The Ghosts of Christmas

"The Ghost of Christmas" is a song by the Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers. It was released during Christmas time as a gift to fans of the band.[2]

"The Ghost of Christmas"
Single by Manic Street Preachers
Released1 December 2007
Genre
Length3:39
Manic Street Preachers singles chronology
"Indian Summer"
(2007)
"The Ghost of Christmas"
(2007)
"(It's Not War) Just the End of Love"
(2010)

Background

Manics bassist Nicky Wire announced the release with the following message: "Here we go - a Manics Christmas tour is upon us. A fine and worthy tradition - To celebrate this season of goodwill we will be giving away our Christmas single 'The Ghosts of Christmas' on our website, and newsletter, from 1 December completely free. So to anyone who has bought our records, seen our gigs, read our reviews, joined our website or given us awards Thank You for a special year.[3] The song is old school Christmas, the anti X Factor, for us it's actual fun. Hope you enjoy the song and the tour. Merry Christmas Nicky Wire, James and Sean. 'Nobody knows anything and nobody tells you anything' - Robert Capa" [4]

Having been made available free, the single is non-chart eligible. No artwork accompanies the single, except for an animated picture on the band's official website of snow falling in front of an icy window on which is written "A Merry Christmas gift to all Manics fans everywhere. 'Ghosts of Christmas' free mp3. Enjoy! Nick, James & Sean. XX".[5]

Content

In allusion to the style of "The Ghosts of Christmas", Marc Burrows of Drowned in Sound proclaimed the song "sax-drenched glam rock Christmas song" and characteristic of "for the hell of it behavior of a band enjoying themselves".[1]

gollark: A desktop computer (with peripherals) is great cognitive expansion and has decent IO.
gollark: And calculators, notepads, etc.
gollark: I've seen one which said it detected level of focus or something.
gollark: There are a bunch of useless external ones around, and I think are fairly cheap, if useless.
gollark: True, but it would probably help.

References

  1. Marc, Burrows (12 May 2017). "Album review: Manic Street Preachers - Send Away The Tigers: 10 Years Collectors Edition". Drowned In Sound. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  2. "Message from the Wire". Manic Street Preachers official website. 28 November 2007. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008.
  3. Power, Martin (17 October 2010). Manic Street Preachers. Omnibus Press.
  4. "Message from the Wire". Manic Street Preachers official website. 28 November 2007. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008.
  5. "Manics to Release Christmas Single as a Free Download". albumvote.co.uk. 27 November 2007. Archived from the original on 5 January 2008.
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