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The Eighties were a strange time of change for recording practices
and for bands. Studios went from the extreme isolation of instruments
and drums that were favored in the Seventies to the use of analog
and digital drum machines, click tracks, and heavy-handed synth
overdubs. Many artists were lured into this world, making records
that sound as dated today as they sounded modern back
then.
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The Go-Betweens were a band from Australia, in the late
Seventies who were originally looking back at the Sixties
for inspiration and soon found themselves moving to England
and spending ten years or so courting success in the music
industry that always seemed a short step away. In the early
1990 they disbanded, after moving back to Australia. Recently
a compilation of their more popular songs and a collection
of early recordings became available, prompting a short tour.
I was lucky to catch Grant McLennan and Robert Forster, the
core of the band and both fine songwriters, who performed
an amazing acoustic set, and chat with Robert extensively
about the Go-Betweens experiences in the studio...
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When was the first time the Go-Betweens went into the studio?
We went to a studio in Brisbane thats now called Sunshine
Studios. It was a 24 track studio we just found in the directory.
We didnt know anyone that had done any recordings. Now, its
easier to put out a CD. Records were harder to put out, it was a
more difficult process and people didnt record as much. There
werent as many studios and we didnt know anyone that
had actually ever been in a studio to recommend us one.
Did you have friends that were in bands?
When we started, no one. We didnt know anyone in bands. We
soon met people at gigs and met other bands, but when Grant and
I started, we didnt know anyone in bands. We only met other
bands and musicians through playing.
What was the studio like? What was the experience?
It was a good experience. It was sort of doing a little bit of country
and jingles. The Saints had recorded their first album there...
I dont know if youve ever heard of a band called the
Saints.
Oh, yeah, I like that band.
They recorded their single there.
Im Stranded?
Im Stranded was recorded there, but we didnt
know that!
Thats great!
We just had an engineer and we were in and out in like four hours.
Recording and mixing.
Was that just the first single?
We were overwhelmingly happy, you know its the first time
we had ever played with headphones on, its the first time
we ever played and went back and heard our music over big speakers.
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Its a very overwhelming experience. Its a wonderful
experience. Its an experience that you never forget.
It was not a big room, but it was big enough, it was a one-room
studio where youre paneled off from the control room
so its just two rooms, but the desk was quite good and
they had a decent mic collection. The guy that recorded us
was a hippie guy, and hippie guys in the 70s, most times,
knew what they were doing, know what I mean? It could have
been a lot worse. We could have had some hideous rock guy
or some guy that wanted to turn us into a top 40 band. We
walked in off the streets, had money to pay for the session,
and he was good. He actually engineered our first three sessions
because we went back to the same studio.We went back in October,
78 and we recorded a song called The Sound of
Rain which is on The Lost Album and then we went back
and recorded People Say, which was our second
single.We did all of those at the same studio using the same
engineer and then, many years later in 1992, I went back to
Brisbane after recording my first solo album in Hansa Studios
in Germany.
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The one you did with Mick Harvey?
Yeah. It was a huge big studio in Berlin. You know, Bowie did Low
and Heroes there and Iggy Pop did Lust for Life. After I was in
there, U2 went in there and did Achtung Baby. Very famous studio.
After that I went back to my hometown in 1992, I went back to the
same studio and it hadnt moved and it was the same desk that
I recorded my second solo album, Calling From a Country Phone. It
was a little bit like Sun. I always imagined it was a little bit
like those studios that Buddy Holly did his first recording... you
know, sort of a small studio, come in and do a bit of country, we
do jingles and its not the best gear but its got a certain
sort of little funkiness about it.
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