Artist: The Cranberries
Album: No Need to Argue
Genres: Alternative, Music, Rock, Adult Alternative, Pop, Pop/Rock
Released: Sep 30, 1994
℗ 1994 UMG Recordings, Inc.
Album Review
With their surprise success behind them, the Cranberries went ahead and 
essentially created a sequel to Everybody Else is Doing It, So Why Can’t
 We with only tiny variations, with mixed results. The fact that the 
album is essentially a redo of previously established stylistic ground 
isn’t apparent in just the production, handled again by Stephen Street, 
or the overall sound, or even that one particularly fine song is called 
“Dreaming My Dreams.” Everybody wasn’t a laugh riot, to be sure, but No 
Need to Argue starts to see O’Riordan take a more commanding and 
self-conscious role that ended up not standing the band in good stead 
later. Lead single “Zombie” is the offender in this regard — the heavy 
rock trudge isn’t immediately suited for the band’s strengths (notably, 
O’Riordan wrote this without Noel Hogan) — while the subject matter (the
 continuing Northern Ireland tensions) ends up sounding trivialized. 
Opening cut “Ode to My Family” is actually one of the band’s best, with a
 lovely string arrangement created by O’Riordan, her overdubbed vocals 
showing her distinct vocal tics. Where No Need succeeds best is when the
 Cranberries stick at what they know, resulting in a number of charmers 
like “Twenty One,” the uilleann pipes-touched “Daffodil’s Lament,” which
 has an epic sweep that doesn’t overbear like “Zombie,” and the 
evocative “Disappointment.”
Track List
1. Ode to My Family
2. I Can’t Be With You
3. Twenty One
4. Zombie
5. Empty
6. Everything I Said
8. Disappointment
9. Ridiculous Thoughts
10. Dreaming My Dreams
11. Yeats’ Grave
12. Daffodil Lament
13. No Need to Argue
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