Forever Delayed | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Manic Street Preachers |
Cover: | ForeverDelayed.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Released: | 28 October 2002 |
Recorded: | 1991–2002 |
Length: | 155:56 |
Label: | Epic |
Producer: | Various (see track listing) |
Prev Title: | Know Your Enemy |
Prev Year: | 2001 |
Next Title: | Lipstick Traces |
Next Year: | 2003 |
Forever Delayed | |
Type: | video |
Artist: | Manic Street Preachers |
Cover: | Forever Delayed DVD cover.jpg |
Released: | 18 November 2002 |
Recorded: | 1991–2002 |
Genre: | Alternative rock, hard rock, punk rock |
Label: | Epic |
Chronology: | Manic Street Preachers video album |
Prev Title: | Louder Than War |
Prev Year: | 2001 |
Forever Delayed is a greatest hits album and DVD by Welsh alternative rock band Manic Street Preachers, released on 28 October 2002 by Epic Records. The album included three singles which had never appeared on any of the band's earlier albums ("Motown Junk", "Suicide Is Painless" and the number one hit "The Masses Against the Classes"), as well as two new songs, the single "There by the Grace of God" and "Door to the River".
The album peaked and debuted on the UK Albums Chart at number 4.[1]
The album featured two new songs: the single "There by the Grace of God" and "Door to the River". "Door to the River" was originally recorded in the sessions for the Know Your Enemy album, but the band deemed the song too unfitting to the album's general style. "There by the Grace of God" could be seen as a foreshadowing of what followed the hits compilation, as it features a more electronic/keyboard-heavy style that would eventually be the main style of the band's next studio album, Lifeblood.
Several songs were edited for length ("Motorcycle Emptiness", "La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)", "You Love Us", "Australia", "From Despair to Where", "Everything Must Go", "Little Baby Nothing" and "The Everlasting") so that more tracks could fit onto the CD (though not listed as edits in the liner notes).
The title of Forever Delayed is lifted from the lyrics of their song "Roses in the Hospital" (which does not feature on the CD album). A song called "4 Ever Delayed" was recorded for inclusion but ended up not being included. Plans of releasing it as part of a new two-disc edition of the compilation and as CD single were then toyed with but never surfaced. It eventually wound up on the band's following B-sides and rarities compilation Lipstick Traces (A Secret History of Manic Street Preachers) in 2003. The title of the greatest hits package had also been planned for several years previous; band member Nicky Wire first mentioned it in Simon Price's biography Everything – A Book About Manic Street Preachers, published in 1998.
The compilation album reached number 4 in the UK Albums Chart, and spent a total of 19 weeks in the Top 75. To date it has gone Double Platinum (600,000 copies) in the UK.[2] It reached number 7 in Ireland and in Finland, and it also charted within the Top 20 in Denmark. The album has sold more than one million copies since its release in 2002.[3]
The album was promoted by the introduction of new songs such as "Door to the River" and by the single "There by the Grace of God", which peaked and debuted at number 6 in the UK Singles Chart.
The Forever Delayed DVD was released in 2002 together with the greatest hits CD and photo book that bear the same name, and features all the promo music videos from the start of the band's career released prior to the DVD. Along with the promo videos there is a selection of 14 remix videos, where the visual material is taken from clips of the other promo videos as well as backdrop visuals from the band's live concerts.
Forever Delayed is the first of three compilation albums by the Manic Street Preachers, and it was not well received by NME that stated: "So here it is, The Album That Should Not Exist. To the slogan-smothered, soul-bruised, scarred-for-the-cause skunkpunk heroes of 1991 - the scary/beautiful freaks claiming they'll self-destruct after one six million-selling album - this greatest hits would be musical treachery."[4]
AllMusic rated the album with a 4 out of 5, saying: "Manic Street Preachers have always been a band of very specific charms, something that has not translated outside of the U.K. particularly well. Although it boasts a generous 20 tracks, the 2002 compilation Forever Delayed isn't likely to change that situation, even if it has the lion's share of their big singles, since a band devoted to sloganeering doesn't play outside of their province, or era, without some knowledge of their context."[5]
Sputnikmusic made a track-by-track review, finishing with: "Overall I'd say this is a great introduction to the Manics, but it's nowhere near definitive. It's missing songs too many good songs (Slash N Burn especially), and it's far too biased towards This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours."[6]
Song title | Length | From album | Originally released | Producer | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "A Design for Life" | 4:20 | Everything Must Go | 15 April 1996 (No. 2) | Mike Hedges | |
2 | "Motorcycle Emptiness" (Edit) | 5:06 | Generation Terrorists | 1 June 1992 (No. 17) | Steve Brown | |
3 | "If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next" | 4:51 | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | 24 August 1998 (No. 1) | Dave Eringa | |
4 | "La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)" (Edit) | 4:06 | Gold Against the Soul | 26 July 1993 (No. 22) | Eringa | |
5 | "There by the Grace of God" | 3:47 | New track | 14 October 2002 (No. 6) | Hedges | |
6 | "You Love Us" (Edit) | 3:14 | Generation Terrorists | 16 January 1992 (No. 16) | Brown | |
7 | "Australia" (Edit) | 3:42 | Everything Must Go | 2 December 1996 (No. 7) | Hedges | |
8 | "You Stole the Sun from My Heart" | 4:21 | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | 8 March 1999 (No. 5) | Hedges | |
9 | "Kevin Carter" | 3:24 | Everything Must Go | 30 September 1996 (No. 9) | Hedges | |
10 | "Tsunami" | 3:49 | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | 5 July 1999 (No. 11) | Hedges | |
11 | "The Masses Against the Classes" | 3:23 | Non-album single | 10 January 2000 (No. 1) | Eringa | |
12 | "From Despair to Where" (Edit) | 3:21 | Gold Against the Soul | 7 June 1993 (No. 25) | Eringa | |
13 | "Door to the River" | 4:41 | New track | Not a single | Hedges | |
14 | "Everything Must Go" (Edit) | 3:07 | Everything Must Go | 22 July 1996 (No. 5) | Hedges | |
15 | "Faster" | 3:53 | The Holy Bible | 6 June 1994 (No. 16) | Manic Street Preachers, Brown | |
16 | "Little Baby Nothing" (feat. Traci Lords) (7" version) | 4:12 | Generation Terrorists | 16 November 1992 (No. 29) | Brown | |
17 | "Suicide Is Painless (Theme from MASH)" | 3:28 | Non-album single | 7 September 1992 (No. 7) | Manic Street Preachers, Brown | |
18 | "So Why So Sad" | 3:45 | Know Your Enemy | 26 February 2001 (No. 8) | Eringa | |
19 | "The Everlasting" (Edit) | 4:07 | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | 30 November 1998 (No. 11) | Hedges | |
20 | "Motown Junk" | 3:59 | Non-album single | 21 January 1991 (No. 94) | Robin Wynn Evans |
Song title | From album | Director | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Motown Junk" | Non-album single | ||
2 | "You Love Us" (Heavenly Recordings Version) | Non-album single | Tony Van Den Ende | |
3 | "You Love Us" (Sony Music Version) | Generation Terrorists | W.I.Z. | |
4 | "Stay Beautiful" | Generation Terrorists | Walter Stern | |
5 | "Love's Sweet Exile" | Generation Terrorists | W.I.Z. | |
6 | "Slash 'n' Burn" | Generation Terrorists | Van Den Ende | |
7 | "Motorcycle Emptiness" | Generation Terrorists | Martin Hall | |
8 | "Little Baby Nothing" | Generation Terrorists | Small and B Swells | |
9 | "Theme from MASH (Suicide Is Painless)" | Non-album single | Matthew Amos | |
10 | "From Despair to Where" | Gold Against the Soul | Peter Scammell | |
11 | "La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)" | Gold Against the Soul | Josh Taft | |
12 | "Roses in the Hospital" | Gold Against the Soul | Erik Zimmerman | |
13 | "Life Becoming a Landslide" | Gold Against the Soul | Martin Hall | |
14 | "Faster" | The Holy Bible | Chris D'Adda | |
15 | "Revol" | The Holy Bible | D'Adda | |
16 | "She Is Suffering" | The Holy Bible | Adolfo Doring | |
17 | "A Design for Life" | Everything Must Go | Pedro Romhanyi | |
18 | "Everything Must Go" | Everything Must Go | W.I.Z. | |
19 | "Kevin Carter" | Everything Must Go | John Hillcoat | |
20 | "Australia" | Everything Must Go | John Hillcoat | |
21 | "If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next" | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | W.I.Z. | |
22 | "The Everlasting" | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | Mike Lipscombe | |
23 | "You Stole the Sun from My Heart" | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | Sophie Muller | |
24 | "Tsunami" | This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours | Romhanyi | |
25 | "The Masses Against the Classes" (live performance taken from Leaving the 20th Century) | Non-album single | ||
26 | "Found That Soul" | Know Your Enemy | Jeremy Deller and Nick Abrahams | |
27 | "So Why So Sad" | Know Your Enemy | Jamie Thraves | |
28 | "Ocean Spray" | Know Your Enemy | James Frost and Alex Smith | |
29 | "Let Robeson Sing" | Know Your Enemy | Andrew Dosunmu | |
30 | "There by the Grace of God" | Non-album single | Hillcoat |