Never Apologise Never Explain

Never Apologise Never Explain
Studio album by Therapy?
Released 27 September 2004
Recorded June 2004 at Parkgate Studios, Hastings, England
Genre Alternative metal, post-punk, noise rock
Length 39:48
Label Spitfire Records
Producer Pete Bartlett
Therapy? chronology
High Anxiety
(2003)
Never Apologise Never Explain
(2004)
One Cure Fits All
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
RTÉ[2]

Never Apologise Never Explain is the eighth full-length album by the band Therapy?,[3] and the second to be released on Spitfire Records. It was released on 27 September 2004. The album was recorded in June 2004 at Parkgate Studios, Hastings.

"Never Apologise Never Explain" marked a return to the claustrophobic sound of the bands’ early releases.[4][5] It failed to chart in the Top 200 of the UK Albums Chart.[6] The album was not released in North America.

The album was released on CD only. A limited edition CDROM of the album contains two live videos ("Teethgrinder" & "Who Knows") from the Scopophobia DVD.

Polish label Metal Mind Productions re-released the album on 2 November 2009. The album was remastered using 24-Bit technology, limited to 1000 copies, on a gold disk digipak CD.[7]

Track listing

All songs written by Therapy?

No.TitleLength
1."Rise Up (Make Yourself Well)"  2:49
2."Die Like a Motherfucker"  2:42
3."Perish the Thought"  3:41
4."Here Be Monsters"  2:45
5."So-Called Life"  3:10
6."Panic"  2:03
7."Polar Bear"  3:40
8."Rock You Monkeys"  3:06
9."Dead"  2:37
10."Long Distance"  3:32
11."This Ship Is Sinking"  3:18
12."Save the Sermon"  3:03
13."Last One to Heaven's a Loser"  3:22
Total length:39:48

Personnel

Singles

Promo videos

Origins of the phrase

The originator of this commonly used phrase, often attributed to the hardline politicians of the House of Windsor (British Royalty), Duke of Wellington, Benjamin Disraeli and others, is said to be John Arbuthnot Fisher, a notable British Admiral of the Victorian and Edwardian era. ("Boldness has genius, power and magic in it ... Never contradict. Never explain. Never apologise”). And even earlier, King Charles I of England is quoted in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations as writing "Never make a defence or apology before you be accused", in a letter to Lord Wentworth as long ago as 1636.

References

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