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La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)

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Wikipedia article




"'La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)'" is a song by Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers. It was released in 1993 by record label Columbia as the second single from their second studio album 'Gold Against the Soul'.

It reached number 22 in UK Singles Chart.

Content and composition



The song's title is taken from the reported last words of Vincent van Gogh, "La tristesse durera toujours", quoted in a letter from his younger brother Theo to their sister Elisabeth, using her nickname 'Lies'. The letter was translated by Robert Harrison, who states that the phrase means "The sadness will last forever".

The song lyrics are written from the perspective of a war veteran, containing the line "wheeled out once a year, a cenotaph souvenir" and tracking the bathetic progress of the former soldier's war medal: "It sells at market stalls/Parades Milan catwalks". Richey Edwards told 'Melody Maker' newspaper, "It's a beautiful image when the war veterans turn out at the Cenotaph, [...] and everyone pretends to care ... but then they're shuffled off again and forgotten." According to Nicky Wire, he wrote much of the song and came up with its title, whilst Edwards contributed the "scream to a sigh" refrain. Wire has stated that his objective in writing the song was "to write about war heroes in a sympathetic way", an aim which he described as "non-trendy".

According to Martin Power in his book 'Manic Street Preachers', the band "sounded at sixes and sevens" in the rest of the album, "Yet, as with 'Generation Terrorists', they had again produced one genuine classic in the form of 'La Tristessa Durera (Scream to a Sigh)'." In allusion to the style of the song, Rob Jovanovic detailed that the song "followed the grunge template" with a "quiet opening verse that explodes into a loud guitar-driven chorus". According to Sean Moore the track's drum part was the result of an attempt to copy a song by hip-hop group Arrested Development. James Dean Bradfield also cited the Clash's song "Car Jamming" as an influence.

Edwards, unusually, played rhythm guitar on the track. Edwards was credited for rhythm guitar on all of the tracks released during his tenure with the band, but almost never actually performed the parts he was credited for due to his self-acknowledged lack of talent with the instrument. This would be only one of two tracks he would perform on, the other being a partial recording on 'Everything Must Go's "No Surface All Feeling".

The B-side, "Patrick Bateman", is a "tribute" to the 'American Psycho' character.

Release



"La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)" was released as a single in 1993 by record label Columbia. It reached number 22 in the UK Singles Chart on 31 July.

The song made an appearance in edited form on 'Forever Delayed' (28 October 2002), the Manics' greatest hits album. The remastered album version appeared on the 'National Treasures The Complete Singles', compilation.

In the US, a promotional version was released as "Scream to a Sigh (La Tristesse Durera)".

Accolades



"La Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh)" was included in Robert Dimery's '1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die'.

Track listing



;CD

;12"

;Cassette

Charts



References



Bibliography

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Category:1993 singles

Category:1993 songs

Category:Columbia Records singles

Category:Manic Street Preachers songs

Category:British soft rock songs

Category:Grunge songs

Category:Songs written by James Dean Bradfield

Category:Songs written by Nicky Wire

Category:Songs written by Richey Edwards

Category:Songs written by Sean Moore (musician)

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