Skip to Content
Talkhouse home
Talkhouse home
Music

Stuart Murdoch (Belle and Sebastian) Talks with Suki Waterhouse on the Talkhouse Podcast

Peptides, Banksy, and the indignity of pooping on tour

On this week’s Talkhouse Podcast we’ve got a pair of songwriters from relatively similar locales but different generations who also happened to record a song together that’s finally coming out: Stuart Murdoch and Suki Waterhouse.

Stuart Murdoch is the primary force behind the delightfully wry and smart Scottish band Belle and Sebastian, which shyly emerged from Glasgow in the mid-'90s but quickly became one of those touchstone indie bands—or as Waterhouse puts it in this chat, a legacy band. Belle and Sebastian have released a dozen terrific albums over the years, and they’re still capable of surprising their devoted fanbase. The band’s latest, Late Developers, was released early this year, hot on the heels of the band’s 11th album, A Bit of Previous. If you haven’t availed yourself of the band’s charms in recent years, this new one is a great place to jump back in.

Suki Waterhouse is probably best known as an actor and model—you may have seen her in the music-focused Amazon Prime series Daisy Jones & The Six recently—but she’s been passionate about music forever as well. Her debut album came out last year on Sub Pop; it’s called I Can’t Let Go, and it’s perfect for fans of Fiona Apple or Lana Del Ray. And music isn’t just a side thing for Waterhouse; she jumped right in the van, as you’ll hear, to tour her songs as soon as her acting gig allowed it. She also recorded a song with Belle and Sebastian a few years back, which has finally been released as a Sub Pop single, and it’s the reason we ended up here together. The song is called “Every Day’s a Lesson in Humility.” Check it out.

Waterhouse and Murdoch hadn’t seen in each other in a while, but they picked up the conversation like old friends, talking about breakfast, peptides, a funny nickname that Murdoch got when he started his short-lived career as a roadie, and the difficulties of pooping as a touring musician. Yes, you read that right. We also hear about some incredible Los Angeles advice that Murdoch got way back when. It’s a charming chat, and I hope you enjoy it.

Thanks for listening to the Talkhouse Podcast, and thanks to Suki Waterhouse and Stuart Murdoch for chatting. If you liked what you heard, please follow Talkhouse on your favorite podcasting platform, and check out the many wonderful written pieces and other goings-on at Talkhouse.com. This episode was produced by Myron Kaplan, and the Talkhouse theme is composed and performed by the Range. See you next time!

(Photo Credit: left, Marisa Privitera Murdoch; right, Tom Mitchell; Edited by: Keenan Kush.)

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Music

Explore Music

Mood Board: Criteria’s SEIZE!

Stephen Pedersen on how his garden, his guitars, and the death of his closest friend shaped his new record.

June 5, 2026

Sook-Yin Lee Talks with John Cameron Mitchell on the Talkhouse Podcast

 "People in the same room is a balm and a medicine and an antidepressant and an understanding that we are still fucking human."

June 4, 2026

Anna Thérèse Witenberg and Jack Whitescarver Talk the Physicality of Music

The choreographer and the musician catch up about their creative upbringings, electronic music, and more.

Poliça and Circuit des Yeux Tap into the Rawness

Channy Leaneagh and Haley Fohr catch up about songwriting and more ahead of their show at Knockdown Center.

CORRECTION: Morgan Wallen Did Not Flip A Piano

A special report from Adam Schatz on this latest incident of "Nord Shame."

June 2, 2026

Pleasure Systems and Emily Wells Want to Know Each Other Forever

The friends catch up about irony in music, Fire Island, the queer lineage of their work, and Leave It in the Sand.

June 2, 2026