Manic Street Preachers

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Manic Street Preachers emerged at the dawn of the 1990s as a fiery rebuke of the placid state of British indie rock, a scene that grew to favor the swirling solipsism of shoegaze and the neo-psychedelia of acid house. Inspired by the provocative punk of the Clash and the heavy glam of Guns N' Roses, the Manics wedded leftist politics with arena-filling guitar riffs, a combination that made them irresistible to the British rock press of the ’90s. The group’s rise ran parallel to the ascendency of Brit-pop but just when they were at the cusp of stardom, lyricist/guitarist Richey James disappeared after the release of their early masterwork The Holy Bible. The trio of James Dean Bradfield, Nicky Wire, and Sean Moore regrouped to deliver Everything Must Go, a 1996 album where they unveiled a subdued, mature sound that suited a set of songs where they came to terms with their loss. Everything Must Go eclipsed the group’s three previous albums, a success consolidated by its 1998 sequel This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours, the pair of records that established the group as a U.K. rock institution. From that point forward, Manic Street Preachers adhered to the template established in the late ’90s — big music delivered passionately — while also refusing to abandon the political principles they established at the start of their career. The combination helped the Manics retain a fervent following: in 2021, The Ultra Vivid Lament became their first album in 23 years to top the U.K. charts.
James Dean Bradfield (vocals, guitar), Nicky Wire (born Nick Jones; bass), Sean Moore (drums), and Flicker (rhythm guitar) formed Betty Blue in 1986. Within two years’ time, Flicker had left the band and the group had changed its name to the Manic Street Preachers. In the summer of 1988, a fellow student at Swansea University, Richey James (born Richey Edwards), who had previously been the group’s driver, joined the band as rhythm guitarist. They began recording demos, eventually releasing the single “Suicide Alley” in August. “Suicide Alley” boasted a cover replicating that of the Clash’s first album, which indicated the sound of the group at the time — equal parts punk and hard rock. A year after the single’s release, NME gave it an enthusiastic review, citing James’ press release — “We are as far away from anything in the ’80s as possible.”
Indeed, the Manics were one of the key bands of the early ’90s, and their career didn’t get rolling until 1991. The New Art Riot EP appeared in the summer of 1990, followed by a pair of defining singles — “Motown Junk” and “You Love Us” — in early 1991 on Heavenly Records. The singles and the Manics’ incendiary live shows, where they wrote slogans on their shirts, created a strong buzz in the music press, which only escalated that May. James gave an interview with Steve Lamacq for NME in which Lamacq questioned the group’s authenticity; after an argument, James responded by carving the words “4 Real” on his arm. The incident became a sensation, attracting numerous magazine articles, as well as a major-label contract with Sony. Many observers interpreted the action as a simple stunt, but over the next few years it became clear that the self-mutilation was the first indication of James’ mental instability.
“Stay Beautiful” was the Manics’ first release for Sony, and it climbed into the British Top 40 late in the summer of 1991, followed early in 1992 by a re-recorded “You Love Us,” which peaked in the Top 20. By the time they released their much-hyped debut album, Generation Terrorists, in February 1992 — a record the band claimed would outsell Guns N' Roses’ Appetite for Destruction — they had already cultivated a large and devoted following, many of whom emulated their glammy appearance and read the same novels and philosophers the group name-dropped. The Manics had been claiming that they would disband following the release of their debut, yet it became clear by the fall, when a non-LP cover of “Suicide Is Painless (Theme from M*A*S*H)” became their first Top Ten hit, that they would continue performing. Nicky Wire and Richey James had become notorious for their banter throughout the British music press, and while it earned them countless articles, it also painted the group into a corner. Comparatively polished and mainstream compared to its predecessor, Gold Against the Soul, the group’s second album, appeared in the summer of 1993 to mixed reviews.
Shortly after the release of Gold Against the Soul, the Manics’ support began to slide as the group began to splinter amidst internal tensions, many of them stemming from James. Nicky Wire ran into trouble over on-stage remarks about R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe dying of AIDS, but Richey James was in genuine trouble. Suffering from deepening alcoholism and anorexia, James entered prolonged bouts of depression, highlighted by incidents of self-mutilation — most notoriously at a concert in Thailand, when he appeared with his chest slashed open by knives a fan gave him. Early in 1994, he entered a private clinic, and the band had to perform a number of concerts as a trio. James’ mental illness surfaced on the group’s third album, The Holy Bible. Reportedly recorded in a red-light district in Wales, The Holy Bible was a bleak, disillusioned record that earned considerable critical acclaim upon its late summer release in 1994.
Although the Manics’ critical reputation was restored and James was playing with the band, even giving numerous interviews with the press, all was not well. Prior to the American release of The Holy Bible and the band’s ensuing tour, James checked out of his London hotel on February 1, 1995, drove to his Cardiff apartment, and disappeared, leaving behind his passport and credit cards. Within a week he was reported missing and his abandoned car was found on the Severn Bridge outside of Bristol, a spot notorious for suicides. By the summer, the police had presumed he was dead. Broken but not beaten, the remaining Manics decided to carry on as a trio, working the remaining lyrics James left behind into songs.
The Manic Street Preachers returned in December 1995 opening for the Stone Roses. In May 1996, they released Everything Must Go, which was preceded by the number two single “A Design for Life.” Their most direct and mature record to date, Everything Must Go was greeted with enthusiastic reviews, and the Manics became major stars in England. Throughout 1996, the band toured constantly, and most U.K. music publications named Everything Must Go Album of the Year. Despite their growing success, several older fans expressed distress at the group’s increasingly conservative image, yet that didn’t prevent the album from going multi-platinum.
Everything Must Go didn’t just go multi-platinum — it established the Manics as superstars throughout the world. Everywhere except America, that is. The record received a belated release in the U.S., appearing in August of 1996, and the group attempted an American tour opening for Oasis. It should have led to increased exposure, but a blowup between the Gallaghers led to Oasis canceling the entire tour, leaving the Manics at square one. They returned to the U.K. and toured, receiving a number of awards at the end of the year. They didn’t deliver their much-anticipated follow-up, This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours, until August of 1998. The album was another blockbuster success in the U.K., Europe, and Asia, but it didn’t receive a release in America, since the Manics were in the process of leaving Epic in the U.S.
For a while, there was simply no interest in the Manics from American labels, but another multi-platinum album and numerous awards in Britain revived press attention. The band signed with Virgin, which issued This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours in the U.S. in June 1999 — nearly a year after its initial release. Know Your Enemy followed in 2001, although it was not well-received, and the band moved to Sony for British distribution of 2004′s Lifeblood. Both vocalist/guitarist James Dean Bradfield and bassist Nicky Wire followed this release with solo albums, and then reconvened in 2007 to record the edgier, punk-influenced Send Away the Tigers with producer Dave Eringa. After its release, the band quickly set to work on another album, using Richey James’ abandoned lyrics as inspiration. “All 13 songs on the new record feature lyrics left to us by Richey,” the Manics wrote on their website in early 2009. “The brilliance and intelligence of the lyrics dictated that we had to finally use them.” Titled Journal for Plague Lovers, the album was recorded on analog tape by veteran engineer Steve Albini and released that May. Postcards from a Young Man, the band’s tenth studio album, followed in 2010.
After releasing a compilation called National Treasures: The Complete Singles in the fall of 2011, the Manics released a super-deluxe 20th Anniversary edition of Generation Terrorists in 2012. Meanwhile, they plugged away in the studio, working on a ludicrously ambitious project tentatively titled 70 Songs of Hatred and Failure. At one point they despaired of simply having written too much material before hitting on the idea of releasing two very different albums. The first, a folky, almost entirely acoustic, emotionally raw effort titled Rewind the Film, appeared in the fall of 2013, and the second, the “spiky” and Krautrock-inspired Futurology, was issued in May 2014.
A documentary on the Manics, Escape from History, arrived in 2017, followed by the full-length Resistance Is Futile in April 2018. In 2020, Bradfield’s second solo effort, Even in Exile — a concept album about the Chilean activist Victor Jara — went to the U.K. Top Ten. The following year, the Manics returned with their 14th studio album, The Ultra Vivid Lament, a record largely written by Bradfield on piano. Preceded by the single “Orwellian,” The Ultra Vivid Lament became Manic Street Preachers’ first number one album in the U.K. since This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours in 1998. The Manics would support the album with a co-headlining North American tour with Suede, marking the first time either band toured the continent in a number of years. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine