Go Betweens Discography Rar S

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The Go-Betweens were their own favorite band, and there's a lot to be said for that. Robert Forster and Grant McLennan met as teenaged boys at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, as Forster explains in the book that's the centerpiece of this anthology of their first seven years together. (His 70-page history of that period is written in the third person; count on the Go-Betweens for a touch of the impersonal where it's least expected.) They had their own ideas of what pop might be, and especially of what Australian pop might be. The very end of the book names their influences: Abba, Bowie, Creedence, Dolenz, Easybeats, Fellini, and then themselves.The two of them bonded over their enthusiasm for film and literature at least as much as they did over music. Young men of that era didn't become filmmakers or novelists together, because that couldn't yield Jules et Jim, so Forster taught McLennan how to play guitar, and they started the group.

(Forster described their partnership as 'platonic homosexuality.' ) Between 1978 and 1989, they made a small mountain of records but never made much of a ripple commercially; their 2000-2006 reunion was cut short by McLennan's death. Forster's essay, though, disputes the received wisdom that they 'were 'unsuccessful' and had little luck. It is a view Forster and McLennan never shared, having taken a two-piece Brisbane bedroom band out to the world.' The Go-Betweens have tried to organize and reassess their chaotic early period a few times now: There have been a few greatest-hits sets, 1985's semi-bootlegged Very Quick on the Eye, 1999's '78 Til '79: The Lost Album, the expanded 2002 reissues of their early albums. G Stands for Go-Betweens includes new vinyl remasters of Send Me a Lullaby (1982), Before Hollywood (1983) and Spring Hill Fair (1984), and an LP called The First Five Singles, which is just that. There are also four CDs: three discs' worth of demos, compilation tracks, B-sides and oddities, and a live set from April, 1982, which features a few songs that mutated or disappeared before they could be recorded.

This is, in other words, aimed at Go-Betweens superfans, but most of their fans were always superfans anyway.They were a singles band more than they tended to let on—a lot of their songs are best experienced one or two at a time. The First Five Singles, released one a year from 1978 to 1982, is the most immediately delightful of these eight discs, although the very early Go-Betweens were callow, awkward, and a little uncomfortable with women, in the way that bookish young men can be. Both sides of their first single are paeans to unattainable women, one of them Lee Remick and the other a librarian who 'helps me find Genet, helps me find Brecht, helps me find Chandler. She's my god, she's my G-O-D.' 'People Say', from 1979, is a homemade homage to the garage singles of a dozen years earlier; the next year's skittish 'I Need Two Heads' made them the only non-Scottish band to release music on Postcard Records, thanks to a trip to the UK whose charming details Forster explains in the book.Forster has noted that people shouldn't buy the Go-Betweens' first album 'without at least owning three others,' and he's probably right.