The story behind The Masses Against The Classes, the raucous Manics single that the Welsh trio deleted on the day of release

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The story behind The Masses Against The Classes, the raucous Manics single that the Welsh trio deleted on the day of release


The Manics ended the 20th century in celebratory fashion, playing a momentous show at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium and signing off a decade that they’d ended as one of the UK’s biggest and most important rock bands in triumph. But James Dean Bradfield, Nicky Wire and Sean Moore were determined not to rest on their laurels and the trio began the new millennium with a song as spiky and snarling as anything they’d done in a while. It’s 25 years next week since the release of their one-off single The Masses Against The Classes, a curio that feels like a song-apart from anything else in the Manics catalogue (and one that rolls off the tongue a lot easier if you’re not a Southerner: The Masses Against The “Clarsses” doesn’t really cut it). It was a release that showed they weren’t ready to settle into a life of being comfy Radio 2 big-hitters just yet.

Built around a barbed wire riff, a pummelling groove and some larynx-shredding hollering from Bradfield, the single was deleted on the day of release but the ploy didn’t harm its chart prospects – The Masses Against The Classes went straight to Number One in the UK single charts, the group’s second chart-topper after 1998’s If You Tolerate This Then Your Children Will Be Next.

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