Belle and Sebastian came together in
Glasgow,
Scotland in 1994 after vocalist Stuart Murdoch and bassist Stuart David met on a programme for unemployed musicians called Beatbox, funded by
Stow College. In 1996, the pair reportedly enlisted the first four musicians they came across at the city's Grosvenor Café, settling on a line-up of Murdoch, David, guitarist Stevie Jackson, drummer Richard Colburn, keyboardist Chris Geddes, and cellist Isobel Campbell. Their initial performances took places at venues such as church crypts, libraries, and house parties. Concurrently, Colburn, who shared a flat with David at the time, attended a music business course at Stow, run by
Alan Rankine of
the Associates. The end goal of the course was to take two songs from the class and record and release them through Rankine's record label
Electric Honey. Colburn provided a demo tape Murdoch and David had recorded titled
Rhode Island (later released as the
Dog on Wheels EP). The college was extremely impressed and chose to support them in creating a full album. The band subsequently spent three days recording, finishing with an album's worth of songs. Murdoch recalls that the group was still quite loose knit at the time
Tigermilk was recorded and that the full ensemble had not played together before getting into the studio. Many of the supporting instrument parts were shaped as the group recorded. After recording, though, "we were a group, no question." ==Composition==