BELLE AND SEBASTIAN: STORYTELLING (2002)
1) Fiction; 2) Freak; 3)
Dialogue: Conan, Early Letterman; 4) Fuck This Shit; 5) Night Walk; 6)
Dialogue: Jersey's Where It's At; 7) Black And White Unite; 8) Consuelo; 9) Dialogue:
Toby; 10) Storytelling; 11) Dialogue: Class Rank; 12) I Don't Want To Play
Football; 13) Consuelo Leaving; 14) Wandering Alone; 15) Dialogue: Mandingo
Cliche; 16) Scooby Driver; 17) Fiction Reprise; 18) Big John Shaft.
Although this album is essentially a side
project, it does have its own importance in the Belle & Sebastian story. Formally,
this is a soundtrack for a movie of the same name by US indie director Todd
Solondz — not at all an unexpected development, as indie cinema and indie pop are
so naturally tied in together with the ubiquitous «outcast loser» mentality. However,
due to various issues of personal communication as well as forced edits to the
final version of the movie, most of the actual music composed for the project
was never heard in the theater. So, big deal, Murdoch and Co. just went ahead
and released all of it as a separate album, together with isolated fragments
of movie dialog for «authenticity».
The occasional advantage of such an album is
that soundtracks tend to be partially or mostly instrumental, and this makes
it easier to assess the «musicality» of the artist without it getting too
obscured by the frontman's personality. No matter how talented, or untalented,
the members of Belle & Sebastian may be in the composing department, most
of the songs were completely dominated by Murdoch's personal charisma. Here,
the singing is kept to a minimum, and it helps answer the question — is the «Belle
& Sebastian» brand actually viable when stripped of its sentimental tales
of highland loneliness?
And the answer is an immediate «yes», on the
strength of the album's opening track: the piano theme to ʽFictionʼ, simple and
unassuming as it is, is instantaneously charming, memorable, and completely
true to the Belle & Sebastian ethical code without a single spoken word —
fragile, delicate, tasteful, and friendly. For admirers, other than the reprise
at the end of the album, there is also a special «night version» of the same
theme (ʽNight Walkʼ), played at higher octaves and sending out a sharper
contrast with the dark bassline. It may not be a phenomenal composing feat,
but, well, at least it is a more complex bit of piano phrasing than most of Paul
McCartney's feats, and every bit as catchy.
The ʽFictionʼ theme may be the best there is on
the record (it ain't repeated thrice for nothing), but most of the other
melodies have their own charm as well. ʽFreakʼ is an attractive shadowy mix of minimalist
acoustic guitar, piano, Mellotron, and «ghost vocals»; ʽFuck This Shitʼ, defying
its title, is a little romantic harmonica-driven ditty (the harmonica does keep
repeating a three-note sequence that intonationally mimicks the title, though);
and ʽConsueloʼ cleverly synthesizes Spanish-style trumpet with «Celtic» harp.
Of the vocal numbers, ʽScooby Driverʼ finds the
band in quite an unusual mood — playing a fast, almost raunchy Sixties-style
pop-rocker, invading the turf of The Apples In Stereo or some other such band
in full confidence (too bad it's only a minute-long snippet); but the title
track is also upbeat, alternating friendly male / female vocals, pianos,
flutes, and trombones in a Kinks-derived way that was only hinted at on Fold Your Hands, but never became the
norm for that album; and ʽI Don't Want To Play Footballʼ is a brief solo
Murdoch-and-the-piano piece that is so intentionally «wimpy» it could just as
well be upgraded to the state of the National Belle-And-Sebastian Fan Club
Anthem: "I'd rather play a different sort of game / The girls are just as
good as boys at playing". (One can only imagine how the poor boy must have suffered in school — this is a
fifty-seven second snippet of his nerdy revenge).
The only full-length, fully-fledged vocal tune
on the entire album is ʽBig John Shaftʼ, and it, too, shows a departure from
the usual stylistics by being built around a funk-pop electric rhythm — which
the band still dresses up in Christmasy pianos and strings, so as, God forbid,
not to invite any accusations of a «transition to a roughness of sound». And
yet, everything shows that there is some
sort of transition on here — that they took up the offer, among other things,
in order to get try and get themselves out of the self-imposed stylistic rut. And
on here at least, the transition works: short and snippety as the record is, it
is pleasantly diverse and dynamic without having to sacrifice any part of the
band's artistic credo. Thumbs up, and for those in doubt, the only negative
side effects of the album's «soundtrack» status are (a) its shortness (some of
the snippets could have easily been promoted to full-length songs) and (b) the tiny
bits of dialog that are incomprehensible without the movie and do not really
make that much of a difference. Without them, the album's even shorter — but
still a worthy addition to the catalog.
Check "Storytelling" (CD) on Amazon
Check "Storytelling" (MP3) on Amazon
Normally I don't listen to this neo-folksy indie stuff as it's just not for me. But this
ReplyDelete"on the strength of the album's opening track"
caught my attention. Indeed, the piano theme is charming. It's a stroke of genius to create a lovely atmosphere by means of staccato playing; in classical music staccatto on the piano (almost?) always indicates aggression.
The accompanying acoustic strumming is as unimaginative as possible though and the saccharine violins are sickening me as always. The counterplay provided by the bass is well done.
I can only imagine what someone like Schubert would have done with something like this.