I'll be starting this rundown on the fourth track, which is also the title track, 'Absence of Hope', as the three first tracks were covered in the previous post.
It's not a bad song, but does it fit in? Thinking in terms of a complete album where songs are played successively.. an uncommon thing in this day and age where everybody just skips to the next song on their streaming platform, having a song like this is probably good to make an album seem varied and dynamic. Instead of having every song chug along at the same tempo and intensity.
Track number seven, 'Dave Lost His Flute', is just the intro to the next track. Two minutes or so of flute playing.. nothing to say here, moving along... It's point though is to serve as a breather after the previous high energy song.
Before it gives way to the eighth track, purposefully or accidentally, numbered as the seventh track on the album. Another song in the punk rock style, but where the other one was a little more hardcore, this one has a poppier and more accessible sound which makes it sound a upbeat and enjoyable, in spite of the sad subject matter of being a homeless man...
Then it's back to the more hardcore punk sound again. This song, 'Promises from out of town', has the most abrasive intro of all songs on this album... Sounds like they were angry with something or someone here... Spokeswoman and drummer Kajsa Tangstad says they wrote this song after their visit to the record company in Cyme Ixotic, where they hoped to get a record deal...
Then after they've let out some steam on the previous track, they continue with this one, 'Thanks for Nothing', where they take it back to some kind of pop-punk song which turns out to be a break-up song! Ugggh.... give me a break! ;) Now, I don't hate the song, but this is probably my least favourite on this album... it's just not what I would listen to... what are you? Taylor Swift!? Blah!
..and then for their final song, they take it down, down, down to a dark and gloomy place in this stripped down track, 'Cash for a rainy day', about a mother in the city struggling to make ends meat... oh boy. This one is far, far removed from 'Party Punk', which they started off saying they were, but it is probably my favourite track here right now... there are no loud screaming guitars or bravado to this track, but that only makes the message stand out more..
The last track, 'Dave found his flute', is just another two-three minute flute track in a similar fashion to the previous one with almost the same name, but this one sounds a little more uplifting and.. heavenly (?) for lack of a better word.. it also gives me the feeling of watching some ending credits. Not sure if that is a property of the track itself, or just because I know this is the last song. ;)
..and that was it, clocking out on a playing time of 44 minutes and 14 seconds.. a varied punk-pop album with celtic influences.. that's what I would call it. ;) And actually.. the title does seem appropriate, as, apart from the first track 'We are party punk', where they introduce themselves, an absence of hope does indeed seem to be an underlying theme one way or another in every song that follows... the album is perhaps a little bit uneven in the way that it seems they don't know if they should be pop or punk, but on overall I'll say it's a job well done. ;)