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Cattle and Cane

"Cattle and Cane" is a song by the Australian alternative rock band The Go-Betweens, released as the first single from their second album Before Hollywood. It was released as a single in the United Kingdom by Rough Trade Records in February 1983 and reached No. 4 on the UK Independent Chart.[1][2] The single and album were both released in Australia on Stunn,[3] a small label allied with EMI. The Stunn pressings were of poor quality and their distribution limited.[4]

"Cattle and Cane"
7" single cover
Single by The Go-Betweens
from the album Before Hollywood
B-side"Heaven Says"
ReleasedFebruary 1983
RecordedOctober 1982
I.C.C. Studios – Eastbourne, England
GenreAlternative rock
Length4:12
LabelRough Trade
Songwriter(s)Grant McLennan, Robert Forster
Producer(s)John Brand
The Go-Betweens singles chronology
"Hammer the Hammer"
(1982)
"Cattle and Cane"
(1983)
"Man O'Sand to Girl O'Sea"
(1983)

Vocalist and bass guitarist Grant McLennan wrote the lyrics for his mother as an autobiographical description of his return home to a Queensland farm when a boy. He used Nick Cave's acoustic guitar while staying at Cave's London apartment. Vocalist and guitarist Robert Forster co-wrote the song.[5] Drummer Lindy Morrison also supplied backing vocals.[6][7] The single and album both failed to appear on the relevant Australian Kent Music Report Top 50 charts.[8] In May 2001, "Cattle and Cane" was selected by Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) as one of the Top 30 Australian songs of all time.[9]

Background

"Cattle and Cane" was recorded by Australian rock band The Go-Betweens in October 1982 at I.C.C. Studios in Eastbourne, United Kingdom with John Brand producing. Formed in Brisbane in 1977, the band signed with Missing Link Records in 1981 with the line-up of Robert Forster on vocals, lead guitar and rhythm guitar; Grant McLennan on vocals, bass guitar and guitars; and Lindy Morrison on drums and backing vocals.[6][10] Their debut album, Send Me a Lullaby, was released as an eight-track in Australia in November.[11] It was expanded with four bonus tracks when released in UK on Rough Trade Records in February 1982.[6]

The Go-Betweens released "Cattle and Cane" in late February 1983, ahead of their second album, Before Hollywood, which appeared in May.[10] The single and album were both released in Australia on Stunn,[3] a small label allied with EMI. The Stunn pressings were of poor quality and their distribution limited.[4] The B-side on the Stunn recordings was "Man O'Sand to Girl O'Sea" with newly joined bass guitarist Robert Vickers on board, which freed McLennan for lead guitar work.[11] The group recorded a video for the single in May, six weeks after its UK release. It was filmed in an antique shop in Fulham, with Vickers miming playing the bass guitar, to portray group solidarity, even though he didn't play on the actual recording.[4]

Song development

"Cattle and Cane" is an autobiographical story of McLennan as a schoolboy embarked on a journey home, evoking memories of a "house of tin and timber," the train edging him closer to the past "through fields of cattle, through fields of cane."[12] McLennan wrote it while using Nick Cave's acoustic guitar in Cave's London apartment[4][13] in 1982, whilst Cave was comatose after injecting heroin.[14]

In 1983, McLennan described writing the song:

I wrote (the song) to please my mother. She hasn't heard it yet because my mother and stepfather live (on a cattle station) and they can't get 240 volts electricity there, so I have to sing it over the phone to her [...] I don't like the word nostalgic; to me, it's a sloppy yearning for the past, and I'm not trying to do that in that song. I'm just trying to put three vignettes of a person, who's a lot like myself, growing up in Queensland, and just juxtaposing that against how I am now.[15]

Lindy Morrison later said:

Grant was incredibly homesick for the first couple of years we were in England and he spent those first couple of years thinking about his past. He was obsessed with it. A lot of those songs on Before Hollywood have the imagery of Australia. I think "Cattle and Cane" is a master song.[16]

The Canberra Times noted, "The three verses by McLennan cover three phases of his life to date in a series of images – the primary schoolboy scrambling through cane fields, the adolescent in boarding school losing his late father's watch in the showers, the young man at university discovering a bigger brighter world – and then the fourth phase of his life: Robert Forster, playing himself."[17]

A feature of the song is the unusual time signature used in most it, which is explained by Morrison in a radio interview:[18] "Grant had written that song and […] he wrote it in that time signature. It's a bar of five, then a bar of two, then a bar of four, so the phrase is eleven beats […] but when you get to the chorus it goes to four-four. The final section is […] over the verse chord […] back into the eleven pattern."

Forster later said, "Grant managed to create something new in the Australian songbook with 'Cattle and Cane.' When he first played me the riff I thought it was like one of a number of his that were good, but it was the lyric that did it. The music is quite sort of post-punky, but the lyric is just like Slim Dusty, it's Banjo Paterson or something."[19]

Reception and influence

"Cattle and Cane" reached No. 4 on the UK Independent Charts in 1983.[1][2] The single and album both failed to appear on the relevant Australian Kent Music Report Top 50 charts.[8] However, "Cattle and Cane"'s popularity saw it reach No. 11 in Triple J's Hottest 100 for 1989,[20] No. 27 in 1990 and No. 96 in the 1991.[21] The song was also selected by NME writers in their '100 Best Indie Singles Ever' in 1992.[22]

In AllMusic's review of Before Hollywood, Ned Raggett described the single:

Arguably the band's absolute highlight of its earliest years and one of the early-'80s' utter classics, the combination of McLennan's nostalgia-laden but not soppy lyric, his flat-out lovely singing and overdubbed backing vocals, and the catchy, beautifully elegant acoustic/electric arrangement is simply to die for.[7]

Fellow Australian musician Paul Kelly recalled hearing the song for the first time while driving in Melbourne:

My skin started tingling, and I had to pull over ... [it] had an odd, jerky time signature which acted as a little trip-switch into another world – weird and heavenly and deeply familiar all at once ... I could smell that song ... What planet was this from? When did The Stranglers go to northern Queensland and get all arty?[23]

In May 2001 "Cattle and Cane" was selected by Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) as one of the Top 30 Australian songs of all time.[9]

"Cattle and Cane" was covered by British indie rock group The Wedding Present as a B-side to their 1992 single "Blue Eyes" and by Jimmy Little on his ARIA award winning 1999 album, The Messenger.

Track listing

UK release

  1. "Cattle and Cane" (McLennan, Forster)[5] – 4:12
  2. "Heaven Says" (McLennan, Forster)[24] – 4:06

Australian release

  1. "Cattle and Cane" (McLennan, Forster)[5] – 4:12
  2. "Man O'Sand to Girl O'Sea"[25] – 3:24

Personnel

The Go-Betweens members

Additional musicians

  • Bernard Clarke – organ, piano

Production details

  • Producer – John Brand
  • Engineer – John Brand, Tony Cohen
  • Mastering – Ian Cooper
  • Tape transfer – Ingo Vauk
  • Studio – I.C.C. Studios, Eastbourne, England

Releases

Format Country Label Catalogue No. Year
7" single UK Rough Trade RT 124 February 1983
7" single AUS Rough Trade RTANZ 007
(Promotional release)
1983
7" single AUS Stunn BFA 952 1983

References

General
  • McFarlane, Ian (1999). . Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 5 April 2004. Retrieved 8 April 2010. Note: Archived [on-line] copy has limited functionality.
  • "Cattle and Cane Chords by Go-Betweens". e-chords.com. 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
Specific
  1. ^ a b "The Go-Betweens: Cattle And Cane". Go-Betweens.org.uk. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  2. ^ a b Lazell, Barry (1997). . Cherry Red Books. ISBN 0-9517206-9-4. Archived from the original on 7 July 2010.
  3. ^ a b "Go-Betweens, The – Cattle and Cane". Discogs. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d Nichols, David (1997). The Go-Betweens. Portland, Oregon: Verse Chorus Press. ISBN 1-891241-16-8.
  5. ^ a b c ""Cattle and Cane" at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 27 October 2008.
  6. ^ a b c Holmgren, Magnus; Warnqvist, Stefan. . Australian Rock Database. Passagen.se (Magnus Holmgren). Archived from the original on 21 September 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  7. ^ a b Raggett, Ned. "Before Hollywood – The Go-Betweens". Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  8. ^ a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  9. ^ a b Kruger, Debbie (2 May 2001). (PDF). Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 27 October 2008.
  10. ^ a b McFarlane entry. Retrieved 8 April 2010.
  11. ^ a b Stafford, Andrew (2004). Pig City: From The Saints to Savage Garden. St Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press. pp. 65–78. ISBN 0-7022-3360-9.
  12. ^ Johnston, Chris (12 May 2006). "The Crate – Cattle and Cane (1983)". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  13. ^ "Nick Cave interview". Juice magazine. 1983. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  14. ^ Pearson, Nick (10 April 2007). "Grinderman – Grinderman". PopMatters. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  15. ^ Jenkins, Jeff; Ian Meldrum (2007). "40 Great Australian songs". Molly Meldrum presents 50 years of rock in Australia. Melbourne: Wilkinson Publishing. pp. 286–287. ISBN 978-1-921332-11-1. Retrieved 27 October 2008.
  16. ^ Tracee Hutchison (1992). Your Name's On The Door. Sydney: ABC Enterprises. p. 64. ISBN 0-7333-0115-0.
  17. ^ Andrew P. Street. "The top three songs of the Australian Landscape". Canberra Times.
  18. ^ "Lindy Morrison – The Music Show, ABC Radio National". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 June 2014. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  19. ^ Monique Schafter (24 August 2016). "Robert Forster reflects on 30 years of friendship with Go-Betweens collaborator Grant McLennan". ABC.
  20. ^ "Hottest 100 Of All Time −1989". Triple J. 1989. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  21. ^ "Hottest 100 Of All Time – 1991". Triple J. 26 December 2008. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  22. ^ "NME Writers 100 Best Indie Singles Ever 1992". NME. 25 July 1992. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  23. ^ Kelly, Paul (21 September 2010). "Careless". How to Make Gravy. Australia: Penguin Books (Australia). pp. 61–62. ISBN 978-1-926428-22-2.
  24. ^ ""Heaven Says" at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  25. ^ ""Heaven Says" at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 21 November 2010. (McLennan, Forster)

cattle, cane, song, australian, alternative, rock, band, betweens, released, first, single, from, their, second, album, before, hollywood, released, single, united, kingdom, rough, trade, records, february, 1983, reached, independent, chart, single, album, wer. Cattle and Cane is a song by the Australian alternative rock band The Go Betweens released as the first single from their second album Before Hollywood It was released as a single in the United Kingdom by Rough Trade Records in February 1983 and reached No 4 on the UK Independent Chart 1 2 The single and album were both released in Australia on Stunn 3 a small label allied with EMI The Stunn pressings were of poor quality and their distribution limited 4 Cattle and Cane 7 single coverSingle by The Go Betweensfrom the album Before HollywoodB side Heaven Says ReleasedFebruary 1983RecordedOctober 1982I C C Studios Eastbourne EnglandGenreAlternative rockLength4 12LabelRough TradeSongwriter s Grant McLennan Robert ForsterProducer s John BrandThe Go Betweens singles chronology Hammer the Hammer 1982 Cattle and Cane 1983 Man O Sand to Girl O Sea 1983 Vocalist and bass guitarist Grant McLennan wrote the lyrics for his mother as an autobiographical description of his return home to a Queensland farm when a boy He used Nick Cave s acoustic guitar while staying at Cave s London apartment Vocalist and guitarist Robert Forster co wrote the song 5 Drummer Lindy Morrison also supplied backing vocals 6 7 The single and album both failed to appear on the relevant Australian Kent Music Report Top 50 charts 8 In May 2001 Cattle and Cane was selected by Australasian Performing Right Association APRA as one of the Top 30 Australian songs of all time 9 Contents 1 Background 2 Song development 3 Reception and influence 4 Track listing 5 Personnel 6 Releases 7 ReferencesBackground Edit Cattle and Cane was recorded by Australian rock band The Go Betweens in October 1982 at I C C Studios in Eastbourne United Kingdom with John Brand producing Formed in Brisbane in 1977 the band signed with Missing Link Records in 1981 with the line up of Robert Forster on vocals lead guitar and rhythm guitar Grant McLennan on vocals bass guitar and guitars and Lindy Morrison on drums and backing vocals 6 10 Their debut album Send Me a Lullaby was released as an eight track in Australia in November 11 It was expanded with four bonus tracks when released in UK on Rough Trade Records in February 1982 6 The Go Betweens released Cattle and Cane in late February 1983 ahead of their second album Before Hollywood which appeared in May 10 The single and album were both released in Australia on Stunn 3 a small label allied with EMI The Stunn pressings were of poor quality and their distribution limited 4 The B side on the Stunn recordings was Man O Sand to Girl O Sea with newly joined bass guitarist Robert Vickers on board which freed McLennan for lead guitar work 11 The group recorded a video for the single in May six weeks after its UK release It was filmed in an antique shop in Fulham with Vickers miming playing the bass guitar to portray group solidarity even though he didn t play on the actual recording 4 Song development Edit Cattle and Cane is an autobiographical story of McLennan as a schoolboy embarked on a journey home evoking memories of a house of tin and timber the train edging him closer to the past through fields of cattle through fields of cane 12 McLennan wrote it while using Nick Cave s acoustic guitar in Cave s London apartment 4 13 in 1982 whilst Cave was comatose after injecting heroin 14 In 1983 McLennan described writing the song I wrote the song to please my mother She hasn t heard it yet because my mother and stepfather live on a cattle station and they can t get 240 volts electricity there so I have to sing it over the phone to her I don t like the word nostalgic to me it s a sloppy yearning for the past and I m not trying to do that in that song I m just trying to put three vignettes of a person who s a lot like myself growing up in Queensland and just juxtaposing that against how I am now 15 Lindy Morrison later said Grant was incredibly homesick for the first couple of years we were in England and he spent those first couple of years thinking about his past He was obsessed with it A lot of those songs on Before Hollywood have the imagery of Australia I think Cattle and Cane is a master song 16 The Canberra Times noted The three verses by McLennan cover three phases of his life to date in a series of images the primary schoolboy scrambling through cane fields the adolescent in boarding school losing his late father s watch in the showers the young man at university discovering a bigger brighter world and then the fourth phase of his life Robert Forster playing himself 17 A feature of the song is the unusual time signature used in most it which is explained by Morrison in a radio interview 18 Grant had written that song and he wrote it in that time signature It s a bar of five then a bar of two then a bar of four so the phrase is eleven beats but when you get to the chorus it goes to four four The final section is over the verse chord back into the eleven pattern Forster later said Grant managed to create something new in the Australian songbook with Cattle and Cane When he first played me the riff I thought it was like one of a number of his that were good but it was the lyric that did it The music is quite sort of post punky but the lyric is just like Slim Dusty it s Banjo Paterson or something 19 Reception and influence Edit Cattle and Cane reached No 4 on the UK Independent Charts in 1983 1 2 The single and album both failed to appear on the relevant Australian Kent Music Report Top 50 charts 8 However Cattle and Cane s popularity saw it reach No 11 in Triple J s Hottest 100 for 1989 20 No 27 in 1990 and No 96 in the 1991 21 The song was also selected by NME writers in their 100 Best Indie Singles Ever in 1992 22 In AllMusic s review of Before Hollywood Ned Raggett described the single Arguably the band s absolute highlight of its earliest years and one of the early 80s utter classics the combination of McLennan s nostalgia laden but not soppy lyric his flat out lovely singing and overdubbed backing vocals and the catchy beautifully elegant acoustic electric arrangement is simply to die for 7 Fellow Australian musician Paul Kelly recalled hearing the song for the first time while driving in Melbourne My skin started tingling and I had to pull over it had an odd jerky time signature which acted as a little trip switch into another world weird and heavenly and deeply familiar all at once I could smell that song What planet was this from When did The Stranglers go to northern Queensland and get all arty 23 In May 2001 Cattle and Cane was selected by Australasian Performing Right Association APRA as one of the Top 30 Australian songs of all time 9 Cattle and Cane was covered by British indie rock group The Wedding Present as a B side to their 1992 single Blue Eyes and by Jimmy Little on his ARIA award winning 1999 album The Messenger Track listing EditUK release Cattle and Cane McLennan Forster 5 4 12 Heaven Says McLennan Forster 24 4 06Australian release Cattle and Cane McLennan Forster 5 4 12 Man O Sand to Girl O Sea 25 3 24Personnel EditThe Go Betweens members Robert Forster vocals lead guitar rhythm guitar Grant McLennan vocals bass guitar guitars Lindy Morrison drums backing vocals Robert Vickers bass guitar on Man O Sand to Girl O Sea Additional musicians Bernard Clarke organ pianoProduction details Producer John Brand Engineer John Brand Tony Cohen Mastering Ian Cooper Tape transfer Ingo Vauk Studio I C C Studios Eastbourne EnglandReleases EditFormat Country Label Catalogue No Year7 single UK Rough Trade RT 124 February 19837 single AUS Rough Trade RTANZ 007 Promotional release 19837 single AUS Stunn BFA 952 1983References EditGeneralMcFarlane Ian 1999 Whammo Homepage Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86508 072 1 Archived from the original on 5 April 2004 Retrieved 8 April 2010 Note Archived on line copy has limited functionality Cattle and Cane Chords by Go Betweens e chords com 2011 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Specific a b The Go Betweens Cattle And Cane Go Betweens org uk Retrieved 17 March 2010 a b Lazell Barry 1997 Indie Hits 1980 1989 Cherry Red Books ISBN 0 9517206 9 4 Archived from the original on 7 July 2010 a b Go Betweens The Cattle and Cane Discogs Retrieved 17 March 2010 a b c d Nichols David 1997 The Go Betweens Portland Oregon Verse Chorus Press ISBN 1 891241 16 8 a b c Cattle and Cane at APRA search engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Retrieved 27 October 2008 a b c Holmgren Magnus Warnqvist Stefan The Go Betweens Australian Rock Database Passagen se Magnus Holmgren Archived from the original on 21 September 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2014 a b Raggett Ned Before Hollywood The Go Betweens Retrieved 17 March 2010 a b Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book ISBN 0 646 11917 6 a b Kruger Debbie 2 May 2001 The songs that resonate through the years PDF Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Archived from the original PDF on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 27 October 2008 a b McFarlane The Go Betweens entry Retrieved 8 April 2010 a b Stafford Andrew 2004 Pig City From The Saints to Savage Garden St Lucia Queensland University of Queensland Press pp 65 78 ISBN 0 7022 3360 9 Johnston Chris 12 May 2006 The Crate Cattle and Cane 1983 The Age Fairfax Media Retrieved 15 March 2010 Nick Cave interview Juice magazine 1983 Retrieved 15 March 2010 Pearson Nick 10 April 2007 Grinderman Grinderman PopMatters Retrieved 15 March 2010 Jenkins Jeff Ian Meldrum 2007 40 Great Australian songs Molly Meldrum presents 50 years of rock in Australia Melbourne Wilkinson Publishing pp 286 287 ISBN 978 1 921332 11 1 Retrieved 27 October 2008 Tracee Hutchison 1992 Your Name s On The Door Sydney ABC Enterprises p 64 ISBN 0 7333 0115 0 Andrew P Street The top three songs of the Australian Landscape Canberra Times Lindy Morrison The Music Show ABC Radio National Australian Broadcasting Corporation 14 June 2014 Retrieved 23 April 2015 Monique Schafter 24 August 2016 Robert Forster reflects on 30 years of friendship with Go Betweens collaborator Grant McLennan ABC Hottest 100 Of All Time 1989 Triple J 1989 Retrieved 8 July 2015 Hottest 100 Of All Time 1991 Triple J 26 December 2008 Retrieved 17 March 2010 NME Writers 100 Best Indie Singles Ever 1992 NME 25 July 1992 Retrieved 17 March 2010 Kelly Paul 21 September 2010 Careless How to Make Gravy Australia Penguin Books Australia pp 61 62 ISBN 978 1 926428 22 2 Heaven Says at APRA search engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Retrieved 20 November 2010 Heaven Says at APRA search engine Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Retrieved 21 November 2010 McLennan Forster Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cattle and Cane amp oldid 1023609914, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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