Legacy (Mansun song) explained

Legacy
Cover:Legacy_CD1_front.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Mansun
Album:Six
B-Side:
  • "Can't Afford to Die"
  • "Spasm of Identity"
  • "Check Under the Bed"
  • "GSOH"
  • "Face in the Crowd"
  • "The Impending Collapse of It All" (acoustic)
  • "Ski Jump Nose" (acoustic)
Length:
  • 6:29 (album version)
  • 5:57 (radio edit)
  • 4:41 (short radio edit)
Label:Parlophone
Producer:Paul Draper
Prev Title:Closed for Business
Prev Year:1997
Next Title:Being a Girl (Part One)
Next Year:1998

"Legacy" is a song by English rock band Mansun. It was released as a single in 1998 from the group's album, Six, and was the lead track on Eight EP. It follows a similar template to many of the group's other hits and was also their highest-charting single, peaking at 7 in the UK Singles Chart.

Overview

"Legacy" was released as the first single from Mansun's second album, Six. It preceded the album by three months, but is somewhat unrepresentative of the overall sound of its parent album. It bears similarities with "Wide Open Space" and "Closed for Business"; two of the band's most popular singles. The song references the Marquis de Sade. The song's name was later used as the title for the group's retrospective compilation Legacy: The Best of Mansun in 2005. The closing refrain "Nobody cares when you're gone" was later reused as the title of a documentary about the group included on DVD editions of the Legacy: The Best of Mansun compilation.

The music video was directed by Mike Mills. After the controversial "Taxloss" video, it is probably their most unconventional and well known video. The video parodies the group and others like themselves, sending up the clichés of male pop and rock bands and the experience of the music industry. The entirety of the video is performed by simplistic and jerkily animated puppets against unconvincing but humorous cardboard backdrops.

B-sides

The single was released in the final week of 1998 that allowed singles to have four tracks on each format. The new chart rules were instated the following week that meant that singles could only be eligible to chart with three tracks per format. The four-track EP was nostalgically valued by many musicians; this compromised the Mansun releases, which had offered value and incentives to fans by cramming numerous B-sides on each format. For example, "Legacy" provided a wealth or a plethora of content depending on a person's disposition by having five original B-sides, a remix, two versions of "Legacy" and two acoustic re-recordings across the single's four formats.

After the instatement of the new chart rules, ineligible four-track EPs were released as statements by musicians; the premise was to elevate the material as being a whole as opposed to a commercial pop hit. 3 Colours Red's EP Paralyse (1998) and Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys? (2006) by Arctic Monkeys are examples of the practice. The chart rules were revised in October 2007 allowing four-track releases under the 'Maxi' name.

Personnel

Mansun

Production

Release history

RegionDateFormat(s)Label(s)
United Kingdom29 June 1998Parlophone[2]
6 July 19987-inch vinyl[3]
Japan7 August 1998CD[4]

Notes and References

  1. Eurochart Hot 100 Singles. Music & Media. 15. 29. 10. 18 July 1998. 4 July 2021.
  2. New Releases: Singles. Music Week. 27. 27 June 1998. 4 July 2021.
  3. New Releases: Singles. Music Week. 31. 4 July 1998.
  4. Web site: レガシィEP マンサン. Legacy EP Mansun. Oricon. ja. 27 November 2023.