Blogs
Thu Jul 24, 5:35 PM
Thu Jul 24, 5:33 PM
Thu Jul 24, 6:36 PM
Thu Jul 24, 3:43 PM
Thu Jul 24, 9:10 AM
Thu Jul 24, 6:12 AM
Thu Jul 24, 10:36 AM
Wed Jul 23, 11:29 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Rob Trucks
Role Playing
The ballad, and ballads, of Billy Joe Shaver
With a No. 1 album in the UK, the Kings of Leon are all but exiled from Main Street, USA
Let's Get Out of This Country
...to the ball game. Lauding baseball-in-rock's finest moments.
No related articles found
National Features >
City Pages
Minnesota's Tim Pawlenty grooms himself for vice-presidential consideration--by being a jerk.
By Jonathan Kaminsky
Miami New Times
Our reporter sets out in search of a naked lunch.
By Janine Zeitlin
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side: gay or straight?
By Amy Guthrie
Village Voice
At JFK, Erhan Yildirim clears corpses for takeoff.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Camera Obscura
Let's Get Out of This Country
Published on July 13, 2006
After three albums, it's now apparent that Camera Obscura is unfortuitously fated to revolve as a satellite in the Belle & Sebastian orbit. Like B&S, the six-piece outfit hails from Glasgow, and the band's lyrics -- courtesy of lead Obscurean Tracyanne Campbell -- are, like those of head Belle Stuart Murdoch, by turns coy (We can find a cathedral city / You can convince me I am pretty) and culturally literate (consider "Dory Previn," an ode to the cult singer-songwriter and shock-therapy survivor). Furthermore, both bands tilt unmistakably toward the twee axis, a sound redolent of simpler times (references to "the bee's knees" and so forth). But despite this genre gerrymandering, there is much to celebrate on Let's Get Out of This Country. From a well-made bed of inspired melancholia (see "Tears for Affairs," "Come Back Margaret," or "Country Mile") springs both "Lloyd, I'm Ready to Be Heartbroken" and the title track, two of the most precociously charming, Motown-spirited, string-sectioned sing-alongs of the past several years -- sweet enough to entice, yet sufficiently sticky to escape disposability.