Showing posts with label Go-Betweens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Go-Betweens. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Robert Forster in conversation with Andrew Stafford

I went along tonight to a free event at Queensland State Library where I saw Robert Forster in conversation with Andrew Stafford. The pair were talking about the legacy of Grant McLennan. McLennan died in 2006 and he and Forster were the creative heart of one of Brisbane’s finest gift to music: The Go-Betweens. Interviewer Stafford’s book “Pig City: from the Saints to Savage Garden” is a musically history of Brisbane, the city Forster and McLennan called home either side of a long stint in exile.

Stafford began by asking was their early move to London done for creative reasons. Forster said it was because they could finally see the bands they were reading about in the 1970s. They saw the Cure at the Marquee, Scritti Politti, The Fall, Gang of Four, Bauhaus and Simple Minds. They saw the Pretenders the week “Brass in Pocket” reached number one. Forster called it a crash course in musical education. “Interesting bands would only come to Brisbane every four months or so, but in London we were seeing bands three or four times a week,” he said. “It would have taken us five years to do in Brisbane”.

Stafford said it was almost a cliché now that bands no longer had to leave Brisbane to be successful. Forster disagreed and said not enough young Australian bands head overseas. “I could think of several bands who could do with six months in Berlin, Thailand or South America” he said, with more than a passing nod to Nick Cave’s Sao Paolo period.

Stafford then asked about Forster’s return to Brisbane in 1992 after eleven years away and whether he thought of it as a transitional phase of the city. Forster said he arrived back with no set of preconceptions. He met up with the members of local band Custard and its alter ego COW (Country or Western). Both bands were the brainchild of James McCormack. Forster said their music was like the Go-Betweens’ late 70s material and meeting McCormack was like “running into a younger version of myself”. But, he said, they made music together on Forster’s Calling From A Country Phone album in 1994 despite the fact “I was 34 and they were all 22 or 24”.

Stafford then asked Forster about the newest album The Evangelist, his first solo recording in 12 years and which was recorded in London. Forster said he wanted it to sound different. He wanted “big, clean sounds” with “piano, voices, acoustic guitar, no drums”. Forster said it was a return to the familiar London environment he worked in during the 80s. “London has always been good to me,” he said. “I had good recording times there”.

The album includes three songs written by McLennan. Forster said he first heard the songs in February 2006; three months before McLennan died. After they played the songs they were talking about Audrey Riley, a British cellist the pair met in London in the 1980s. Her career took off after she did the strings for their fourth album “Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express”. Forster invited her to do the strings on the new album on McLennan’s song “Demon Days”.

Stafford asked how difficult was the album to record in the studio where he did so much work with his former partner. Forster admitted he was worried by that, “but there were no scary moments, I mean pianos never suddenly started playing!” But it was difficult to get over the death of his professional partner of 30 years. “Part of it felt “like madness, but I’m glad we did it,” he said. “I thought it was going to get all ‘stoopy’, but it didn’t. Process takes over”. That musical process helped Forster get over his loss and record the album, entitled “The Evangelist”.

Stafford asked him to name his five favourite McLennan songs. Forster named seven: The Wrong Road, Cattle and Cane, Bye Bye Pride, Magic in Here, Finding You, Quiet Heart and The Clock. This creativity befits a man whose death was mourned in NSW’s parliament. Forster said McLennan had the gift of finding a new melody for basic chords. He remembers going around to McLennan’s house in New Farm where he played Forster the new tune he wrote “Finding You”. It had “great verse, great chorus, and an incredible middle eight,” said Forster, “ I thought: fuck! He nailed it!”

Stafford asked why three of McLennan’s last six songs did not make it to the new album. Forster said he “didn’t get” those songs. “Grant is a different singer to me”, he said. To do his songs justice Forster had to sing in McLennan’s key but these three songs didn’t work. He said he might give two of them away to other performers. One is quite rocky,” he said. “Don’t tell anyone, but I might give that one to Powderfinger!”

Forster said the album had to be true to his partner but there was always a contrast between them. He admitted McLennan could be “tetchy” and hard to work with at times. Telephone conversations would be terse and he could be cruel and cold. “At times you had to reintroduce yourself to him, talk about bands or movies you’d seen, the cricket, anything to get him going again,” he said. McLennan was moody, but “there was truth in that moodiness”.

Forster has brought back bassist Adele Pickvance and drummer Glenn Thompson from the Go Between’s final line-up for the new album. He said both were great friends and he couldn’t imagine making music without them. Adele lives in the Brisbane suburb of Paddington and Forster said she is his first port of call with the songs for the new album. “We’ll meet at ten, have a coffee, talk silly Brisbane rock gossip and then play music,” he said. “Adele played bass and mandolin as I played these new songs”. Forster described the songwriting process as “real music therapy” after Grant died. He will be showcasing songs from the new album (as well as singing McLennan’s own “Finding You”) on his national tour next month. Forster plays the Powerhouse in his home town Friday 15 August.

Forster / McLennan "Bye Bye Pride"

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Grant McLennan

Grant McLennan, one of Australia’s finest singer-songwriters, died in his sleep on Saturday, May 6 2006. He was 48 years old. McLennan was born and raised on a cattle station near the town of Rockhampton in Central Queensland. He formed a fruitful and long lasting musical partnership with Robert Forster when they met as students at Brisbane’s University of Queensland in 1977. They shared interests in poetry, movies and the music of Bob Dylan. Other musical influences were 1960s pop, folk-rock, and the bands Television and the Velvet Underground. They formed a band and called it the Go-Betweens.

McLennan had no musical training and Forster encouraged him to learn the bass guitar. They released their first single in 1978, the Forster composed “Lee Remick.” Initially Robert performed most of the songwriting, vocals and guitar work. But McLennan would soon develop his own style so that a pattern emerged where they shared equally in songwriting and vocals. McLennan was often considered to be the more pop-oriented half of the Go-Betweens' songwriting team, but as Pitchfork stated his work was also tinged with sadness and melancholy. McLennan's 1983 song, Cattle and Cane, a nostalgic reverie about his childhood in rural tropical Queensland, was recently voted by the Australasian Performing Rights Association as one of the 10 greatest Australian songs of all time.

The Go-Betweens became hugely influential media darlings. Their albums attracted much critical acclaim which never translated into large sales. Among the bands that claim the Go-Betweens as an influence are U2, REM, Belle and Sebastian, Franz Ferdinand and Coldplay.

The Go-Betweens moved to London in the early 80s where they produced independent hits as the aforementioned "Cattle and Cane" and "Streets of Your Town" (1988). McLennon shared a flat in Fulham with the singer of another Australian band that had also recently moved to London. He was the Birthday Party’s Nick Cave. After recording six acclaimed albums, Forster and McLennan disbanded The Go-Betweens in December 1989.

Grant and Robert then went their own ways to further their solo careers. During the next ten years McLennan recorded four solo albums as well as forming subprojects such as Jack Frost (with The Church’s Steve Kilbey) and The Far Out Corporation (with Powderfinger’s Ian Haug.)

With both McLennon and Forster back living in Brisbane in 2000, the Go-Betweens reunited for the album "The Friends of Rachel Worth," which featured backing from members of Sleater-Kinney. They made two more albums since then, again to much favourable reviews from critics and fans alike.

Saturday, May 6 should have been a very happy date for McLennon. The Go-Betweens last album Oceans Apart (2005) was their biggest selling album ever and won them their first Australian Grammy. He was having a housewarming party that night where he was planning to propose to his girlfriend Emma Pursey. At 4:30pm, he went for a nap. Early arrivers to his party found him dead in his bedroom a few hours later. The autopsy revealed a massive heart attack.

The funeral revealed his artistic legacy with a bevy of Australian musical talent in attendance. Forster paid tribute to his partner, "the last six months was the happiest I had ever known him." He added, "he was very happy in his private life and had just written an amazing bunch of songs. He was especially pleased with how well the last album had done. That had put a real spring in his step."

The Go-Betweens web page stated briefly but eloquently "his singular contribution to music and his commitment to his craft simply cannot be understated. He will be deeply missed by all who knew him."