Send Away the Tigers
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Send Away The Tigers
- Underdogs
- Your Love Alone Is Not Enough
- Indian Summer
- Second Great Depression
- Rendition
- Autumnsong
- I'm Just A Patsy
- Imperial Bodybags
- Winterlovers
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #6675 in Music
- Released on: 2007-05-07
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Enhanced
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Fans of Welsh rockers The Manic Street Preachers have been holding their breath for the arrival of the band's eighth studio album. Will Send Away The Tigers be evidence of another new musical twist? Might they revert to their old fiery ways? In fact, Send Away The Tigers does both. An intriguing blend of backwards-looking nostalgia and forward motion, fans might be pleased to learn, first of all, that the album features its fair share of anthems. "Your Love Alone Is Not Enough," (which features Cardigans singer Nina Persson), "Indian Summer," "Autumnsong" and "The Second Great Depression" all boast catchy choruses and are underpinned by the stadium-rock aesthetic of the good old days. The Manic's political fire also remains intact, shifting emphasis to the Iraq war with mediocre songs like "Imperial Bodybags", while the title track and "Rendition" indicate a slightly more innovative direction. It's no Holy Bible, nor a Generation Terrorists - but Send Away The Tigers does show the boys can still make a glorious racket when they try. --Danny McKenna
CD Description
Wales's finest follow up 2004's 'Lifeblood' with this, their eighth studio album. An attempt to fuse the majesty and grace of their early post-Richey work with the raw punk rock they briefly returned to on 'Know Your Enemy', the album is overtly political (the title is a reference to the farcical "liberation" of Baghdad Zoo in 2003). Produced once again by longtime collaborator Dave Eringa, it includes the singles 'Your Love Alone Is Not Enough' (featuring the Cardigans' Nina Persson) and 'Underdogs'.
Customer Reviews
The boys are back in town
I'm going to get straight to the point: Send Away the Tigers is a fantastic album.
It's the sound of a band waking up and realising what it was about themselves that made them sound so powerful, unique and exhilarating and then applying that to record. It's also like they've finally managed to strike the perfect balance between their more abrasive 'punky' moments and their epic, grandiose numbers - bringing the two together to create something truly thrilling.
To name but four songs, Rendition and Send Away the Tigers will make your heart beat faster (or maybe even stop it for 168 seconds), and The Second Great Depression and Autumnsong will make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.
When MSP are on this kind of form they are still very special indeed, and alongside The Holy Bible and Everything Must Go, a trilogy of classic Manic Street Preachers albums is now finally complete.
Almost Back To The Best
Whilst Manic Street Preachers will probably never be able to revive the energy and darkness of "The Holy Bible", "Send Away The Tigers" does resemble, in the main, "Everything Must Go". Indeed, the opening bars on Indian Summer could be Design For Life part II. The album doesn't have a weak track. It was delivered last night and, apart from sleeping, I haven't stopped listening to it. A real return to form from what some thought was the disappointing Lifeblood (though I found it refreshing to listen to a band that have grown up), this album still follows in the vein of Lifeblood, whilst harking back and warmly reminiscing previous glories. Highlights for me, at the moment, are Indian Summer, Autumnsong and the title track. Well worth the money - essential listening.
Oh, and the title actually refers to Tony Hancock, who would apparently use the phrase when trying to rid himself of his depressive moods.
Condemned to rock n' roll...
I remember being fourteen in 1992, singing joyfully along on summer days to bouncy glam-punk anthems about AIDS, exploitation, methadone and rock n' roll, completely under the spell of this group of wonderfully random Welshmen. Listening to this album takes me back to those times, while at the same time making me wish I actually was fourteen right now, just so I could discover the Manics all over again.
The standard line is that this is a return to form after a run of poor albums, but for me, most of the band's work since their commercial peak in 1996 has had its charm, with the possible exception of 2001's Know Your Enemy. The band didn't suddenly lose their ability to write good songs between 1996 and 2007. James Dean Bradfield didn't suddenly cease to be one of the best guitarists and singers in British rock. The difference here is that the Manics seem to be having fun again. There's something instinctive and unforced about the songs on Send Away the Tigers, and this is a quality that the band hasn't had since the days of Generation Terrorists, the Holy Bible and, to a lesser extent, Everything Must Go.
Only the Manics could offer a critique of American foreign policy in the guise of Imperial Bodybags, a punky, funky rockabilly workout that seems to take joy and gain momentum from its very ridiculousness. And only the Manics could make it into something that leaves you breathless, reaching for the repeat button again and again. Rendition, with its massive riff, crunching power chords and military drums, achieves a similar feat. Send Away the Tigers, the title track, boasts the best riff I've heard for a long time, and the chorus is a perfect showcase of the strange mix of euphoria, melancholia and anger that it seems only the Manics can pull off. "Send away the tigers," James Dean Bradfield sings with a smile in his voice, as if he's bringing tidings of great joy, "because we're lonely and we're desperate." The song, which references themes as disparate as the Iraq war and the alcoholism of the comedian Tony Hancock, also demonstrates Nicky Wire's enduring talent as a lyricist.
Elsewhere on the album, the Manics dust off the guilty pleasures in their record collections and reference them with admirable gusto and candour. Winterlovers, which brings to mind Queen playing Guns N' Roses, will have you laughing with joy before making the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Autumnsong directly lifts the riff from Guns N' Roses' Sweet Child O' Mine, says `so what?' and then moulds it into a massive, tender anthem about first love. Then there's Your Love Alone is Not Enough, the catchiest pop song since Kylie's Can't Get You Out of My Head.
Echoes of A Design for Life, one of the band's most popular tracks to date, can be found in Indian Summer, and all of the polished emotional punch of the album Everything Must Go is distilled on this album in one song, the beautiful, slow-moving The Last Great Depression.
There's something for all Manics fans on this album, without any sense of dilution, and without any sense that the band is harking back to past glories. This is a big, fun rock album that will entertain you, provide you with a soundtrack for glorious summer days, and occasionally make you think. Who could ask for more?





