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Shack - H.M.S. Fable (CD)

H.M.S. Fable
$64.16
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: H.M.S. Fable

Release Date:08/31/1999
Label:Sire / Wea
UPC:643443107129

Track List: H.M.S. Fable

  1. Natalie's Party
  2. Comedy
  3. Pull Together
  4. Beautiful
  5. Lend's Some Dough
  6. Captain's Table
  1. Streets Of Kenny
  2. Reinstated
  3. I Want You
  4. Cornish Town
  5. Since I Met You
  6. Daniella

User Reviews: H.M.S. Fable

  • Overall:

    Shack HMS Fable

    By adam  Apr 3, 2000

    HMS fable consolidates and surpasses the brilliance of Shack's previous 'lost classics', 'The Magical World of the Strands' and 'Waterpistol'. It brims with chiming guitars, ecstatic/melancholic three-part harmonies, and familiar-yet-beguiling melod...ies, crystallizing sources as diverse as the purest Sixties pop, Latin textures, shanties, Elizabethan madrigals and the peculiar strains of Northern English narcotic sea-symphonies. By turns the album uplifts, pulses, crunches and sweetly, painfully, laments. The title track is a whispering anthem, aching, like the whole album, with echoes musical - The Beatles, Nick Drake, The La's, The Verve - and personal, Michael Head's cracked-folk, soul-survivor's tones recollecting voices and lives lost during 20 years of neglect and disenfranchisement. 'Reinstated' similarly collapses together the private and political, on a bittersweet bed of strings and Bacharach brass. A highlight, amongst many, is John Head's 'Cornish Town'. Combining the belligerence of 'Pull Together' with the rushing passion of 'I Want You' and the perception of 'Comedy', it seems to invoke a realisation of the necessity of connectedness in the face of disintegrating identities. Whether that disintegration, or the redemptive solution sought, is drug-induced, Biblically inspired, or dynamised by the truest love, remains unresolved: the chorus glides into a coda, all ringing, shimmering, and dissolving, powerfully affirmative and beautiful, though haunted by minor chords. It sings with, and for, life; yet it is mindful of the pressing closeness of desperation and death. In that, the song typifies an album which should not be forgotten. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: H.M.S. Fable

  • All Music Guide

    Shack is led by Michael Head, who fronted the Pale Fountains in the mid'80s after his mind was blown by Liverpool's incredible Echo the Bunnymen and Teardrop Explodes. Head and his brother John know their way around highlydeveloped '60sto'80s pop. Get past what used to be called side one; it's often wonderful, but it's lesser. For instance, the one clunker, "Pull Together," is like uncharacteristicallybad Oasis. "Lend's Some Dough" is fun Mersey bounce pop like the La's, and the two U.K. singles, "Natalie's Party" and the much better Bunnymenlike "Comedy," are both guilty of trying too hard. But, starting with "Streets of Kenny," the LP shifts into a more natural pace, marked by chattering, delicatelypicked bright acoustics, ringing electrics, busy background strings, and the Heads' onrushing, splendid harmonies. The level of compositions, arrangements, and singing on side two sets Shack apart from all the merelyOK, pressfed bands cluttering up British festivals. In fact, Head's pop k...nack has never been greater, as if he finished a long apprenticeship. (1997's The Magical World of the Strands, released as Michael Head the Strands, is even way better) He's rather sly about it, too: From the affectionate "You Only Live Twice" coda of the standout, "Since I Met You," to the staccato Burt Bacharach trumpet blurts of "Reinstated" to the Revolver Beatles outros of "Natalie's Party" and "I Want You" to the Arthur Lee/Loveworship of "Daniella," the milestones of yesteryear are referenced but built upon as well. What a contrast to the shambles of Shack's 1988 debut. The drums crackle, the guitars zing, the strings wash overhead. Perhaps the Heads sounded better in the past with more organic production, starting with 1996's Water Pistol. The bigger, bolder production is just a new wrinkle. Say no more. - Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Shack

Following the dissolution of his cult-favorite 80s indie-pop band the Pale Fountains, Liverpudlian singer-songwriter Michael Head formed Shack with his guitarist brother John. The group debuted in 1988 with Zilch, again falling victim to the commercial indifference which earlier plagued the Pale Fountains' career; the follow-up, Waterpistol, was recorded in 1991 at Lond... Read more