Happy Secret collects a number of recordings made by Australia's
Lucksmiths in 1998, a year during which they toured Europe with
Belle & Sebastian and evidently fine-tuned certain elements of their sound, as well. The recordings are certainly the band's best work to that point, dropping the goofy, whimsical attitudes that occasionally hampered
A Good Kind of Nervous and concentrating instead on evocative acoustic pop. This move is a very, very good thing. Many of the songs on
Happy Secret recall
Billy Bragg's best late-'80s work (the lighter side of
Don't Try This at Home), or some of the songwriting on
the Smiths' self-titled debut, and the record's avoidance of cheekily clever lyrics or overly bouncy song constructions calls for the band's music to be taken as seriously as it probably deserves.
The Lucksmiths' intimate, organic sound (acoustic guitars, lightly brushed drums, and plenty of tasteful vocal harmonies) assures their appeal to
Belle & Sebastian's many fans, but the giant leap
Happy Secret makes from
A Good Kind of Nervous should prove the band to be much more than some sort of
Belle & Sebastian replacement. ~ Nitsuh Abebe