Close Menu
voxmusicmagazine.com
    What's Hot

    The Moshville Times – Festival Review: DesertFest London 2026 – various venues in Camden Town, London (15th – 17th May 2026)

    May 23, 2026

    Hue And Cry

    May 23, 2026

    Exclusive Southend Film Festival interview with Doggerland: The Dead & The Lonely Co-Writer-Director Adam McHattie • Blazing Minds

    May 23, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    voxmusicmagazine.com
    • Home
    • ROCK
    • R&B
    • METAL
    • COUNTRY
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • HIP HOP
    • POP
    • ELECTRONIC
    • MOVIES
    • CONTACT
      • LEGAL STUFF
    voxmusicmagazine.com
    Home»POP»Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review
    POP

    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review

    AdminBy AdminApril 14, 2026
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review


    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live ReviewBelle & Sebastian
    Albert Hall, Manchester
    11th and 12th April 2026

    The indie icons celebrate the thirtieth anniversaries of Tigermilk and If You’re Feeling Sinister with two shows in Manchester

    Just before Belle & Sebastian take the stage in Manchester for the first of two nights at the Albert Hall, there’s a visit from a ghost of the band’s past. Stuart David, founder and former bassist, narrates a short film on the making of their debut album, Tigermilk, and delivers a verdict on the early recording sessions far more damning than you might expect from somebody so softly spoken; hey were, he says, “genuinely awful – muddy, flat and sloppy.”

    He does concede, though, that the group had a “slightly shambolic magic” about them. That was thirty years ago, after they formed at Stow College in Glasgow; David met frontman Stuart Murdoch on a government-funded course for unemployed musicians, something that neatly underlines how different an era it was. 1996 was their halcyon year. Most bands never make one masterpiece, let alone two, and it is rarer still – practically unheard of – for them to both be released in the same calendar year. June 1996 saw the release of Tigermilk and If You’re Feeling Sinister followed four months later. Both are classics.

    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review

    A decade ago, they played the albums in full over two nights at the royal Albert Hall in London, to celebrate their twentieth anniversaries. The second of those shows took place on the day of the Brexit referendum. Ten years later, Britain’s standing in the world is diminished but Belle & Sebastian’s is not; as indie icons, they retain a global fanbase, and are now taking 2016’s one-off concept to several continents, playing two nights in each city to cover both albums. With a European run already wrapped up and having again played the Royal Albert Hall earlier this week, they now return to Manchester’s non-royal equivalent for a celebration of the good old days.

    It is a fitting city in which for them to reflect upon the passing of time. Tigermilk was released nine days before the IRA bombed Manchester, fuelling regeneration and accelerating gentrification in the city centre. From the stage, Murdoch marvels at the nearby cluster of new skyscrapers, and notes that “everybody wants to move here.” Belle & Sebastian, too, are much-changed; whilst the current seven-piece lineup retains five of the six members named on the back cover of Tigermilk, they are a now a sharp, polished live outfit, and have been for decades. These shows are a far cry from their first two-night stand in Manchester, just yards away at the Town Hall in 1997 – those gigs, performed in the round, came at a time when they seldom appeared live. They were, by all accounts, a disaster, beset by technical problems: “wanky, half-arsed, cack-handed and utterly insulting amateurism,” wrote a decidedly unimpressed NME.

    On that evidence, their gradual transition into slick, tight live proposition was by no means guaranteed, one that is of a piece with their gravitation towards higher production values and a more polished sound since 2003’s Dear Catastrophe Waitress. Up until that point, most of the band’s material was recorded in the west Glasgow church hall above which Murdoch was living. Whilst Tigermilk is presented with warmth and sonic richness on night one, backed by brass and cello, it retains some of the ramshackle charm that David was talking about in its breezy melodies. Plus, the idiosyncrasies of Murdoch’s songwriting remain enthralling, with a focus on kitchen sink storytelling and the minutiae of everyday life that so fascinated him as he emerged from a brutal, years-long struggle with ME.

    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review

    It seemed to imbue him with a superpower; the ability to conjure swooning poetry from the smallest of details. We Rule The School sees him craft a gorgeously sad piano ballad around a piece of graffiti he spotted. Mary Jo does something similar, as he spins an evocative imagined backstory of isolation for its title character. His lyrics are often arch and playful, and the songs that match that energy musically are the ones that go over best with the Saturday night crowd. There’s the irresistible She’s Losing It, a simple bit of storytelling that segues impressively seamlessly into exploration of sexual identity, and Electronic Renaissance, one of the great outliers in the band’s catalogue, a groovy, synth-driven odyssey that asserted the band’s singular approach early on – “you go disco, and I’ll go my way.”

    Whilst it’s often been suggested that their overlapping gestation means that Tigermilk and If You’re Feeling Sinister could effectively be considered a double album, two sides of the same coin, night two demonstrates that the latter has an identity all its own. It wanders down entirely different musical avenues, like when opener The Stars Of Track And Field builds to a freewheeling, Velvet Underground-inspired climax, or when guitarist Stevie Jackson rips through a thrilling harmonica solo to close Me And The Major. There are piercingly personal moments (the lesser-spotted The Boy Done Wrong Again) and mischievous studies of sexual politics (Seeing Other People). The title track might be their finest ever moment, its richly-drawn characters driven to the brink of suicide by a mixture of ennui, longing, loneliness, lapsed faith and lack of purpose. “The reviews called this a mini-LP when it came out,” says Murdoch indignantly, a notion dispelled by this performance of it. It is a giant of modern British indie.

    Each night is suffixed with a second set of fan favourites, whereby we get the present-day Belle and Sebastian in their purest form. Untethered from the albums’ track listings, they slalom through styles, the only through-line being that the band are unabashedly themselves. They celebrate their endearing nerdiness, especially when Jackson presents an uptempo rework of Chickfactor, his paean to the 1990s zone of the same name that was a bible of leftfield indie pop, or when Murdoch kneels before the crowd to sing Piazza, New York Catcher, which couches a love song within his the terminology of his beloved baseball.

    Belle & Sebastian: Albert Hall, Manchester – Live Review

    The frontman is on particularly excitable form. A churchgoer who effusively relates his Sunday morning meeting with the Bishop of Bolton to the crowd, he is at home in this old Wesleyan chapel, often venturing into the crowd to deliver the softly anthemic Dress Up In You or the slinky dance pop of Stay Loose from among his congregation. Only the obligatory stage invasion for their signature song, The Boy With The Arab Strap, seems set in stone; elsewhere, the second sets are hugely varied, and thus an accurate reflection of the band in 2026. They paint with every colour on the indie pop palette.

    If there were to be a minor nit-pick from the diehards, it would be that the second sets at those Royal Albert Hall shows ten years ago celebrated the embarrassment of non-album riches from their early years, digging out deep cuts from EPs like Dog On Wheels, 3…6…9 Seconds Of Light, Lazy Line Painter Jane and This Is Just A Modern Rock Song. The title tracks from the latter two make the encores at these latest shows – albeit the second of them in abridged form – but in the main, these are greatest hits sets. That’s fitting, though, given that the band are now playing to multi-generational audiences; there are clearly some fans in the room on both nights attending their first ever Belle and Sebastian show, and others who have several dozen under their belts. The electric atmosphere is a testament to them being brought together by the same thing – the wonderful songs Murdoch wrote for those two 1996 records, elegant and literate and full of heart. On Get Me Away from Here, I’m Dying, a track he wrote whilst despairing at the state of the music scene, he sings “nobody writes them like they used to, so it may as well be me.” Boy, did he.

    ~

    Belle & Sebastian can be found at their Facebook|Instagram|website

    Words byJoe Goggins: find him on Xhere

    Photos from the April 12th show by Reece Pinches. You can find Reece on Instagram

    A Plea From Louder Than War

    Louder Than War is run by a small but dedicated independent team, and we rely on the small amount of money we generate to keep the site running smoothly. Any money we do get is not lining the pockets of oligarchs or mad-cap billionaires dictating what our journalists are allowed to think and write, or hungry shareholders. We know times are tough, and we want to continue bringing you news on the most interesting releases, the latest gigs and anything else that tickles our fancy. We are not driven by profit, just pure enthusiasm for a scene that each and every one of us is passionate about.

    To us, music and culture are eveything, without them, our very souls shrivel and die. We do not charge artists for the exposure we give them and to many, what we do is absolutely vital. Subscribing to one of our paid tiers takes just a minute, and each sign-up makes a huge impact, helping to keep the flame of independent music burning! Please click the button below to help.

    John Robb – Editor in Chief

    PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO LTW

    View Original Article Here

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Previous ArticleWacken announce Sabaton as final headliner for this years 35th anniversary celebrations
    Next Article Cant Live With It, Cant Live Without It: Chris Smither

    Related Posts

    Hue And Cry

    May 23, 2026

    Thin Lear: Many Disappeared – Album Review

    May 22, 2026

    Eli Expands Stage Girl With Deluxe Album Not A Dream Anymore

    May 22, 2026

    Stephanie Babirak Reimagines Moon River With Dark Cinematic Harp-Pop

    May 22, 2026
    LATEST POSTS

    The Moshville Times – Festival Review: DesertFest London 2026 – various venues in Camden Town, London (15th – 17th May 2026)

    May 23, 2026

    Hue And Cry

    May 23, 2026

    Exclusive Southend Film Festival interview with Doggerland: The Dead & The Lonely Co-Writer-Director Adam McHattie • Blazing Minds

    May 23, 2026

    Kojey Radical @ The Royal Albert Hall (20.05.26)

    May 23, 2026

    Exclusive Interview with Debt Meat Writer-Director Benji Edward • Blazing Minds

    May 22, 2026

    DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH: Flowananda – First Breath

    May 22, 2026

    ALBUM SALES (week 21, 2026): Drake, Drake, Drake, Giveon & more!

    May 22, 2026
    Archives
    POPULAR POSTS

    The Moshville Times – Festival Review: DesertFest London 2026 – various venues in Camden Town, London (15th – 17th May 2026)

    May 23, 2026

    Hue And Cry

    May 23, 2026

    Exclusive Southend Film Festival interview with Doggerland: The Dead & The Lonely Co-Writer-Director Adam McHattie • Blazing Minds

    May 23, 2026

    Kojey Radical @ The Royal Albert Hall (20.05.26)

    May 23, 2026
    About Us

    Welcome to Vox Music Magazine — where music lives and breathes. Whether you're chasing the rush of a surprise album drop, keeping up with breaking artist news, or uncovering the deeper stories behind the songs you love, you're exactly where you need to be. This is more than just a magazine — it's a space built for people who feel music, not just hear it.

    We cover every corner of the music world, from global chart-toppers to underground gems waiting to be discovered. Hip-hop to rock, pop to electronic, R&B to country — no genre is off-limits, and no story is too small if it matters to the culture. Whether you're a casual listener or a die-hard fan, there’s always something here for you.

    Our passionate team of writers brings you the latest news, honest reviews, exclusive interviews, and sharp industry insight — updated daily to keep you ahead of the curve. We don’t just report on music, we celebrate it, question it, and explore what makes it move people.

    So pull up a seat, turn up the volume, and dive in. This isn’t just where you read about music — it’s where you belong.

    © 2026 Vox Music Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.