Thursday, October 1, 2009

Manic Street Preachers take on Chicago


I’m soaking wet with a stomach full of Irish Whiskey, fish and chips. My ears are still ringing a little bit.

And I can’t wipe off the grin on my face after witnessing what I can only describe as sheer delight.

From the very first time I heard Manic Street Preachers when I was 19, I knew this was the type of band I wanted to see live since I first started listening to music.

Tonight I got my chance.

The Manics started their set with “Motorcycle Emptiness” off their debut album, “Generation Terrorists.” It was a solid start, and a proper kickoff as James Dean Bradfield announced that it had been nearly a decade since the band had played this country.

The band launched into a set that lasted more than an hour and a half, with minimal chit chat and banter. Bradfield, Nicky Wire and Sean Moore delivered with an energy that would not relent.

Songs skipped around from album to album, from “No Surface All Feeling” on 1996’s “Everything Must Go” to “Gold Against The Soul” favorites like “La Tristesse Durera” and “From Despair to Where.”

Several songs from their latest release, “Journal For Plague Lovers,” were interspersed throughout with Bradfield and Wire pausing before the newer songs to announce the lyrics were penned by original rhythm guitarist Richey Edwards (who mysteriously vanished in 1995 after his car was abandoned near the Severn Bridge in Wales).

Even at the end of the set as Bradfield introduced the band members with snarky descriptions of their various personas and personalities, he introduced Edwards in spirit - as if he was still on the stage - with a sense of reverence.

If one thing was evident, the Manics have been able to overcome the trials of losing one of the greatest lyricists in rock history without bemoaning the past. Instead, like truly great Welsh artists, they celebrate in elegy.

The set slowed down in the middle with Bradfield taking to the stage solo with only an acoustic guitar. High point of the concert? Bradfield singing “This Is Yesterday” from “The Holy Bible” after hushing the crowd and crooning as if in a mournful lullaby.

It sent shivers up my spine.

The band would have been remiss had it not ended the set with the DIY ethos-bearing punk numbers of their formative years. “Motown Junk” and “You Love Us” had the front 10 rows of the audience pogo jumping along with the band.

It was truly a great show and one of the few where you'd be hard pressed to hear a song you didn't instantly like. Whether they will find fan bases in other cities will remain to be seen, but a man in his late 30s standing in the fifth row summed up the sentiments of many who attended the Chicago show at the Metro. As the opening band, Bear Hands, was about to close, they told the audience it wouldn’t be long before the Manics took the stage.

“It’s been too long!” the man in the fifth row exclaimed.

Bradfield promised the crowd at the beginning of the concert that the Manics would make it up to them for waiting so many years. The following hour and a half more than did so.

Hopefully we won’t have to wait ten more years to hear them again in Chicago.

4 comments:

  1. Another great post Mr. Saunders. You describe it with an imagery that makes it seem like I was actually there.

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  2. Great article! And it was a truly amazing show!
    Do you happen to have the whole set list from the show? If so, can you please post it? I saw them 13 years ago in England, fell in love with them then, and so glad they haven't changed a bit since then:)

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  4. I don't have the set list, but if you go to the MSP Facebook fan page, you'll find a lot of set lists on the wall. In almost every instance, the set lists are identical except for the middle, particularly which song James chooses to play on acoustic guitar after "This Is Yesterday."

    Other than that, the songs are all pretty much the same. They've also been playing "Peeled Apples" and "Jackie Collins Existential Question Time" at each show, and then throwing in a third track of their choice from the new album (the third song differs from city to city).

    Hope that helps! Glad you enjoyed the show too!

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