Send Me a Lullaby

Send Me a Lullaby
Studio album by The Go-Betweens
Released November 1981 (AUS)
February 1982 (UK)
2002
Recorded July 1981
Melbourne, Australia
Genre Rock, alternative rock, indie rock
Length 35:37
Label Missing Link (AUS)
Rough Trade Records (UK)
Circus
Producer The Go-Betweens and Tony Cohen
The Go-Betweens chronology
Send Me a Lullaby
(1982)
Before Hollywood
(1983)
Singles from Send Me a Lullaby
  1. "Your Turn, My Turn"
    Released: July 1981
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Send Me a Lullaby was The Go-Betweens' debut album. It was released in November 1981 in Australia on Missing Link as an eight-track mini-album. It was subsequently released in the UK on Rough Trade Records, an independent music record label (Missing Link's UK distributors) in February 1982, as a 12 track album.[2]

Details

The album was recorded at the Richmond Recorders studio in Melbourne in July 1981. The album was engineered and produced by Tony Cohen (The Birthday Party), together with The Go-Betweens.

In 2002, Circus Records released an expanded CD which included a second disc of twelve bonus tracks of songs recorded by The Go-Betweens around the same time as the album together with a music video for the song, "Your Turn, My Turn".

McLennan later said, "Send Me A Lullaby is to me an inauspicious debut. It's a record that I think if I'd heard - well, it's hard for me to say that, but if I'd heard that and I wasn't in the band, I think my comment would have been 'What the fuck is going on here.' There's great melodies but then there's changes which to this day I can't work out. There's lyrics to this day which I don't understand and when I actually summon up enough courage to get to the microphone, I sound like a choirboy with a mouthful of fruitcake."[3]

Morrison said her drumming on the album had been affected by the experimentation with her previous band Xero. "The trouble was, it had become part of me to do silly things, which is why my drumming is idiosyncratic with the Go-Betweens in many ways. On Send Me A Lullaby there are lots of strange drumbeats, things that a normal drummer wouldn't play," she said.[4]

Reception

Reviewed in Australian Rolling Stone at the time of release, it was described as reflecting, "the progression from folky naivety of the early songs to a more involved, complex set of emotions, though understatement is still a key feature." The reviewer notes it is an album with, "no, or at least very few, overdubs," and says, "the band have produced a fresh, uncluttered sound that has a live presence to it." The review concludes by saying, "everything's come together just fine."[5]

NME described the album as, "a record of tremendous depth, a mystery to be fathomed." Noting the album's naivety, clumsiness, intelligence, and frailty, the reviewer notes, "Maybe I'm forgetting, but this seems the least fussy, least pompous, most natural and moving music I've yet heard from their part of the planet."[6]

Track listing

Send Me a Lullaby (original Australian issue)
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "One Thing Can Hold Us"  Grant McLennan 3:17
2. "People Know" (vocals by Lindy Morrison)Robert Forster 2:11
3. "Midnight to Neon"  Robert Forster, Grant McLennan 2:31
4. "Careless" (lead guitar – Grant McLennan)Robert Forster 2:34
5. "All About Strength" (lead guitar – Grant McLennan)Grant McLennan 2:12
6. "Ride"  Robert Forster 3:30
7. "Hold Your Horses"  Grant McLennan 2:14
8. "It Could Be Anyone" (lead guitar – Grant McLennan)Grant McLennan 4:30

Personnel

The Go-Betweens

Additional personnel

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. "Go-Betweens Send Me a Lullaby". Go-Betweens.org.uk. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  3. Gavin Sawford (12 April 1996). "Gazing On A Sunny Afternoon". Rave (Stones Corner, QLD: Rave Magazine Pty Ltd): 7–8.
  4. Clinton Walker (1984). The Next Thing. Kenthurst, New South Wales: Kangaroo Press. pp. 42–43. ISBN 0-949924-81-4.
  5. Toby Creswell. "Records". Australian Rolling Stone. No. 17 June 1982 (North Sydney, NSW: Silvertongues Pty Ltd). pp. 14–18.
  6. Dave Hill (26 June 1982). "Raw Paradox". NME (London, England).
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