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Manic Street Preachers
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Blackwood, Wales
United Kingdom

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   Manic Street Preachers: General Info
Member Since1/19/2005
Band Websitehttp://www.manics.co.uk
Band MembersThe Manic Street Preachers:
James Dean Bradfield (Vocals, Guitar)
Nicky Wire (Bass)
Sean Moore (Drums)
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   About Manic Street Preachers

Nicky Wire


US Widget
Includes remixes, documentary clips and Richeys Journal


UK Widget

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Manic Street Preachers – Journal for Plague Lovers.
Biography by John Niven:


'The artists people are interested in have something eating at them. Elvis. What was eating at that guy? Why did he have to sing like that and move like that? Jerry Lee Lewis, what was eating at him? What was eating at Hank Williams? Johnny Lydon? Something was. So the idea is: how do you manage that thing that's eating at you, without letting it eat you? 'Cause that's what it wants to do. The thing that's eating at you, wants to eat you. And so your life is...how do you keep that from happening?' - (Bruce Springsteen)

'Riderless horses on Chomsky's Camelot...' - (Richey Edwards, Peeled Apples)

The ellipsis at the end of the second quotation belongs to me. For elliptically very much describes the way the first incarnation of Manic Street Preachers ended, with that final point hardening and emboldening over the years, black ink bleeding out into white page, gradually ceasing to represent elision, gradually becoming a full stop.
And what of the five words preceding the ellipsis?
The riderless horse follows the casket in a military funeral procession, empty boots facing backwards in the stirrups. The tradition stretches back close to a millennia, to the campaigns of Genghis Khan, when horses were sacrificed so they would be there to greet fallen warriors in the next world. The most famous riderless horse used for US state funerals was Black Jack, whose oil-coloured mane swung in the cold Washington air behind the coffin of John F. Kennedy. Noam Chomsky wrote a savage critique of Kennedy's foreign policy during the Vietnam era entitled 'Rethinking Camelot.' So - military funerals, sacrifices and fallen warriors, Kennedy, Vietnam, geo-politics.
All from five words of the chorus of the opening track.
Did Richey Edwards think all that through and condense it to one couplet so that, as with all good poetry, the fit, hungry listener might extrapolate meaning back up from the bottom? Or did he just think it sounded fucking cool? As Bradfield and Moore bring the drums and the Les Pauls in on the chorus – the whole thing underproduced by Steve Albini to sound like a virulent ransom note - you are powerfully reminded that it is one of the great joys of rock and roll that it doesn't much matter either way.

***

A government in crisis, houses being repossessed, greedy, misled people in negative equity, a young, newly-elected American President who would change the world: 1994 and in Cardiff four men – young and dissolute – begin making what will become the most extraordinary record of their generation, The Holy Bible. Just over a decade and a half later (a millennia in rock music) and one is tempted to conclude that all that has changed is that it is now just three men – older, resolute – who gather in Cardiff to make a record.
In the weeks before he disappeared in February 1995 Richey Edwards gave away certain items of his possessions to his bandmates. To Nicky Wire he gave a clutch of notebooks, whose contents, amongst many other things, included the lyrics sung by James Dean Bradfield and Nicky Wire on this record. As an artistic endeavour, giving voice to someone who can no longer speak for themselves, it is without parallel. Of course the words of poets long gone, from Burns to Dante, have often been set to music. More recently the Mermaid Avenue record posthumously put Woody Guthrie's lyrics to fresh melodies but, in all these cases, the writers were unknown to the composers.
A task beset with great responsibility then.
Add to this the typography, the Jenny Saville artwork, the cracked fragments of dialogue that segue the tracks, the guitars that growl and claw beneath the floorboards of the songs, blips of feedback, pickup stutter and flanging wash preceding their arrival and echoing their departure: in edifice and execution this is a clear, deliberate companion piece to a record without peer at the time and now widely regarded as a career best.
Great responsibility and inevitable, no invited, comparison with the finest work you have ever done. Why would anyone put themselves in such a position?
Because here there is no why. The genuine artistic endeavour presents itself as a fleeting thought, that becomes a recurring thought, that eventually becomes the only thought possible. In the end, you don't have a choice. The thing will out.
What were the only thoughts possible for Richey Edwards in the days when he was keeping these notebooks? As one might expect the imagery is Yeatsian, apocalyptic, in places: 'The falcons attack the pigeons, in the West Wing at night...crucifixion is the easy life...beaten across the face, with a horsewhip, where the wounds already exist...she bathed herself in a bath of bleach...
But we also get 'It's the facts of life, sunshine.' The throwaway familiar at the end of the line ringing with humour and an understanding of the absurd. As does 'we missed the sex revolution, when we failed the physical...' which echoes Larkin, which would sit handsomely in one of one of Morrissey's better-filled notebooks. On Virginia State Epileptic Colony the joy and loss of self in mundane ritual – 'cleaning, cooking and flower arranging' – chimes with the playful abandon of the track: a trilling acoustic guitar, a loping, playful groove. The fury, rage and invective of The Holy Bible, these are vices for youth. Natural enough to scream at the world in your twenties, if you haven't found a way – however precarious, however uneasy, however doubt-riddled - to coexist by the time you reach your forties...
As the years pass, in any artistic process, technique often replaces urgency, methodology overcomes chance, and assurance displaces anxiety. There are costs to be borne here; what can rich, comfortable rock stars living lives of forty-something luxury truly understand anymore about the pain and isolation of someone in their twenties who decided that those riches and comforts would never be his? Well, Nabokov pointed out that 'before building oneself an ivory tower one must take the unavoidable trouble of killing quite a few elephants.' Manic Street Preachers brought home a richer kill than most. The carcasses of the elephants are large, and to properly deal with their carrion is often the work of a lifetime.

***

Ultimately the mature artist comes to understand that interpretation, criticism, approval - how the thing you've created is received in the world - are as nothing when set against the act of creation itself. 'What cared I who set them on to ride?' Yeats says, speaking of his poems in The Circus Animals Desertion. The process itself is all there is. Everything else is noise. It’s a late poem, written towards the end of his life, and in the final stanza Yeats contemplates the loss of the artistic faculty, the dimming of vision:

Now that my ladder's gone, I must lie down where all the ladders start In the foul rag and bone shop of the heart.

It takes great courage to lie down in this place. There are dark corners where things fester and breed, things that most of us do not like to look upon in daylight. The real genius here lies in Yeats' ability to conjure a poem out of his inability to write a poem, to find the act of creation in the face of darkness and impotence, to fashion the work itself out of these very qualities, to find the strength of purpose to pick up the pen and do the work in the face of the void. It's probably unnecessary to belabour the parallels. And so to the end – 'William's Last Words'. In a voice as neutral, calm and serene as an early spring morning, Nicky Wire - a man in middle age now, with children of his own - sings 'Isn't it lovely when the dawn brings the dew, I'll be watching over you.' And he sings 'wish me some luck as you wave goodbye to me, you’re the best friends I ever had.' And he sings 'I'm just gonna close my eyes, think about my family, shed a little tear.' And, finally, he sings, 'I'd love to go to sleep and wake up happy.'
In the sepia of hindsight it is literally unbearable. And the urge is overpowering, physically painful; to reach back through the fog of years, back through platinum albums and stadiums filled and worlds conquered, to reach back and tenderly enfold, to look into hazelnut eyes and whisper the words known to every parent; 'It's OK. It'll be alright.'
But this is sentiment. And Manic Street Preachers are not sentimental people. It wasn't OK. And it wouldn't be alright. 'The thing that's eating at you, wants to eat you.' Springsteen says. 'And so your life is...how do you keep that from happening?' Well, as Bruce knows, as Elvis and Hank before him knew, sometimes you can't. You fight and you can't. Can't win. 'It' wins. And the rest of us get what is left scattered around the room, the great and terrible debris of that battle: we get The Holy Bible. We get And Death Shall Have No Dominion. Sunflowers. In Utero. Closer. The album you are holding now.

Art, basically.

John Niven, Buckinghamshire, Spring 2009

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Manic Street Preachers's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 6920 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
Antonio Danese

antonio danese



Feb 6 2010 11:02 PM

Simply amazing!
Robert

Robert Halls



Feb 6 2010 11:02 PM

tHANX FOR THE ADD
John

John F



Feb 6 2010 11:02 PM

nice to meet you

have a good week

defow.com

:)
Luiza

Luiza Perez



Feb 3 2010 6:21 AM

Tank you for add!!
Come to Brazil please!!
Foxy Ladette

Megan Strickland



Feb 1 2010 6:46 AM

It's been 15 years...
Antonio Danese

antonio danese



Feb 1 2010 6:46 AM

Very good music!
phantlers

Dirty Rectangle



Jan 30 2010 11:18 AM

Thanks for accepting my request. I've been revisiting Forever Delayed - at considerable length and considerable volume - over the past few days, especially the remixes. "You Stole the Sun from My Heart", the Mogwai Remix is (still) mesmerising and highly redolent of My Bloody Valentine, the Velvets etc. (maybe not in that order)

Although the material was originally released from 1992 onwards, the overall 'feeling' took me back to my early years as an outsider living in London in the early 1980s having uprooted and moved there for a job that only lasted three months. Rather than high tail back to north Wales, I stuck it out in a cold (crappily) furnished flat with no friends, no money and not much on the horizon. I stuck it out for twelve years and even went back for a year in 92-93.

That was then and this is now, and the songs came from somewhere in between but strange the way the sentiment of many of them transported me so vividly to that time of exciting new encounters, falling in and out of love and the rest. I was about 26 when I got there.

Some years later, having lived moved on from Kilburn to live in northern Brazil for a year by that circuitous route that life takes us on (The Path?), on my return to the UK and Wales with the kids' Mum to be (a Brasiliera), the first song we heard on Top Of The Pops was "Motorcycle Emptiness'. (The only other one I remember from that show was Shanice's 'I Love Your Smile' but by then I already knew I was home.)

Anyway, just saying 'Hello', 'Hwyl dda' and thanks again for the add. Diolch! :D
Babsi

Babsi



Jan 30 2010 11:18 AM

Just here to comment how much I love this band. It makes me sad that I'll probably never see you live in my country (and I'm not sure if I'll ever have money to see you abroad).
Robert

Robert Halls



Jan 29 2010 7:56 PM

tHANX FOR THE ADD
Antonio Danese

antonio danese



Jan 23 2010 7:10 PM

Incredible Band !
Maddy Manic

Maddy Manic



Jan 21 2010 6:40 AM

Just wanted to stop by and say I've had your music on repeat all week.

Also, I wanted to wish a very happy birthday to the Wire. <3 Can't wait to see what 2010 is going to bring for the band!
Foxy Ladette

Megan Strickland



Jan 21 2010 6:40 AM

No other band creates more meaningful music than you 3.
With Richey, without Richey, it's consistent, deep music.

You should put up more tracks, like 4st 7lb or My Guernica.
And come to America again?
Karina

Karina Longo



Jan 21 2010 6:40 AM

Hey guys,

I'm passing by to wish Mr Nicholas Allen Jones a very happy birthday because we all know that he deserves it! Nicky, you're a genius, your lyrics and your witty personality makes you one of my greatest heroes ever.

God save the Manics! Nicky, YOU'RE MY BASS HERO! lol

Stay beautiful,

Karina xx
ercole and his brother △

ercole and his brother △



Jan 21 2010 6:40 AM

Thx, i love your music.
ercole and his brother △

ercole and his brother △



Jan 21 2010 6:40 AM

THX for add. nice to meet you, my name is ercole in love for the musique
Déesse de la Lumière

Déesse de la Lumière



Jan 19 2010 6:18 AM

Hi! I know my English is not good but I'll do my best.! I just wanted to say your music
has a very great importance.! Thank you.! Sincerely, Lulu:o))
Antonio Danese

antonio danese



Jan 17 2010 7:58 AM

Excellent music!
anntobe

anntobe
Online Now!


Jan 17 2010 7:57 AM

came a long here after a while and just can say your music is still one of my lifecarriers thx so much - If you come along Cardiff say hello from me at chapter art centre- may some mates are still there
greets Ann
x
Erick Seban-Meyer photographe

Erick Seban-meyer Photographe



Jan 12 2010 8:19 PM


Bonne année 2010 - Happy new year - Cчастливого нового года - Szczesliwego nowego roku - Felice anno nuovo - Frohes neues Jahr - Gelukkig nieuw jaar - Feliz año nuevo - Feliz ano novo - あけましておめでとう
Zera

Zera



Jan 7 2010 6:20 AM

Thanx for the add!!
Kisses from germany!
Antonio Danese

antonio danese



Jan 6 2010 5:13 PM

Your music is super!!!
Kiana

Kiana Rivas



Jan 6 2010 5:13 PM

Thank you for the add!!!
PinkAfternoonFix

PinkAfternoonFix



Jan 6 2010 5:13 PM

Happy New Year!!!
GingerBread

GingerBread



Jan 6 2010 5:13 PM

Happy Blessed 2010....thanx for the amazing music
lots of love
from Gigi
misurino

misurino



Jan 5 2010 6:44 AM

Thanks for the add!

cheers
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