Robert Forster's endearingly fey persona, equal parts Bryan Ferry and
gangly bookstore clerk, reaches full flower on the Go-Betweens' fourth
album, which tempers the angularity and occasional claustrophobia of the
band's previous work with a new airiness and nervous romanticism. The
lighter sound can be partly attributed to the growing influence of co-leader
Grant McLennan, whose wistful "Cattle and Cane" and "Bachelor
Kisses" lent grace to the Go-Betweens' sometimes stilted early records.
McLennan's touch is all over Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express
-- his "In the Core of a Flame," a love song that manages to
be at once tenderhearted and impatient, is a highlight -- but this is
still mostly Forster's show, and as such is a revelation. The merry, pastoral
opener "Spring Rain" serves as notice that this will be a less
dour affair than usual, yet, rather than negating Forster's pained, self-doubting
lyrics, the comparatively gentle songs set them off beautifully. "You
opened my mail apart at the seams/and now you know I live beyond my means,"
he sings at the outset of the swaying "Bow Down," and the prettiness
of the melody makes him sound all the more uneasy. Other highlights include
the sublime "Head Full of Steam," a tale of infatuation so strong
that Forster breathlessly reports what his beloved's parents do for a
living before realizing that such trivia is probably "of no importance
at all" to anyone but him (which doesn't stop him from blurting out
just a few lines later the earth-shattering news that neither he nor his
object of desire have ever had a nickname). Protestations aside, the urgency
in his voice makes it clear that the minutiae of love matter very much
indeed, and anyone who's been there will sympathize. Liberty Belle is
by no means free of the old Go-Betweens edge (the brooding "Twin
Layers of Lightning" is proof of that), but it is the pervading warmth
and rueful humor of this release that make it so accessible and such a
delight.
(by Kristi Coultert, All Music Guide)