If You're Feeling Sinister (CD)
Belle & Sebastian's second record, If You're Feeling Sinister, is, for all intents and purposes, really their first, since their debut in 1997 was not heard outside of privileged inner circles. And If You're Feeling Sinister really did have quite a bit of an impact upon its release in 1997, largely because during the first half of the '90s the whimsy and preciousness that had been an integral part of alternative music was suppressed by grunge. Whimsy and preciousness are an integral part of If You're Feeling Sinister, along with clever wit and gentle, intricate arrangements -- a wonderful blend of the Smiths and Simon & Garfunkel, to be reductive. Even if it's firmly within the college, bed-sit tradition, and is unabashedly retrogressive, that gives Sinister a special, timeless character that's enhanced by Stuart Murdoch's wonderful, lively songwriting. Blessed with an impish sense of humor, a sly turn of phrase, and an alluringly fey voice, he gives this record a real sense of backbone, in that its humor is far more biting than the music appears and the music is far more substantial that it initially seems. Sinister plays like a great forgotten album, couched in '80s indie, '90s attitude, and '60s folk-pop. It's beautifully out of time, and even if other Belle & Sebastian albums sound like it, this is where they achieved a sense of grace. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
| Tracklisting | |
| Disk | 1 | |
| 1 | Stars of Track and Field |
| 2 | Seeing Other People |
| 3 | Me and the Major |
| 4 | Like Dylan in the Movies |
| 5 | Fox in the Snow |
| 6 | Get Me Away from Here, I'm Dying |
| 7 | If You're Feeling Sinister |
| 8 | Mayfly |
| 9 | Boy Done Wrong Again |
| 10 | Judy and the Dream of Horses |
| Branton Plaster
- Salem, OR, USA |
| This is probably the best music I have ever listened to. | |
| Charles Bowman
- Cape Girardeau, MO, USA |
| Belle and Sebastian do it again with yet another collection of beautifully swirling dream pop. The songwriting is top notch as always and on tracks such as the tittle track, they marry their beauty with an attitude as hard as any punk group with lines like "If you're feeling sinister, go out and see a minister. You'd probably feel better if you stayed and played with yourself." But as always, the main focus of the band is simply on creating beauty and with this dreamy collection of folky rock reminiscent of the quieter moments of Yo La Tengo delivered in an approach that often recalls Simon and Garfunkel, they have created another pop gem. | |