Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
My favorite album of all time ever, April 9, 2003
I first heard about Belle and Sebastian from a friend of mine who had also turned me on to Kings of Convenience. I went out and bought this CD as soon as I could. I didn't really get into it at first and I didn't really understand what some of the songs were about. But the album grew on me. The songs are timeless, they conjure up the ghosts of late 60s pioneers like Love and Nick Drake, while always sounding modern and in touch with today's alienated youth. But now that I have listened to these twelve songs thousands of times, the thing that draws me back the Boy with the Arab Strap is the MOOD. Autumnal, like leaves falling but with a hint of summer still lingering and winter waiting at the door. Like "The Graduate" or a Wes Anderson movie, graceful and beautiful, with equal measures of humor, sorrow and tenderness. If you haven't already, buy this CD and prepare yourself for the most subtle and gorgeous forty-five minutes of your life.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Soothingly Beautiful., August 20, 2004
Belle & Sebastian is something magical, so magical and amazing that at first glance they seem like nothing. It takes a while to sink in, and in that time their music tends to confuse you, for you've never heard something like this before. But after time, Belle & Sebastian will earn a spot in your heart as one of the most pleasant songcrafters you will ever hear.
The Boy With The Arab Strap is an incredible piece of work by Belle & Sebastian. The entire album stays majestical and gives you an ultimate sense of relaxation, but very strangely sneaks brass instruments in, without you even realizing how loud and out of place the trumpets can be at times. Stuart Murdoch's vocals are (as the music backing it) soothing, and stay fluent as he pumps out fairy-tale lyrics.
'It Could Have Been A Brilliant Career' starts the album off, very slowly. It sets the stage up for 'Sleep The Clock Around', a track which no one can put down. It starts soft, but includes sharp trumpets. 'Is It Wicked Not To Care' has female vocals, followed by 'Ease Your Feet In The Sea', which really does give you the 'beach' mindpicture. The album stays pretty consistant, stopping for the spoken-voice over instrumentals interlude 'A Space Boy Dream'. The album ends on a soft, yet high note with 'The Rollercoaster Ride'.
I really don't have too many things bad to say about this album. If I could give it 4.5 stars, I would. Get this album.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good, solid music - pure and simple, April 22, 2000
Every so often, you buy a CD that is a "press play, leave on" CD - one that has enough enjoyability and variety to be listened to the whole way through...I found that here. Some people have a hard time considering music with vocals of such softness - rock; but the simple fact here is that this is an album where most of the power comes in the lyrics - which could stand alone as poetry, and in the subtle and clean instrumentation - which is nothing less than perfect. I know that it is already hard to imagine an alnum so good through all of my flowery, fawning words, but - one listen straight through and you too will be sold. This album has out and out, impossible-not-to-dance-to songs (Dirty Dream #2 and the title track), breathy atmospheric gems (Ease Your Feet in the sea, Chickfactor, Seymour Stein- a brilliant song) as well as grinding, undefinable, songs with no genre or label (the amazing "Simple Things," and the equally great "A Spaceboy Dream"). This is one to buy, because there really is nothing quite like it available anywhere from anyone - and as the band shy away from public acclaim (turned down several major-label deals to sign with small Scottish label "Jeepster") they strengthen the unique nature of their sound which has only gotten better with each flawlessly produced album. Maybe not pure mosh, pyrotechnic, guitar smash rock, and maybe not pure troubador ballads - but a great piece of arranged music nonetheless and an entirely enjoyable addition to any collection.
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