| Calling From a Country Phone is sometimes referred to as Robert Forster's 
        "country" album, but the folk-rock sound (with occasional pedal 
        steel) recalls Felt's Me and a Monkey on the Moon more than anything that 
        has ever come out of Nashville. Forster's no-frills production suits his 
        idiosyncratic and dramatic style, which requires very little in terms 
        of accompaniment for its effect. "Atlanta Lie Low" seems too 
        low-key to open an album, but it is immediately followed by "121," 
        an unusually straight rocker on which Forster's delivery actually suggests 
        Elvis Presley at times. "Drop" was the album's single, a dynamic 
        song that deserved to be heard but would have found no place on the charts 
        of the day, and "Falling Star" is just as good. Calling From 
        a Country Phone is the only one of Forster's solo albums that was never 
        released in the U.S., which is both disappointing and understandable since 
        it probably would not have gained an audience beyond the adulatory cult 
        surrounding the Go-Betweens.  (by Greg Adams, All 
        Music Guide) |