Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Lifeblood (album)

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Released
  
1 November 2004

Length
  
45:26

Release date
  
1 November 2004

Recorded
  
2003

Artist
  
Manic Street Preachers

Lifeblood (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenbb9Man

Studio
  
Stir Studios in Cardiff, Wales Grouse Lodge in Westmeath, Ireland Looking Glass Studios in New York, United States

Producer
  
Tony Visconti Tom Elmhirst Greg Haver

Lifeblood (2004)
  
Send Away the Tigers (2007)

Label
  
Epic Records International

Genres
  
Rock music, Alternative rock, Hard rock, Post-punk, Pop rock

Similar
  
Manic Street Preachers albums, Rock music albums

Manic street preachers lifeblood full album


Lifeblood is the seventh studio album by Welsh alternative rock band Manic Street Preachers. Recorded in 2003, it was released on 1 November 2004 by record label Sony Music UK.

Contents

The album was met with generally positive reviews from critics, yielding two singles, "The Love of Richard Nixon" and "Empty Souls". The album peaked at number 13 in the UK Album Chart.

Lifeblood still alive from shattered wishes album


Writing and recording

The working title of Lifeblood was Litany, hinting that the song "Litany" recorded during the Lifeblood sessions was originally intended for inclusion. The track, however, only featured as a B-side to the "Empty Souls" CD single. The album includes a song about Emily Pankhurst ("Emily"), a leader in the British woman's suffrage movement, but, otherwise, the band's earlier political lyrics have been replaced by personal reflection, such as on the band's past ("1985") and former member Richey Edwards ("Cardiff Afterlife").

Lifeblood was recorded at studios in New York, Wales and Ireland by Tony Visconti, Tom Elmhirst and frequent collaborator Greg Haver. Two tracks recorded – "Antarctic" and "The Soulmates" – remain only on the Japanese version of the album.

The album is a departure musically, replacing the band's traditional guitar walls with more subtle and melodic playing, emphasis instead being given to keyboards and synthesizers. This results in the album being described as pop rock and synthpop sound, something Nicky Wire described the album as "elegiac pop" throughout the recording process.

Wire talked about the ghosts that haunted this record and stated that the record was a retrospective: "The main themes are death and solitude and ghosts. Being haunted by history and being haunted by your own past. Sleep is beautiful for me. I hate dreaming because it ruins ten hours of bliss. I had a lot of bad dreams when Richey [Edwards] first disappeared. Not ugly dreams, but nagging things. Until we wrote 'Design for Life', it was six months of misery. Lifeblood doesn't seek to exorcise Edwards' ghost, though, just admits that there are no answers".

Release

Lifeblood was preceded by the single "The Love of Richard Nixon", released on 18 October 2004. During the mid-week chart the single was at the No. 1 position, but dropped and ended up peaking at No. 2 on the UK singles chart.

Lifeblood was released on 1 November 2004. It entered the UK Albums Chart at No. 13, selling 23,990 in the first week and spending only 3 weeks in the Top 75. The album has gone Silver, but it is the least commercially successful album by the band. It has currently sold around 90,000 copies in the UK.

"Empty Souls", the second and final single from the album, was released on 10 January 2005. Like the previous single, it debuted and peaked at No. 2.

Reception

The album was met with generally positive reviews from critics, something that didn't happen for their previous effort Know Your Enemy. The album currently holds an approval rating of 66/100 on review aggregator website Metacritic.

AllMusic awarded the album with an average rating of three stars out of five and stated: "Lifeblood is a pleasant listen, but once you peel away the keyboards, sensitively strummed guitars and tasteful harmonies and concentrate on Bradfield's nakedly open voice and Wire's terminally collegiate lyrics, it's hard to escape the unintentional pathos that winds up defining the album and, conceivably, the band's latter-day career."

Barry Nicolson of NME wrote: "Where Know Your Enemy strived vainly for relevance, Lifeblood is seemingly content to exist as a highbrow rock record. Out go song titles that were half-baked political manifestos in themselves ('Freedom of Speech Won't Feed My Children' anyone?), in come elegiac pop anthems ('1985') and the welcome presence of Bowie producer Tony Visconti to add a glacial sheen to the whole affair. Indeed, this is arguably the best Manics album since Everything Must Go."

Colin Weston of Drowned in Sound praised the album, writing: "This is not rock, it is arguably not indie and would fit very comfortably next to the soft nu-wave eighties pop albums that your auntie has on the shelf... and it is quite simply brilliant! [...] 'Generation Terrorists' may well live forever in the hearts of their fans but 'Lifeblood' may well live forever as one of the best commercial albums of the bands career." John Garrett from PopMatters wrote "Richey may be long dead, but there's still warm blood coursing through the Manics' veins. They are for real—although maybe not in the way history had intended."

A negative review came from Q, calling the album "miserable and insipid".

Track listing

All lyrics written by Nicky Wire; all music composed by James Dean Bradfield and Sean Moore, with additional lyrics by Patrick Jones on "Fragments".

Songs

119854:08
2The Love of Richard Nixon3:39
3Empty Souls4:05

References

Lifeblood (album) Wikipedia