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Named after a town on the Isle of Lewis in Scotland's Outer
Hebrides, English indie pop outfit Stornoway's breezy debut blends
folk-infused, dewy eyed, twenty-something romanticism with rainy
Brit-pop, and while the results can be hit or miss, Beachcomber's
Windowsill is the kind of calling card you'll want to keep in your
wallet. Vocalist Brian Briggs, who sports a gentle croon that falls
somewhere in between James' Tim Booth, the Stone Roses' Ian Brown,
and Belle and Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch, is more concerned with
daydreaming through the verdant summer countryside and the ancient
spires of his native Oxford than he is anything close to rock
posturing. Over the course of 11 tracks, his soft musings are given
equally gentle (and tasteful) credence by the band. Beachcomber's
Windowsill is frontloaded by its two best cuts, the instantly
likeable "Zorbing" and the goofy but sweet "I Saw You Blink." Both
tracks convey the innocence of love and the heartache that hides
behind it without coming off as cloying, but by the time the
listener reaches "Boats and Trains" near the album's midpoint, it's
hard not to want the narrator to just get on one and go find a girl
that's not covered head to toe in red flags. ~ James Christopher
Monger
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