The first official album from the Go-Betweens, after a slew of earlier
recordings and initial singles, was described by Forster and McLennan
in later years as sounding like a practice room session, "metallic
folk in a way." It's a fair assessment, and certainly while it's
the work of a young band, Send Me a Lullaby is still a promising start,
showing that the original trio had an aesthetic and the talent to carry
its work over an album's length. Another McLennan comment, that it's the
1981 version of the Pixies, is partially accurate -- there's no walls
of feedback or screaming, but the songs are short, brisk, angular. The
not-so-secret weapon, as one can imagine, is the singing of Forster and
McLennan, investing even the sharpest songs and most cutting rhythms (check
out the relentless rhythms of the art-funk "The Girls Have Moved")
with a sometimes desperate and sometimes withdrawn emotion. At points
the vocals are forced, as can also be heard on Very Quick on the Eye,
but both are starting to audibly try out other approaches. As musicians,
the three definitely had something of that 'metallic folk' thing about
them, with Morrison's drumming adding a sometimes brusque but (except
for part of "Eight Pictures") never brutal touch to the proceedings
that holds up quite well. Forster's guitar work and McLennan's bass are
both interesting to hear in context given how much of an influence they
would exert in later years. Rather than sounding like they're trying to
recodify rock and roll or the like, it's a series of often gentle explorations
in restraint, saying more with less. There are definitely more thrashy
numbers that live might well have completely rocked out -- "People
Know," with its squirrelly guest saxophone from James Freud, is the
most likely candidate of all.
(by Ned Raggett, All Music Guide)