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Articles by "Everything Must Go"

Manic Street Preachers - Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky
Manic Street Preachers - Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky


Manic Street Preachers - Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: Everything Must Go
Released: 1996

Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky Lyrics


You have your very own number
They dress your cage in its nature
Once you roared now you just grunt lame
Pace around pathetic pound games

want to get out won't miss you sensaround
To carry your own dead to swing your tyre tricks
want to get out in here you're bred dead quick
For the outside
The Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky

They drag sticks along your walls
Harvest your ovaries dead mothers crawl
Here comes warden, Christ, temple, elders
Environment not yours you see through it all

want to get out won't miss you sensaround
Carry your own dead to swing your tyre tricks
want to get out in here you're bred dead quick
For the outside
The small black flowers that grow in the sky

Here chewing your tail is joy

Writer/s: JAMES BRADFIELD, NICHOLAS JONES, RICHARD EDWARDS, SEAN MOORE
Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky
  • Manic Street Preachers guitarist Richey Edwards wrote the lyrics, marking one of his last contributions to the band. Edwards disappeared in February 1995 and was never found. The band soldiered on without him, not knowing if he was dead or in hiding. Everything Must Go was the first album released in his absence, and it contained five songs he co-wrote.

    "Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky" empathizes with a zoo animal's state of mind while in captivity, an insight into how Edwards was feeling. Manic's bass player Nicky Wire, who was very close to Edwards, told Dazed & Confused that Edwards wrote the song about "getting born in zoos and just going mad with boredom." Wire added, "But if you read it, you'd just think it was about him."
  • This gentle number is a rare rock song with a harp; it was played by Julie Aliss, who also appeared on the 1987 Siouxsie and the Banshees album Through the Looking Glass.

  • Manic Street Preachers - Kevin Carter
    Manic Street Preachers - Kevin Carter


    Manic Street Preachers - Kevin Carter Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Everything Must Go
    Released: 1996

    Kevin Carter Lyrics


    Hi Time magazine hi Pulitzer Prize
    Tribal scars in Technicolor
    Bang bang club AK 47 hour

    Kevin Carter

    Hi Time magazine hi Pulitzer Prize
    Vulture stalked white piped lie forever
    Wasted your life in black and white

    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter

    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter

    The elephant is so ugly he sleeps his head
    Machetes his bed Kevin Carter kaffir lover forever
    Click click click click click
    Click himself under

    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter

    Writer/s: BRADFIELD/EDWARDS/JONES/MOORE
    Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Kevin Carter
  • Kevin Carter was a South African photographer who took his own life months after winning the Pulitzer Prize for feature photography for a haunting Sudan famine picture. After dropping out of school for bad grades he joined the South African Defense Force where he found upholding the apartheid regime loathsome - when he took sides with a black mess-hall waiter, some Afrikaans-speaking soldiers called he 'kaffir-boetie' (nigger lover). After a few odd jobs, Carter worked in a camera shop and fell into journalism. Carter, whilst working for the Johannesburg Star, hooked up with three friends - Ken Oosterbroek of the Star and free-lancers Greg Marinovich and Joao Silva - and they began moving through Soweto and Tokoza at dawn. Capturing the chaotic hand-to-hand street fighting between Mandela's A.N.C. and the Zulu-supported Inkatha Freedom Party which involved AK-47s, spears and axes. The four became so well known for capturing the violence that Living, a Johannesburg magazine, dubbed them "the Bang-Bang Club."

    In 1993 Carter headed north of the border with Silva to photograph the rebel movement in famine-stricken Sudan. He wandered into the open bush. He heard a soft, high-pitched whimpering and saw a tiny girl trying to make her way to the feeding center. As he crouched to photograph her, a vulture landed in view. Careful not to disturb the bird, he positioned himself for the best possible image. The picture immediately became an icon of Africa's anguish. on April 12, 1994, the New York Times phoned to tell him he had won the Pulitzer. Carter was always troubled by personal problems and two months after receiving his Pulitzer, Carter would be dead of carbon-monoxide poisoning in Johannesburg, a suicide at 33. His pickup truck was parked near a small river where he used to play as a child, in a note left on the passenger seat part of it read: "The pain of life overrides the joy to the point that joy does not exist."
  • Richey Edwards wrote the lyric to this song. The Manic Street Preachers guitarist vanished in February 1995, and the band continued on without him, including five songs on the Everything Must Go album (the first one released after his disappearance) that he co-wrote. The band was hoping that Edwards was in hiding, and that including some of his songs on the set would flush him out.

    In writing about Kevin Carter, Edwards opened a window to his own sense of nihilism and a depression that is exasperated by success. His body was never found.

  • Manic Street Preachers - A Design For Lif
    Manic Street Preachers - A Design For Life


    Manic Street Preachers - A Design For Life Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Everything Must Go
    Released: 1996

    A Design For Life Lyrics


    Libraries gave us power
    Then work came and made us free
    What price now for a shallow piece of dignity

    I wish I had a bottle
    Right here in my dirty face to wear the scars
    To show from where I came

    We don't talk about love we only want to get drunk
    And we are not allowed to spend
    As we are told that this is the end

    A Design For Life
    A design for life
    A design for life
    A design for life

    I wish I had a bottle
    Right here in my pretty face to wear the scars
    To show from where I came

    We don't talk about love we only want to get drunk
    And we are not allowed to spend
    As we are told that this is the end

    A design for life
    A design for life
    A design for life
    A design for life

    We don't talk about love we only want to get drunk
    And we are not allowed to spend
    As we are told that this is the end

    A design for life
    A design for life
    A design for life
    A design for...

    Writer/s: BRADFIELD, JAMES / JONES, NICHOLAS / MOORE, SEAN
    Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    A Design For Life
  • The lyrics are a critique of working class culture. The band's bass player/lyricist Nicky Wire explained the song's meaning in an interview with Q magazine April 2011: "It was originally a two-page poem. One side was called A Pure Motive and the other A Design For Life. The song was inspired by what I perceived as the middle classes trying to hijack working-class culture. That was typified by Blur's 'Girls and Boys,' the greyhound image on their Parklife cover. It was me saying, 'This is the truth. GET IT.'"
  • The line, "Libraries gave us power" came from the wall of Newport Library in Wales.
  • In 1995, Manic guitarist Richey Edwards disappeared. He may have committed suicide, but his body was never recovered and some people claim they have seen him since. The band carried on without him - this was the first song bass player Nicky Wire wrote after Richey disappeared.
  • Vocalist James Dean Bradfield recalled writing the song's instrumentation to Q magazine: "I remember being given the lyrics by Nick (Wire). We had come to a total standstill since Richey (Edwards) had disappeared. There was a long period of shock where we couldn't do a thing, I just really needed something to occupy me. Deep down, I wanted to know what it was like to write a song as a three-piece. That was the most daunting task facing as at that point - how would it work? I remember being incredibly nervous when the first proper set of Nick's lyrics arrived five months after Richey disappeared. I didn't actually start writing anything for a few days after they came, which is strange for me as I usually start pretty much the second I've torn open the envelope."

    He continued: "I remember atomising the lyrics. It felt like there was a thread running through of anger and what I thought at the time was sarcasm. I think it was one of the quickest tunes I've ever written - it came fully formed in just 10 minutes. Up to that point, we were genuinely in limbo. By the time I called Nick, I was pretty sure I was onto something brilliant."

    Wire added: "James called me up saying, It's Ennio Morricone, R.E.M. and Phil Spector."
  • This song is sometimes interpreted as a lament, but Nicky Wire considers it an empowering song. "It's almost heroic, in the sense that whatever is thrown at the working classes by the upper classes, we will always come through," he told Dazed & Confused. "That's what the lyric is about: we always come back with something better."
  • James Dean Bradfield revealed to the NME that the band nearly split after Richey Edwards disappeared in 1995, adding that the remaining Manics technically weren't together for six months that year. Explaining how they came back together, he recalled: "I was living in London and [Nicky] sent me some lyrics in the post. Two [sets] arrived; one was called 'Pure Motive' and one was called 'A Design For Life.' They both had a hint of violence and reaffirmation about them, what working class attitudes should have. And then I atomized the two sets of lyrics and wrote some music to it, which came really easily. I rang him up and said, 'I found the song that will give us reason to exist as a band!'"

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