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Monday
06Aug2007

Hannah Fury: Through the Gash

I throw your head across the ice
I throw my head through a window
Crash
Like poetry
Throwing Muses, Delicate Cutters, 1986.



through-the-gash.jpg
The career of the solo singer / songwriter is fraught with difficulties: if you consider yourself lucky enough to be signed to a major label, it's probable that if your first or second single isn't a success, you'll be dropped, possibly without ownership of the material you've written in the process. Some may be seduced into diluting their craft to satisfy their masters. Others will become disillusioned or attempt a career relaunch with another label. The smart ones don't bother any of this: it's no coincidence that the more interesting artists reach out to the internet for their audience, often setting up their own record company in the process. Hannah Fury has single-mindedly sought her own path straight from her 1998 debut EP, Soul Poison. Subsequent releases have proven the benefit of taking this approach. None more so than her second album, Through the Gash, an album that treats affairs of the heart with the same intensity that others might treat mania. To quote Throwing Muses again: shocking is therapy.

Those listeners who ached for Through the Gash to be a continuation of her first album The Thing That Feels, may be disappointed. I was at first: it does seem to be quite a departure from the days of the Wicked inspired piano ballads and the arresting The Vampire Waltz. Listen some more and the relationship proves more subtle: Through the Gash gets its strength and exposes Hannah's increasing confidence through the more varied use of keyboards. So whilst piano lovers will have to dig deeper to find the percussive melodies that dazzled throughout The Thing That Feels - and they are present - the corresponding pay-off is that her vocals and lyrics have a greater opportunity to impress, especially during the slower songs.

I am in no way trying to pimp Hannah Fury's back catalogue, but to get the best out of this album, you have to listen to her entire body of work. Other artists, particularly Kristin Hersh, repeat words and imagery across their songs as coincidental reflections on their afflictions. With Hannah, the most obvious phrasing revolves around the album title (with its attendant interpretations), together with love, scars, sugar, hearts and, inevitably, Marie Antoinette. Through the Gash becomes unique on two counts: by making oblique references to previously released songs, and by being self-referential, lyrically and musically. One might consider this re-use to be lazy, but that would be wrong. The re-use is so meticulous that it has to be intentional. Such intricate songwriting and execution rewards attentive listening. But it's not just the lyrics which work this way.

One superficial review of this album has dismissed the songs as simple half-spoken vocals passed through various delays, underneath which some simple piano lines are played. None of this is correct: the album is bursting with individually processed multi-tracked vocals - whispered, sung, half-sung, spoken, gasped and screamed. Effects drop out mid-measure, each line a further opportunity for a different realisation. Hannah's approach to the mixing and production of this album is closer to the way that techno artists tweak and cut notes, sounds and push the beats by single digit milliseconds to get the desired results. There are often multiple melodies within each song, either acting to support or break away from the vocals. The piano work an advance on that debut album. Vocal tracks coalesce and separate to build a dynamic that often destroys the distinctions between verse and chorus. The production is extraordinary.

You'll realise by now that I've not mentioned any individual song: it would be unfair to single out songs to identify one or more of the qualities I've explained above. (See my earlier reviews of these songs: No Man Alive, Where the Wounds Are, Defenestration, You Don't Leave A Trace, Girls That Glitter Love the Dark). The lyrics are too rich to reach any specific conclusion other that what I wrote in my opening paragraph. The fact is, these songs take time to digest. Listen and judge for yourself.

I've listened to this album dozens of times. Provided you treat it with respect and don't drown in it, you may find it to be the best solo release in recent years. Here's a tip: play it loud. But, there is one more thing: it holds a remarkable secret which I'm only just uncovering. Not that it towers above its peers, that much is clear, but that it's a better album than Hannah may think it to be.

Through the Gash is available now, released on MellowTraumatic Recordings.

Through the Gash - iTunes UK
Through the Gash - iTunes US

Hannah Fury: Last.fm
Hannah Fury: MySpace

Reader Comments (6)

Yeah! Finally a well written review of this album. Those other reviews you alluded to are such dreck, that it is a great relief to finally see someone produce an intelligently written fair review of the album. Thanks!

August 7, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterAran

Excellent review!!! I cant say anything else, theres nothing else to say. Sublime. I sincerely hope people take note of this review and get themselves a copy of Through The Gash.

August 8, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterUndrentide72

thank you for such a terrific review, couldn't have written a better one myself.

ever since i received my first dose of hannah's compelling music (a long time ago, "meathook"-era), i've been hooked, "through the gash" was eagerly awaited, like a drug.

after listening to "the thing that feels" on a daily basis for about 3 years, a feat that no album has ever been able to achieve in my lifespan, i was fearing that hannah might do a "emilie autumn" on me. i mean: alienating her fanbase, lying about exclusive tracks and succumbing to popular demand, i should have known better, thank heavens.

to me, hannah sings true emotions of life, (unrequited) love, fear, desperation, death, loss, loneliness and cupcakes. to have a person sing about those things in the way thay you feel about them is marvellous and, for me at least, unprecedented in this way.

although i miss the more pronounced and obvious piano melodies of her first album, theay are still there, as you said, just less obvious, more intricate and required to dig for by the listener. hannah is not for everyboy, and i thank her for that, and for staying that way.

my support for her will never cease.

grtz,
pascal
(the netherlands)

August 8, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterpascal

Listening to this on headphones my first reaction is to be dizzy. Disoriented really. I had to force myself to stop listening to The Thing That Feels as it had too much of an affect on me. I can tell that this album will be more of an acquired taste. That's ok. So are Chocolate (the good stuff that's 70% cacao) and Coffee. Now Hannah tells me its alright... oh good.

-edward

August 10, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterRiemann42

I'm glad to see someone else agrees with my opinion on the beauty of this album. :)

August 10, 2007 | Unregistered Commentermuruch

[...] So I backed off and my review became a mask for these issues. And now, when it is time to review the album in the context of last year’s music, I remain unable and unwilling to delve further into its psyche in order to persuade you of its greatness. Through the Gash is simply too extraordinary for me to write about anymore. [...]

October 19, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterninthspace » Hannah Fury

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