08 Dicembre 2008
Tim Sendra
Belle and Sebastian cut their first BBC session for the
Mark Radcliffe Show in July of 1996 just a few months before their seminal
If You're Feeling Sinister
album was released. The four songs they recorded were live and intimate
versions of three of the record's best tracks: "Like Dylan in the
Movies," "Judy and the Dream of Horses," and "Stars of Track and
Field." Hearing these songs (as well as "The State I Am In," from Tigermilk)
in such a raw and unadorned state (complete with vocal wavers and
assorted bum notes) isn't a revelation now, though one can imagine
people tuned in to their radios that night were thrown for a loop, but
it is pretty great. Of course, the songs are amazing, but just as
impressively, Stuart Murdoch's
vocals are heartbreakingly sincere and soulful, and the band
definitively belie their image as shamblers by sounding tight and
together. If they had never written or recorded more than just these
four songs, they still would be legendary, but luckily they didn't quit
while they were ahead and kept recording and releasing brilliant pop
music. They also continued making trips to the BBC studios and
The BBC Sessions
collects songs recorded there between 1996 and 2001. The track list is
made up of mostly album tracks and singles (highlights being an
insistent "Sleep the Clock Around," a folky take on "Wrong Love," and a
truly beautiful "Slow Graffiti") but the real treat for fans is the
inclusion of the group's 2001 session for John Peel,
for which they trotted out four songs that hadn't been released
previously (or since) on record. Any one of them could have comfortably
fit on a single, EP, or album and a couple even qualify as lost
treasures: "The Magic of a Kind Word" pits Isobel Campbell's
breathy vocals in the quiet verses against rich group harmonies in the
insanely sunny choruses, and ends up as one of the band's brightest and
lightest tunes that just could have been a hit single, "(My Girl's Got)
Miraculous Technique" has a wonderfully relaxed groove built on samples
and fleshed out with some wonky synth squiggles and lovely harmony
vocals by Campbell and Stuart. It was Campbell's
last recording made with the band and she really shines. That session
alone is worth the price of the disc, and when you add the 1996
session, it becomes damn near essential for Belle and Sebastian fans.
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» Tiny Mix Tapes
Indie rock bands don’t put out live albums per se; theyput out studio session collections, or whatever. Anything to keep frombeing compared to Dave Matthews and John Mayer, or whoever. Oh, andJohn Peel was a man among men, blah, blah, blah....
» Tiny Mix Tapes
Indie rock bands don’t put out live albums per se; theyput out studio session collections, or whatever. Anything to keep frombeing compared to Dave Matthews and John Mayer, or whoever. Oh, andJohn Peel was a man among men, blah, blah, blah....
» Rolling Stone
Fans of Belle and Sebastian's witty bookworm popare an obsessive lot, and no doubt they'll snap up this cherry-pickedcollection of BBC recordings from 1996 to 2001. The draw for devoteesis four rare songs from a 2001 session, including a hilarious...
» Rolling Stone
Fans of Belle and Sebastian's witty bookworm popare an obsessive lot, and no doubt they'll snap up this cherry-pickedcollection of BBC recordings from 1996 to 2001. The draw for devoteesis four rare songs from a 2001 session, including a hilarious...
» Pitchfork
Among the great ironies inBelle & Sebastian's 13-year career is that this group, once knownfor stumbling through its live performances, has become a tight theaterband. From the start, they resisted putting on common shows, eschewingpubs or clubs...