Tag Archives: the holy bible

#817: Manic Street Preachers – Mausoleum

Well, it’s my birthday today. 26. A pretty solid age to be at, I think. I’m finding it a bit funny that a song from one of the darkest British rock albums of the 90s arrives on this day. The Holy Bible by Manic Street Preachers has been noted for its rage, discontent, and for being a brutal critique of the human condition, as described by comment I saw on YouTube. It’s the band’s last record featuring guitarist/lyricist Richey Edwards, who disappeared a few months after the album’s release. It’s something of a final statement by the man, though some lyrics were also written by bassist Nicky Wire. Clearly, Edwards wasn’t having the greatest of times.

‘Mausoleum’ is one of two songs on there inspired by the band’s visit to Dachau concentration camp. It doesn’t contain any overt references to the place itself. ‘The Intense Humming of Evil’ covers that. The ‘no birds’ refrain on ‘Mausoleum’ is said to have been written because there were no birds that the members saw when they were at the camp. Otherwise, the track is a scathing description of seeing nothing but death and destruction around you, and generally being in a very bad mental place.

James Dean Bradfield belts out every word from the gut here, apart from the verses where he has more of a hushed approach to the delivery. He really was a powerhouse back in the day. From ‘regained your self-control’ to the two repeats of ‘your meaning’, I don’t think he takes a breath once. And only a few seconds later, he yells ‘no birds’ from his chest. Very awesome when you hear it. I’ve always enjoyed the ending where the song’s melody completely changes to another and gradually speeds up until coming to a crashing stop. Just my personal highlight.

My iPod #361: Manic Street Preachers – Faster

‘I hate purity, hate goodness, I don’t want virtue to exist anyway, I want everyone corrupt….’

Er… huh?!

Could you imagine how it was for me, after all these years of listening to post-Richey Manics, to actually sit down and listen to “The Holy Bible” for the first time? That album is not fun. It is very good. But if seeing the absolute worst in mankind is your thing, then “The Holy Bible” will be the best 56 minutes of your life.

No lies, I listened to “The Holy Bible” for the first time nearing the end of last year when Manic Street Preachers came to mind for some reason. Before then I’ve only known of the ‘A Design for Life/If You Tolerate This/You’re Not Alone’ Manics. The ones with the radio-friendly, festival anthems. So to say “Faster” was a change is a definite understatement. It took me a few minutes to get over what I had listened to.

What are essentially phrases, sentences and a few proverbs coined by Richey Edwards and Nicky Wire (mostly Richards) are placed with some of the most ferocious music that James Dean Bradfield and Sean Moore have written. The drumming by Moore seems to never end right until that final note, being quick on the bass drum with constant fills here and there and Bradfield melodically shouts at you against a two-note riff that symbolises uneasiness, fast rhythm guitars and loud licks and a terrifying solo before the coda.

This song is a bit scary and disturbing. I give it 10/10, good work.