Editing Article:2018/06/05 'Eat Me, Drink Me': Marilyn Manson's great, underrated goth album revisited

From MansonWiki, the Marilyn Manson encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in.

Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 38: Line 38:
 
While ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' failed to follow ''The Golden Age of Grotesque'' to the top of the charts, it still reached a very respectable No. 8 on the Billboard 200, and was favorably received by critics. But rather than charting a new artistic course for Manson, ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' turned out to be something of an anomaly. Sköld left the fold before the recording of 2009's ''[[The High End of Low]]'', on which Manson reunited with former bassist and collaborator [[Twiggy Ramirez]] and returned to the sociopolitical lyrics and gear-grinding industrial glam he'd mined on albums like 1998's ''[[Mechanical Animals]]''. Though his 2015 collaboration with score composer [[Tyler Bates]] — 2015's ''[[The Pale Emperor]]'' and 2017's ''[[Heaven Upside Down]]'' — arose from a working relationship similar to the one he enjoyed with Sköld on ''Eat Me, Drink Me'', the music on those albums would be far more rock-oriented, while Manson's lyrics have never been quite so personal or vulnerable again.
 
While ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' failed to follow ''The Golden Age of Grotesque'' to the top of the charts, it still reached a very respectable No. 8 on the Billboard 200, and was favorably received by critics. But rather than charting a new artistic course for Manson, ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' turned out to be something of an anomaly. Sköld left the fold before the recording of 2009's ''[[The High End of Low]]'', on which Manson reunited with former bassist and collaborator [[Twiggy Ramirez]] and returned to the sociopolitical lyrics and gear-grinding industrial glam he'd mined on albums like 1998's ''[[Mechanical Animals]]''. Though his 2015 collaboration with score composer [[Tyler Bates]] — 2015's ''[[The Pale Emperor]]'' and 2017's ''[[Heaven Upside Down]]'' — arose from a working relationship similar to the one he enjoyed with Sköld on ''Eat Me, Drink Me'', the music on those albums would be far more rock-oriented, while Manson's lyrics have never been quite so personal or vulnerable again.
  
But perhaps the anomalous nature of ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' is part of why it still feels like one of the most extraordinary entries in Manson's discography. No other Manson album has revealed so much about its creator, just as no other Manson album has so powerfully testified to the transformative powers of love and art.
+
But perhaps the anomalous nature of ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' is part of why it still feels like one of the most extraordinary entries in Manson's discography. No other Manson album has revealed so much about its creator, just as no other Manson album has so powerfully testified to the transformative powers of love and art.  
  
 
"I don't want to give people advice about depression and how to feel," he said in 2007. "All I know is that I made myself find something to believe in. I'm just happy, and that's a strange word to use, but I'm happy because I actually enjoyed making this record more than any record I've enjoyed. It's dark and it's painful, and I've been going through a dark and painful period in my life, and I've found a way to make it better…
 
"I don't want to give people advice about depression and how to feel," he said in 2007. "All I know is that I made myself find something to believe in. I'm just happy, and that's a strange word to use, but I'm happy because I actually enjoyed making this record more than any record I've enjoyed. It's dark and it's painful, and I've been going through a dark and painful period in my life, and I've found a way to make it better…

Please note that all contributions to The Marilyn Manson Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see The Marilyn Manson Wiki:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)

Template used on this page: