Belle Reading From a Book Tv Show

Scottish indie pop band

Belle and Sebastian

Left to right: Mick Cooke, Richard Colburn, Bobby Kildea, Chris Geddes, Stevie Jackson, Sarah Martin, Stuart Murdoch

Left to right: Mick Cooke, Richard Colburn, Bobby Kildea, Chris Geddes, Stevie Jackson, Sarah Martin, Stuart Murdoch

Groundwork information
Origin Glasgow, Scotland
Genres Indie pop,[i] folk rock,[2] [one] chamber pop[iii] [4]
Years active 1996–present
Labels Crude Merchandise, Jeepster, Matador, Arts & Crafts México
Associated acts God Help The Girl, Looper, Norah Jones, Evie Sands, The Gentle Waves, The Reindeer Department, The Vaselines,
Website belleandsebastian.com
Members Stuart Murdoch
Stevie Jackson
Sarah Martin
Chris Geddes
Richard Colburn
Bobby Kildea
Dave McGowan
By members Mick Cooke
Isobel Campbell
Stuart David

Belle and Sebastian are a Scottish indie popular band formed in Glasgow in 1996. Led by Stuart Murdoch, the band has released x albums.[5] [half-dozen] Much of their work had been released on Jeepster Records earlier signing with Matador Records.

History [edit]

Formation and early years (1994–1998) [edit]

Belle and Sebastian were formed in Glasgow, Scotland in 1994 by Stuart Murdoch and Stuart David, both of whom had enrolled at Stow College's Beatbox programme for unemployed musicians.[five] Together, with music professor Alan Rankine (formerly of The Associates), they recorded some demos, which were picked upwardly by the college's Music Business organization grade that produces and releases one single each twelvemonth on the higher'due south label, Electric Honey. As the band had a number of songs already and the characterization was extremely impressed with the demos, Belle and Sebastian were allowed to record a total-length album, which was recorded mostly alive over three days, entitled Tigermilk. Murdoch once described the band equally a "product of botched capitalism".[five] The band took their proper name from a short story Murdoch had written inspired past the telly accommodation of the French novel Belle et Sébastien about a six-year-old boy and his domestic dog.[half-dozen] [7]

Tigermilk was recorded in three days and originally only one thousand copies were pressed in vinyl.[6] As of 2007, these original copies were valued up to £400.[8] [ix] [10] The warm reception the album received inspired Murdoch and David to turn the band into a full-fourth dimension projection, recruiting Stevie Jackson (guitar and vocals), Isobel Campbell (cello/vocals), Chris Geddes (keys) and Richard Colburn (drums) to fill out the grouping.

After the success of the debut anthology, Belle and Sebastian were signed to Jeepster Records in August 1996 and If Yous're Feeling Sinister, their second album, was released on 18 Nov.[10] The album was named by Spin every bit one of the 100 greatest albums between 1985 and 2005,[11] and it is widely considered the band'south masterpiece.[12] Just before the recording of Sinister, Sarah Martin (violin/vocals) joined the band. Post-obit this a series of EPs were released in 1997.[13] The first of these was Dog on Wheels, which contained iv demo tracks recorded before the real germination of the band. In fact, the only long-term band members to play on the songs were Murdoch, David, and Mick Cooke, who played trumpet on the EP but would not officially join the band until a few years afterward. It charted at No. 59 in the U.k. singles nautical chart.[10]

The Lazy Line Painter Jane EP followed in July. The runway was recorded in the church where Murdoch lived[14] and features vocals from Monica Queen. The EP narrowly missed out on the UK top twoscore, peaking at No. 41.[x] The last of the 1997 EPs was October's 3.. half-dozen.. nine Seconds of Lite. The EP was made Single of the Week in both the NME and Melody Maker and reached No. 32 in the charts, thus becoming the band'southward first top 40 single.[10]

Critical acclamation and line-up changes (1998–2003) [edit]

The band released their third LP, The Male child with the Arab Strap in 1998, and it reached No. 12 in the UK charts.[16] Arab Strap garnered an NPR interview[17] and positive reviews from Rolling Stone [18] and the Hamlet Vocalization, [14] amid others; however, the anthology has its detractors,[19] including Pitchfork, who gave the album a specially poor review, calling it a "parody" of their earlier piece of work (Pitchfork has since removed the review from their website and re-reviewed the anthology positively in 2018).[20] [21] During the recording of the album, long-time studio trumpet-player Mick Cooke was asked to join the band as a full member.[8] The This Is Just a Mod Rock Song EP followed later on that yr.[22]

In 1999, the ring was awarded with Best Newcomer (for their 3rd album) at the BRIT Awards, upsetting better-known acts such every bit Steps and 5ive.[23] That same year, the band hosted their own festival, the Bowlie Weekender. Tigermilk was also given a full release past Jeepster before the band started work on their next LP. The result was Fold Your Hands Child, Yous Walk Like a Peasant, which became the ring'southward first top x album in the Britain.[10] A stand-alone single, "Legal Man", reached No. fifteen and gave them their starting time appearance on Top of the Pops.[24]

Belle and Sebastian performing at the 9:30 Club in Washington, D.C., in 2006

Every bit the band's popularity and recognition was growing worldwide, their music began appearing in films and on television. The 2000 moving picture Loftier Fidelity mentions the band (with Jack Black'south graphic symbol referring to them as "old sad bounder music" and disdaining their soft way) and features a clip from the vocal "Seymour Stein" from The Male child with the Arab Strap.[25] Also, the title track from Arab Strap was played over the terminate credits of the UK television set series Teachers, [26] and the lyric "Colour my life with the chaos of problem" from the vocal was quoted by i of the characters in the 2009 film (500) Days of Summertime.

Stuart David soon left the band to concentrate on his side projection, Looper, and his book writing, which included his The Idle Thoughts of a Daydreamer.[27] He was replaced by Bobby Kildea of V-Twin. The "Jonathan David" unmarried, sung by Stevie Jackson, was released in June 2001 and was followed by "I'm Waking Upwards to Us" in November, which saw the band use an outside producer (Mike Hurst) for the first time.[28] Near of 2002 was spent touring and recording a soundtrack album, Storytelling (for Storytelling by Todd Solondz).[29] Campbell left the band in the bound of 2002, in the middle of the band's North American tour to pursue a solo career, get-go as The Gentle Waves, and later under her own name. She later collaborated with singer Mark Lanegan on three albums.[30] [31]

Label alter and return to success (2003–2010) [edit]

The band left Jeepster in 2002, signing a four-album deal with Rough Trade Records.[32] Their showtime album for Rough Trade, Dear Ending Waitress, was released in 2003 and was produced by Trevor Horn.[33] The anthology showed a markedly more "produced" audio compared to their first four LPs,[34] as the band was making a concerted endeavour to produce more than "radio-friendly" music.[33] The album was warmly received and is credited with restoring the band'southward "indie cred".[half-dozen] The album also marked the return of Murdoch as the group's primary songwriter, following the poorly received Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like a Peasant and Storytelling, both of which were more collaborative than the band'due south early work.[35] A documentary DVD, Fans Only, was released past Jeepster in October 2003, featuring promotional videos, live clips and unreleased footage.[12] A single from the album, "Step into My Office, Baby" followed in November 2003; information technology would be their first single to be taken from an album,[32] and included a rails recorded with Divine One-act producer Darren Allison entitled Dearest on the March.

The Sparse Lizzy-inspired "I'chiliad a Cuckoo" was the second unmarried from the album.[34] [36] Information technology achieved their highest chart position nevertheless, reaching No. xiv in the Britain.[31] The Books EP followed, a double A-side single led past "Wrapped Up in Books" from Dear Catastrophe Waitress and the new "Your Comprehend'south Diddled". This EP became the band'southward tertiary top xx United kingdom release, and the band was nominated for both the Mercury Music Prize and an Ivor Novello Award. In Jan 2005, B&S was voted Scotland's greatest band in a poll by The List, beating Uncomplicated Minds, Idlewild, Travis, Franz Ferdinand, and The Proclaimers, amongst others.[37]

In April 2005, members of the band visited Israel and the Palestinian territories with the UK charity War on Want;[38] the group subsequently recorded a song inspired by the trip titled "The Eighth Station of the Cross Kebab House", which would first appear on the digital-download version of the charity album Help!: A Twenty-four hour period in the Life and would afterward take a concrete release every bit a B-side on 2006's "Funny Lilliputian Frog" single. Push Barman to Open up Old Wounds, a compilation of the Jeepster singles and EPs, was released in May 2005 while the band were recording their 7th album in California. The consequence of the sessions was The Life Pursuit, produced by Tony Hoffer.[38] [39] The album, originally intended to be a double album,[40] became the ring'southward highest-charting album upon its release in February 2006, peaking at No. 8 in the UK and No. 65 on the Usa Billboard 200.[41] [42] "Funny Little Frog", which preceded it, too proved to exist their highest-charting single, debuting at No. 13.[12]

On half dozen July 2006, the ring played a historic[43] show with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl.[44] The opening act at the 18,000 seat sell-out concert was The Shins.[45] The members of the band see this as a landmark event, with Stevie Jackson saying, "This is the biggest thrill of my entire life".[46] In October 2006, members of the band helped put together a CD collection of new songs for children titled Colours Are Brighter, with the interest of major bands such equally Franz Ferdinand and The Flaming Lips.[47]

On 18 November 2008 the ring released The BBC Sessions, which features songs from the period of 1996–2001 (including the last recordings featuring Isobel Campbell before she left the band), forth with a second disc featuring a recording of a alive operation in Belfast from Christmas 2001.[48]

Recent years (2010–nowadays) [edit]

On 17 July 2010, the band performed their outset UK gig in almost four years to a crowd of around 30,000 at Breadth Festival in Henham Park, Southwold.[49] They performed two new songs, "I Didn't Come across It Coming" and "I'm Non Living in the Real World".[l]

Their eighth studio album, released in the Uk and internationally on 25 September 2010, was titled Belle and Sebastian Write About Love.[51] The commencement single from the anthology, as well as the record's championship track "Write About Love", was released in the US on 7 September 2010. Write Well-nigh Love entered the UK albums chart in its first week of release, peaking at No. 8 every bit of 19 October 2010.[52] Norah Jones is featured on the runway "Piffling Lou, Ugly Jack, Prophet John".[53]

In Dec 2010 Belle and Sebastian curated the sequel to the Bowlie Weekender in the form of Bowlie 2 presented by All Tomorrow's Parties.

In 2013, Pitchfork TV released an hr-long documentary in February, directed by RJ Bentler which focused on the band's 1996 album If You lot're Feeling Sinister, as well as the formation and early on releases of the band. The documentary featured interviews with every member that was nowadays on the anthology, likewise equally several archival photos and videos from the band's early days.[54] The band compiled a 2d compilation album The Third Middle Middle which included the b-sides and rarities released after Push Barman to Open Old Wounds, from the albums Love Ending Waitress, The Life Pursuit, and Write Nigh Dearest. In an interview at the finish of 2013,[55] Mick Cooke confirmed he had left the band on skilful terms.

The band received an 'Outstanding Contribution To Music Award' at the NME Awards 2014.[56]

In 2014, the band returned to the studio, recording in Atlanta, Georgia for their ninth studio anthology,[57] along with announcing bout dates for diverse festivals and concerts across the world during 2014.[58] Their ninth album Girls in Peacetime Want to Dance was released on 19 January 2015.[59] It was their first album with Dave McGowan, who had been their touring bassist since 2011.[60]

The Belle and Sebastian song "At that place's Too Much Love" forms much of the soundtrack for the Brazilian pic The Fashion He Looks, about a blind, gay teenage boy and his friends, released in 2014.

Belle and Sebastian performed at the Glastonbury Festival on Sun 28 June 2015, on 'The Other Stage' and at O2 Academy, Glasgow in March 2017 which was televised in the U.K. as part of the 'BBC vi MUSIC Presents Festival'.

In mid-2017, the ring put out a new single, "We Were Beautiful".[61] During the same year, the band appeared in the news for a comical story that occurred during their Us tour, in which they accidentally forgot Colburn in a North Dakota Walmart.[62] In Dec 2017 and January and Feb 2018, the ring released a trio of EPs under the name How to Solve Our Human Problems.[63]

On three November 2018, the band appear that Dave McGowan had become a member.[64] [ non-primary source needed ]

In Baronial 2019, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the commencement Bowlie Weekender festival, Belle & Sebastian held a third festival, dubbed the Boaty Weekender.[65] Dissimilar the previous two festivals, the Boaty Weekender was held on a cruise send in the Mediterranean Sea instead of U.K. holiday parks.[66] [67]

A new anthology, A Scrap Of Previous, has been announced for release in May 2022.[68]

Collaborations and side projects [edit]

  • The Reindeer Section were a Scottish indie stone supergroup formed in 2001 by Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol, which released albums and gigged in 2001 and 2002. Information technology featured Richard Colburn, Mick Cooke and Bobby Kildea from Belle and Sebastian.
  • The Vaselines are an alternative stone band from Glasgow formed in Glasgow in 1986. Between 2008 and 2014 their lineup featured Stevie Jackson and Bobby Kildea from Belle and Sebastian and they performed at Bowlie Weekender 2 curated by Belle and Sebastian in Dec 2010.
  • Tired Pony is a state / Americana supergroup formed past Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol in 2010. It features Richard Colburn from Belle and Sebastian.
  • God Assist the Girl is a musical project by Stuart Murdoch, featuring a group of female vocalists, including Catherine Ireton, with Belle and Sebastian as the accompanying band.
  • Looper (ring) is an electronic music group fronted by Stuart David.

Band members [edit]

Electric current members

  • Stuart Murdoch – vocals, guitar, keyboards (1996–present)
  • Stevie Jackson – guitar, vocals, piano (1996–present)
  • Sarah Martin – vocals, violin, guitar, flute, keyboards, recorder, percussion (1996–present)
  • Chris Geddes – keyboards, piano, percussion (1996–present)
  • Richard Colburn – drums, percussion (1996–present)
  • Bobby Kildea – guitar, bass (2001–nowadays)
  • Dave McGowan – bass, keyboards, guitar (2018–present; touring musician 2012–2018)

Former members

  • Isobel Campbell – vocals, cello, guitar (1996–2002)
  • Stuart David – bass (1996–2000)
  • Mick Cooke – trumpet, guitar, bass, percussion (1998–2013; touring musician 1996–1998)

Timeline

Discography [edit]

Studio albums

  • Tigermilk (1996)
  • If You're Feeling Sinister (1996)
  • The Boy with the Arab Strap (1998)
  • Fold Your Easily Child, You Walk Similar a Peasant (2000)
  • Storytelling (2002)
  • Dear Catastrophe Waitress (2003)
  • The Life Pursuit (2006)
  • Write About Dearest (2010)
  • Girls in Peacetime Desire to Trip the light fantastic (2015)
  • Days of the Bagnold Summer (2019)
  • A Scrap of Previous (2022)[69]

Projects

  • God Help the Girl (2009)

See also [edit]

  • List of bands from Glasgow

References [edit]

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  43. ^ Gallo, Phil (9 July 2006). "Belle & Sebastian / L.A. Philharmonic; the Shins". Variety . Retrieved 1 February 2018.
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  49. ^ "Line-up – Latitude Festival 2011". Latitudefestival.co.u.k.. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
  50. ^ "Belle and Sebastian Concert Setlist at Latitude Festival, Southwold on July 17, 2010". setlist.fm. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
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  52. ^ "Archive Chart". Official Charts Company. 23 October 2010. Retrieved 24 November 2010.
  53. ^ Yentch, Katrina (19 August 2010), Norah Jones to sing on new Belle and Sebastian album, Under the Radar, archived from the original on 22 Baronial 2010, retrieved four September 2010 /
  54. ^ "Pitchfork.tv Presents a Documentary Film on Belle and Sebastian's If You're Feeling Sinister". Pitchfork. 18 Feb 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  55. ^ "Interview: Mick Cooke (formerly) of Belle & Sebastian". The Current . Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  56. ^ "Belle & Sebastian win Outstanding Contribution To Music Award at NME Awards 2014 with Austin, Texas". NME . Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  57. ^ "Belle And Sebastian confirm new anthology recording sessions". NME . Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  58. ^ "Live Dates". Belle and Sebastian official website . Retrieved iv June 2014.
  59. ^ The Glasgow veterans waltz between acoustic indie and disco bangers on their army camp and scatterbrained ninth anthology, NME, past Dan Stubbs, 14 January 2015
  60. ^ Ham, Robert (31 March 2015). "Belle & Sebastian find ways to keep their music fresh after 20 years". The Oregonian . Retrieved eighteen January 2019.
  61. ^ Eddie Fu (28 July 2017). "Belle and Sebastian share new track 'Nosotros Were Beautiful': Stream". Consequence of Audio . Retrieved 28 September 2017.
  62. ^ Ben Beaumont-Thomas. "Belle and Sebastian accidentally leave drummer in pyjamas in Walmart". The Guardian . Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  63. ^ "Belle & Sebastian denote three new EPs: 'People need an escape from the dystopia'". NME . Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  64. ^ Belle and Sebastian (3 November 2018). "...and then there were vii! Dave just made information technology official and joined the band". Facebook. Archived from the original on 25 Feb 2022. Retrieved xviii January 2019.
  65. ^ Jack, Maclolm. "All bands on deck: aboard the Belle and Sebastian Med and music prowl". The Guardian . Retrieved xiii Baronial 2019.
  66. ^ Korstanje, Emma. "Belle & Sebastian Denote Lineup for 2019 Festival Cruise, The Boaty Weekender". Paste . Retrieved 16 December 2018.
  67. ^ Jack, Maclolm. "The Boaty Weekender: welcome to Glastonbury on the Med". The Times . Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  68. ^ https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/belle-and-sebastian-announce-a-flake-of-previous-1313941/.
  69. ^ Minsker, Evan (2 March 2022). "Belle and Sebastian Announce New Anthology and Tour, Share Video for New Vocal: Scout". Pitchfork . Retrieved 3 March 2022.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Official channel on YouTube

barksmank1951.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belle_and_Sebastian

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