Ireland - Luna Kafé - Full Moon 2 - 12/24/96
A House
No More Apologies
Setanta Records (SETCD28)
As the title of this their fifth album suggests, A House have succeeded
somewhat in reconciling the fierce youthful ambition of their earlier
masterpieces I Want Too Much and I Am The Greatest, with the recognition
that despite their failure in satisfying corporate demands, they can stand
proud over a decade's body of work, the consistency of which has been
matched by few of their peers. Despite the constant insecurity of their
record company tenure and the disappointment from the numerous false dawns
- like another band greeted by similar popular indifference: The Go-Betweens
- these upheavals never obscured their primary intentions. And although
No More Apologies exhales some of the vehemence of old, the attitude is
never swamped in any bitterness or recriminations, always tempered by the
realisation that the romance invested in the ominously titled final track
A Happy Ending should never be disowned.
But while A House instinctively strive for some sort of solace, they never
shy away from ongoing combat with the impressive evidence mounting for
counsel advocating the abandonment of hope. Not that this is all done in
a tone devoid of humour, for humour abounds (the comic relief that is the
keyboard interlude in Broken being one of the outstanding moments.) The
best kind that find its inspiration in the tragic and surreal, while
reserving contempt for the begrudgery masking as cheap sarcasm in Twist
& Squeeze. The romantic types may provide a rich target for the piss-takers
but as David Couse (and he should bloody know!) cautions in that customised
melodic rant of his in Without Dreams: try living bereft of some daft
master plan "and you might as well lie down."
With its Walt Disney like colours I Can't Change distinguishes itself
as the album's flagship song, embodying the self-acceptance and peace
that A House seem to have found as a band, but as always the mantra of
affirmations can be applied to the listener's own particular context. Other
songs are worthy of a mention: the title track, Love Is and Sister
Song, but like all records of durability each fresh listen reveals another
special moment previously not appreciated in full.
I hate the way this all sounds too much like a band's parting note,
especially when so many, who need the empathy you get so succinctly (and
sadly so rarely) in great songs like these, are still ignorant of A House's
work. For those that purport to being familiar with the true individualists
of pop and have somehow managed to side-step this Irish bunch, I suggest
you do something about it soon before your credentials are exposed as
being sorrily all too inadequate.
Copyright © 1996 Sean Phelan
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