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Manic Street Preachers The Masses Against The Classes Guitar Tab

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Date: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 17:37:23 +0000 (GMT)
From: =?iso-8859-1?q?Dom=20Bailey?=
Subject: m/manic_street_preachers/the_masses_against_the_classes.crd

Manic street preachers- The masses against the classes

Intro: E (that's the ahh ahh bit)

Verse: G#m, E, B, F#

Chorus: G#m, E, B, F#
G#m, E,
(this next part before the 2nd verse has no
distortion)
B, A, D, C

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Source: http://www.guitarmasta.net/m/manic_street_preachers/274875.html

Tab Discussion, Comments, and Critiques
 
 
No Picture

Roman
Rhythm Player
#1 by Roman Malik at Feb 6, 1971 at 10:14 PM EST
I think the greetings are from the masses to the elite. The ugly little success is that of the concentrations of wealth and power, who often use their own myths of self-made empires to convince the lower classes that their cooperation with the ruling classes will be rewarded by that same kind of success (this is hinted at in the ending quote). Everybody wants to get rich, few succeed, so for most people the capitalist dream isn't a reality but an ultimately unfulfilled promise which prevents people thinking about different kinds of social order. I think the winter they speak of is the intensification of whatever forms of oppression are used by the ruling classes, which tend to galvanize (bring together) popular opposition, where before there was much more complacency. The privatization of (all) water in Bolivia springs to mind. They half-sarcastically say their love (for the rich) is unconditional (and it is: if you look at it, people tend to see success as self-legitimating, and don't question its origins), and their hate can be utilized: the ruling classes foster racism, war, and things that divide people on superficial cultural lines rather than risk them uniting as the working class.
 
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Chris
Wanna Be
#2 by Chris H at Feb 5, 1982 at 4:12 AM EST
The quote at the start of the song is Chomsky. The only Mao Tse-Tung quote, as far as I can tell, is from the record sleeve, not the lyrics: "We should support whatever the enemy opposes and oppose whatever the enemy supports."
 
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Justin
Average
#3 by Justin Ruiz at Feb 2, 1999 at 10:47 PM EST
Does anyone know who that is at the start? Which line is a quote from Mao Tse-Tung?
 
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Steven
Average
#4 by Steven Daniel at Oct 6, 2007 at 3:11 PM EST
I never thought this song really means what the title would suggest at face value. I tend to agree with my nothing's analysis except I would say it is aimed more at the so-called "fans" who constantly bitch about how the MSP have got more commercial (Success is an ugly word Especially in your tiny world )/crap after Richey left and so on. I think the line "I'm tired of giving a reason " is them saying they're fed up of having to justify everything they do to the aforementioned so-called fans. They believe in the future, nothing stays the same etc. if you don't like the music they are putting out now then piss off and spend all day listening to the Holy Bible and feeling nostalgic.
 
No Picture

kevin
Rhythm Player
#5 by kevin jeung at Oct 13, 2007 at 2:43 AM EST
like nostalgic pussheads...