Belle and Sebastian: The Boy with the Arab Strap
Label: Matador
"Belle & Sebastian quietly built a dedicated following after the
release of their second album, If
You're Feeling Sinister, as word of mouth spread from indie
kids to record collectors to store clerks to critics. By the end of
1997, the Scottish septet had developed a following every bit as
passionate as the
Smiths did at their peak, which is only appropriate since leader Stuart
Murdoch is as wittily literate as Morrissey.
If
You're Feeling Sinister proved this as did the three excellent
EPs that followed, increasing expectations for The Boy With the Arab
Strap. Even if the album doesn't match the peerless If
You're Feeling Sinister or break new ground for Belle &
Sebastian, it's not a sophomore slump. From the Motown stomp of "Dirty
Dream Number Two" to the Paul
Simon shuffle of the title track, there is more musical texture on Boy
than Sinister,
but much of this was already explored on the EPs, which means Arab
Strap essentially consolidates the group's talents. Murdoch
recedes from the spotlight on occasion, letting Steve
Jackson deliver two music-biz spiels and giving Isobel
Campbell space to shine with the lilting "Is It Wicked Not to
Care?" All three songs are highlights, but Murdoch's
songs still attract the most attention. His vicious wit, often
overlooked in favor of his poetic narratives, surfaces on the title
track, while "It Could Have Been a Brilliant Career" summarizes his
effortless gift for elegant melancholia. Such small, precious gems are
what Belle & Sebastian are all about, and The Boy With the Arab
Strap offers another round of timeless, endlessly fascinating
folk-pop treasures." - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, allmusic.com



