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Great British Hopes: Butcher Boy

Butcher Boy

Great British Hopes celebrates new British music that is really bloody good.

As I was preparing to write this, I came across a fact that threw this piece into question. I tend to write these Great British Hopes pieces as a way of talking up the absolute best from all of the new bands I hear. Doing some research on though, I discovered that they have been playing for 11 years. Which begs the question of whether they can really be hailed as a hope for the future of music. I decided to go with it though, as regardless of their longevity as a band, this is just too damn good.

have floated around my mind for a while now. A Drowned In Sound review here, the odd promo email there. Even with that though, I never paid them much attention. I got the impression of another Scottish miserablist, and really, a man who already has a complete Arab Strap collection probably can’t take much more. Then the magic phrase appeared. “Compared to ” read the email, and I was in*.

Not that the end result is Belle & Sebastian exactly. Sure, you can hear those elements in the strings, but this is a band that is more down to the earth. Earnest lyrics sung out by someone who has listened to a lot of Smiths records but doesn’t quite know how to be . No, if I were to place this on this indie pop landscape, I’d slot it alongside recent Swedish offerings like or . The sound is certainly British, but it likes to travel.

This kind of indie pop seems to be short supply in the UK at the moment. may have formed 11 years ago, but with their second album release in three years, one gets a sense that they may have finally found their way.

React or Die will be released in April, but the lovely How Does It Feel To Be Loved? is selling advance copies through their shop right now.


* It occurs that I’ll probably now getting death metal bands mentioning the fact they sound like Belle & Sebastian in their promo emails.

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