Album of the Week: Brian – Understood (Understand: Expanded Reissue)
Staff Review
Once upon a time… before almost all recorded music sat at our fingertips, I went down a rabbit hole collecting early indie from the mid-to-late ’80s. Some of it came via bands featured of the NME C-86 cassette, some from Creation Records’ early roster, and some from Bristol’s obscure label Sarah Records. Much of this scene was indebted to both the DIY attitude of punk, the commercial pop success of The Smiths, R.E.M., and The Cure, as well as the singular visions of cult heroes like Felt. But it was made on tiny budgets, driven by heart and soul. One track that has stayed with me ever since is The Field Mice’s Emma’s House (1988), an introverted, small, utterly perfect pop song, with the uncanny ability to draw the listener into its own secret microcosm.
The feeling and emotional rush of listening to The Field Mice resurfaced with the reissue of Brian’s Understand. The 1992 album, by Irish singer-songwriter Ken Sweeney, released on London Irish label Setanta Records, was entirely new to me. While clicking play in 2025 doesn’t quite replicate the thrill of tracking down scarce vinyl or cassettes, the moment those chiming, summery guitars and softly sung melodies of opening track Understand began, it felt like finding The Field Mice all over again.
Now retitled Understood, the reissue (via Needle Mythology, responsible for the excellent indie-pop compilation Sensitive released earlier this year) expands the original eight-track release with bonus material (not appearing thus far on digital services), offering the chance to rediscover an overlooked gem 33 years on.
Back in ’92, Understand was likely lost in both a crowded sea of melodic guitar bands in the wake of The Smiths, The Stone Roses, The La’s, and The Cure, the global dominance of grunge, the emergence of burgeoning electronic dance music scenes, not to mention the hurdles plenty of Irish artists faced in reaching wider audiences. Listening today, though, its carefully constructed songs feel timeless.
The title track opens with shimmering guitars, soaring synths, and a post-baggy rhythm, radiating pure magic. The record embraces a limited sonic palette but achieves a distinct, gentle, otherworldly sound. While echoes of The Cure, The Cocteau Twins, can be heard, Brian avoids drifting into gothic esoterica, as lyrically the songs are grounded in reality, balancing relatable themes of joy and melancholy.
Highlights are frequent as the album progresses, Big Green Eyes is effervescent finger-picked pop, A Million Miles drifts like a piece by Factory Records outliers The Durutti Column, Don’t Leave Me Behind pairs raging guitars with ethereal synths with stunning effect. Elsewhere, the more musically muscular You Can’t Call Home leans towards a shoegaze-dream pop axis, yet Sweeney’s delicate, angelic vocals keep the music serene and intimate. Each track is anchored by a timeless pop hook, each one a lost jewel waiting to be found.
If you missed Understand the first time around, or never knew it existed, this expanded Understood offers more than nostalgia. It’s a vital piece of Irish indie-rock history, proof of a scene that deserves fresh excavation.
Brian – Understood (Understand: Expanded Reissue) is OUT NOW on Vinyl & CD.
Needle Mythology is thrilled to announce ‘UNDERSTOOD’ the first ever reissue of ‘UNDERSTAND’ the acclaimed 1992 debut album by BRIAN. BRIAN was the ‘band’ name chosen by Dublin singer-songwriter KEN SWEENEY, after his songs attracted the interest of fellow Dubliner and head of Setanta Records Keith Cullen. The first sessions for UNDERSTAND dated back to the summer of 1989. Propelled by work to the suburbs of West London, Ken found himself far from his comfort zone and raw from a particularly painful break-up. “I hardly knew anyone,” he recalls, “and the only way of making sense of things seemed to be writing songs.” Inevitably, the musical lodestones of Ken’s teenage years – The Go-Betweens, R.E.M., Miracle Legion, Trashcan Sinatras – started to percolate into his own musical language. In the space between estranged lovers, all the things that are too painful to say in words seemed to find their purest expression on a fretboard. It was in this space that the songs on ‘UNDERSTAND’ took shape. Why ‘UNDERSTAND’? Well, that was the name of the title track. A programmed rhythm bears impassive witness to the emotional disclosure being played out over it: “The word ‘understand’ came up a lot, recalls Ken, “The wishing that somehow we could talk; that there could be a last conversation that would make things okay.” On its release, ‘UNDERSTAND’ was greeted with unanimous acclaim. Select Magazine talked about “the devastating effectiveness of early Smiths”; Melody Maker praised its giddy, mesmeric pop songs; Hot Press called it “an astonishing achievement”. Over the ensuing decades, the album has become increasingly sought-after among music fans whose collections sit in the centre of the Venn diagram where melody and melancholy overlap. Now retitled to acknowledge the closure that comes with the passage of time, ‘UNDERSTOOD’ has been expanded to include the four songs that comprised 1993’s Planes EP – as well as a previously unheard track If You Knew, which was intended for the original album. In later years, as an acclaimed broadcaster, Ken went on to make documentaries about several of his musical heroes, among them R.E.M., The Go-Betweens and The Blue Nile. His Trashcan Sinatras documentary earned him a prestigious Irish National Radio Award in 2024. The newly expanded ‘UNDERSTOOD’ has been remastered at Electric Mastering by Guy Davie. “Music affected me so much growing up, I only wanted to make music that moved me emotionally and if it didn’t happen, I wouldn’t make records.” – Ken Sweeney, 2025