Futurology has grown on me to the point where it's now one of my favourite things they've ever done. That and Journal For Plague Lovers are essentially my two go-to Manics albums these days. I no longer listen to any of the first three.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 06:41 (eight years ago)
I've always felt like a very atypical Manics fan for naming Gold Against The Soul as my favourite album of theirs, one of my best friends tends to joke that I usually go against the consensus and it's mainly based on this. I'm actually very surprised to see how many votes it got here!(My atypical Manics love goes somewhat futher though: apart from favouring GATS, two Manics singles I really don't like all that much are Faster and Your Love Alone Is Not Enough - both are massive fan favourites. Oh and I like Lifeblood a lot.)
That said, since Futurology I'm not sure anymore which of the two I really think is their best. Futurology is amazing throughout, it keeps throwing awesomeness at my ears.
― Valentijn, Thursday, 19 October 2017 06:51 (eight years ago)
I'd name Gold Against the Soul as my personal favourite of the first three too, tbh. These days, though, I'm pretty much all about their work from Everything Must Go onwards, even one or two of those albums aren't great.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 06:55 (eight years ago)
GATS has some p weak moments but the highlights hold up far better for me than most of GT, which i find v hard to stomach now apart from "motorcycle." much prefer the earlier versions of "you love us" and "tennessee."
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 19 October 2017 07:01 (eight years ago)
GT obviously has some great songs but it sounds like shit and my god is it a slog
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Thursday, 19 October 2017 08:46 (eight years ago)
otm
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 19 October 2017 11:50 (eight years ago)
"Sounds like shit" is a bit harsh... some tracks suit the production, such as 'Natwest-Barclays-Midlands-Lloyds', and others would have been better if they'd been produced more like the stuff they did for Heavenly. The problem that I have with the debut is that they didn't have enough great material for a double album. There's about 10-11 tracks on there that still hold up, but I'm not likely to dig out as often these days because I've heard it too much and the later Manics stuff sounds fresher to me.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 13:42 (eight years ago)
rerecordings are usually a dumb cash-in but I would listen the hell out of an album consisting of new recordings of their 10-12 best songs from that era
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Thursday, 19 October 2017 13:51 (eight years ago)
Yeah, I would too.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 17:28 (eight years ago)
I've got to say, sometimes when I think about the Manics' discography, I'm a little impressed - they've made tons of albums and explored as many different approaches to their sound as possible while still sounding like themselves. I just wish I didn't sometimes find their lyrics cringeworthy.
It's amazing how many of their fans still act as if the Manics are all leopard print and eyeliner when that phase of the band lasted barely a couple of years.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 17:33 (eight years ago)
I'd rank the "three piece" records like this:
Everything Must GoJournal For Plague LoversFuturologyLifebloodSend Away The TigersRewind The FilmKnow Your EnemyPostcards From A Young ManThis Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 17:39 (eight years ago)
Journal for Plague Lovers is a mother of a rock record. I played that to death when it came out.
― kornrulez6969, Thursday, 19 October 2017 17:39 (eight years ago)
The problem I have with (relatively) recent Manics is that often Wire's lyrics are so howlingly bad, they kill entire songs stone dead. Lifeblood and (obviously) Plague Lovers being exceptions. Half of Tigers is OK, but the bad half is so appalling that I can only ever think of it as their worst album overall
― PaulTMA, Thursday, 19 October 2017 22:25 (eight years ago)
I agree, although I try to ignore the lyrics when listening to this band in general. Richey's lyrics could be howlingly bad too, just in a different way. There's plenty of stuff on the first three LP's that's atrocious and/or really silly.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 05:09 (eight years ago)
I listened to William's Last Words a bunch today. Mostly the Underworld remix, which I prefer, but the lyrics are pretty good on that one.
― brotherlovesdub, Friday, 20 October 2017 05:19 (eight years ago)
Indeed, but about two thirds of a page of nonsense had to be cut out to get the lyric down to that.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 05:51 (eight years ago)
Turrican's ranking matches my own fairly well. I think I'd swap Futurology with Everything Must Go for 1st/3rd spot & I think I'd put Know Your Enemy a little bit higher. KYE is messy and would have been better with less songs on it, but there's some really great stuff on it.
I usually don't dislike their lyrics but like PaulTMA I'm also divided on Tigers, I think half of it is great (Indian Summer and the last three songs especially - Imperial Bodybags wouldn't have been out of place on Gold Against The Soul!), half not so much.
This Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours is the only album I think is pretty bad. It bores me, there's too much drone on it and not enough energy to make up for it. Few songs from that album are highlights.
Postcards also feels like it's somewhat autopilot & overall not too overwhelming, although it gets massive bonus points from me for the guest appearance from my all-time favourite singer Ian McCulloch.
― Valentijn, Friday, 20 October 2017 07:07 (eight years ago)
I decided to order the 5 manics albums I never bothered with on CD from amazon marketplace really cheap as after Know Your Enemy (which i loved at the time, indeed saw them both nights at the barras on that tour) I never bought any bar Journal. All based on turricans rankings of a few being better than KYE and even the rest as being better than timttmy. The completest in me needed them.
I only really ever listen to the first three though unlike him. So it will be nice rediscovering them. (I listened to them on spotify or whateever when theb came out.)
Is it worth looking for a deluxe CD issue of generation terrorists? I already own the og CD, LP and Pic Disc( i passed up the CD pic disc version in Missing Records instead of the vinyl one at the time)
I wish gold against the soul would get the vinyl treatment as I bought the 'Gold' CD at the time.
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Friday, 20 October 2017 14:55 (eight years ago)
It's clear that this band are really at their best when they try to please themselves instead of the masses or Cult of Richey dickheads.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 15:51 (eight years ago)
i didn't know what to expect w/Futurology when my brother insisted i check it out, but it's great, just an excellent rock album.
― nomar, Friday, 20 October 2017 15:54 (eight years ago)
To say I was disappointed with this album when it first came out is an understatement - I like some of it more now than I did at the time, but it's still my least favourite album of theirs.
'If You Tolerate This...', 'Black Dog On My Shoulder' and 'Tsunami' are my three favourites on that one.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 16:06 (eight years ago)
I have the exact same favourites from TIMTTMY! 'You're Tender And You're Tired' is quite alright and 'Born A Girl' is pretty. I also like 'The Everlasting' but I already think the album starts off in a bad way with two ballads, even if both are good.The rest, I find mostly pretty dull. 'I'm Not Working' is the best example of why that album is Not Working for me.
― Valentijn, Friday, 20 October 2017 17:01 (eight years ago)
TIMTTMY sounds like the work of a seriously depressed band, which I think is what makes it so divisive. "I'm Not Working," "Be Natural" and "SYMM" are the most obvious examples of this - pure spaced-out directionless bloat with no sense of purpose. (I like all of these qualities but I can understand why people don't go to the Manics for them.)
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:08 (eight years ago)
'S.Y.M.M.' has some neat chord changes, but it has an awful set of lyrics and the chorus is dreadful. A bit of a cop out not calling it 'South Yorkshire Mass Murderer', which is what it was originally written as.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:34 (eight years ago)
It's hilarious and strange in retrospect that local police took apparently issue w/ the song (before they heard it, I can only assume) since the lyrics are basically just one long shrug, it sounds like Bradfield was forced to make them up on the spot
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:37 (eight years ago)
I hate the everlasting. Always hated it when played live too
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:38 (eight years ago)
I liked 'The Everlasting' the first time I heard it, but every subsequent listen has been a slog and it's their worst album opener precisely for this reason. Another neat set of chord changes, though.
'S.Y.M.M.' is more about trying and failing to write about something, rather than what the song is supposed to be about. The lyric is one huge cop out with added excuses.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:44 (eight years ago)
Another weird thing about that album is how openly virtuosic JDB's guitar-playing is throughout compared to a lot of their other material - those elaborate leads and solos on "My Little Empire," "Black Dog...," etc. Most of their albums since have been comparatively power-chord heavy for the most part.
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:47 (eight years ago)
I'm looking at the tracklisting on the back of my copy of This Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours and it's actually incredible how much this is making me not feel like listening to it.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 17:52 (eight years ago)
I always felt SYMM should have been an instrumental, save for the 'chorus' lyrics. Not attempting to lyrically address the enormous subject, just to make a statement. I don't mind the music at all, but those verses are just abysmal.
This thread is making me remember how great Tsunami is. For that reason alone, TIMT can never be my least favourite.
― PaulTMA, Friday, 20 October 2017 18:01 (eight years ago)
All of their albums have great stuff on 'em, though. Just so happens that This Is My Truth... has the least amount of great stuff.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 18:18 (eight years ago)
Yes, SYMM as an instrumental except for the chorus, that would have been much, much better. When I was 18 I thought they were being clever by (more or less) putting in words that there actually are no words for something so vile. But I grew to dislike those verses quite a bit, "trying and failing to write" sounds like an appropriate assessment.
I'm reminded of the last time I saw them live, James sat down with an acoustic guitar for a couple of songs solo. First, 'A Sudden Welsh Heart'. He then told the audience that he would give us three options and he'd play the one for which we'd cheer the most:1. Life Becoming A Landslide2. Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky3. The EverlastingOf course, how this goes is that the cheering increased in order, so it came down to The Everlasting. I -do- like that song, but I was incredibly disappointed, it was the least interesting thing for him to play by far.
― Valentijn, Friday, 20 October 2017 19:51 (eight years ago)
hate that song so much. life becoming a landslide is one of my fave songs but luckily they played it live when i saw them in 96
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Friday, 20 October 2017 20:41 (eight years ago)
Love 'Life Becoming a Landslide' and 'Small Black Flowers...', really can't sit through 'The Everlasting' these days.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 20 October 2017 21:46 (eight years ago)
Holy Bible was my ultimate angst album in high school. To me the lyrics "got it" more than anything like Nine Inch Nails or whatever else, as far as 90s angst music goes.
― carpet_kaiser, Sunday, 22 October 2017 02:30 (eight years ago)
Maybe Richey Edwards went Heath Ledger Joker, because that's some fucking intense shit on that album
― carpet_kaiser, Sunday, 22 October 2017 03:02 (eight years ago)
The lyrics to The Holy Bible looked so deep and meaningful when I was in my mid teens. Nowadays huge portions of that album sound really silly lyrically.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Sunday, 22 October 2017 09:22 (eight years ago)
thread is inspiring me to pick up a bunch of their post TIMTTMY albums, the only ones I've really heard were Futurology and Know Your Enemy. The latter didn't do it for me nearly as much as the former, but i keep seeing cheap copies of a bunch of the others. Journal For Plague Lovers is the most intriguing one.
― nomar, Sunday, 22 October 2017 16:42 (eight years ago)
the Europhilia of Futurology makes it a bit of an arm's-length record for me
― Simon H., Sunday, 22 October 2017 16:47 (eight years ago)
huge portions of that album sound really silly lyrically.
the bonkersness of this record is what makes it great.
― new noise, Sunday, 22 October 2017 17:28 (eight years ago)
the Europhilia of Futurology makes it a bit of an arm's-length record for me― Simon H., Sunday, October 22, 2017 4:47 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Simon H., Sunday, October 22, 2017 4:47 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
This is one of the reasons why the record is so great.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Sunday, 22 October 2017 18:36 (eight years ago)
Between The Clock And The Bed doesn't half sound like Genesis
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Sunday, 22 October 2017 19:56 (eight years ago)
I don't think it sounds like Genesis at all... which Genesis songs does it remind you of?
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Monday, 23 October 2017 06:40 (eight years ago)
not a specific track more a feel... the Phil Collins era just after Peter Gabriel left when it still sounded like PG era. Its not a diss though. I like early Genesis
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Saturday, 28 October 2017 16:40 (eight years ago)
love green’s vocal on that song so much. one of my favorite songs about depression
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Saturday, 28 October 2017 17:34 (eight years ago)
I like his vocal on it too, and I hate Scritti Politti.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:57 (eight years ago)
new album out in April
http://www.manicstreetpreachers.com/wp-content/themes/manic-street-preachers/assets-splashpage-nov2017/images/packshot-manicstreetpreachers-resistanceisfutile.jpg
― Simon H., Friday, 17 November 2017 14:16 (eight years ago)
That Thailand article xp had the quite brilliant headline Bangkoksucker Blues. The NME didn't even use it properly, they threw it away as the tagline on the mastheadI read it again a couple of years ago. Disturbing as the cutting stuff was, it was striking to me now how prudish the tone was. The band sleeping with groupies was a scandal, and Richey's visit to a brothel ('it was just paid masturbation, really') was like the end of the world. I was aware that we're supposed to have become a more sexualised culture over the past decade, but I didn't realise that we started off as the 50s midwest― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 25 September 2008 17:56 (nine years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I read it again a couple of years ago. Disturbing as the cutting stuff was, it was striking to me now how prudish the tone was. The band sleeping with groupies was a scandal, and Richey's visit to a brothel ('it was just paid masturbation, really') was like the end of the world. I was aware that we're supposed to have become a more sexualised culture over the past decade, but I didn't realise that we started off as the 50s midwest
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 25 September 2008 17:56 (nine years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yeah, lighten up, visiting Thailand and going to a brothel, thousands of Western men do it every year, where's the harm in it?
― Terry Micawber (Tom D.), Friday, 17 November 2017 14:47 (eight years ago)
Any idea what approach they're taking for the new one? Hoping it's not another attempt at a big rock record.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 17 November 2017 23:23 (eight years ago)
idk maybe they’ll nail that this time
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Saturday, 18 November 2017 02:39 (eight years ago)