Camera Obscura at the Bottleneck

Camera Obscura took the stage Wednesday night
before an enthusiastic and seemingly epic crowd that stretched
beneath the Bottleneck’s low ceilings to the pool tables near the
bar’s end. For those unfamiliar,
the band defies that forlorn moodiness which seems to typify so many
other Glaswegian acts in favor of a more jangly, Belle & Sebastian-like approach
(another Glasgow act). Despite an upbeat sound, Camera Obscura’s songs are drenched in lovelorn romance, so often concerning that
unnamed second-person, “you.”
The band jumped immediately into their newest album’s
titular track “My Maudlin Career,” a dreamy number powered by lead singer
Tracyanne’s woozy voice and complemented by Carey’s piano riffs that floated
over spritely drumming. Camera
Obscura, though so often waxing romantic, does so slyly. The sarcasm is evident in her admitting
to hurting an ex’s feelings, but yeah, they were worth protecting.