Manic Street Preachers: ‘We want to outdo ourselves and people’s expectations’

Singer-guitarist James Dean Bradfield on the Welsh band’s new album ‘Resistance Is Futile’, their favourite Irish venues, and why they are thrilled to be supporting Guns N’ Roses

Sean Moore, Nicky Wire and James Dean Bradfield: 'People secretly like to know when things are going to end and for something to have a finite time span, but I instinctively rail against that.'
Sean Moore, Nicky Wire and James Dean Bradfield: 'People secretly like to know when things are going to end and for something to have a finite time span, but I instinctively rail against that.'

Manic Street Preachers singer James Dean Bradfield has very vivid memories of their first Dublin show back in the mists of 1991 that are slightly more unusual than the love of an adoring crowd and quaffing pints of Guinness.

“We played a place called Charlie’s Rock Bar to about 100 people,” Bradfield recalls of their Dublin debut in a long-defunct venue on Aungier Street. “I had to take Nick [Wire] to A&E straight after the gig because he twisted his ankle. I sat with him in the hospital on a Friday or Saturday night. All the usual victims were present and incorrect, plastered drunk with their Abrakebabras in their hands, staring at Nick with his panda eyes and make-up running. Somebody asked us who we were. We told them we were in a rock’n’roll band. They said, ‘Well, you’re the strangest-looking rock’n’roll band I’ve ever seen, fella.’”

Such reactions from strangers are a fundamental part of Manics history. They chose their name after Bradfield was confronted in Cardiff with the pointed question while busking, “What are you, boyo, some kind of manic street preacher?”

Millions of album sales later and the Welsh trio are poised to release Resistance is Futile, their 13th studio album. They declared in 1992 that their debut album, Generation Terrorists, was about "culture, alienation, boredom and despair". On Resistance is Futile, they address more adult themes: memory, loss, forgotten history, confused reality, and art as a refuge and source of inspiration. They call it an "obsessively melodic" album, which "references both the naive energy of Generation Terrorists and the orchestral sweep of Everything Must Go".

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Bradfield wrote the recent single Distant Colours, which is inspired by the iconic Welsh politician and NHS founder Nye Bevan. "It is a post-Trump, post-Brexit, post-digital malaise and post-general election song," he explains. "It's about getting to the age that I am now, which is 49, and there's no hiding from that fact at all. It's about not being able to pin your colours to any masts anymore."

Liverpool Revisited eulogises the Merseyside city and salutes the defiance and perseverance of those who lost their loved ones in the Hillsborough disaster, when fans were crushed to death at the 1989 FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forrest.

Where we came from in Wales, we were left with the muck and wastage of the Thatcher era. We were left with a mess, but we got through it

"We've written about Hillsborough before, on South Yorkshire Mass Murder, Bradfield says. "That was a very blunt song that delved into the grotesque injustice and utter tragedy of what happened. I would conversely say that Liverpool Revisited is about ordinary people's victory. It's not about defeat and it doesn't delve into the pain. It's a song about the victory those people achieved against the entire British legal establishment. They f**king nailed them and won. It's about ordinary people being victorious against all the odds and it's a positive song."

Reasons to be cheerful

The singer pauses when asked to identify reasons to be positive in fractured times. “That’s the hardest question I’ve been asked in the last two years,” he answers. “If you can still try to engage with the world, no matter how f**ked up, confusing, intractable and polarising it is, and just hang in there, you will win eventually. The one thing you learn as you get older is nothing lasts forever, and these times won’t last forever. We came out of the ’80s thinking we were born in absolutely awful times with the miner’s strike and Thatcher. Where we came from in Wales, we were left with the muck and wastage of the Thatcher era. We were left with a mess, but we got through it.”

Growing up in the former mining town of Blackwood in south Wales, punk and rock'n'roll became the primary escape for Bradfield and his cousin Sean Moore, who, along with their primary school pals Richey Edwards and Nicky Wire, formed Manic Street Preachers in Oakdale Comprehensive School in 1986. Bradfield learned guitar from playing along to Appetite for Destruction by Guns N' Roses in his bedroom. Emboldened by the brazen swagger of insurrectionary rock, the youthful Manics said they wanted to outsell Guns N' Roses, headline Wembley stadium, and split up after one album.

This summer, the Manics will support Guns N’ Roses.

“I know Duff McKagan and I’ve played onstage with him before,” Bradfield explains. “We keep in touch. He is such a lovely, cool dude. I don’t use the word dude much, but for someone like Duff McKagan, it is entirely appropriate. When we were asked to do these dates, we were thrilled to bits. After we made the decision, I could hear in my head the negative press release from the hacking gallery: ‘Manic Street Preachers once wanted to outsell Guns N’ Roses but ended up supporting them on their victory lap.’ Well, who gives a f**k? We’re looking forward to it and it’s going be childlike and teenage. My friend went to see them last year. All he said was Axl Rose was off-the-scale stupendous.”

James Dean Bradfield and Nicky Wire of Manic Street Preachers performing at the Olympia in June 2009. “It is one of those venues everybody knows and has so much affection for.”  Photograph: Alan Betson
James Dean Bradfield and Nicky Wire of Manic Street Preachers performing at the Olympia in June 2009. “It is one of those venues everybody knows and has so much affection for.” Photograph: Alan Betson

Like GN'R, the Manics have also played Slane. They performed before The Verve in the summer This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours went absolutely stratospheric. They were introduced onstage by the late Uaneen Fitzsimons, a moment captured in the BBC documentary From There to Here. Dublin's Olympia also is a very special place for them.

“We’ve played the Olympia something like six times,” Bradfield says. “It is one of those venues everybody knows and has so much affection for. It is like a more elegant version of the Barrowlands in Glasgow, which is exactly the same as it was in 1992, and so is the Olympia. There is a comfort in being on sanctified musical ground. Every time I get there, I feel comfortable, excited, and at home.”

No show like a Go show

Bradfield immediately rattles off dates and places when asked what are his favourite Irish shows over the years. "The Everything Must Go shows in the Olympia – two nights over Easter weekend in 1997 – are among my favourite shows ever. Coleraine on the 1991 Motown Junk tour was sensational. There were only 20 kids there, all about two years younger than us, but they were all dressed up in our kind of gear and it was amazing. They didn't give a f**k that most of the room was occupied by space. We also did a great show in the Cork Opera House."

I never had the urge to buy a flash car. I never had a drug problem. Instead, I constantly bought guitars

The Manics took the last four years off, their longest sabbatical between albums. After releasing Rewind the Film in 2013, Futurology in 2014 and embarking on two gigantic tours to mark anniversaries of The Holy Bible and Everything Must Go, the band were a bit burnt out and in need of a rest. Now, they're itching to get the show back on the road.

"People secretly like to know when things are going to end and for something to have a finite time span, but I instinctively rail against that," Bradfield says. "I never had the urge to buy a flash car. I never had a drug problem. Instead, I constantly bought guitars. I like to think we push it further than people expect us to. We want to outdo ourselves and people's expectations. We always try to outwit ourselves. After The Holy Bible, we were totally up against it. We were going through the trauma of Richey [Edwards] disappearing, but we decided to carry on. We outdid ourselves and came up with A Design for Life at a time when we didn't think we could. We also questioned ourselves after Everything Must Go. We wondered whether this was as good as gets and whether we should bow out after everything that had happened to us personally. Then, we wrote If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next. Every time we thought we should observe the rules of rock'n'roll and go out on a high, we ended up doing something else.

“I just make sure I visit the osteopath before I go on tour, and I’m ready.”

Generation terrorists: The five best Manics albums

The Holy Bible (1994)

The darkest British rock album since Pornography by The Cure. Richey Edwards said at the time, "I think that if a holy bible is true, it should be about the way the world is and that's what I think my lyrics are about."

Everything Must Go (1996)

Against all the odds after Richey Edwards's disappearance, the Manics came up with A Design for Life. Everything Must Go turned them into one of the biggest bands in the world.

Journal for Plague Lovers (2009)


A companion pice to The Holy Bible, which saw the Manics finishing off songs Edwards had started writing. Me and Stephen Hawking has an added resonance after the theoretical physicist's death.

Know Your Enemy (2001)
The most underrated Manics album, featuring the lost classics Intravenous Agnostic and Freedom of Speech Won't Feed My Children.

Futurology (2014)

A recent masterpiece recorded in Berlin, Futurology embraced a more expansive sound. "The overriding concept behind Futurology is to express all the inspiration we get from travel, music and art," said Nicky Wire.

  • Resistance is Futile is out on Friday. Manic Street Preachers play the Biggest Weekend, Belfast on May 25th.