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(It's Not War) Just the End of Love

"(It's Not War) Just the End of Love"
Itsnotwarjusttheendoflove.jpg
Single by Manic Street Preachers
from the album Postcards from a Young Man
Released 13 September 2010
Format CD, Vinyl record (7"), digital download
Genre Alternative rock
Length 3:27
Label Columbia
Writer(s) James Dean Bradfield, Nicky Wire, Sean Moore
Producer(s) Dave Eringa
Manic Street Preachers singles chronology
"The Ghosts of Christmas"
(2007)
"(It's Not War) Just the End of Love"
(2010)
"Some Kind of Nothingness"
(2010)

"(It's Not War) Just the End of Love" is a song by Manic Street Preachers and both the opener and the lead single of their tenth album Postcards From a Young Man.

The song was made Record of the Week on BBC Radio 2 and added to the BBC Radio 2, BBC 6 Music and XFM playlists.

The music video, directed by Alex Smith, was premiered on GMTV on 26 August 2010. It is set in a 1970s chess tournament and stars actor Michael Sheen, who portrays an American chess master (although playing with a Welsh flag), opposite a Soviet chess master portrayed by actress Anna Friel. The entire video unfolds in slight slow motion. The match is interrupted when the two mount the chess table and kiss passionately (coinciding with the guitar solo) as the studio audience looks on aghast.

The single was enthusiastically received by BBC Wales' James McLaren, who stated "Well I like it, I really do. It's got a theatrical pop verve to it. A sweeping string-laden hook, classic Bradders growly verse and a widdly solo in the middle eight. The melody is simple but delivered with classic Manics panache."This Is Fake DIY described it: "It's simple, it's catchy and it's enjoyable, and will have many casual radio listeners rifling through their back catalogue to discover what they've been missing all these years." The NME commented that it had "nostalgia...but also an unmistakable sense of vitality and urgency". In an early review of the album, the NME described the track as "quite literally the daftest, campest, most outlandish stadium pop song the Manics have ever put their minds to. But in a really excellent way, with one of those choruses you only need to hear once to remember forever."The Fly called it a "brilliant start" to the album, saying that it "sets out its grandiose stall from the off as James Dean Bradfield's FM-friendly riff gives way to a warm orchestral flourish".


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