Albums to watch

Postcards From A Young Man

Manic Street Preachers

Postcards From A Young Man

The Manics follow up last year's well received LP with a string drenched epic.

ADM rating[?]

7.3

Label
Columbia
UK Release date
20/09/2010
  1. 9.0 |   The Digital Fix

    There is a sad wistfulness to Postcards From A Young Man, at times heartbreakingly so
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  2. 9.0 |   The Line Of Best Fit

    Postcards From a Young Man is a wonderful album; the sound of a band practically bursting with justified confidence in themselves and in their songs
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  3. 8.0 |   The Fly

    ‘Postcards...’ is yet more proof that, twenty years into existence, Manic Street Preachers are in the form of their life
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  4. 8.0 |   Uncut

    The Manics haven't sounded this confident since Motown Junk
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  5. 8.0 |   Q

    Still raging, not drowning, their flame burns unfashionably on. Print edition only

  6. 8.0 |   BBC

    It's – and this isn't a phrase often associated with the Manics – an incredibly jolly rock record
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  7. 8.0 |   NME

    As it plays, you're struck by the fact that no one else does anything like it: reason enough for the Manic Street Preachers' continued existence
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  8. 8.0 |   The Irish Times

    This is as punchy as Your Love Alone Is Not Enough , and also operates as a bit of a masterclass in composition and execution
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  9. 8.0 |   Daily Telegraph

    Their best in ages
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  10. 8.0 |   Clash

    If you can’t love these songs, you are incapable of experiencing joy itself
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  11. 8.0 |   The Quietus

    The sound of a band shedding the baggage of a turbulent past, and in the process thrillingly rediscovering their incendiary spirit
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  12. 8.0 |   Rave Magazine

    Those resilient Welshmen have combined two of their most successful talents to create a cracking tenth album – pure and simple
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  13. 8.0 |   FasterLouder

    There is a vague, unsurprising concept running through Postcards From A Young Man, but it never feels laboured or self-important
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  14. 7.5 |   Pitchfork

    An inviting, populist album that deserves the attention
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  15. 7.0 |   musicOMH

    Longtime Manics fans will likely find plenty to love in this polished, grandiose "last attempt at mass communication" from an enigmatic rock 'n' roll institution
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  16. 7.0 |   NME

    Poignant, joyful and above all really, really loud. Print edition only

  17. 6.0 |   The Skinny

    It seems that in trying to second-guess what the massed classes want, they’ve ever-so-slightly taken their eye off the ball
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  18. 6.0 |   Mojo

    In their hands, grandiose needn't be a dirty word. Print edition only

  19. 6.0 |   PopMatters

    Although far from being a disaster, the uninitiated should become familiar with something more enduring before settling for Postcards from a Young Man
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  20. 6.0 |   Drowned In Sound

    [The] polished retro pop doesn’t ultimately play to the strong suits of a band who thrive on anger, anthems and the odd bit of absurdity
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  21. 6.0 |   The Scotsman

    It's not the brazen pitch for the Radio 2 playlist that is the problem, it is the relative blandness of the MOR songwriting and the over-egged arrangements that underwhelm
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  22. 6.0 |   Evening Standard

    Yet again they'll be criticised for losing their edge — but many will as be happy to have something new to whistle
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  23. 5.0 |   The Observer

    After 20 years at the coalface of British pop, it's as if these bloody-minded refuseniks still haven't quite mastered the fine art of being crude
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Manic Street Preachers: Postcards From A Young Man

  • Download full album for just £6.99
  • 1. (It's Not War) Just the End of Love £0.99
  • 2. Postcards from a Young Man £0.99
  • 3. Some Kind of Nothingness £0.99
  • 4. The Descent - (Pages 1 & 2) £0.99
  • 5. Hazelton Avenue £0.99
  • 6. Auto-Intoxication £0.99
  • 7. Golden Platitudes £0.99
  • 8. I Think I Found It £0.99
  • 9. A Billion Balconies Facing The Sun £0.99
  • 10. All We Make Is Entertainment £0.99
  • 11. The Future Has Been Here 4 Ever £0.99
  • 12. Don't Be Evil £0.99
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