#61
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Oh yeah, I'd pay good money for that! do it!
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#62
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This is an outstanding blog and I would happily pay for a hard copy!
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#63
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'Manic Street Preachers: A Critical Discography' Latest Track: [B162] 'Voodoo Polaroids' (31/01) |
#64
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I do really love the blog but, 'With ‘The Love of Richard Nixon’, released almost a year to the day after their previous single, the Manics began in earnest the Lifeblood era. The band’s seventh album would pursue much more strongly the electronic sound which had influenced the last single [A148] ‘There By the Grace of God’. This song is very much in that vein, in that it contains no guitars at all.' needs correcting.
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I fuck arses. Who fucks arses? Maybe he fucks arses! |
#65
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Indeed, there are no Manics songs in that era that don't feature guitars in some capacity.
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“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.” L.P. Hartley |
#66
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Thanks - edited! I'm not sure how I ended up writing that, though it's fair to say it was a more swiftly-written post as I'm really no fan of that song.
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'Manic Street Preachers: A Critical Discography' Latest Track: [B162] 'Voodoo Polaroids' (31/01) |
#67
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There's a Goddamn guitar solo in Nixon, I even learnt how to play it cos it's ace! Any way, Nixon came more than 2 years after their previous single, Grace of God was from 2002, Nixon was late 2004.
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#68
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it was about 2 years
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