Camera Obscura- Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi, Merge Records 2004

Let’s first acknowledge the two-ton pachyderm in the room. Camera Obscura is a seven piece from Glasgow. Yes, like the other seven piece from Glasgow with a touch more name recognition. Stuart Murdoch (familiar?) produced the stellar single “Eighties Fan”-including the sweeping string arrangements-and has been romantically linked to front woman Tracyanne Campbell. Did I mention that Richard Colburn once warmed the drum throne? Outside of media’s overwhelming tendency to address the likeness to Belle and Sebastian, Camera Obscura is much more than a little brother in the shadows of a relative indie rock behemoth. Steeped in the early rock traditions of Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound, Camera Obscura brews a blend of lush and traditional indie-pop; dusted with a touch of twee. Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi is the perfect soundscape to a post-brunch Sunday spent flipping through review copies at the Strand while eyeing fellow bed-headed lit-crit fans through the lenses of your tortoise shell frames.

The seeds for Camera Obscura were sowed in the dorm of songwriters Tracyanne Campbell and John Henderson, who first collaborated while collegiate cohorts. They were then joined by Gavin Dunbar on bass and autoharp. Colburn provided percussion for initial live performances and was later replaced by Lee Thomson in 2000. The current incarnation of the band also includes Kenny McKeeve on guitar, Carey Lander on keys, and Nigel Baillie on trumpet.

Once limited to the import section of well-stocked indie music emporiums, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi (which was first released on Spain’s Elefant Records in 2001) is now available wherever you do your real time music browsing and purchasing. The success of Underachievers Try Harder (who’s single “Teenager” appeared in the WB’s Gilmore Girls) firmed up the bands reputation in the states and prompted Merge to grant a proper US release to their debut. The album, engineered by Geoff Allan, who has worked with the likes of Mogwai and Teenage Fanclub, offers hints of the band’s lyrical beginnings and displays the musical foundation built upon in their stellar sophomore release. Bolstered by two bonus tracks (“Shine Like A New Pin”, and “Let’s Go Bowling”), Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi is an excellent introduction to the band.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Temple A. Stark

    Nov 30, 2004 at 12:46 pm

    I got this up on Advance.net

    Here's one link to one of the ADV pages.

    You'll be there, just scroll down :)

    You might check that I didn't screw up the Biggest Bluest and Biggest Obscura references. I put the link to the "other" album up there because that had a pretty picture to go with.

  • 2 - Temple A. Stark

    Nov 30, 2004 at 12:49 pm

    Oh and call me the densest person on the planet but, what other seven piece from Glasgow?

    I can only think of Wet, Wet, Wet but they only had, I think, five Wet ones.

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