Win a year of free pizza at PizzaExpress
Their small but fervent band of admirers includes Michael Stipe of R.E.M., Bono and the Edge of U2, the film-maker Jonathan Demme, fellow Australians Nick Cave and Jason Donovan, and Princess Caroline of Monaco. Their influence has even spread to Hollywood. Kiefer Sutherland’s hunt for terrorists in the current series of 24 takes him to a sinister corporation called McLennan-Forster — a neat in-joke by another fan, the writer-producer Evan Katz.
Each of their eight albums has been adored by critics. Yet, even if you include the eight solo albums they made during a decade-long hiatus in the Nineties, their combined record sales would struggle to hit seven figures.
No one would question the timespan if they were a wine; a bordeaux laid down in 1978 would only now be ready to be appreciated fully. But pop music is not meant to work that way. Youth is all. Two Australian men now in their mid-forties making gentle semi-acoustic music with witty lyrics full of literary and cinematic allusions were never going to start a bidding war.
Now, though, they feel this might finally be the time for them to break through to the public at large. Now, with the release of their ninth album, Oceans Apart, there is a sense that the Go-Betweens have painted their masterpiece.
McLennan, who combines straight-talking Aussie blokeishness with the soul of a poet, says he feels that for the first time he can stand shoulder to shoulder with those at the peak of his profession. “This really is the first time where I feel I’d love to walk into a room with Elton John and Madonna and Prince, and maybe U2 and Neil Diamond, and hold up this album and say: ‘Cop an earful of this!’ ” Oceans Apart follows the Beatles-like formula with which the Go-Betweens have made records from the start. Each album has ten songs, five by Forster and five by McLennan, with each singing his own tunes and playing guitar, joined by various accompanists. They write the songs separately and have distinct styles of their own, united by a gift for evoking a sense of time and place in the music and in particular the lyrics, which often feature the names of real places and people.
A fastidious figure with a penchant for smart suits, afternoon tea and the finer points of etiquette, Forster’s narrative songwriting style offers wry observations sparkling with wit against rhythms that reflect his angular physique.
Here Comes a City, from the new album, describes a train ride in which the carriage is shared with an earnest young man reading a hefty tome, prompting Forster to ponder: “Why do people who read Dostoevsky always look like Dostoevsky?” “It’s true!” he insists. “A couple of years back I was on a train when a student in his early twenties with a wild look came into our carriage and pulled out Dostoevsky.”
Another of Forster’s compositions, the elegiac Darlinghurst Nights, recalls youthful times in a Sydney suburb, inspired by the discovery of an old diary. “Darlinghurst is a place where we spent some time in the early Eighties,” he explains. “It was a bohemian area with coffee shops and cheap Italian restaurants. We met a lot of people there and made a lot of friends.”
Most of them are name-checked in the song, which captures that sense of forgotten friendships in another time, right down to the smallest detail: “Then there was Sue, who we never saw again.”
Compared to Forster’s crafted vignettes McLennan is a more instinctive writer, whose songs come from the heart. He inclines towards the ballad, mining a seam of romance and nostalgia. “At night I haunt the boulevards to the songs of Sasha,” he croons on The Statue, scanning the boulevard for late-night drinking dens full of disreputable women.
In the flesh, flanked by an ever-present supply of beer and cigarettes, he looks like a cricketer, or at least someone who enjoys the outdoors — as long as it’s followed by a debauched night out.
The two met in 1976, while studying arts at Queensland University in Brisbane. Inspired by the first wave of New York punk bands — Talking Heads, Television, Blondie, Richard Hell, the Ramones — and Brisbane’s own punk tyros, the Saints, Forster decided they should form a band, despite his best mate’s lack of musical proficiency.
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Find tickets for:
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2008
£44,990
2008
£48,489
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
OTE £100k
CPA
North West/East Anglia/South
£
Circa £100k
NHS
London
£23,500 + benefits
MI5
London
Some of the finest Apts & Penthouses
Across London
Great Investment, River Views
Luxury properties within exclusive development in
Chislehurst Kent
A new experience in Luxury Living
Multi–Centre
from Only £829pp
With Ramblers Worldwide Holidays!
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - search houses for sale and rooms and property to rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.