Difference between revisions of "Eat Me, Drink Me (album)"

From MansonWiki, the Marilyn Manson encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Album Covers)
m (Album Covers)
Line 38: Line 38:
 
* "[[This Is Halloween]]" – <small>A cover featured on ''The Nightmare Before Christmas'' Soundtrack re-release in October 2006. The chances of it being featured on the standard version of ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' are improbable, but it may see future release on international versions of the album, much like "[[Tainted Love]]" (also a cover) was to ''[[The Golden Age of Grotesque]]''.</small>
 
* "[[This Is Halloween]]" – <small>A cover featured on ''The Nightmare Before Christmas'' Soundtrack re-release in October 2006. The chances of it being featured on the standard version of ''Eat Me, Drink Me'' are improbable, but it may see future release on international versions of the album, much like "[[Tainted Love]]" (also a cover) was to ''[[The Golden Age of Grotesque]]''.</small>
  
 +
[[Image:Eatmedrinkme.jpg|frame|A fake cover of Eat Me, Drink Me]]
 
==Album Covers==
 
==Album Covers==
 
As anticipation of the album has increased, many covers for the album Eat Me, Drink Me have surfaced. While some are convincing, no official album covers have been released, pointing to these covers simply being fan-made.
 
As anticipation of the album has increased, many covers for the album Eat Me, Drink Me have surfaced. While some are convincing, no official album covers have been released, pointing to these covers simply being fan-made.
 
[[Image:Eatmedrinkme.jpg|frame|A fake cover of Eat Me, Drink Me]]
 
  
 
==Personnel==
 
==Personnel==

Revision as of 01:29, 11 April 2007

Eat Me, Drink Me is the sixth studio album by Marilyn Manson, due for release on June 5 2007 in North America by Interscope Records. Eat Me, Drink Me was produced by frontman Marilyn Manson and recorded in multiple studios in California, and in collaboration with "an assortment of other musicians".

Background information

Manson on Eat Me, Drink Me

"I feel as if there's more like three albums' worth of material, [because] I don't want to cram a long record into a place that doesn't have the attention span for that... I'd like to return to the old-fashioned records that had eight or nine songs [that] were all very important. Not to say that I made records that had filler material. They were all based around a central idea, and the central idea in this one is my pain and its ability to be unashamed to repeat itself."

—Marilyn Manson, MTV News

"[The songs] are clearly written to seduce somebody... I don't want people to think that the record is some kind of exploitation of my personal life. At the same time, it also represents exactly who I am and what I feel... I really wanted to be a singer on this album. This is very earnest and uncalculated and raw, in the sense that I know I'm fucked up, and I'm really not ashamed of it."

—Marilyn Manson, Rolling Stone

"This is the record I’ve worked all my life to get to. You always have to transform, or you can’t continue as an artist, and this record has been the biggest transformation for me... It’s better heard than described... On this record I really wanted to sing, and that has to come from a naked, emotional place. It's not a record about me crying, or songs about my woes, but I think this record will probably speak to more people in different ways, because of its total human element... If I had to do a record review, I’d say it’s got a cannibal, consumption, obsessive, violent-sex, romance angle, but with an upbeat swing to it... The album's title [Eat Me, Drink Me] was also inspired by that story several years back of the German man who put out an ad that he wanted to be eaten, and the man who ate him. Although I can't relate to the relationship those two had, I found the story very compelling in a romantic way."

—Marilyn Manson, Revolver

The singer also referred to the album as "very guitar-oriented and very melodic", and as featuring "various unconventional forms of percussion". He has also called it a romantic album, whose lyrical content involves "the unfulfilled yearning to be in another time or another place where you feel like you would fit in better".

Recent Events

On February 26, 2007, MarilynManson.com revealed the opinion of Rolling Stone upon first hearing the album as being:

"Things got really interesting on Saturday when the Smoking Section drove out to the Valley at the behest of Marilyn Manson. The S.S. joined Manson in his rec room where we worked our way down the belly of a bottle of German absinthe and were blown away as Manson debuted his new album, Eat Me, Drink Me. The key cut is "If I Was Your Vampire," a six-minute epic with the lyric "The hole is where the heart is." If anyone thought Manson was down for the count, think again."[1]

Themes

According to Manson, Vampirism is just one of the dark themes running through Eat Me, Drink Me. "If I had to do a record review, I'd say it's got a cannibal, consumption, obsessive, violent-sex, romance angle, but with an upbeat swing to it." He says with a laugh. Aside from the obvious Lewis Carroll and Jesus Christ references, Manson says the album's title was also inspired by "that story several years back of the German man who put out an ad that he wanted to be eaten, and the man who ate him. Although I can't relate to the relationship those two had, I found the story very compelling in a romantic way. I think a lot of people wouldn’t look at it as romantic, but it was to them in some sick way, and it is to me in some sick way, too" he laughs.

Track listing

  1. "If I Was Your Vampire" – 6:01
  2. "Putting Holes in Happiness" – 4:35
  3. "The Red Carpet Grave" – 4:47
  4. "They Said Hell Is Not Hot" – 4:17
  5. "Just a Car Crash Away" – 4:55
  6. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" – 5:00
  7. "Evidence"
  8. "Are You the Rabbit?" – 3:57
  9. "Mutilation is the Most Sincere Form of Flattery"
  10. "You and Me and the Devil Makes 3"
  11. "EAT ME, DRINK ME"

Possible Inclusions

  • "This Is Halloween" – A cover featured on The Nightmare Before Christmas Soundtrack re-release in October 2006. The chances of it being featured on the standard version of Eat Me, Drink Me are improbable, but it may see future release on international versions of the album, much like "Tainted Love" (also a cover) was to The Golden Age of Grotesque.
A fake cover of Eat Me, Drink Me

Album Covers

As anticipation of the album has increased, many covers for the album Eat Me, Drink Me have surfaced. While some are convincing, no official album covers have been released, pointing to these covers simply being fan-made.

Personnel