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The band doesn’t quite pull off that escape on God Save—the songs are still melancholy, often in spite of otherwise upbeat arrangements—but Nevers’ production is bright and clean. The bouncing keys and ebullient, rubbery bass line of the opening track, “Here Comes the Phantom,” are a perfect counterpoint to MacLean’s vocals, simultaneously wistful and weary. The band may not have been aiming for the heart of country music per se, but they clearly have that fabled organ, with all its foibles and idiosyncratic desires, squarely in their sights: “Lonely cops pick flowers on their beats / And what do they see? / Summer waits in the leaves…. / Happiness just comes and goes / My heart is playing like a violin.”
But aimed-for or not, country music does rear its heart on God Save. Never have The Clientele sounded higher or more lonesome than on “The Queen of Seville,” which features a haunting and surprisingly spare pedal steel part that was never part of the song’s original design, instead coming spontaneously out of the recording process.
“I hadn’t envisaged that track having pedal steel at all,” MacLean explains. “But we got Pete Finney, who is a fantastic session steel player, into the studio…. At the time, that one was sounding incredibly dull as I remember, so we got him to spice it up for us.”