Without reconvening
the Messengers,
Paul Kelly nevertheless worked with a steady backup band on
Deeper Water, resulting in a more consistent musical style than he had employed on
Wanted Man. He did try South African mbaqanga on "Madeleine's Song" and a kind of
Eno-like ambience on "Gathering Storm," but most of the songs had folk-rock arrangements, and most concerned romantic subjects, within which
Kelly's primary concerns were lust and betrayal. On the best songs, he took a different tack or found a twist: The title tune was a rite of passage metaphor about generational commitment and "I'll Forgive But I Won't Forget" found new ways to talk about infidelity by focusing on the friend rather than the straying lover and delaying the news of the crime until the last verse. Such songs marked
Kelly as a craftsman with a sense of surprise, and raised
Deeper Water a cut above the more diffuse
Wanted Man.