Manic Street Preachers - Tour Dates

This fall Manic Street Preachers will tour the North America for the first time in 10 years. Pitchfork’s Joe Tangari sums up the band pretty well here in his review of their bsides collection Lipstick Traces…
PITCHFORK REVIEW:
- In all of rock’s varied and storied history, I can’t think of another band that yearned harder and more desperately to be Important than the Manic Street Preachers. You can tell from every album they ever released, every photo they ever posed for, every line of lyrics they ever penned, that these guys wanted to change the lives and minds of millions and enter into rock’s history books as nothing short of legends. From day one, they wore their politics (indeterminate though they sometimes were) on their sleeves and spoke only in Statements— they’re the kind of band who almost certainly come up with the titles for their songs before the songs are written (“If You Tolerate This, Your Children Will Be Next”, anyone?), driven by ideas and philosophical concepts more than raw inspiration or restless creativity.
- The band has managed to squeeze six albums out of that approach, which in itself tells you something. Back when they were just four unknowns in heavy eye shadow and feather boas with slogans scrawled on their clothes, they famously had the audacity (or was it marketing savvy?) to proclaim that they would make the greatest rock album ever and then split— neither of which panned out, of course. Their debut, Generation Terrorists, walked a weird line between agit-punk, cock rock, romantic melodicism and glam, and was so obviously patterned after The Clash’s London Calling that it was actually kind of cute. They did add a chapter to rock folklore, however, after releasing their best record (1994’s tormented The Holy Bible), when lyricist Richey Edwards— suffering from anorexia, alcoholism and a pattern of self-abuse that culminated in him carving “4REAL” in his arm with a razor blade during an interview with Steve Lamacq as a manner of addressing critics who doubted the band’s conviction— disappeared, never to be seen again. [Pitchfork]
Tour Dates:
Sept 21 Seattle, WA @ Neumo’s
Sept 22 Vancouver, Canada @ The Commodore Ballroom
Sept 24 San Francisco, CA @ The Fillmore
Sept 25 Los Angeles, CA @ The Avalon
Sept 28 Denver, CO @ The Bluebird Theatre
Sept 29 Minneapolis, MN @ The Varsity Theatre
Oct 1 Chicago, IL @ The Metro
Oct 2 Detroit, MI @ The Majestic Theatre
Oct 4 Toronto, Canada @ The Phoenix Concert Theatre
Oct 6 Philadelphia, PA @ World Café Live
Oct 7 New York City, NY @ Webster Hall
Oct 8 Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club