Close Menu
voxmusicmagazine.co.uk
    What's Hot

    Something for the weekend: Chicago Just You N Me

    June 26, 2026

    Cybèle – Lovergirl (Single)

    June 26, 2026

    Iron Maiden fans! You can pre-order the official Eddfest programme and museum guide only through the Metal Hammer and Classic Rock online store

    June 26, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    voxmusicmagazine.co.uk
    • Home
    • ROCK
    • R&B
    • METAL
    • COUNTRY
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • HIP HOP
    • POP
    • ELECTRONIC
    • MOVIES
    • CONTACT
      • LEGAL STUFF
    voxmusicmagazine.co.uk
    Home»POP»Belle and Sebastian, If Youre Feeling Sinister, Piece Hall – Review
    POP

    Belle and Sebastian, If Youre Feeling Sinister, Piece Hall – Review

    AdminBy AdminJune 22, 2026
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Belle and Sebastian, If Youre Feeling Sinister, Piece Hall – Review


    Belle and Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister 30th anniversary, Piece Hall – Live ReviewBelle and Sebastian | Saint Etienne
    The Piece Hall, Halifax
    22nd June 2026

    If You’re Feeling Sinister turns 30 this year, the album that took Belle and Sebastian from charming bedroom outliers to the architects of a shadow kingdom of misfits, malcontents, and the unconvinced. Thirty years on, songwriter Stuart Murdoch and his band returned to it in full, alongside support from Saint Etienne, for a sold-out anniversary show at The Piece Hall in Halifax on Sunday night. Thomas Sidwell was there.

    Arguably the high point of their back catalogue, Belle and Sebastian played the album front to back on a glorious Sunday evening at The Piece Hall, joined by support from Saint Etienne. For plenty in the crowd, this wasn’t an album they grew to like over time; it was one that soundtracked a very specific stretch of their lives, tangled up with first heartbreaks, dead-end jobs, and long bus rides home. Hearing it again decades later, with older heads and clearer eyes, only sharpened that connection. What became obvious over the course of the night wasn’t nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake; it was just how much weight this record still carries for the people who grew up inside it, or even, living the life of the characters.

    The night had already been set up nicely by Saint Etienne, who drew a full house into a kind of warm, shuffling consensus before Belle and Sebastian had taken the stage. Like A Motorway sounds like it was beamed in from a more optimistic decade, and He’s On The Phone got an early outdoor crowd moving in a way support slots rarely manage.

    Belle and Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister 30th anniversary, Piece Hall – Live ReviewBelle and Sebastian‘s Murdoch opened with The Stars of Track and Field and Seeing Other People, and straight away the choice to play the album in sequence made its case. There’s a found logic to Sinister’s tracklist that gets lost when bands cherry-pick favourites. Me and the Major kept the energy bubbling along, blues harp and all, before Like Dylan in the Movies came in raucous and a little ragged at the edges, all clattering rhythm section and Murdoch goading the crowd into the kind of chaos the song’s title promises but rarely delivers live.

    It was followed almost immediately by The Fox in the Snow, which did the opposite job entirely. Hushed and fragile, the whole courtyard seemed to hold its breath through a song that’s barely more than a vocal melody and a held chord, and somehow more devastating for it. The two back-to-back said something about what this band can do that a lot of their peers can’t: turn on a dime between racket and quiet without either one feeling like a stunt.

    Get Me Away From Here I’m Dying landed with the kind of singalong fervour that suggested half the crowd had been waiting all night for it. The title track itself, five-plus minutes of doomed characters wandering between churches and confusion, sounded bigger outdoors than it has any business sounding, steel guitar lines catching on the stone walls of the venue.

    Belle and Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister 30th anniversary, Piece Hall – Live ReviewMayfly kept the mood simmering rather than letting it dip, before The Boy Done Wrong Again hit that note that’s somehow both mournful and triumphant, which is about as Belle and Sebastian as a feeling gets. They closed the album out with Judy and the Dream of Horses, and it was a genuine highlight of the night, that lilting, slightly goofy brass interlude landing like a held breath finally let go, the whole courtyard singing it back at the band like a hymn nobody wanted to stop singing.

    What’s been most enjoyable about this band across three decades is how rarely the songwriting curdles into nostalgia act territory, and the second half of the set backed that up. It’s like hanging out with old friends you’ve not seen for a while, and remembering what made you fall in love with them in the first place. A truly pleasant and joyful experience. Another Sunny Day pulled the loudest singalong of the non-Sinister songs, the crowd word-perfect from the first line, no hesitation, no need for Murdoch to coax it out of them. Step Into My Office, Baby brought a welcome jolt of pure pop swagger, all jaunty piano and Murdoch in full smirking-narrator mode, before Reclaim the Night, the night’s lone outing for 2024’s material, proved it could hold its own among the old guard.

    Step Into My Office, Baby brought a welcome jolt of pure pop swagger, all jaunty piano and Murdoch in full smirking-narrator mode, and the crowd lapped it up. They ended on a trio that felt less like an encore than a victory lap: The Boy With The Arab Strap, Dear Catastrophe Waitress, and Sleep The Clock Around sent a Yorkshire crowd home buzzing into the night, well past the point where most outdoor curfews would have shut things down.

    Belle and Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister 30th anniversary, Piece Hall – Live ReviewThere’s a temptation with these full-album-in-sequence anniversary shows to treat them as museum pieces: careful, reverent, a little inert. Belle and Sebastian didn’t make that mistake. The band played If You’re Feeling Sinister like it still had somewhere to go, then spent the rest of the night proving the same was true of everything they’ve written since. Thirty years on, the cult Belle and Sebastian dreamed up is still going strong, and might have even recruited a few more members.

    ~

    Belle and Sebastian Website | Instagram | Facebook

    Words by Thomas Sidwell, more work on his author profilehere

    Photos byPhotos by Frank Ralph; you can find Frank at his website | Instagram| and Facebook

    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 ArticleExclusive AUK Mini-Gig: Sean McConnell
    Next Article Gorillaz, Trueno & SPARKS Live @ Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (20.06.26)

    Related Posts

    Oswald Slain Toasts The Present On Heaven Is The Place

    June 26, 2026

    B52s and DEVO: O2 London – Live Review

    June 25, 2026

    Joanna Coelho Expands Her Rave Sound With Feel The Acid, Duro And Techno EP

    June 25, 2026

    Shoun Shoun: Drip – single review, video premiere & back-catalogue peak

    June 24, 2026
    LATEST POSTS

    Something for the weekend: Chicago Just You N Me

    June 26, 2026

    Cybèle – Lovergirl (Single)

    June 26, 2026

    Iron Maiden fans! You can pre-order the official Eddfest programme and museum guide only through the Metal Hammer and Classic Rock online store

    June 26, 2026

    Rich The Kid – Calling My Line [Video]

    June 26, 2026

    BackRoad Gee ft: Pa Salieu – Spin Your Block (Single)

    June 26, 2026

    Nils Lassen returns with the impressive song, Somersault

    June 26, 2026

    Oswald Slain Toasts The Present On Heaven Is The Place

    June 26, 2026
    Archives
    POPULAR POSTS

    Something for the weekend: Chicago Just You N Me

    June 26, 2026

    Cybèle – Lovergirl (Single)

    June 26, 2026

    Iron Maiden fans! You can pre-order the official Eddfest programme and museum guide only through the Metal Hammer and Classic Rock online store

    June 26, 2026

    Rich The Kid – Calling My Line [Video]

    June 26, 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.