RED’. After that airy orchestral flourish, the song becomes an eerie ballad. Whilst the vocal melody is pure pop the backing is anxious and jittery. The perfect foil.
‘SOMETHINGS ENDING’ is the shortest track on here and somehow manages to be creepier and freakier in under two minutes than anything else on here. In a good way of course. It seems to be about finding a dead body in a river and the crazy instrumentation just amps up the nervous energy to the max.
Then its straight into ‘I’VE BEEN EVIL’. This is about as accessible a song as I’ve ever heard from a SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE album. Vocal melodies are on point again. Different on each verse and lyrically getting darker and darker as the song progresses. I think this is as close to dancefloor filler as we’ll get from the band.
There’s a further development of the bands more accessible side on ‘1/500’. There’s only the lightest use of vocal treatments. This has flashes of Radiohead and Arcade Fire but always comes back to what we love about them. That unusual time signature, that minor resolution and start stop dynamic.
‘DUPLICATE SPOTTED’ is the gift that keeps giving. After an understated opening (well as understated as this band can be) the song erupts and a driving guitar plays off Ravede’s angelic vocal. This contrast is sublime. Not content with giving us that we also get treated to a wonderful ambient outro that is equally heavenly. Man, I don’t want this album to end.
End it must and our closer comes in the form of ‘EARTH KIT’. Discordant strings open proceedings before the vocals kick in. I don’t know why but it made me think of ‘Vienna’ by Ultravox for about 30 seconds or so. That’s short lived. When the line “In a lifetime of your own violent design who will sing your happy songs?” I get goosebumps. It’s not just the sentiment in that line, it’s the impassioned delivery too. Couple that with the closing plea of “What if I need people” and I’m gone, a bubbling mess.
In all the press for this album I had kept reading that this was going to be the bands most accessible album to date and that songs were going to follow a more straightforward structure. I’m pleased to report that is not the case and in YOU’LL HAVE TO LOSE SOMETHING the band have once again visited the contrary, euphoric and downright sinister world that all their songs inhabit. Yes, ok, there are brief moments where you think things are going down a more traditional song structure route but they are always short lived. We’re back luxuriating in the genius that is SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE in no time.
I’m so grateful that given what this band have been through that they have stayed the course and delivered an album of unbridled creativity and wild imagination. In a world of cookie cutter indie bands, I’ll always be grateful for true originals, true mavericks like SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE.
YOU’LL HAVE TO LOSE SOMETHING is out now via Saddle Creek Records and is also available via the SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE Bandcamp page as well as your favourite local record store.


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