The Life Pursuit (CD)
Written almost entirely by frontman Stuart Murdoch, the new Belle and Sebastian album, their sixth, makes a return to Matador Records and is a magnificently assured and diverse pop record. With nods to influences as diverse Cornelius, Manfred Mann, David Bowie, The Life Pursuit mingles the folky, be-sweatered pathos of their earliest work with joyfully satirical laste-'60s sunshine pop and the sophisticated early '80s-influenced work reminiscent of their prior album, 2003's Dear Catastrophe Waitress.![]()
| Tracklisting | |
| Disk | 1 | |
| 1 | Act of the Apostle |
| 2 | Another Sunny Day |
| 3 | White Collar Boy |
| 4 | The Blues Are Still Blue |
| 5 | Dress Up in You |
| 6 | Sukie in the Graveyard |
| 7 | We Are the Sleepyheads |
| 8 | Song for Sunshine |
| 9 | Funny Little Frog |
| 10 | To Be Myself Completely |
| 11 | Act of the Apostle II |
| 12 | For the Price of a Cup of Tea |
| 13 | Mornington Cresent |
| Jonathan Christopher
- Brooklyn, NY, USA |
| Belle and Sebastian's sixth full-length album ''The Life Pursuit'' finds the band returning to styles and ideas set forth by 2003's ''Dear Catastrophe Waitress'' while still further expanding their pallette. With Producer Tony Hoffer (Beck, Air, Supergrass) at the helm, the band reaches out into new genres (glam, motown and blues, to name a few) without ever giving up the witty, literate charm first revealed on 1996's ''Tigermilk''. As a pop band in its maturity, Belle and Seastian proves itself to be unsusceptible to falling into self-parody or redundancy. As shown by ''Dear Catastrophe Waitress'' and now ''The Life Persuit'', the band is in no shortage of fresh ideas and will be producing sublime pop records for years to come. | |
| Daniel Scheppke
- Salem, OR, USA |
| Like most Belle and Sebastian albums, this record has one or two amazing songs and a whole lot of filler. I'd reccomend it for a few spins but it's nothing amazing. | |