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Go-Betweens
aim to strike public chord
Dave
DiMartino Billboard, 14 January 1989
At
the end of the day, what do good reviews really mean? In the case
of the Go-Betweens, whose debut Capitol album 16 Lovers Lane came
10 years into their career, they have in one sense meant everything.
"Put
it this way," says Grant McLennan, guitarist, vocalist, and
group co-founder. "If we hadn't sold a whole lot of records
up to this point and we hadn't had a good critical reception,
then the band wouldn't be together. Because no record company
would have given us a new deal. And record companies over the world
have been giving us deals because of our critical acclaim--not because
we sell records."
Ideally,
the group's track record with the public will change with 16
Lovers Lane. Like the group's other albums, 16 Lovers Lane
has won critical praise since its release in November. But in many
ways it is also the band's most commercial album to date.
Helping
matters is the group's new tie to Capitol, which in the latter
half of 1988 demonstrated a strong commitment to alternative music,
backing such bands as the Cocteau Twins, Lloyd Cole & the Commotions,
Marc Almond, Richard Thompson, and Skinny Puppy. The label promises
releases soon by Martin Stephenson & the Daintees and Pink Floyd
founder Syd Barrett, among others.
"It
is good timing," McLennan says, "because you can feel
that the record company is changing, and they're going to be
quite hungry in a way to break new acts. We're not new, and
neither are the Cocteau Twins, but we are to the American market.
The label is going to try to sell those records, so it means they're
going to get behind them."
In
fact, the Go-Betweens have had three previous U.S. albums: Metal
And Shells, a compilation of material from their second and third
albums, released on PVC, and 1986's Liberty Belle And The Black
Diamond Express and Tallulah, both out here on Beggars Banquet/RCA.
The
band has done a lot moving--and not just from one label to another.
McLennan co-founded the group in 1977 with singer/guitarist Robert
Forster at Brisbane Univ. After that, the Go-Betweens relocated
first to Melbourne, Australia, then to London, where they are now
based once again.
McLennan
thinks their return Down Under had a great effect on the songs on
16 Lovers Lane.
"I
had a vision for this record," he says. "It was, in some
way, just sitting down with acoustic guitars in sunlight, writing
songs, and then making a record. It was as simple as that. And I
get that vibe from the record, a summer feeling.
"It
was 10 years since Robert and I had started the band, and we had
moved to Australia, where we began. And it was a spiritual thing:
Robert and I felt we wanted to get back together and try to touch
on some of the things that first brought us together just
that period of what it was like when we were first working together.
It's been 10 years, and I don't know what's ahead."
In
those 10 years, the band has made several personnel changes. Drummer
Lindy Morrison has been a constant since 1980, Amanda Brown, who
plays violin, oboe, and guitar and sings backing vocals, came aboard
for 1987's Tallulah; and new bassist John Wilsteed has replaced
McLennan and Forster's old Brisbane friend Robert Vickers,
who decided to leave the Go-Betweens to move to New York.
While
in the U.S. in late '87, McLennan, Forster, and Brown played
acoustic trio sets in LA and New York as a preview of a full-fledged
band tour of the U.S. slated to start early this year. With that
exposure, the Go-Betweens may soon escape the familiar plight of
being loved by the critics and unheard by the masses.
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