Similar Albums:
- Artist: Manic Street Preachers
- Rating:





- Release Date: 1996 05
- Type: Lyrics are included with the album
- Genre: Rock
| Album Review: Everything Must Go |
Similar Albums:





| Wikipedia: Everything Must Go (Manic Street Preachers album) |
| Everything Must Go | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Manic Street Preachers | ||||
| Released | 20 May 1996 | |||
| Recorded | 1995–1996 at Chateau De La Rouge Motte, France; Big Noise Recorders, Cardiff; Real World Studios, Wiltshire |
|||
| Genre | Alternative rock, britpop | |||
| Length | 45:22 | |||
| Label | Sony | |||
| Producer | Mike Hedges | |||
| Professional reviews | ||||
|
||||
| Manic Street Preachers chronology | ||||
|
||||
Everything Must Go is the fourth album by Manic Street Preachers, released in 1996. It contains five songs with lyrics by Richey James Edwards, who disappeared and presumed to have died circa 1 February 1995 and was the last album to feature his contributions until Journal for Plague Lovers. The working title of this album was Sounds In The Grass[citation needed] - after a series of paintings by Jackson Pollock.
Contents |
Everything Must Go, takes its name from a play by Patrick Jones, Nicky Wire's brother, represents a change of style for the Manics. Their previous album, The Holy Bible, had been a stark, disturbing album with a minimal amount of instrumentation whilst this album embraces synths and strings, has a more commercial feel and fits with the Britpop movement that was prevalent at the time. The lyrical focus of the album is also shifted, due in part to Edwards' departure. Instead of introspective and autobiographical tracks such as 4st 7lbs, Wire's predilection for grandiose, historical and political themes dominates. These themes would continue through their next album, This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours.
Subjects tackled on the album include the tragic life of the photographer Kevin Carter, on the track of the same name, Willem de Kooning, and the maltreatment of animals in captivity on "Small Black Flowers That Grow in the Sky". The latter track, with lyrics by Richey James Edwards, can also be interpreted as an exploration of his mental state before his disappearance; the line "Here chewing your tail is joy" for instance may be as much about Richey's self harm as it is the tormented self injury of zoo animals.
Part of the rhythm guitar on "No Surface All Feeling" was played by Edwards before his disappearance, making it only the second time that Edwards' guitar-work was present on a Manic Street Preachers recorded track (the other instance being "La Tristesse Durera" on Gold Against the Soul.) Bradfield typically performs all the guitar parts for their recordings.
Writing for Q magazine in June 1996, Tom Doyle thought that Everything Must Go had "little in common" with its predecessor, The Holy Bible, and saw the album as a return to, and improvement upon, the "epic pop-rock" sound of Gold Against The Soul.[4] He noted the band's choice of producer, Mike Hedges, as a possible contributing factor to the overall change in sound, and drew parallels to the lyrics of Kurt Cobain and the "reverb-laden" music of Phil Spector.[4] Nicholas Barber of The Independent described Everything Must Go as "the most immediate, assured and anthemic British hard-rock album since Oasis's Definitely Maybe".[8] He also thought that the record was more accessible when comparing it to the "crushingly heavy-going" sound of The Holy Bible, especially, he noted, for a band "who once would have spat at the breadhead, corporate-sell-out idea of a hummable ditty."[8] Vox magazine's Mark Sutherland saw Everything Must Go as the group's "most approachable" album, describing it as a "record so superb it might just make intelligence fashionable again", and surmising that the album "proves that, professionally, at least, the Manic Street Preachers don't miss Richey."[9]
In 1998, Q readers voted it the 11th greatest album of all time, while in 2000 the same magazine placed it at number 39 in its list of the "100 Greatest British Albums Ever". The album also won the award for Best British Album at the 1997 Brit Awards.
All tracks written by Bradfield/Moore (music) and Wire (lyrics), unless otherwise noted.
As with the lead single "A Design for Life", the album peaked at number 2 in the UK charts. "Everything Must Go", "Kevin Carter" and "Australia" were also released as singles and reached the UK Top 10. So far the album has gone double platinum in the UK.
A 10th anniversary edition of the album was released on November 6, 2006. It included the original album, demos, B-sides, remixes, rehearsals and alternate takes of the album's songs, spread out over two CDs. An additional DVD, featuring music videos, live performances, TV appearances, a 45-minute documentary on the making of the album, and two films by Patrick Jones, completed the three-disc set.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Everything Must Go (1996 Album by Manic Street Preachers) | |
| Everything Must Go [Bonus DVD] (2003 Album by Steely Dan) | |
| Bottom Out (Drama Film) |
| Everything is going to be alright in gaelic? Read answer... | |
| Do you lose everything you have when you go bankrupt? Read answer... | |
| When is everything going to get better? Read answer... |
| Is it the same version of A design for life live on the Manics cassette single Australia as the Everything Must Go 10th Anniversary album? | |
| What is the Meaning of the phrase there's a place for everything and everything must have a proper place? | |
| What is the meaning of There is a place for everything and everything must have a proper place? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Everything Must Go (Manic Street Preachers album)". Read more |
Mentioned in