
Critical Thinking: 2CD
Manic Street Preachers have released details of their fifteenth studio album and UK tour to accompany it. âCritical Thinkingâ is released on Columbia on 31st January 2025, and a new single featuring for the first time, lead vocals from bassist/lyricist Nicky Wire âHiding In Plain Sightâ is available now (25th October).
InitiallyâŻinspired by a line from the poet Anne Sexton ("I am a collection of dismantled almosts"),âŻâHiding in Plain Sightâ contrasts a fearful midlife nostalgia - one in which the writer longs to âkeep the curtains drawn all dayâ - with a gloriously uplifting melody that draws on classic â70s rockânâroll of The Only Ones, Cockney Rebel and the loose flow of Dinosaur Jrâs âFreak Sceneâ. Recorded at the bandâs Door To The River Studio and Rockfield, Monmouth, the songâŻfeatures a lead vocal by Nicky Wire and added vocals by Lana McDonagh. It was produced by the band with regular collaborators Dave Eringa and Loz Williams and mixed by Caesar Edmunds (St Vincent/Wet Leg).âŻÂ Â
âCritical Thinkingâ celebrates conflicting ideas colliding, with unflinchingly soul-searching lyrics meeting some of the most head-on, addictive melodies the band have ever recorded.Â
Manic Street Preachersâ Nicky Wire on Critical Thinking: âThis is a record of opposites colliding - of dialectics trying to find a path of resolution. While the music has an effervescence and an elegiac uplift, most of the words deal with the cold analysis of the self, the exception being the three lyrics by James (Dean Bradfield) which look for and hopefully find answers in people, their memories, language and beliefs. Â
The music is energised and at times euphoric. Recording could sometimes be sporadic and isolated, at other times we played live in a band setting, again the opposites making sense with each other. There are crises at the heart of these songs. They are microcosms of skepticism and suspicion, the drive to the internal seems inevitable - start with yourself, maybe the rest will follow.âÂ
Speaking to Mojo Magazine, James Dean Bradfield said âSometimes just to have your best songs is enough, just putting a record out and not trying to describe a big overarching concept, even though there is a thread there.âÂ
Manic Street Preachers have released details of their fifteenth studio album and UK tour to accompany it. âCritical Thinkingâ is released on Columbia on 31st January 2025, and a new single featuring for the first time, lead vocals from bassist/lyricist Nicky Wire âHiding In Plain Sightâ is available now (25th October).
InitiallyâŻinspired by a line from the poet Anne Sexton ("I am a collection of dismantled almosts"),âŻâHiding in Plain Sightâ contrasts a fearful midlife nostalgia - one in which the writer longs to âkeep the curtains drawn all dayâ - with a gloriously uplifting melody that draws on classic â70s rockânâroll of The Only Ones, Cockney Rebel and the loose flow of Dinosaur Jrâs âFreak Sceneâ. Recorded at the bandâs Door To The River Studio and Rockfield, Monmouth, the songâŻfeatures a lead vocal by Nicky Wire and added vocals by Lana McDonagh. It was produced by the band with regular collaborators Dave Eringa and Loz Williams and mixed by Caesar Edmunds (St Vincent/Wet Leg).âŻÂ Â
âCritical Thinkingâ celebrates conflicting ideas colliding, with unflinchingly soul-searching lyrics meeting some of the most head-on, addictive melodies the band have ever recorded.Â
Manic Street Preachersâ Nicky Wire on Critical Thinking: âThis is a record of opposites colliding - of dialectics trying to find a path of resolution. While the music has an effervescence and an elegiac uplift, most of the words deal with the cold analysis of the self, the exception being the three lyrics by James (Dean Bradfield) which look for and hopefully find answers in people, their memories, language and beliefs. Â
The music is energised and at times euphoric. Recording could sometimes be sporadic and isolated, at other times we played live in a band setting, again the opposites making sense with each other. There are crises at the heart of these songs. They are microcosms of skepticism and suspicion, the drive to the internal seems inevitable - start with yourself, maybe the rest will follow.âÂ
Speaking to Mojo Magazine, James Dean Bradfield said âSometimes just to have your best songs is enough, just putting a record out and not trying to describe a big overarching concept, even though there is a thread there.âÂ
Original: $43.50
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$15.22Description
Manic Street Preachers have released details of their fifteenth studio album and UK tour to accompany it. âCritical Thinkingâ is released on Columbia on 31st January 2025, and a new single featuring for the first time, lead vocals from bassist/lyricist Nicky Wire âHiding In Plain Sightâ is available now (25th October).
InitiallyâŻinspired by a line from the poet Anne Sexton ("I am a collection of dismantled almosts"),âŻâHiding in Plain Sightâ contrasts a fearful midlife nostalgia - one in which the writer longs to âkeep the curtains drawn all dayâ - with a gloriously uplifting melody that draws on classic â70s rockânâroll of The Only Ones, Cockney Rebel and the loose flow of Dinosaur Jrâs âFreak Sceneâ. Recorded at the bandâs Door To The River Studio and Rockfield, Monmouth, the songâŻfeatures a lead vocal by Nicky Wire and added vocals by Lana McDonagh. It was produced by the band with regular collaborators Dave Eringa and Loz Williams and mixed by Caesar Edmunds (St Vincent/Wet Leg).âŻÂ Â
âCritical Thinkingâ celebrates conflicting ideas colliding, with unflinchingly soul-searching lyrics meeting some of the most head-on, addictive melodies the band have ever recorded.Â
Manic Street Preachersâ Nicky Wire on Critical Thinking: âThis is a record of opposites colliding - of dialectics trying to find a path of resolution. While the music has an effervescence and an elegiac uplift, most of the words deal with the cold analysis of the self, the exception being the three lyrics by James (Dean Bradfield) which look for and hopefully find answers in people, their memories, language and beliefs. Â
The music is energised and at times euphoric. Recording could sometimes be sporadic and isolated, at other times we played live in a band setting, again the opposites making sense with each other. There are crises at the heart of these songs. They are microcosms of skepticism and suspicion, the drive to the internal seems inevitable - start with yourself, maybe the rest will follow.âÂ
Speaking to Mojo Magazine, James Dean Bradfield said âSometimes just to have your best songs is enough, just putting a record out and not trying to describe a big overarching concept, even though there is a thread there.âÂ













