This page has been archived and is no longer updated.Find out more about page archiving.

Left With PicturesBeyond Our MeansReview

Album. Released 2009.  

BBC Review

Lush pocket symphonies both lyrically arch and stunningly tender.

Rob Crossan2009

Twinkling pianos hop-scotch around this debut long-play collection of tunes from an East London five-piece whose folkish-leanings have been more fully explored on this album, after the torch song melancholy that dominated their previous EPs.

Her Father’s Nose is a beautifully realised jaunt around faded memories: “Our imaginary meetings are over cigarettes and wine / I think we should have met in California in 69” is a typically witty and playfully affecting line. Lyrical duties are shared between the group on this brief album, but its sole songwriter Stuart Barber’s voice that really delights – a sonorous and woozy sound that dazzles on The Flight Paths, a shimmering lullaby of melodica, piano and softly purring violin with lyrics that talk of being “scared of the sky, but next to you I have no fear”.

‘Chamber pop’ is how this album will doubtless be described, with all its connotations of tweeness. But Beyond Our Means possesses a sound that feels like it should be seeping up from the bowels of the servants’ quarters in Gosford Park. There’s an almost Edwardian crispness to Barber’s vocals, a man who can enunciate lyrical similes as “I must keep up my double standards, like a new Stone Henge” without sounding ridiculously gauche.

This is a record that takes the tweed-donning primness of early Divine Comedy and the voracious book worm tendencies of the first Belle and Sebastian album to create a charming patchwork of tunes that defy a low budget to create lush pocket symphonies both lyrically arch and stunningly tender.

Creative Commons Licence This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. If you choose to use this review on your site please link back to this page.