Details for this torrent 

Manic Street Preachers - Postcards From A Young Man [mp3-160-201
Type:
Audio > Music
Files:
13
Size:
51.55 MiB (54058117 Bytes)
Tag(s):
Manic Street Preachers 2010 trfkad
Uploaded:
2010-08-31 21:15:48 GMT
By:
trfkad VIP
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0
Leechers:
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Comments
8  

Info Hash:
FD66017A27D53C8F9C5D8D5166F6CAF80EE4B110




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1. It's Not War Just The End Of Love
2. Postcards From A Young Man
3. Some Kind Of Nothingness - Manic Street Preachers & Ian McCulloch
4. Descent, The
5. Hazleton Avenue
6. Auto Intoxication
7. Golden Platitudes
8. I Think I've Found It
9. A Billion Balconies Facing The Sun
10. All We Make Is Entertainment
11. The Future Has Been Here 4 Ever
12. Don't Be Evil 


Artist: Manic Street Preachers
Title: Postcards From A Young Man
Store Date: 20 sep 2010
Upload Date: 31 aug 2010
Label: Columbia
Genre: Rock
Cover: front
Bitrate: vbr kb/s, joint stereo 


Manic Street Preachers' 10th studio album Postcards From A Young Man  features guest vocals from Ian McCulloch on one track (Some Kind of Nothingness), John Cale on piano (Auto-Intoxication) and Duff McKagen playing bass (A Billion Balconies Facing The Sun). Manics bassist Nicky Wire sings lead vocals on The Future Has Been Here 4 Ever alongside drummer Sean Moore on the trumpet. Postcards From A Young Man is the follow up to 2009’s Journal for Plague Lovers but is musically very different and more in the vein of Send Away The Tigers and Everything Must Go  with unashamed soaring choruses, lots of strings and gospel choirs. It was recorded in Cardiff with producer Dave Eringa and mixed by Chris Lord Alge in the US. 

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Comments

Thx man,downloading this now,hope it`s better than ,,Journal for plague lovers,, `cause that one was horrible...
you're welcome
Forgot to mention: manics definitelly return to form with this album.Download if you like them...
Ha @ mirrormaster. I thought the last album was pretty boring, not as good as SATT. cheers for the review :)
Liked all their albums except the last one. Hope this is a return to form
After reading the comments I'm not sure I'll bother with this one; Send Away the Tigers being a throwaway slice of badly considered fluff, how one can even consider to slice fluff, I don't know. I wonder how these commenters can claim Journal from Plague Lovers was a departure from form, they obviously have no idea what the Manic Street Preachers were and could never have considered a funeral parade for all the ignorant with The Holy Bible providing the soundtrack.
thank's.
Well said stew! I just don't get the 'comeback' manics for the most part. It's like the media are over-compensating for their past criticisms in a mass 'emperor's new clothes' delusion. Oh, look they're doing Queen! Gr8!! Now it's simple minds! Classic! And it's all so knowing, isn't it?! We always loved them ;)
That said, there are always at least one or two great songs (e.g the title track of SATT) and I'm still hoping for futurology, despite the lead single...

And yes, JFPL will be remembered as a classic, with originality that comes from taking time to integrate your influences and synthesize something truly original, as they did for the first time with THB. Hope they'll get back on the right track with the next one ;)