• Consequence
  • Music
  • Film
  • TV
  • Heavy
Menu Consequence
Menu Shop Search Newsletter
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Live
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
Advertisement
  • Reviews
  • Album Reviews

Album Review: Belle & Sebastian – The Third Eye Centre

C+

Artists

  • Belle and Sebastian
Dan Caffrey
August 27, 2013 | 12:02am ET

    Halfway through Tigermilk, Belle & Sebastian‘s 1996 debut, the band’s gentle yet acidic baroque pop is interrupted by a flurry of synths pulled straight from the roller rink. It goes on for about five minutes before things return to their regularly scheduled programming. Unsurprisingly titled “Electronic Renaissance”, the track has always been divisive among fans, and for good reason. It’s not that bad of a tune, but the mix is off (Stuart Murdoch sounds like he’s trapped in a well) and, most notably, it sounds nothing like the rest of the album. That being said, musical oddities like “Electronic Renaissance” can often be a creative boon to a larger work (“Within Your Reach” on The Replacements’ Hootenanny comes to mind), so your overall opinion of Tigermilk probably depends on how you feel about its mid-game curveball. The same goes for The Third Eye Centre, Belle & Sebastian’s second collection of b-sides and rarities.

    This time, however, there are three curveballs or, more specifically, remixes. The album even kicks off with one. The Avalanches’ spin on “I’m A Cuckoo” first appeared as a B-side of the song’s single back in 2004, replacing the Thin Lizzy guitar line with flutes (pan- and otherwise) and everything else with accordion, African tribal percussion, and chanting. It’s better than it sounds because, a) The Avalanches know what they’re doing, and b) everything used in the arrangement shows the appropriate age. These are instruments and ideas that, although not representative of a typical Belle & Sebastian song, are by no means outside of Murdoch and Co.’s vintage wheelhouse. The Avalanches didn’t just slap some effects on the track and call it a day.

    Unfortunately, that’s what happens on Miaoux Miaoux’s sort-of reworking of “Your Cover’s Blown” and Richard X’s take on “I Didn’t See It Coming”. The former becomes a cheap runway soundtrack due to a sped-up finale and more (always more) cowbell, while the latter gets the same dark dance treatment as the Mortal Kombat theme. Placed at the one-third and halfway points of a tracklist sprinkled with some of Belle & Sebastian’s strongest non-album material, the remixes end up being the sorest of thumbs.

    Advertisement
    Related Video

    This normally wouldn’t be too big an issue; rarities anthologies are by and large meant to be mixed bags. But 2005’s Push Barman To Open Old Wounds was so rock-solid, so perfect from front to back, that it proved Belle & Sebastian to be capable of intensely discriminate curation. Sequencing several early-era EPs and singles in chronological order made the project feel like a proper album as opposed to an assortment of odds and ends. It also helped that the band never strayed too far from what makes them great. Here though, “Your Cover’s Blown” breaks up the autumnal prep-school charm of “Your Secrets” and the Stevie Jackson-penned “I Took A Long Hard Look”. The same goes for “I Didn’t See It Coming”, which brings down the slinky raga of “The Eighth Station Of The Cross Kebab House” with its electropop-101 keys. Even the surf-rock throwaway “Passion Fruit” creates a lull after the Simon and Garfunkel-isms of “(I Believe In) Travelin’ Light” (Jackson as Garfunkel) and “Stop, Look And Listen” (Murdoch as Simon).

    Given the sheer number of tracks (19 in total), The Third Eye Centre still has enough FM bliss to satisfy the most casual fan, and obsessives might even dig the genre-shunning experimentation. “Suicide Girl”—a Write About Love outtake that trumps almost everything after that record’s opening track—should appeal to both parties with its new wave hook and classic Belle & Sebastian subject matter: a narrator pining over an outcast, this time a girl who wishes to be on the notorious softcore site. “Heaven In The Afternoon” makes similar use of grim subject matter offset by a sunny arrangement (a Belle & Sebastian staple), with Sarah Martin waxing sentimental about overdosing amidst yacht rock saxophone and strings. There aren’t quite enough of these ringers to bring The Third Eye Centre to the A-game level of …Barman, but they at least make for a decent compilation album. And, some bands aren’t even capable of that.

    Essential Tracks: “I’m A Cuckoo (Avalanches Remix)”, “Suicide Girl”, and “Heaven In The Afternoon”

    Advertisement
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit

Artists

  • Belle and Sebastian

Sign up for updates

Subscribe to our email digest and get the latest breaking news in music, film, and television, tour updates, access to exclusive giveaways, and more straight to your inbox.

Advertisement

Popular Stories

Latest Stories

COPINGMECHANISM Album Review

On the Spectacular COPINGMECHANISM, WILLOW Saves Herself

October 6, 2022

Slipknot The End So Far album review

Slipknot's THE END, SO FAR Is One for the Maggots and Beyond: Review

September 30, 2022

bjork fossora review

Björk Is as Vibrant as Ever on the Moving, Earthy Fossora

September 30, 2022

Yeah Yeah Yeahs cool it down

The Anxiety and Ambition of Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Cool It Down

September 28, 2022

Hold the Girl Album Review

On Hold the Girl, Rina Sawayama Epitomizes the Healing Power of Pop Music

September 14, 2022

the mars volta album review

The Mars Volta's Self-Titled Album is a Simpler Yet Wholly Satisfying Return

September 13, 2022

Ozzy Osbourne Patient Number 9 album review

Ozzy Osbourne Is a Bright Light on Star-Studded Album Patient Number 9: Review

September 8, 2022

sudan archives natural brown prom queen

Natural Brown Prom Queen Is Sudan Archives' Brilliant Homecoming

September 8, 2022

Advertisement

News

  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture

Reviews

  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews

Features

  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week

Live

  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear

Heavy

  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts

More

  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Wellness
  • Giveaways

Other sites

  • Heavy Consequence
  • Consequence Media
  • Modern Drummer
  • About
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertising
  • Work For Us
  • Terms
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information

Download our app

  • Get it on the App Store
  • Get it on Google Play
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Consequence
Current story

Album Review: Belle & Sebastian – The Third Eye Centre

Menu Shop Search Newsletter
Consequence
News
  • News
  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture
Reviews
  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews
Features
  • All Features
  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week
Live
  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear
Podcasts
  • The Opus
  • Kyle Meredith With...
  • Stanning BTS
  • The Story Behind the Song
  • The What
  • Going There with Dr. Mike
  • The Rome and Duddy Show
Videos
  • Interviews
  • Two for the Road
  • First Time I Heard
  • When I Made
  • Battle of the Bandmates
  • Peer 2 Peer
  • Essays
  • Fan Theories
Heavy
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts
  • Premieres
  • Culture
  • Beyond the Boys Club
  • Mining Metal
Shop
  • Shop
  • Giveaways

Follow Consequence

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Close
Close