Belle and Sebastian - Write About Love Review

Write About Love

Belle and Sebastian

Release Date: 11th Oct, 2010
Label: Rough trade
Genre: Indie
Purchase on Amazon

People usually have an opinion – good or bad – about Belle and Sebastian. Words such as twee often turn up in critiques of the band, but to take that as gospel is to miss the point. Over the past decade and a half, the many-tentacled Glasgow outfit, operating under the guidance of founder and chief songwriter Stuart Murdoch, have gradually become something of a treasure. To dismiss them as something soft students mince around to while wearing cardigans is foolish. 


Cross this lot and you are D-E-A-D. (Okay, maybe not.)


For their eighth album, and first for four years, B&S have reconvened after extra-curricular dalliances, such as Murdoch’s God Help the Girl and drummer Richard Colburn’s Tired Pony, to reclaim their crown from, well, no one. There’s simply no one else like them. There are some vague photocopies featuring people who you’re surprised are allowed out of the house, but for a British band as unique, as special, as Belle and Sebastian, you really have to travel back to the days of The Smiths.



Muscular pop of the finest variety is on the agenda here. Opener I Didn’t See It Coming explodes into a glorious widescreen chorus noise, and Come on Sister is a polite glam stomper. I Want the World to Stop finds the band in a state of exhilaration, scarves-aloft melodies that smell of talcum powder rising high. Guests lend their weight to proceedings, too: Norah Jones’ honeyed tones illuminate Little Lou, Ugly Jack, Prophet John; and An Education star Casey Mulligan sings on the jaunty title-track. Both settle in effortlessly. The band’s own Stevie Jackson’s I’m Not Living in the Real World has a flavour of early Blur about it, and Sarah Martin’s leads I Can See Your Future fit splendidly into the band’s oeuvre.



Write About Love is a cracking pop album and a fine addition to a great band’s already impressive catalogue. Had it been released a few months ago, it would’ve literally been the sound of summer. As it is, in a dank and damp October, it’s the perfect accompaniment to a plateful of cakes. Marvellous.

Reviewed by Ian Wade

About The Artist

Belle and Sebastian

Belle and Sebastian is a band from Glasgow. Led by guitarist/vocalist Stuart Murdoch, the seven-piece band has an intimate, majestic sound that is equal parts folk-rock and '60s pop. Murdoch has a gift not only for whimsy and surrealism, but also for odd, unsettling lyrical detail which keeps the songs grounded in a tangible reality. Based in Glasgow, Scotland, Belle and Sebastian released their first two albums in 1996: Tigermilk, recorded over three days, and If You're Feeling Sinister, recorded in a week, at the peak of the chamber pop movement. At first, some critics in Britain's music weeklies tied the band into the subgenre, yet the group was too pretty, too delicate, to bear that label. Through their first two years of public existence, the band shielded their personalities, submitting publicity photos featuring a girl, who was a friend of the band and reluctantly posing for photo shoots. Furthermore, they performed in odd venues, playing not only the standard coffeehouses and cafes, but also homes, church halls, and libraries. Prior to the formation of Belle and Sebastian, Murdoch suffered from a protracted battle with chronic fatigue syndrome, which forced him to drop out of school and spend seven years living in his parents' home crippled by his condition.Whilst in his parents home, Murdoch wrote a short story about a boy named Sebastian and a girl named Isabelle based on the names from Madame Cecile Aubery's children's book Belle et Sebastian. On New Year's Day 1996, Stuart attended a party at which he met a young singer and cellist named Isobel Campbell. In a letter to his brother Fraser, Murdoch explained how he was making a single for Stow college at the end of February. Murdoch opted to use the name Belle&Sebastian for the project because it was occupying him at the time. Murdoch took to songwriting as an escapism from the four walls surrounding him in his room and eventually recorded demos with bassist Stuart David whom he met at a government training programme called Beatbox. Murdoch quickly met a series of other musicians through social and musical circles in his hometown Glasgow and they agreed to help with the Stow project. The members he found for this initial lineup were Stevie Jackson (guitar), Mick Cooke (trumpet), Chris Geddes (keyboards), Stuart David (bass), Richard Colburn (drums), and Isobel Campbell (cello). The Stow College record was to be issued by Electric Honey, but it turned into a full album. The course instructor Alan Rankine determined that Murdoch had enough good material to record a full LP and could do so if they could get it all done in three days, studio time allotted for the single. Murdoch and his musicians rose to the challenge and recorded ten tracks putting the songs in order as they would appear on the record and mostly completing them in just a few takes. In May of 1996, Belle and Sebastian self-released their debut album, Tigermilk, on Electric Honey Records. Only 1,000 copies of the album, which was only pressed on vinyl, were released, but it unexpectedly became a sensation, earning terrific word of mouth throughout the UK. As a result, the band became slightly more than a school project — it became an actual band. If You're Feeling Sinister, released on the independent Jeepster label, followed in November of 1996. By the time the album was released in America on the EMI subsidiary The Enclave, it had earned considerable critical acclaim in the U.K. — not only from music weeklies, but from newspapers like The Sunday Times and magazines like The Face — and a large cult following; by some accounts, Tigermilk was being sold for as much as 75 pounds. Over the course of 1997, word of mouth continued to grow in America, even as the band pulled out of an American tour because The Enclave went bankrupt and closed. As the band cult continued to build in 1997, Belle and Sebastian released three EPs — Dog on Wheels (May), Lazy Line Painter Jane (July), and 3.. 6.. 9 Seconds of Light (October). Each subsequent EP placed higher on the indie charts and received great critical acclaim. Later in the year, violinist Sarah Martin became a member of the band. By the end of the year, the group finalized an American deal with Matador Records, issuing The Boy With The Arab Strap in September 1998. The following year saw the eagerly anticipated wide re-release of Tigermilk, the album that started it all. It was the biggest selling album but is unpopular with the group themselves. Following completion of 2000's Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like a Peasant, Stuart David left Belle and Sebastian to focus full-time on his solo project, Looper, being replaced by Bobby Kildea of V-Twin. In 2001, the group released two EPs — Jonathan David and I'm Waking Up to Us — and recorded the soundtrack for Todd Solondz's film Storytelling. Just before the soundtrack's release in spring 2002, Belle and Sebastian embarked on a comprehensive tour of the United States and Canada before returning to Europe for the summer festival season. Midway through the tour, Isobel Campbell left the band, citing the usual differences. Another major change that soon took place was the band leaving Jeepster and Matador to sign with Rough Trade, with their next record, late 2003's Dear Catastrophe Waitress, produced by the inimitable Trevor Horn (who also produced Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Yes, and scores of others). The record spawned the brilliant "Step Into My Office, Baby" and "I'm a Cuckoo" singles, the latter of which was the group's biggest U.K. hit, reaching number 14 in early 2004. After a long worldwide tour that found Belle and Sebastian reaching new levels of success, they retired to Scotland and began preparing for the recording of their seventh full length album, The Life Pursuit, released in 2006. Official website: www.belleandsebastian.com

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30 Comments

  1. stranging 02 May 2012

    everything is pretty awesome, except for im not living in the real world

  2. jorgeherrera315 09 Mar 2012

    belle and Sebastian at their most complacent....which really isn't a bad thing

  3. Sandman2527 15 Sep 2011

    Probably their worst album. Hopefully the next one sounds nothing like this. Come on Stuart you definitely can do better than this :D

  4. Taip 22 Aug 2011

    mmm gotta say, I like that they've stripped down their sound back to the basic. The Life Pursuit was just too, hmm, not gentle. and I love Belle and Sebastian when they make this sea-like music that makes you float.

  5. James_Hartley 22 Jun 2011

    Good album

  6. grahamr93 09 May 2011

    It's really grown on me

  7. MackTheFinger 19 Apr 2011

    I didn't like this album after the first listen at all. I thought "what is this crap?". But its grown on me. It's not their best but its not bad at all.

  8. narut13 14 Mar 2011

    At first listen i didn't like it but after i listened to it more, I did. I was hoping for something like the life pursuit so it threw me off. I think life pursuit is the best but this is a great record.

  9. Leovfz 09 Mar 2011

    I actually think its their best album.

  10. KingsAndQueen 13 Jan 2011

    I liked Storytelling and this one too, I'm not hardcore fan, and i'm a newbie in their msuic, but the only song I didn't like from thios was I Want The World To Stop. I think it's not as good as Storytelling or The Life Pursuit, but it's not bad.

  11. minche90 03 Jan 2011

    i have the wrong tag, oh noes :'/

  12. indy-kid 02 Jan 2011

    probably their worst album, excluding storytelling

  13. Ro_Chad 16 Nov 2010

    wonderful

  14. meister333 14 Nov 2010

    nice pop album album, but nothing special

  15. damnruckus 13 Nov 2010

    Yummeh

  16. dzinsp 09 Nov 2010

    Back to the start.

  17. hasziszijjun 31 Oct 2010

    [polish only] http://quasi-stricte.blogspot.com/2010/10/promieniujacy-radosna-beztroska.html

  18. dangiox2 18 Oct 2010

    it sound promisseing

  19. CarlyQue 18 Oct 2010

    love it.

  20. Crishaan 16 Oct 2010

    wonderful :)

  21. Alessannsk 14 Oct 2010

    если любишь инди рок, можешь читать мои ежедневные обзоры музыкальных новинок http://alessan-nsk.livejournal.com/

  22. TIGRESUANL 14 Oct 2010

    great fuull here

  23. Buzku 13 Oct 2010

    Solid stuff.

  24. Taip 12 Oct 2010

    OMG

  25. iurisantos 20 Sep 2010

    I Didn't See It Coming

  26. Snoo52 20 Sep 2010

    First comment? I think it's pretty good so far, only one listen in. Lots of slow songs!

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