“I thought it was a compilation of obscure Welsh bands… it’s a slam-dunk lost classic”: Rush and Pink Floyd led James Dean Bradfield to Man – a band he’d previously dismissed

“i-thought-it-was-a-compilation-of-obscure-welsh-bands…-it’s-a-slam-dunk-lost-classic”:-rush-and-pink-floyd-led-james-dean-bradfield-to-man-–-a-band-he’d-previously-dismissed

In 2022 Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield told Prog he’d come late to the progressive music party – but after exploring Rush, Pink Floyd and Russian Circles, he discovered Man’s 11th album The Welsh Connection, and became a fan after having previously dismissed the band.


“For me prog starts with Rush, when I was about 17. [Manics bassist] Nicky Wire and his brother were already gigantic fans, and – like a lot of people coming late to them – my in was The Spirit Of Radio, the album Moving Pictures and songs like Limelight, where they were almost at an interface with The Police.

Pink Floyd’s Meddle had a little influence on our 1998 album This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours. I’m a big fan of Russian Circles, Chicago Transit Authority and John McLaughlin – especially on Mahavishnu Orchestra’s The Inner Mounting Flame.

And then there’s Man. I was working as a barman in the Newbridge Miners Institute in the 80s, and a version of Man played there. I remember it being a big deal. I’d bought Rhinos, Winos And Lunatics [1974] and liked some of the songs, but I wasn’t sure.

Then a couple of years later I was flicking through the racks at HMV and saw the cover of The Welsh Connection [1976]. I thought it was maybe a compilation of obscure Welsh bands; then realised it was by Man, so I thought I’d give them another go. I took it home, put it on, and bam!

Man never quite hit the heights; they were almost too versatile

This album’s definitely a slam-dunk lost classic. It was their 11th, so they were way down the line – they were never going to get any bigger at this point in historical terms, and they’d started steering away from the more blues-based stuff.

It was the first record for a new label so there was change in the air. They had John McKenzie on bass, and he and drummer Terry Williams locked into something nimble, nuanced and absolutely gorgeous.

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The title track and Love Can Find A Way had lots of Steely Dan in it, big time, but The Welsh Connection came out a year before Aja, so that’s a bit of a coup for Man! The Ride And The View has more of a groovy, trippy, Little Feat vibe. And Something Is

Happening is so beautiful: at one point it’s like Herbie Hancock, so articulate and dextrous. The whole album was a departure for them. Man never quite hit the heights; I suppose they were almost too versatile. I like a lot of tracks from their other albums, but this is the one I put on and don’t take off.”

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