
TAPETE
Robert Forster - Strawberries Robert Forster
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Robert Forster is the rare case of an artist with a celebrated past
whose current work continues to dominate our affections. “The last album was very personaI,” says Robert, “I didn't write anything for about a year after I'd finished
'She's a Fighter' for the last album. And then I just started to write songs that were something a little bit else.
They just came naturally. I didn't really have a theme, it was just sort of lighter, a situation a little bit outside
of myself. And I thought that was good. That was a place I could go to.”
The first song to point in this new direction was “All of the Time”, starting with the ominous couplet “There's
propaganda and there's truth / And there's a feeling that I get when I'm with you”. We never quite learn what
sinister plot lurks in the background, but these words combined with the subtle suggestion of a glam boogie
groove imply a certain clandestine sexiness not usually associated with the Forster canon. “It was just this
sort of language that I normally didn't use,” says the man himself, “It meant I wasn't going into my present
situation. It just pushed me out there and made it less confessional. A lot more playful and and a lot more
story-orientated as well.”
As it turns out, this storyteller who sees the world through the eyes of a film director, has a way with
romantic fiction that is as emotionally involving as it is economical and free of all sentimentality, as show-
cased on “Breakfast on the Train”, the obvious centrepiece of the album. At almost eight minutes length, it
tells the story of a not-so casual romance between the two odd ones out in a bar full of rugby fans who end
up spending the night in a hotel, laconically retold with possibly the most perfectly timed use of the word
“fuck” ever encountered in a pop song.
Inspired by an actual train journey through Scotland touring the previous album The Candle and the Flame
with his musician son Louis, this epic is an indisputable addition to the pantheon of Robert Forster's best
ever songs while “Foolish I Know”, a tender tale of unrequited same-sex attraction, has to rank amongst his
bravest and most beautiful. Louis Forster, by the way, also makes an impressive appearance on lyrical lead
guitar in “Such a Shame”, the moving story of an exhausted young rock star ending on the beautiful line “No
one I've met has seen me yet at my best / No”.
As on most of the album, the narrator clearly isn't Forster himself, just as he's not the English teacher meeting
a French woman in the album's bouncy opener “Tell it Back to Me”. “Your world so different to mine”, Forster
sings, “I was corporate, you were folk.” Clearly, this relationship was never going to last, but then again, as
Robert observes in the next song, it's “good to cry”. As his slapback echo vocals tuck into the rockabilly vibe
of the song, you can hear Forster enjoying the company of his Swedish backing band: Producer Peter Morén (of
Peter, Björn and John fame) on guitar, Jonas Thorell on bass and Magnus Olsson on drums, crucially augmented
by Lina Langendorf on various woodwind instruments and Anna Åhman on keys.
The idea, writes Forster in his liner notes, was “to arrive in a town with a clutch of songs, to rehearse, record and
mix an album with local musicians over a number of weeks, and then leave with the record done.” In this spirit,
almost all of Strawberries was rehearsed and arranged to be tracked live, with very few overdubs, at Stockholm's
INGRID studios. Forster and Morén, a long-time fan from the times of the Go-Betweens, had met and bonded at
an Australian festival they both played in 2016. They had toured together with the core of the Strawberries band
(Olsson and Thorell) the year after that, so their musical common ground was well explored years before recordings
began.
“It's great working with someone who is truly an auteur,” says Peter Morén, looking back on the intense, focussed
four week period working on the album in September/October 2024, “That sense of direction that 'This is what I
do, and this is who I am as I perceive it.' He does what he does in the only way he can and changes and evolves in
that sphere, but never loses sight of his own personality and strengths.”
“I wanted to explode the sound of my records to an extent”, is Robert Forster's somewhat different assessment
of the collaboration, “I wanted to just bring in new colours.”
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