Forever Delayed - The Independent Manics Forum  

Go Back   Forever Delayed - The Independent Manics Forum > Manic Street Preachers > Manic Street Preachers Discussion

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #706  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:22
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
More stuff from Ooh Brilliant

http://oohbrilliant.com/artist/manics/

‘Rewind the Film’ is the Manic Street Preachers’ quietest and most beautiful album yet. In certain lights it is also their bleakest and most exacting since ‘The Holy Bible’, but the Manics have always oscillated between defiance and despair, and each emotion contains at least a grain of its opposite.

When we call a band “survivors”, it’s usually a polite way of referring to their age, or to some vanquished addiction. But the Manics’ songbook is fundamentally about survival, as they constantly take stock of what’s been lost, what remains and what comes next. Their endurance isn’t the complacent variety that keeps bands circling the globe like ghost ships long after they’ve run out of things to say. It’s something that needs to be fought for, and justified, at every turn.

Just as ‘Generation Terrorists’, re-issued to great acclaim last year, encapsulated how it felt to be young and fierce and gloriously unreasonable, ‘Rewind the Film’ explores the treacherous territory of middle age: “inbetween acceptance and rage,” to quote ‘Builder of Routines’. “This album is a meditation on mortality,” says Nick. “We’re the grown-ups now. The hinterland between 40 and 50 is just so difficult to navigate for a band like us.”

The original plan, true to form, was implausibly audacious – a vast armada of songs – but gradually they realised they were making two separate albums, the second of which was recorded simultaneously in Berlin and will be released next spring. “It’s been a strange experience,” says James. “I usually feel like I live in two bands but for once I actually felt that the two distinct versions of the Preachers were active at the same time.”

Having reconnected with the anthemic ferocity of their youth on ‘Send Away the Tigers’ (2007), ‘Journal for Plague Lovers’ (2009) and ‘Postcards From a Young Man’ (2010) – a phase that culminated in their retrospective ‘National Treasures’ world tour — the Manics found themselves in a new, more exposed place. “We squeezed every last bit of anthemic energy and belief in the idea of being in a rock’n’roll band and there was nothing left,” says Nick.

His lyrics for ‘Rewind the Film’ demanded a more contemplative sound: the acoustic-based album they’d been talking about making for 20 years. Back then the template was the cold, detached narratives of Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Nebraska’ but now James found himself reaching for different influences: Leonard Cohen’s ‘Songs From a Room’, the Cardigans’ ‘Long Gone Before Daylight and Anglo-German classical composer Max Richter. “Those were the three things that came to mind when I was reading Nick’s lyrics. I started seeing musical pictures in my head. You have to be careful when you say acoustic album because people think you’re just battering on boxes and having a hoedown. As a band we wanted to make something with the emotional depth of REM’s ‘Automatic for The People’”.

‘Rewind the Film’ is far from sparse – in fact, it features some of the Manics’ richest, most imaginative arrangements – but James only plays electric guitar once, on ‘3 Ways to See Despair’. “It’s as radical a departure as we’re ever going to make,” says Nick. “We’ve never released a single without James’s electric guitar on before.”

This being the Manics, ‘Rewind the Film’ is not an album of woodsmoke and wistful autumnal reflections on the passing of time but a hard stare in the face of death – not just the deaths of friends and family members, but the death of ideals. It registers the shock felt by a doggedly principled band looking around at a country again dominated by the oldest of elites, from the monarchy to old Etonians, and a music scene overrun by the privately educated and in hock to corporate brands, where the concept of selling out has become a weird relic.

Nick explains “It’s shocking. The idea that most things you believe in are seen as passé is scary. You get really tired of trying to believe in anything. It seems to be a much easier pathway to forget about any principles whatsoever. This album is the sound of a band running away from itself really. It’s the fall of the Manics empire, just crumbling around us.”

In what Nick calls its “cruel self-examination,” ‘Rewind the Film’ also relates back to the more introspective moments on ‘This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours’, and is equally grounded in the soil and psyche of South Wales. Apart from ‘Builder of Routines’ and ‘Running Out of Fantasy’, which were recorded in Berlin, it was made in Cardiff and mixed at Rockfield. “There’s a mystery and serenity on ‘This Is My Truth …’ that has come back on this record,” says Nick.

Hence the chillingly beautiful self-analysis of ‘This Sullen Welsh Heart’ with its stark confession, “I don’t want my children to grow up like me,” and the eerie seclusion of ‘Builder of Routines’, which features softly devastating French horn from Sean Moore: “So sick and tired of being 4 Real/Only the fiction still has the appeal.” Nick’s incorrigible refusenik mentality is a source of both pride and irritation. “I don’t expect your sympathy/I’m old, I’m strange, I’m confidential,” sings James on ‘Running Out of Fantasy’s’ isolationist folk.

There are ghosts from the past, too. ‘3 Ways to See Despair’ (Neil Young watching the night close in) was inspired by a magazine feature about Stuart Adamson, of the Skids and Big Country, who committed suicide in 2001. ‘As Holy as the Soil (That Buries Your Skin)’ is a stirring love song to Richey featuring a Dexy’s style horn section.

The heart of the album is the sumptuous title track, based on a sample by maverick composer David Axelrod’s 1969 song ‘A Little Girl Lost’ which the Manics re-recorded note for note featuring resonant guest vocals from James’s old friend Richard Hawley. Seeking shelter in childhood, it’s a bleak retort to the heroic nostalgia of ‘Postcards From a Young Man’. “You can’t get more honest about ageing and the passing of time,” says James. “For Nick’s sanity I wanted someone else to come in and take the hit emotionally. I love Richard Hawley. There’s something about him that will not be bowed.”

The Manics have always been our greatest idealists — lifelong believers in the power of a song to shake, burn and remake you — so perhaps the album’s most devastating song is ‘Anthem for a Lost Cause’, with lyrics by James. It came from hearing a late-night Radio 4 programme about whether songs still matter.

“Can songs connect with a generation anymore?” asks James. “Can they become a signpost to something? I’m not saying it’s right but, in the wee hours of the morning, my answer was no. Perhaps the song has lost its place in the cultural landscape and its ability to define anything other than good times. There is resistance in this song but there’s also an admission of defeat. Music has become a lifestyle backdrop, an app, a sync, a selling point. I think there’s a suspicion of confrontation: it’s crass and it doesn’t sell. But I’m still looking for a song to atomise the day, to change the particles in the air.” He laughs. “If anyone thinks Nick’s a miserable bastard then they should look at me.”

So ‘Rewind the Film’ is, as Nick says, “our most bare and honest album since ‘The Holy Bible’”. But it is also rippled with warmth and grace, with many surprising departures. English singer-songwriter Lucy Rose counterbalances James on ‘This Sullen Welsh Heart’ while Cardiff based Cate Le Bon takes the lead on ‘4 Lonely Roads’ (written entirely by Nick), a tender, AE Houseman-influenced plea for faith: “And if we can then we must/Hold our heads up and learn to trust.” Optimistic (to a “slightly misleading” extent says Nick), single ‘Show Me the Wonder’ is a brass-bright celebration of doubt: “Is it too much to ask to disbelieve in everything?” The Max Richter-inspired electronic reverie of ‘(I Miss the) Tokyo Skyline’ honours the city where Nick feels most free from himself and from the past.

‘Manorbier’, a cinematic instrumental about the Norman castle in West Wales where Virginia Woolf and George Bernard Shaw used to write, was James’s attempt to “splash love on the canvas” with the aid of a leviathan theremin riff. It offers a way out, because with the Manics there is always a way out, and it leads to ‘30 Year War’, a powerhouse history lesson about the crushing of the working class and the baleful return of “old Etonian scum”.

“It’s a lyric nobody else could write,” says James. “It’s a shock to the system and it’s a great bridge between this record and the next.” Thus an album that begins with the sombre confession “I can’t fight this war anymore”, and proceeds to consider the implications of defeat, ends with a resurgent roar, back from the depths.

Next year, the Berlin album will see the Manics turn their gaze towards the wider world. “It’s more like the logical conclusion of ‘The Holy Bible’ and ‘Journal for Plague Lovers’, with a European disco edge,” says Nick. “I felt like I was someone else writing that.”

For now though the Manics are looking inwards with piercing clarity and asking themselves the hard questions that most bands don’t dare say out loud. And if the words seem unforgiving in cold type, then the music challenges and transforms them, bringing forth precious drops of hope as if in riposte to the nocturnal defeatism of ‘Anthem for a Lost Cause’. The song still matters. These songs matter. To quote ‘This Sullen Welsh Heart’, “The act of creation saves us from despair.”

“My barometer is if you’re as honest in your joy as you are in your misery then you’ll be fine,” says James. “We have a lot of shortcomings as a band and as people but I think we’re the right band for that job: misery and joy in equal measure.”

“Real generosity towards the future lies in giving all to the present.” – Albert Camus
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!

Last edited by AK47; 19-07-2013 at 15:01.
Reply With Quote
  #707  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:32
hummingbird's Avatar
hummingbird hummingbird is offline
Builder of routine
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: in a quiet corner
Posts: 19,472
Quote:
Originally Posted by AK47 View Post
More stuff from Ooh Brilliant

http://oohbrilliant.com/artist/manics/
the more i read about this album the more desperate i am to hear it.
Reply With Quote
  #708  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:41
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
Quote:
Originally Posted by hummingbird View Post
the more i read about this album the more desperate i am to hear it.
It sounds gorgeous, sad and important based on the general vibes I'm hearing.
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!
Reply With Quote
  #709  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:44
stanley lambchop's Avatar
stanley lambchop stanley lambchop is offline
Knowlede Is Power
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Telford
Age: 49
Posts: 1,039
haven't been this excited about a manics album since TIMT though not quite sure about Seans 'softly devasting french horn' poor lad
Reply With Quote
  #710  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:46
gladstone's Avatar
gladstone gladstone is offline
I am purity, they call me perverted
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Manchester
Posts: 380
"30 Year War" sounds like exactly what I want from a new Manics song!
__________________
www.twitter.com/curtthreadgold
Reply With Quote
  #711  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:48
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
That was an excellent insight into the album. A few lyrical clunkers but nothing as bad as Autumnsong! "I'm so fed up of being 4real" feels like a cheap line. However, Wire summing up the next album as European disco is screaming Lifeblood 2 to me.
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!
Reply With Quote
  #712  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:49
Frozendiva's Avatar
Frozendiva Frozendiva is offline
Stretched out in the sun
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Great White North
Posts: 10,511
Why didn't they hire this marketing/promo company a bit earlier?
Reply With Quote
  #713  
Old 19-07-2013, 14:50
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
Quote:
Originally Posted by Frozendiva View Post
Why didn't they hire this marketing/promo company a bit earlier?
Completely agree. They're doing a fantastic job so far.
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!
Reply With Quote
  #714  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:18
Dancing Kirby's Avatar
Dancing Kirby Dancing Kirby is offline
Doors slowly closing
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 8,893
Quote:
"The heart of the album is the sumptuous title track, based on a sample by maverick composer David Axelrod’s 1969 song ‘A Little Girl Lost’ which the Manics re-recorded note for note featuring resonant guest vocals from James’s old friend Richard Hawley."
Finally. Another "sounds like Love's Forever Changes" and I was ready to shop them to the police.

Quote:
"chorus with too many words"

"breakdown section"
Reply With Quote
  #715  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:29
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
Quote:
Originally Posted by MSPKYE View Post
Journalist on twitter with the promo

@justplayed: @justplayed: 'Show Me The Wonder' is a cracking bit of upbeat Manics indie-pop in line with their cover of Out Of Time.

@justplayed: Massive chorus with too many words making it hard to sing along to. Very Manics.

@justplayed:initial impression:[on 4 Lonely Roads] Lovely melody, processional drum beat, Nicky on backing vocals. Great hazy breakdown section.

@justplayed: There is a lovely musical nod to 'God Only Knows ' on 'Builder Of Routines' on the new Manics album.


Sounds really promising!
I had a feeling it would sound in a similar vein to "Out Of Time". Such a shame that I've always hated every version of that song ever committed to tape. I find it horrendously cheesy, massively overproduced. I can only hope SMTW is not as gawdy.
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!
Reply With Quote
  #716  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:34
hummingbird's Avatar
hummingbird hummingbird is offline
Builder of routine
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: in a quiet corner
Posts: 19,472
out of time is a fine tune
Reply With Quote
  #717  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:37
AK47's Avatar
AK47 AK47 is offline
A self-made vacuum
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: In a leather bound book of the worlds greatest secrets
Posts: 2,253
Quote:
Originally Posted by hummingbird View Post
out of time is a fine tune
I used to like it but I've heard so many versions of it that it's lost its charm. The manics did a very good version but the production is just too full on.
__________________
LET'S GO TO WAR!
Reply With Quote
  #718  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:40
mar's Avatar
mar mar is offline
Winterlover
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Barcelona
Posts: 7,059
Thank you AK47! I'm so excited to read about all the tracks!
__________________
Birds ate my face.
Reply With Quote
  #719  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:47
hummingbird's Avatar
hummingbird hummingbird is offline
Builder of routine
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: in a quiet corner
Posts: 19,472
Quote:
Originally Posted by AK47 View Post
I used to like it but I've heard so many versions of it that it's lost its charm. The manics did a very good version but the production is just too full on.
i think i only know the manics version. I must've heard others. Don't listen to it all that much as i don't really play lipstick traces anymore. It comes up on shuffle sometimes and i think *Ooh Brilliant*

sorry..i'm just going to keep going with that little pun till someone punches me in the face
Reply With Quote
  #720  
Old 19-07-2013, 15:53
FacelessSenseOfVoid's Avatar
FacelessSenseOfVoid FacelessSenseOfVoid is offline
Winterlover
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Sheffield/Birmingham
Age: 44
Posts: 6,804
All this sounds extremely promising. Just wanna hear some damn music now!!!!!
__________________
23/08/01 CIA, 06/04/05 Civic Hall, 24/05/06 Camden Barfly, 11/10/06 Birmingham Barfly, 12/05/07 Cardiff Uni, 21/05/07 Civic Hall, 27/05/07 Manchester Apollo, 02/06/07 Colston Hall, 09/06/07 Reading Hexagon, 08/12/07 Birmingham NIA, 12/12/07 Brixton Academy, 28/02/08 O2 Arena, 30/05/09 Roundhouse, 12/10/10 Derby Assembly Rooms, 14/12/10 Birmingham O2 Academy, 19/05/11 Civic Hall, 17/12/11 O2 Arena, 06/11/12 Rough Trade, 13/09/13 Newport Centre, 23/09/13 Colston Hall, 27/09/13 Manchester Ritz, 29/03/14 Cardiff Motorpoint, 31/03/14 Leicester De Montfort, 06/04/14 Civic Hall, 08/07/14 Rough Trade, 14/05/16 Genting Arena, 09/07/17 Llangollen, 06/10/17 Drama Studio, 16/03/18 Absolute Radio, 14/04/18 Rough Trade, 27/04/18 Birmingham Arena, 05/05/18 Cardiff Motorpoint

Twitter: @KhizzyJ
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 12:14.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.