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Richey Edwards

Richard James Edwards (22 December 1967 – disappeared 1 February 1995), also known as Richey James or Richey Manic, was a Welsh musician who was the lyricist and rhythm guitarist of the alternative rock band Manic Street Preachers. He was known for his dark, politicised and intellectual songwriting which, combined with an enigmatic and eloquent character, has assured him cult status. He has been cited as a leading lyricist of his generation, leading the Cool Cymru movement.[1][2]

Richey Edwards
Edwards in Japan, circa 1991
Born
Richard James Edwards

(1967-12-22)22 December 1967
Blackwood, Wales
Disappeared1 February 1995 (aged 27)
Cardiff, Wales
StatusMissing for 29 years and 3 months
Declared dead in absentia
24 November 2008(2008-11-24) (aged 40)
NationalityWelsh
Other namesRichey James
Richey Manic
Alma materSwansea University
Occupations
  • Musician
  • lyricist
  • songwriter
  • guitarist
Musical career
Genres
Instrument(s)
  • Guitar
Years active1989–1995
Formerly ofManic Street Preachers

Edwards disappeared on 1 February 1995.[3] On 24 November 2008, he was declared presumed dead "on or since" 1 February 1995.[4][5] The ninth Manic Street Preachers album, Journal for Plague Lovers, released on 18 May 2009, is composed entirely of songs with lyrics left by Edwards.[6] As of 2005, the remaining members of Manic Street Preachers were still paying 25% royalties into an account in his name.[7]

Early life edit

Richard James Edwards was born and raised in Blackwood, Wales to Graham and Sherry Edwards. He had one younger sister, Rachel (born 1969), with whom he was close.

"It sounds like a cliché but it was a very happy family, a very happy upbringing. I know Richard is on record as having said the same thing. He was two years older than me and my overwhelming memory of our childhood is that he was very supportive of me. When I was at school I used to have a lot of anxiety, particularly around schoolwork. When I went on to comprehensive school, he'd already been there for a couple of years. At the end of each day we'd walk our dog Snoopy, I'd talk to him about my homework and he'd help me. He'd allay my fears, which, I suppose in retrospect, is ironic given the anxiety that he suffered years later."

— Rachel Edwards, GQ Magazine, April 2020[8]

Edwards attended Oakdale Comprehensive School, where he met future bandmates Nicky Wire, Sean Moore and James Dean Bradfield. From 1986 to 1989, he attended University of Wales, Swansea and graduated with a 2:1 degree in political history.

Career edit

Edwards was initially a driver and roadie for Manic Street Preachers. He was accepted as the band's main spokesman and fourth member in 1989. Edwards showed little musical talent; his real contribution to the band was in their lyrics and design. He frequently mimed playing the guitar during early live performances and accordingly only played on two songs during the Manic Street Preachers studio career, but was, along with bassist Nicky Wire, principal lyricist. Edwards is said to have written approximately 80% of the lyrics on their third album, The Holy Bible.[9] Both are credited on all songs written before Edwards' disappearance, with Edwards receiving sole credit on three tracks from the 1996 album Everything Must Go, and co-writing credits on another two.

Despite Edwards' lack of musical input, he contributed to their overall musical direction, and according to the rest of the band on the Everything Must Go DVD, he played a leading role in deciding the band's sound.[citation needed] Edwards expressed a desire to create a concept album described as "Pantera meets Nine Inch Nails meets Screamadelica".[10] Lead guitarist and vocalist James Dean Bradfield later expressed doubt over whether the band would have produced such an album: "I was worried that as chief tune-smith in the band I wasn't actually going to be able to write things that he would have liked. There would have been an impasse in the band for the first time born out of taste."[11][12][13]

Edwards suffered from severe depression,[14] and was open about it in interviews.[15] He self-harmed, mainly through stubbing cigarettes on his arms and cutting himself: "When I cut myself I feel so much better. All the little things that might have been annoying me suddenly seem so trivial because I'm concentrating on the pain. I'm not a person who can scream and shout so this is my only outlet. It's all done very logically."[3] On 15 May 1991, after a gig at the Norwich Arts Centre, NME journalist Steve Lamacq questioned how serious Edwards was about his art; Edwards responded by carving the words "4 Real" into his forearm with a razor blade.[16] The injury required eighteen stitches.[17]

He also suffered from insomnia, and used alcohol to help himself sleep at night. Before the release of The Holy Bible in 1994, he checked into Whitchurch Hospital and later the Priory hospital, missing out on some of the promotional work for the album and forcing the band to appear as a three piece at the Reading Festival and T in the Park.[citation needed] Following his release from the Priory in September, Manic Street Preachers toured Europe with Suede and Therapy? for what would be the last time. Edwards' final live appearance was at the London Astoria, on 21 December 1994. The concert ended with the band smashing their equipment and damaging the lighting system, prompted by Edwards' violent destruction of his guitar towards the end of set closer "You Love Us".[18] On 23 January 1995, Edwards gave his last interview to Japanese music magazine Music Life.[19]

Disappearance and presumed death edit

Edwards disappeared on 1 February 1995, on the day when he and Bradfield were due to fly to the United States on a promotional tour of The Holy Bible.[20] In the two weeks before his disappearance, Edwards withdrew £200 a day from his bank account, which totaled £2,800 by the day of the scheduled flight (equivalent to £7,321 in March 2024[21]). It is unknown if he intended to spend the cash during the U.S. tour or whether a part of it was to pay for a desk he had ordered from a shop in Cardiff. There is no record of the desk being purchased, which would only have explained half the money withdrawn.[22][23]

According to Emma Forrest, as quoted in A Version of Reason, "The night before he disappeared Edwards gave a friend a book called Novel with Cocaine, instructing her to read the introduction, which details the author staying in a mental asylum before vanishing." Whilst staying at the Embassy Hotel in Bayswater Road, London, according to Rob Jovanovic's biography, Edwards removed some books and videos from his bag. Among them was a copy of the play Equus. Edwards placed them in a box with a note that said "I love you", wrapped the box like a birthday present and decorated it with collages and literary quotations including a picture of a Germanic-looking house and Bugs Bunny. The package was addressed to Edwards' on/off girlfriend, Jo, whom he met some years prior, although they had split a few weeks earlier.[24]

Edwards' sister Rachel, contributing to an article about Edwards' final lyrics by Guy Mankowski, proposed that Sylvia Plath's poem "Tulips" 'summed up everything he [Edwards] thought at the time he went'. She added 'why do I know this? Because he told me, he kept a copy of it, and he asked for it to be read at his funeral'. Rachel Edwards said, 'his thoughts must have been dominated by this poem–the themes and messages.' [25][26] The poem is generally considered to depict the tension between the speaker's desire for the simplicity of death and the tulip's encouragement towards life.

The next morning, Edwards collected his wallet, car keys, some Prozac and his passport. He reportedly checked out of the hotel at 7:00 a.m., leaving his toiletries, packed suitcase, and some of his Prozac. He then drove to his flat in Cardiff, leaving behind his passport, his Prozac and the Severn Bridge tollbooth receipt.[22][27] In the two weeks that followed, Edwards was apparently spotted in the Newport passport office[28] and at Newport bus station by a fan who was unaware that he was missing. The fan was reported to have discussed a mutual friend, Lori Fidler, before Edwards departed.[22][29]

This timeline was turned on its head in 2018, due to the original assumption made over the toll booth ticket found from the Severn Bridge. It had been assumed that '2:55' on the ticket was 2:55 PM, but in 2018 the original software engineer of the bridge was located and he confirmed the software printed out the 24-hour clock, meaning Edwards passed this location at 2:55 AM. Therefore, the timeline of events and subsequent appeals for information were no longer valid.[30][31]

On 7 February, a taxi driver from Newport supposedly picked up Edwards from the King's Hotel, and drove him around the valleys, including Edwards' hometown of Blackwood. The driver reported that the passenger had spoken in a Cockney accent, which occasionally slipped into a Welsh one, and that he had asked if he could lie down on the back seat. Eventually they reached Blackwood and the bus station, but the passenger reportedly said "this is not the place", and asked to be taken to Pontypool railway station. It was later ascertained, according to Jovanovic's account, that Pontypool did not have a telephone. The passenger got out at the Severn View service station near Aust, South Gloucestershire and paid the £68 fare in cash.[27][32]

On 14 February, Edwards' Vauxhall Cavalier received a parking ticket at the Severn View service station, and on 17 February, the vehicle was reported as abandoned. Police discovered the battery to be dead, with evidence that the car had been lived in. The car also had photos he had taken of his family days prior.[20][22][33] Due to the service station's proximity to the Severn Bridge, a known suicide site,[34] it was widely believed that Edwards had jumped from the bridge.[35] Edwards had referred to suicide in 1994, saying, "In terms of the 'S' word, that does not enter my mind. And it never has done, in terms of an attempt. Because I am stronger than that. I might be a weak person, but I can take pain".[36]

Since then, Edwards has reportedly been spotted in a market in Goa, India, and on the islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote. There have been other alleged sightings of Edwards, especially in the years immediately following his disappearance.[37] However, none of these has proved conclusive,[38] and none has been confirmed by investigators.[39][40]

The investigation has received criticism. In his 1999 book Everything (A Book About Manic Street Preachers), Simon Price states that aspects of the investigation were "far from satisfactory". He asserts the police may not have taken Edwards' mental state into account when prioritising his disappearance, and also records Edwards' sister Rachel as having "hit out at police handling" after CCTV footage was analysed two years after Edwards vanished.[41] Price records a member of the investigation team as stating "that the idea that you could identify somebody from that is arrant nonsense".[42] While his family had the option of declaring him legally dead from 2002 onwards, they chose not to for many years, and his status remained open as a missing person[16][39] until 23 November 2008, when he became officially "presumed dead".[43][44]

Legacy edit

Edwards' disappearance attracted a great deal of media attention.

On 8 April 1995, an issue of Melody Maker was released in conjunction with the Samaritans[45] regarding depression, self-harm and suicide.[46] The magazine had received a number of letters from fans distressed at both the anniversary of the death of Kurt Cobain and the disappearance of Edwards. The 8 April edition saw Melody Maker assemble a panel of readers to discuss the issues related to both cases. Then-editor Allan Jones placing the inspiration for the special nature of the issue firmly in the hands of the readers: "Every week the mailbag is just full of these letters. Richey's predicament seems to be emblematic of what a lot of people are going through."[47] Jones saw the debate as focusing on the notion of whether "our rock stars are more vulnerable these days, and is that vulnerability a reflection of the vulnerability of their audience? And if so, why?"[47]

On 21 April, Caitlin Moran, writing in The Times, commented that Edwards became "a cause celebre among depressives, alcoholics, anorexics, and self-mutilators, because he was the first person in the public eye to talk openly about these subjects, not with swaggering bravado and a subtext of 'look how tortured and cool I am', but with humility, sense and, often, bleak humour".[46] Moran dismissed the mainstream media's narrative, which was geared towards the idea that Edwards inspired copycat actions in fans. With regard to the 8 April edition of Melody Maker, Moran wrote of her distaste of the media treatment in general: "Arms were flung aloft and tongues tutted two weeks back, when the first anniversary of Kurt Cobain's suicide coincided with the two-month marking of ... Richey Edwards' disappearance, and Melody Maker instigated a debate on escalating teenage depression, self-mutilation and suicide."[46] Nevertheless, Moran said "Cobain's actions and, to a greater extent, Richey Edwards's actions, have legitimised debate on these subjects".[46]

Literature and other cultural influences edit

As well as an interest in music, Edwards displayed a love for literature. He chose many of the quotes that appear on Manics record sleeves and would often refer to writers and poets during interviews. This interest in literature has remained integral to the band's music and lyrics. Albert Camus,[48] Philip Larkin, Yukio Mishima, Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Arthur Rimbaud are known to have been among his favourite authors. In a dressing room interview, he also mentioned admiration for Primo Levi. Edwards' lyrics have often been of a highly poetic nature and at times they reflected his knowledge of political history.

Books about Edwards edit

In 2009, Rob Jovanovic's book A Version of Reason: The Search for Richey Edwards of the Manic Street Preachers was published. The book was written with the goal of providing an authoritative factual account, pieced together through testimonials from those close to Edwards before his disappearance.[49] A novel by Ben Myers, entitled Richard: A Novel, was published on 1 October 2010 through Picador. Richard purports to be a fictionalised account of Edwards' life "as he might have told it."[50] A 2015 novel by Guy Mankowski, entitled How I Left The National Grid, was heavily informed by Edwards and his disappearance.[51][52] Howard Marks has also written a book about Edwards, Sympathy for the Devil, although his name has been changed to fictionalise the story.[52]

In 2019, Sara Hawys Roberts and Leon Noakes published Withdrawn Traces: Searching for the Truth About Richey Manic, a book that claimed to provide fresh evidence that Edwards staged the disappearance. The book was published with consent from Edwards' sister, Rachel Edwards, who also wrote the foreword.[53]

Discography and writing credits edit

With Manic Street Preachers

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Owen, Paul, "The Manics' Lyrics Were Something Special", The Guardian, 27 November 2008
  2. ^ Clash Music, "Manics Member Officially Dead", Clash Music
  3. ^ a b BBC Wales, "Manic Street Preachers – Richey Edwards",BBC Wales
  4. ^ Evans, Catherine Mary "Missing Manic Street Preacher Richey Edwards declared legally dead, 13 years on", 24 November 2008, Western Mail. Accessed on 11 February 2009. on 11 February 2009.
  5. ^ "Richey Edwards". Telegraph.co.uk. 23 March 2009. Retrieved 22 June 2009.
  6. ^ "Journal for Plague Lovers". Manicstreetpreachers.com. Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  7. ^ "Ten-year tragedy of missing Manic". 1 February 2005. Retrieved 2 October 2017. February 2005: The remaining Manic Street Preachers members continue to pay a quarter of the band's royalties into an account held in his name.
  8. ^ "Richey Edwards Disappearance: interview with Rachel Edwards". GQ. April 2020.
  9. ^ Sullivan, Caroline; Bellos, Alex (22 February 1995), "Sweet Exile", The Guardian, London, p. T.010
  10. ^ Bailie, Stuart. "The Art of Falling Apart". Mojo (February 2002). p. 85.
  11. ^ Hill, Claire (3 November 2006). "Manics frontman talks of artistic differences with missing Richey". Western Mail (Cardiff). p. 7.
  12. ^ Maconie, Stuart "Everything Must Grow Up" Q Magazine October 1998
  13. ^ O'Connor, Rob (Producer & Director), Bradfield, James Dean (interviewee), Moore, Sean (interviewee), Wire, Nicky (interviewee) (6 November 2006). The Making of Everything Must Go (DVD). Sony BMG.
  14. ^ Leonard, Marion. Gender in the Music Industry (2007), Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 71. ISBN 0-7546-3862-6
  15. ^ Smith, Richard (1995) Seduced and Abandoned: Essays on Gay Men and Popular Music, London: Cassell.
  16. ^ a b Jinman, Richard (1 February 2005). "Fans keep hopes alive for missing Manic". The Guardian. p. 7. Retrieved 2 February 2007.
  17. ^ "Richey Edwards Disappearance". 23 April 2020.
  18. ^ Boden, Sarah (21 January 2007), "25 of the greatest gigs ever (part 2)", The Observer, p. 41
  19. ^ "'Everyone Is Weak.' The Last Interview Before Richey's Disappearance". Articles.richeyedwards.net. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  20. ^ a b Price (1999), pp. 177–178.
  21. ^ "Inflation Calculator". Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  22. ^ a b c d Beckett, Andy (2 March 1997). "Missing street preacher". The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  23. ^ Price (1999), p. 178.
  24. ^ "A Floating Question Mark". 3ammagazine.com. 4 February 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  25. ^ "'A Series of Images / Against You And Me.' Richey Edwards's Portrayal of the Body in 'Journal For Plague Lovers'". lincoln.ac.uk. 4 February 2019. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
  26. ^ Mankowski, Guy (31 May 2020). "'A Series of Images / Against You And Me': Richey Edwards' Portrayal of the Human Body in Journal For Plague Lovers". ResearchGate. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  27. ^ a b Price (1999), p. 179.
  28. ^ Price (1999), p. 183.
  29. ^ Price (1999), p. 180.
  30. ^ "Richey Edwards' family find "vital new evidence" in the case of the missing Manic". NME. 9 February 2018.
  31. ^ "New information uncovered in Richey Edwards case". The Guardian. 9 February 2018. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  32. ^ Bellos, Alex (26 January 1996). "Music: Desperately seeking Richey". The Guardian. pp. T.010.
  33. ^ "Ten-year tragedy of missing Manic". BBC. 1 February 2005. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  34. ^ Pidd, Helen. "Richey Edwards case closed: how 14 years of hope ended", The Guardian. 29 November 2008.
  35. ^ "Amy Winehouse joins iconic stars who died aged 27". BBC. 25 July 2011. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  36. ^ "The Last of Richey Edwards?". Richeyedwards.net. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  37. ^ Sullivan, Caroline (28 January 2000). "The lost boys". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 February 2007.
  38. ^ Wills, Colin (2 June 1996). "Is Richey the wild rebel of rock alive or dead?". Sunday Mirror. p. 62.
  39. ^ a b Helan, Stephen P. (30 January 2005). "Living With Ghosts". Sunday Herald. p. 10.
  40. ^ Price (1999), pp. 183–185.
  41. ^ Price (1999), p. 186.
  42. ^ Price (1999), p. 187.
  43. ^ "Missing guitarist 'presumed dead'". BBC. 24 November 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2008.
  44. ^ Cartwright, Garth (26 November 2008), "Obituary: Richey Edwards", The Guardian, retrieved 30 October 2012
  45. ^ "Pop paper responds to fans' cry of grief;Melody Maker" The Times (London); 22 March 1995; Dalya Alberge; p. 1
  46. ^ a b c d "Cries that won't go away" The Times (London); 21 April 1995; Caitlin Moran; p. 1
  47. ^ a b "Is this music to die for? When the postbag at Melody Maker is opened these days, out pours a bleak litany of angst and agony. Andrew Smith looks at the dangerous, unprecedented trend of young pop music fans identifying closely with the torment of their heroes" The Guardian; 31 March 1995; ANDREW SMITH; p. T.002
  48. ^ Moran, Caitlin (17 December 2004). "Grow up, for Pete's sake". The Times. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
  49. ^ Jovanovic, Rob (3 December 2010). Rob Jovanovic - A Version of Reason - Orion Publishing Group. Orion Publishing Group. ISBN 9781409111290. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  50. ^ "January+2010+032.jpg (image)". 1.bp.blogspot.com. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  51. ^ Daniel Lukes (14 May 2017). "Archives Of Pain". 3ammagazine.com. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  52. ^ a b Rhian E. Jones; Daniel Lukes; Larissa Wodtke (16 February 2017). Triptych: An examination of the Manic Street Preachers Holy Bible. Watkins Media. p. 206. ISBN 978-1-910924-89-1.
  53. ^ Reilly, Nick (26 January 2019). "New evidence suggests that Richey Edwards staged his disappearance". Nme.com.

References edit

richey, edwards, confused, with, richie, edwards, richard, james, edwards, december, 1967, disappeared, february, 1995, also, known, richey, james, richey, manic, welsh, musician, lyricist, rhythm, guitarist, alternative, rock, band, manic, street, preachers, . Not to be confused with Richie Edwards Richard James Edwards 22 December 1967 disappeared 1 February 1995 also known as Richey James or Richey Manic was a Welsh musician who was the lyricist and rhythm guitarist of the alternative rock band Manic Street Preachers He was known for his dark politicised and intellectual songwriting which combined with an enigmatic and eloquent character has assured him cult status He has been cited as a leading lyricist of his generation leading the Cool Cymru movement 1 2 Richey EdwardsEdwards in Japan circa 1991BornRichard James Edwards 1967 12 22 22 December 1967Blackwood WalesDisappeared1 February 1995 aged 27 Cardiff WalesStatusMissing for 29 years and 3 months Declared dead in absentia 24 November 2008 2008 11 24 aged 40 NationalityWelshOther namesRichey James Richey ManicAlma materSwansea UniversityOccupationsMusician lyricist songwriter guitaristMusical careerGenresPunk rock alternative rock hard rock glam punkInstrument s GuitarYears active1989 1995Formerly ofManic Street Preachers Edwards disappeared on 1 February 1995 3 On 24 November 2008 he was declared presumed dead on or since 1 February 1995 4 5 The ninth Manic Street Preachers album Journal for Plague Lovers released on 18 May 2009 is composed entirely of songs with lyrics left by Edwards 6 As of 2005 update the remaining members of Manic Street Preachers were still paying 25 royalties into an account in his name 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Disappearance and presumed death 3 1 Legacy 4 Literature and other cultural influences 5 Books about Edwards 6 Discography and writing credits 7 See also 8 Citations 9 ReferencesEarly life editRichard James Edwards was born and raised in Blackwood Wales to Graham and Sherry Edwards He had one younger sister Rachel born 1969 with whom he was close It sounds like a cliche but it was a very happy family a very happy upbringing I know Richard is on record as having said the same thing He was two years older than me and my overwhelming memory of our childhood is that he was very supportive of me When I was at school I used to have a lot of anxiety particularly around schoolwork When I went on to comprehensive school he d already been there for a couple of years At the end of each day we d walk our dog Snoopy I d talk to him about my homework and he d help me He d allay my fears which I suppose in retrospect is ironic given the anxiety that he suffered years later Rachel Edwards GQ Magazine April 2020 8 Edwards attended Oakdale Comprehensive School where he met future bandmates Nicky Wire Sean Moore and James Dean Bradfield From 1986 to 1989 he attended University of Wales Swansea and graduated with a 2 1 degree in political history Career editEdwards was initially a driver and roadie for Manic Street Preachers He was accepted as the band s main spokesman and fourth member in 1989 Edwards showed little musical talent his real contribution to the band was in their lyrics and design He frequently mimed playing the guitar during early live performances and accordingly only played on two songs during the Manic Street Preachers studio career but was along with bassist Nicky Wire principal lyricist Edwards is said to have written approximately 80 of the lyrics on their third album The Holy Bible 9 Both are credited on all songs written before Edwards disappearance with Edwards receiving sole credit on three tracks from the 1996 album Everything Must Go and co writing credits on another two Despite Edwards lack of musical input he contributed to their overall musical direction and according to the rest of the band on the Everything Must Go DVD he played a leading role in deciding the band s sound citation needed Edwards expressed a desire to create a concept album described as Pantera meets Nine Inch Nails meets Screamadelica 10 Lead guitarist and vocalist James Dean Bradfield later expressed doubt over whether the band would have produced such an album I was worried that as chief tune smith in the band I wasn t actually going to be able to write things that he would have liked There would have been an impasse in the band for the first time born out of taste 11 12 13 Edwards suffered from severe depression 14 and was open about it in interviews 15 He self harmed mainly through stubbing cigarettes on his arms and cutting himself When I cut myself I feel so much better All the little things that might have been annoying me suddenly seem so trivial because I m concentrating on the pain I m not a person who can scream and shout so this is my only outlet It s all done very logically 3 On 15 May 1991 after a gig at the Norwich Arts Centre NME journalist Steve Lamacq questioned how serious Edwards was about his art Edwards responded by carving the words 4 Real into his forearm with a razor blade 16 The injury required eighteen stitches 17 He also suffered from insomnia and used alcohol to help himself sleep at night Before the release of The Holy Bible in 1994 he checked into Whitchurch Hospital and later the Priory hospital missing out on some of the promotional work for the album and forcing the band to appear as a three piece at the Reading Festival and T in the Park citation needed Following his release from the Priory in September Manic Street Preachers toured Europe with Suede and Therapy for what would be the last time Edwards final live appearance was at the London Astoria on 21 December 1994 The concert ended with the band smashing their equipment and damaging the lighting system prompted by Edwards violent destruction of his guitar towards the end of set closer You Love Us 18 On 23 January 1995 Edwards gave his last interview to Japanese music magazine Music Life 19 Disappearance and presumed death editEdwards disappeared on 1 February 1995 on the day when he and Bradfield were due to fly to the United States on a promotional tour of The Holy Bible 20 In the two weeks before his disappearance Edwards withdrew 200 a day from his bank account which totaled 2 800 by the day of the scheduled flight equivalent to 7 321 in March 2024 21 It is unknown if he intended to spend the cash during the U S tour or whether a part of it was to pay for a desk he had ordered from a shop in Cardiff There is no record of the desk being purchased which would only have explained half the money withdrawn 22 23 According to Emma Forrest as quoted in A Version of Reason The night before he disappeared Edwards gave a friend a book called Novel with Cocaine instructing her to read the introduction which details the author staying in a mental asylum before vanishing Whilst staying at the Embassy Hotel in Bayswater Road London according to Rob Jovanovic s biography Edwards removed some books and videos from his bag Among them was a copy of the play Equus Edwards placed them in a box with a note that said I love you wrapped the box like a birthday present and decorated it with collages and literary quotations including a picture of a Germanic looking house and Bugs Bunny The package was addressed to Edwards on off girlfriend Jo whom he met some years prior although they had split a few weeks earlier 24 Edwards sister Rachel contributing to an article about Edwards final lyrics by Guy Mankowski proposed that Sylvia Plath s poem Tulips summed up everything he Edwards thought at the time he went She added why do I know this Because he told me he kept a copy of it and he asked for it to be read at his funeral Rachel Edwards said his thoughts must have been dominated by this poem the themes and messages 25 26 The poem is generally considered to depict the tension between the speaker s desire for the simplicity of death and the tulip s encouragement towards life The next morning Edwards collected his wallet car keys some Prozac and his passport He reportedly checked out of the hotel at 7 00 a m leaving his toiletries packed suitcase and some of his Prozac He then drove to his flat in Cardiff leaving behind his passport his Prozac and the Severn Bridge tollbooth receipt 22 27 In the two weeks that followed Edwards was apparently spotted in the Newport passport office 28 and at Newport bus station by a fan who was unaware that he was missing The fan was reported to have discussed a mutual friend Lori Fidler before Edwards departed 22 29 This timeline was turned on its head in 2018 due to the original assumption made over the toll booth ticket found from the Severn Bridge It had been assumed that 2 55 on the ticket was 2 55 PM but in 2018 the original software engineer of the bridge was located and he confirmed the software printed out the 24 hour clock meaning Edwards passed this location at 2 55 AM Therefore the timeline of events and subsequent appeals for information were no longer valid 30 31 On 7 February a taxi driver from Newport supposedly picked up Edwards from the King s Hotel and drove him around the valleys including Edwards hometown of Blackwood The driver reported that the passenger had spoken in a Cockney accent which occasionally slipped into a Welsh one and that he had asked if he could lie down on the back seat Eventually they reached Blackwood and the bus station but the passenger reportedly said this is not the place and asked to be taken to Pontypool railway station It was later ascertained according to Jovanovic s account that Pontypool did not have a telephone The passenger got out at the Severn View service station near Aust South Gloucestershire and paid the 68 fare in cash 27 32 On 14 February Edwards Vauxhall Cavalier received a parking ticket at the Severn View service station and on 17 February the vehicle was reported as abandoned Police discovered the battery to be dead with evidence that the car had been lived in The car also had photos he had taken of his family days prior 20 22 33 Due to the service station s proximity to the Severn Bridge a known suicide site 34 it was widely believed that Edwards had jumped from the bridge 35 Edwards had referred to suicide in 1994 saying In terms of the S word that does not enter my mind And it never has done in terms of an attempt Because I am stronger than that I might be a weak person but I can take pain 36 Since then Edwards has reportedly been spotted in a market in Goa India and on the islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote There have been other alleged sightings of Edwards especially in the years immediately following his disappearance 37 However none of these has proved conclusive 38 and none has been confirmed by investigators 39 40 The investigation has received criticism In his 1999 book Everything A Book About Manic Street Preachers Simon Price states that aspects of the investigation were far from satisfactory He asserts the police may not have taken Edwards mental state into account when prioritising his disappearance and also records Edwards sister Rachel as having hit out at police handling after CCTV footage was analysed two years after Edwards vanished 41 Price records a member of the investigation team as stating that the idea that you could identify somebody from that is arrant nonsense 42 While his family had the option of declaring him legally dead from 2002 onwards they chose not to for many years and his status remained open as a missing person 16 39 until 23 November 2008 when he became officially presumed dead 43 44 Legacy edit Edwards disappearance attracted a great deal of media attention On 8 April 1995 an issue of Melody Maker was released in conjunction with the Samaritans 45 regarding depression self harm and suicide 46 The magazine had received a number of letters from fans distressed at both the anniversary of the death of Kurt Cobain and the disappearance of Edwards The 8 April edition saw Melody Maker assemble a panel of readers to discuss the issues related to both cases Then editor Allan Jones placing the inspiration for the special nature of the issue firmly in the hands of the readers Every week the mailbag is just full of these letters Richey s predicament seems to be emblematic of what a lot of people are going through 47 Jones saw the debate as focusing on the notion of whether our rock stars are more vulnerable these days and is that vulnerability a reflection of the vulnerability of their audience And if so why 47 On 21 April Caitlin Moran writing in The Times commented that Edwards became a cause celebre among depressives alcoholics anorexics and self mutilators because he was the first person in the public eye to talk openly about these subjects not with swaggering bravado and a subtext of look how tortured and cool I am but with humility sense and often bleak humour 46 Moran dismissed the mainstream media s narrative which was geared towards the idea that Edwards inspired copycat actions in fans With regard to the 8 April edition of Melody Maker Moran wrote of her distaste of the media treatment in general Arms were flung aloft and tongues tutted two weeks back when the first anniversary of Kurt Cobain s suicide coincided with the two month marking of Richey Edwards disappearance and Melody Maker instigated a debate on escalating teenage depression self mutilation and suicide 46 Nevertheless Moran said Cobain s actions and to a greater extent Richey Edwards s actions have legitimised debate on these subjects 46 Literature and other cultural influences editAs well as an interest in music Edwards displayed a love for literature He chose many of the quotes that appear on Manics record sleeves and would often refer to writers and poets during interviews This interest in literature has remained integral to the band s music and lyrics Albert Camus 48 Philip Larkin Yukio Mishima Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Arthur Rimbaud are known to have been among his favourite authors In a dressing room interview he also mentioned admiration for Primo Levi Edwards lyrics have often been of a highly poetic nature and at times they reflected his knowledge of political history Books about Edwards editIn 2009 Rob Jovanovic s book A Version of Reason The Search for Richey Edwards of the Manic Street Preachers was published The book was written with the goal of providing an authoritative factual account pieced together through testimonials from those close to Edwards before his disappearance 49 A novel by Ben Myers entitled Richard A Novel was published on 1 October 2010 through Picador Richard purports to be a fictionalised account of Edwards life as he might have told it 50 A 2015 novel by Guy Mankowski entitled How I Left The National Grid was heavily informed by Edwards and his disappearance 51 52 Howard Marks has also written a book about Edwards Sympathy for the Devil although his name has been changed to fictionalise the story 52 In 2019 Sara Hawys Roberts and Leon Noakes published Withdrawn Traces Searching for the Truth About Richey Manic a book that claimed to provide fresh evidence that Edwards staged the disappearance The book was published with consent from Edwards sister Rachel Edwards who also wrote the foreword 53 Discography and writing credits editMain article Manic Street Preachers discography With Manic Street Preachers Generation Terrorists 1992 Gold Against the Soul 1993 The Holy Bible 1994 Everything Must Go 1996 Journal for Plague Lovers 2009 See also editLists of people who disappeared 27 ClubCitations edit Owen Paul The Manics Lyrics Were Something Special The Guardian 27 November 2008 Clash Music Manics Member Officially Dead Clash Music a b BBC Wales Manic Street Preachers Richey Edwards BBC Wales Evans Catherine Mary Missing Manic Street Preacher Richey Edwards declared legally dead 13 years on 24 November 2008 Western Mail Accessed on 11 February 2009 Archived on 11 February 2009 Richey Edwards Telegraph co uk 23 March 2009 Retrieved 22 June 2009 Journal for Plague Lovers Manicstreetpreachers com Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2011 Ten year tragedy of missing Manic 1 February 2005 Retrieved 2 October 2017 February 2005 The remaining Manic Street Preachers members continue to pay a quarter of the band s royalties into an account held in his name Richey Edwards Disappearance interview with Rachel Edwards GQ April 2020 Sullivan Caroline Bellos Alex 22 February 1995 Sweet Exile The Guardian London p T 010 Bailie Stuart The Art of Falling Apart Mojo February 2002 p 85 Hill Claire 3 November 2006 Manics frontman talks of artistic differences with missing Richey Western Mail Cardiff p 7 Maconie Stuart Everything Must Grow Up Q Magazine October 1998 O Connor Rob Producer amp Director Bradfield James Dean interviewee Moore Sean interviewee Wire Nicky interviewee 6 November 2006 The Making of Everything Must Go DVD Sony BMG Leonard Marion Gender in the Music Industry 2007 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 71 ISBN 0 7546 3862 6 Smith Richard 1995 Seduced and Abandoned Essays on Gay Men and Popular Music London Cassell a b Jinman Richard 1 February 2005 Fans keep hopes alive for missing Manic The Guardian p 7 Retrieved 2 February 2007 Richey Edwards Disappearance 23 April 2020 Boden Sarah 21 January 2007 25 of the greatest gigs ever part 2 The Observer p 41 Everyone Is Weak The Last Interview Before Richey s Disappearance Articles richeyedwards net Retrieved 14 November 2020 a b Price 1999 pp 177 178 Inflation Calculator Retrieved 8 March 2024 a b c d Beckett Andy 2 March 1997 Missing street preacher The Independent on Sunday Retrieved 29 June 2018 Price 1999 p 178 A Floating Question Mark 3ammagazine com 4 February 2019 Retrieved 14 November 2020 A Series of Images Against You And Me Richey Edwards s Portrayal of the Body in Journal For Plague Lovers lincoln ac uk 4 February 2019 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Mankowski Guy 31 May 2020 A Series of Images Against You And Me Richey Edwards Portrayal of the Human Body in Journal For Plague Lovers ResearchGate Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b Price 1999 p 179 Price 1999 p 183 Price 1999 p 180 Richey Edwards family find vital new evidence in the case of the missing Manic NME 9 February 2018 New information uncovered in Richey Edwards case The Guardian 9 February 2018 Retrieved 5 July 2020 Bellos Alex 26 January 1996 Music Desperately seeking Richey The Guardian pp T 010 Ten year tragedy of missing Manic BBC 1 February 2005 Retrieved 30 January 2008 Pidd Helen Richey Edwards case closed how 14 years of hope ended The Guardian 29 November 2008 Amy Winehouse joins iconic stars who died aged 27 BBC 25 July 2011 Retrieved 25 July 2011 The Last of Richey Edwards Richeyedwards net Retrieved 3 April 2010 Sullivan Caroline 28 January 2000 The lost boys The Guardian Retrieved 2 February 2007 Wills Colin 2 June 1996 Is Richey the wild rebel of rock alive or dead Sunday Mirror p 62 a b Helan Stephen P 30 January 2005 Living With Ghosts Sunday Herald p 10 Price 1999 pp 183 185 Price 1999 p 186 Price 1999 p 187 Missing guitarist presumed dead BBC 24 November 2008 Retrieved 24 November 2008 Cartwright Garth 26 November 2008 Obituary Richey Edwards The Guardian retrieved 30 October 2012 Pop paper responds to fans cry of grief Melody Maker The Times London 22 March 1995 Dalya Alberge p 1 a b c d Cries that won t go away The Times London 21 April 1995 Caitlin Moran p 1 a b Is this music to die for When the postbag at Melody Maker is opened these days out pours a bleak litany of angst and agony Andrew Smith looks at the dangerous unprecedented trend of young pop music fans identifying closely with the torment of their heroes The Guardian 31 March 1995 ANDREW SMITH p T 002 Moran Caitlin 17 December 2004 Grow up for Pete s sake The Times Retrieved 10 August 2010 Jovanovic Rob 3 December 2010 Rob Jovanovic A Version of Reason Orion Publishing Group Orion Publishing Group ISBN 9781409111290 Retrieved 5 November 2015 January 2010 032 jpg image 1 bp blogspot com Retrieved 3 April 2010 Daniel Lukes 14 May 2017 Archives Of Pain 3ammagazine com Retrieved 9 September 2017 a b Rhian E Jones Daniel Lukes Larissa Wodtke 16 February 2017 Triptych An examination of the Manic Street Preachers Holy Bible Watkins Media p 206 ISBN 978 1 910924 89 1 Reilly Nick 26 January 2019 New evidence suggests that Richey Edwards staged his disappearance Nme com References editPrice Simon 1999 Everything A Book About Manic Street Preachers 1st ed Virgin Publishing ISBN 978 0 7535 0139 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richey Edwards amp oldid 1217989895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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