Hey, Cruel World... (song)

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"Hey, Cruel World..."
Hey, Cruel World... cover
Song by Marilyn Manson
Album Born Villain
Released April 25, 2012
Recorded 2009–January 2011 at Zane-a-Due in California
Length 3:44
Label Hell, etc., Cooking Vinyl
Writer Marilyn Manson
Composer Twiggy, Chris Vrenna
Producer Marilyn Manson, Chris Vrenna


"Hey, Cruel World..." is the first song on Marilyn Manson's eighth studio album Born Villain.

Versions

  • "Hey, Cruel World..." appears on Born Villain.

Lyrics

hey, cruel world...
you don't have what it takes
we don't need your faith.
we've got fucking fate.
hey, cruel world...
you don't have what it takes
we don't need your faith.
we've got fucking fate.
Creator
Preserver
Destroyer
Ask which one I am.
There's no drugged-out devils or
square-halo angels
walking among us.
I am among no one
I am among no one
I am among no one
no one
hey, cruel world...
you don't have what it takes
we don't need your faith.
we've got fucking fate.
Fate
Fate
Fate
the center of the universe
cannot exist
when there are no,
no edges
the center of the universe
cannot exist
when there are no,
no edges
hey, cruel world...
you don't have what it takes
we don't need your faith.
we've got fucking fate.
Fate
Fate
Fate
Fate
fate, fate, fate
fate, fate, fate
I am among no one
I am among no one
I am among no one
no one
hey, cruel world...
you don't have what it takes
we don't need your faith.
we've got fucking fate.
Fate
Fate
Fate
Fate
Fate
Fate

Trivia

The song's chorus, scrawled on a door in a Facebook upload.
  • A portion of the song's chorus can be seen in a 2010 Facebook photo entitled "your goddamn right."
  • "Square-halo angels" references early Christian paintings of religious scenes, in which living persons, who often-times had commissioned the actual painting, were portrayed with a square-shaped halo.[1]
  • The lyric "creator, preserver, destroyer" references three I Ching trigrams. Respectively these are quán (☰), "the creative," kūn (☷), "the receptive" and zhèn (☳), "the arousing." Born Villain conceputalizes the archetypical villain, whom has the chance to change; with this line Marilyn Manson assumes the role of the destroyer in order to make the change. Creation, preservation and destruction are also the three forms in the Hindu concept of Trimurti.[2]

References

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