Lipstick Traces (A Secret History of the Manic Street Preachers)
(Redirected from Lipstick Traces (A Secret History Of The Manic Street Preachers) (album))
| Lipstick Traces | ||
|---|---|---|
| LP by Manic Street Preachers | ||
| Released | July, 2003 | |
| Recorded | ||
| Genre | Rock | |
| Length | min sec | |
| Record label | Virgin | |
| Producer | Dave Eringa | |
| Professional reviews | ||
| Pitchforkmedia | 6.3 out of 10 | link |
| Allmusic.com | 3 stars out of 5 | link |
| Manic Street Preachers Chronology | ||
| Forever Delayed (2002) | Lipstick Traces (2003) | Lifeblood (2004) |
Lipstick Traces (A Secret History Of The Manic Street Preachers) is an album of b-sides, rareties, and cover versions by Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers. It was released in 2003.
It is named after the Greil Marcus book Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century.
Track listing
Disc one
B-sides and rareties.
- "Prologue To History"
- "4 Ever Delayed"
- "Sorrow 16"
- "Judge Yr'self"
- "Socialist Serenade"
- "Donkeys"
- "Comfort Comes"
- "Mr. Carbohydrate"
- "Dead Trees And Traffic Islands"
- "Horses Under Starlight"
- "Sepia"
- "Sculpture Of Man"
- "Spectators Of Suicide"
- "Democracy Coma"
- "Strip It Down"
- "Just A Kid"
- "Close My Eyes"
- "Valley Boy"
- "We Her Majesty's Prisoners"
Disc two
Cover Versions.
- "We Are All Bourgeois Now" (originally by McCarthy)
- "Rock 'N' Roll Music" (originally by Chuck Berry)
- "It's So Easy" (originally by Guns n' Roses)
- "Take The Skinheads Bowling" (originally by Camper Van Beethoven)
- "Been A Son" (originally by Nirvana)
- "Out Of Time" (originally by The Rolling Stones)
- "Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head" (originally by B. J. Thomas)
- "Bright Eyes" (originally by Art Garfunkel)
- "Train In Vain" (originally by The Clash)
- "Wrote For Luck" (originally by Happy Mondays)
- "What's My Name" (originally by The Clash)
- "Velocity Girl" (originally by Primal Scream)
- "Can't Take My Eyes Of You" (originally by Andy Williams)
- "Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel" (traditional, famously recorded by Paul Robeson)
- "Last Christmas" (originally by Wham)
Categories: 2003 albums