Belle & Sebastian
LateNightTales
[Azuli; 2006]
Rating: 6.8


Once a
furtive marker of recognition among like-minded obsessives, Belle and
Sebastian have increasingly attracted casual listeners. Recent
full-length The Life Pursuit completed the break with the
band's outsiders-as-insiders origins, becoming their first album to reach the UK top 10. With
the latest installment in the LateNightTales compilation
series, previously curated by the Flaming Lips and Four Tet, the
Scottish group poses an inevitable cred-salvaging question: But have
you seen their records?
Oh, sure, they've got it all: funk, jazz, soul, hip-hop, lounge,
tropicalia, IDM, Afropop, classical, classic rock,
reggae, country reggae, reggae funk (but not reggaeton), and a hazy
spoken-word piece by comedian David Shrigley in which an old woman
dishes about her husband's "apparatus." It's never clear which
specific band member chooses each track. No matter: Stuart Murdoch &
Co. throw down the pop archivist's gauntlet impressively, though it
often feels they're trying too hard to impress.
Like the recent Rough Trade Counter Culture comp, the disc is
too varied for many one-sitting listens, but as a crate-digging
exercise it yields a few directions for further exploration. The
plaintive vocals of Greek troubadour Demis Roussos on his sparse 1972
ballad "O My Friends You've Been Untrue To Me" should appeal to Antony
and the Johnsons fans. California soul singer Mary Love's uptempo
mid-1960s also-ran "I'm in Your Hands" has the energetic appeal of the
best Motown. Gal Costa's Caetano Velosi-penned 1969 "Lost in the
Paradise" is swooning, horn-drenched bossa nova, while Ramsey Lewis's
funky jazz entry from the same year, "Uhuru", features Earth, Wind &
Fire founder Maurice White on kalimba. Erick and Mondrek Muchena add a
taste of Zimbabwe amid the dusty rhythms of "Taireva". To be fair, Tom
Middleton already picked the Peddlers' sub-Sinatra crooner "On a Clear
Day You Can See Forever" for another compilation series, Family's
The Trip, but this song remains the only good argument for a
new Austin Powers sequel.
Other tracks fall deeper into novelty territory. Elsie Mae and the
barrel-voiced Walter Jackson each turn in powerful performances, but
their material-- a tepid "Rescue Me" knock-off and an overwrought soul
weeper, respectively-- explains their lack of wider fame. It's hard to
say what Belle & Sebastian were thinking when they mashed up Johnny
Cash's mariachi-laced "Ring of Fire" with the West Kingston skank of
the Ethiopians' "Freeman", but Butch Cassidy Sound System's "Cissy
Strut" works with the classic Meters tune.
Where the compilation intermittently succeeds is in building a foggy,
buzzed late-night atmosphere, true to its title. Rehash's opening
"Gratuitous Theft in the Rain" sets the scene with David Axelrod-like
loops, bringing to mind Rjd2, whose heartbreaking
Deadringer hidden track and single "Here's What's Left" also appears. Madlib's Lootpack offers the slinky "Questions". A dancefloor
rendering of the Stylistics' "People Make The World Go Round" by
Paperclip People, aka Carl Craig, achieves a futuristic Herbertian
sheen that almost transcends its smooth-jazz sax. Contrast that with
Novi Singers' Polish-language vocal jazz. The electronic textures of
Múm's "Green Grass of Tunnel" and Space Jam's 1998 12-inch "Let Your
Conscience Be Your Guidance" prove even more immersive.
No worries, a few tracks also conjure the band's own sound. On "Get
Thy Bearings", from 1968's Hurdy Gurdy Man, unlikely
indie-yuppie precursor Donovan floats his fey, Murdoch-like vocals
atop jazzy instrumentals fit for Astral Weeks, which was
released the same year. Big Star's "Watch the Sunrise", from 1972's #1 Record shares
the gawky acoustic glow of "Mayfly" or "I Don't Love Anyone". Stereolab melds "Eleanor Rigby" strings and
joyously fuzzy guitars on 1993 touchstone "French Disko". Steve Miller Band's "Fly Like an Eagle" sounds kinda like how haters
described The Life Pursuit, except this time it really is
flatulent mid-70s astro-blooz, which no amount of so-unhip-it's-hip
trend-speculating (BTW sooo unhip) can salvage.
So it goes: Eclecticism and obscurantism provide the tale of the tape
in record-collector apparatus-measuring contests. By this standard,
Belle & Sebastian's LateNightTales is a prodigious success.
The band's lone recording here, a breezy, overlookable cover of
"Casaco Marron" by Evinha-- a member of Brazilian a cappella group
Trio Esperanca-- seals the victory, pyrrhic as Plutarch. Belle
and Sebastian's fan culture may have always encouraged vinyl
fetishism, but the misplaced machismo in this nugget-flaunting display
seems gauche given the delicate wit of the band's original
compositions. Dudes, you're not losing your edge.
-Marc Hogan, March 2, 2006