Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)

From MansonWiki, the Marilyn Manson encyclopedia
Revision as of 18:22, 24 March 2011 by Yawaraey (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about the album. For other uses, see In the Shadow of the Valley of Death and Holy Wood (novel).
Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)
Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) cover
Studio album by Marilyn Manson
Released November 13, 2000 (United Kingdom)
November 14, 2000 (Australia and United States)
December 5, 2000 (Japan)
Recorded 1999–2000 at the Mansion in Death Valley, California
Genre Alternative metal, heavy metal, industrial metal
Length 68:19
Label Nothing, Interscope
Producer Marilyn Manson, Dave Sardy
Analysis and Interpretations

The Third And Final Beast (Nachtkabarett)
Mercury & The Androgyne (NachtkabaFrett)
Holywood Gun Crucifix (Nachtkabarett)

Marilyn Manson chronology
The Last Tour on Earth
(1999)
Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)
(2000)
The Golden Age of Grotesque
(2003)

Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) is the fourth full-length studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson. It was released on November 14, 2000 in the US and Australia by Nothing/Interscope and marked a return to the industrial rock/metal style of the band's earlier efforts, after the glam rock-inspired Mechanical Animals. As their first release following the Columbine High School massacre on April 20, 1999, Holy Wood served the group as both rebuttal and retort to the accusations leveled against them. The band's frontman described the record as "a declaration of war".[1][2]

It is a rock opera concept album and the third and final installment in a trilogy that includes Antichrist Superstar and Mechanical Animals.[3] After its release, Manson revealed that the over-arching story within the trilogy is divulged in reverse timeline (chronologically reverse from their actual release dates). Holy Wood, therefore, begins the story, followed by Mechanical Animals and is concluded with Antichrist Superstar.[4][5][6]

With worldwide sales of over 9 million copies,[7] the album is the most successful of Marilyn Manson's career.[8] It spawned three singles ("Disposable Teens", "The Fight Song" and "The Nobodies") and a stillborn film that was modified into a novel which currently remains unreleased.[5][6]

Development

Background

Template:Quote box In the ensuing moral panic following Columbine, Manson and the band were held as a scapegoat,[9][10] being blamed with the large majority of the culpability by various media outlets,[11][2] religious figures[12], civic groups[13] and politicians[14][15] who made reckless and malicious sensationalist allegations that the band's music and imagery drove Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold to kill their classmates[16] despite later reports to the contrary; that the two actually considered them "a joke".[17][18][2][19] Consequently, after cancelling the remaining dates of the band's Rock Is Dead Tour,[20][21] the band retreated from public view.[5] The album's development was marked by the singer's three month seclusion at his then home in the Hollywood Hills.[5]

During this period of relative silence, Manson avoided interviews and publicity.[5][2] The frontman spent this time vacillating on "what I was going to do and how I was going to react"[2], stating, "There was a bit of trepidation, deciding, 'Is it worth it? Are people understanding what I'm trying to say? Am I even gonna be allowed to say it? Because I definitely had every single door shut in my face...there were not a lot of people who stood behind me."[5] The singer would later admit to Alternative Press that there was also a genuine concern for his safety, "...one reason I didn't leave was, I genuinely believed that there was a realistic possibility that I could be shot Mark David Chapman-style". A further blow would come in the form of the disintegration of his long-term relationship with then-fiancée, actress Rose McGowan.[5] The one break in his self-imposed sequestration was in May of that year when the embattled musician began to respond to the accusations starting with his notable Rolling Stone magazine op-ed piece, "Columbine: Whose Fault Is It?".[22]

The maelstrom also caused the singer to reconsider whether or not it was judicious to continue pursuing his career.[2][16] It was after determining that it would be less prudent for a controversial artist like himself to fail to address the onslaught head-on and allow his detractors to colour the aftermath in their own worldview that he decided to continue making music.[2][16] After settling on a course of counter-attack, the band spent a year of production and recording.[16][2]

Recording and production

Manson had begun writing material for the record as early as 1995, prior to the release of Antichrist Superstar in 1996.[6] It was finally worked into shape in his aforementioned former home during his confinement, which is the same house where the Rolling Stones were rumoured to have written Let It Bleed.[4] Recording was done in several "undisclosed" locations, including Death Valley, under the working title "In The Shadow Of The Valley Of Death".[23] During this process, the band retained their low profile, with the singer stating that their official web site "will be my only contact with humanity."[23] The band drafted in mixer Dave Sardy to co-produce the album with Manson. Bon Harris of Nitzer Ebb was also brought in to supply programming and pre-production editing.[23] Manson has subsequently claimed that over 100 songs had been written during the production of Holy Wood, which was subsequently whittled down to the 19 tracks that made it into the final record.[23]

At the 1999 MTV Europe Music Awards, Manson revealed to MTV News' John Norris the title of his then-unrevealed album and movie screenplay, which "will go into production sometime in the next year."[24] He further divulged,

I'm at that point in my career where I wanted to make this film and I'm [also] making this new record, where I really examine suffering and where celebrities come from. How it all kind of traces back in religion, and celebrities and Hollywood all kind of relate to each other. And that's very American.
Marilyn Manson Marilyn Manson To Probe Celebrity And Suffering In New Film, Next Album.[24]

Concept

for a complete overview of the Trilogy see Triptych.

The album address the Littleton tragedy directly by taking a critical look on American society's common obsession with firearms, religion, and media martyrs, articulating on what Manson saw as their root cause: the three core ideals of conservative Christian America, "Guns, God and Government".[25] Parents and the news media were also castigated for the more harmful roles they play in the glorification and acceptance of wholesale violence in "mainstream" culture in contrast to music, movies, books or video games.[1][16]


The album's plot is a thinly-veiled satire of modern America centered on its ill-fated protagonist "Adam Kadmon". Kadmon is an idealistic abstract figure borrowed from the Kabbalah where he is described as the "Primal Man" or, in the similar Sufic and Alevi philosophy, "Perfect or Complete Man"; the very archetype for humanity.[6] Disillusionment takes over the protagonist, however, as he watches humanity consumed by Holy Wood's ideology of 'Guns, God and Government' into a culture of death and fame where celebrity-worship, violence and scapegoatism are held as moral values and martyrdom has become religion — a religion that canonize dead celebrities into saints and idolize 'Jack' Kennedy as the transfigured 'Lamb of God' and modern-day Christ. Deliberately a parallel of Christianity and a critique of both the 'Dead Rock Star' martyr/celebrity phenomenon in American celebrity culture and of Jesus Christ's own role as its very blueprint,[26] this religion is called "Celebritarianism".[1] The Guns, God and Government world tour that supported the album expanded on this with the tour's logo — a rifle and handguns arranged to resemble the Christian cross. Much like in Mechanical Animals, another lesser character is found in "Coma Black". Similar to the character of "Coma White" from the previous album, Coma Black is an obscure figure which, simultaneously, may or may not be an unattainable ideal, an androgynous facet of Adam or an actual person.[27]


Template:Quote box The record makes numerous confrontational references to events and figures in pop culture history to audit everyone's complicity (especially those of Manson's accusers) in creating the culture that culminated in Columbine. With an eye toward their implications and ramifications, the vast number of these allusions primarily drew from the cultural impact of the tumultuous and defining Cold War period of 1960s America.[4] A substantial amount of the record is devoted to a cultural analysis of Abraham Zapruder's film of the JFK Assassination (especially Frame 313) during the "Winter of our Discontent"[4], on which Manson has commented, "To me, that's the only thing that's happened in modern times to equal the crucifixion of Christ"[5] and further sarcastically described in an op-ed piece for Rolling Stone as "[a] good clip of mankind’s generosity to share his violence with the world in such a cinematic way."[28] The death of notable author and intellectual Aldous Huxley on the same day is also brought up — a fact buried in newspapers the following morning because JFK's greater fame ensured his assassination top priority in the headlines — and subsequently deplored with a quip often attributed to Joseph Stalin, "One death is a tragedy. A million deaths is just a statistic". The climate of fear directed against youth culture in the 1990's is also sharply compared with the Altamont Free Concert tragedy which brought an abrupt and violent end to the 'love generation', identifying the latter as the point that cemented America's fear of its own children.[4]


Allegories in the album to The Beatles' White Album and the Charles Manson murders[4] are especially significant regarding an issue brought up in the wake of Columbine — anti-mimesis (or life imitating art), since the White Album was thought to have played a key role in the Tate/LaBianca murder case when news media reported that Charles Manson took inspiration from his misreading of the record, resulting in his infamous Helter Skelter manifesto. Marilyn Manson observed that the Beatles song of the same name "was the first piece of music to be blamed and associated with violence".[4] In this sense, the rock singer drew parallels with the White Album; both him and it have been used as a scapegoat by a traumatized, knee-jerk reactionary American public and both expound on America's obsession with guns and violence and addresses the political concepts of evolution and revolution.[27] Most critically, however, the record puts a spotlight on the universal phenomenon of the press 'canonizing' people into media martyrdom in TV or print by turning their death into a vulturistic overexposed spectacle. He cites, as examples, icons of American assassination such as John Lennon, John F. Kennedy and Jesus Christ who have attained cult-of-personality celebrity-worship as a result.[27] Of Kennedy and Christ's martyrdom he opines,

Christ was the blue-print for celebrity. He was the first celebrity, or rock star if want to look at it that way, and [dying on the cross] he became this image of sexuality and suffering. He’s literally marketed — A crucifix is no different than a concert T-shirt in some ways. I think for America, in my lifetime, John F. Kennedy kind of took the place of that [as a modern day Christ] in some ways. [Being murdered on TV], he became lifted up as this icon and this Christ figure [by America].
—Marilyn Manson Marilyn Manson - Revelations of an Alien-Messiah[29]


When Bill O'Reilly suggested, in an interview on the O'Reilly Factor, that 'disturbed' kids could misinterpret certain lyrics in his 1996 song "The Reflecting God" to mean "when I'm dead everybody's going to know me", Manson replied by tying the aforementioned observations to Columbine,

Well I think that's a very valid point and I think that it's a reflection of, not necessarily this programme but of television in general, that if you die and enough people are watching you become a martyr, you become a hero, you become well known. So when you have these things like Columbine, and you have these kids who are angry and they have something to say and no one's listening, the news media sends a message that says if you do something loud enough and it gets our attention then you will be famous for it.

Those kids ended up on the cover of Time magazine, the news media [and the American audience] gave them exactly what they wanted. That's why I never did any interviews around that time when I was being blamed for it because I didn't want to contribute to something that I found to be reprehensible.

—Marilyn Manson Marilyn Manson on the O'Reilly Factor[30][31]

Release

A promotional poster for Holy Wood.

Packaging

Like Antichrist Superstar, Holy Wood also utilizes a compositional device called the song cycle structure dividing Holy Wood into four sections which form the framework and outline of Kadmon's story: A: In the Shadow, D: The Androgyne, A: Of Red Earth and M: The Fallen.

The album's cover, which portrayed Manson in a crucified pose with a missing jaw as a dual statement on censorship and America's obsession with media martyrs,[27] generated minor controversy upon release and had to be offered with a cardboard sleeve featuring an alternative cover due to some retailers refusing to stock the album with the original artwork. Manson described the move as "censorship" and stated that "those who seek to censor my album cover have successfully proven [the] point [of the image]."[2] Gigwise ranked the cover 16th out of The 50 Most Controversial Album Covers Of All Time!.[32]

Book and film

See also Holy Wood (novel) for more details

The album was originally meant to be accompanied by a film of the same name which would further explore the album's backstory.[2][24] In July 1999, Manson had reportedly entered negotiations with New Line Cinema to produce and distribute the film and corresponding soundtrack.[6] The project was slated to go into production sometime in 2000.[2] However, by late February 2000, the deal fell through due to Manson's reservations that the direction New Line Cinema was taking the film would not have "retained his artistic vision."[6]

After his attempt to bring Holy Wood to the big screen resulted in stillborn, Manson shifted medium for the project and announced plans to put out two books to accompany the then-forthcoming album instead.[6] The first was a "graphic and phantasmagoric" novelized adaptation of the script intended to be released shortly after the record. It was then to be followed by a coffee table book of images created for the "Holy Wood" project.[6] In an interview with Manson in December 2000, Chuck Palahniuk briefly mentions the Holy Wood novel and compliments its style, adding it is due for release "next spring".[33] Neither book has yet been released, allegedly due to a publishing dispute.[34]

Reception

Critical reception

 Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic Template:Rating 4.5 [35]
Entertainment Weekly B [36]
Robert Christgau Rating-Christgau-dud.png [37]
Rolling Stone Template:Rating 3.5 [38]
NME (favorable) [39]
Los Angeles Times 2/4 stars [40]
Drowned in Sound 10/10 [41]
Sputnikmusic 4/5 stars [42]

The album received generally favorable reviews. It earned a collective score of 72% out of 100 from Metacritic.[43] Barry Walters from Rolling Stone commented that "The band truly rocks: Its malevolent groove fleshes out its leader's usual complaints with an exhilarating swagger that's the essence of rock & roll.... On Holy Wood, Manson is as ambitious, personal and heavy as he's ever been, but the album is not, as he has proclaimed, the band's White Album. The music of these L.A. scenesters, though still evolving, can't hope to match the Beatles' level of eclectic experimentation or melodicism."[38] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic commented that "It's easy to see this as the definitive Marilyn Manson album, since it's tuneful and abrasive. Then again, much of its charm lies in Manson trying so hard, perfecting details in the concept, lyrics, themes, production, sequencing, the tarot card parodies in the liner notes, the self-theft, the self-consciously blasphemous cover art. There's so much effort, Holy Wood winds up a stronger and more consistent album than any of his other work. If there's any problem, it's that Manson's shock rock seems a little quaint in 2000...It's to Warner's credit as, yes, an artist that Holy Wood works anyway." Erlewine further complimented the band in "figur[ing] out [how] to meld the hooks and subtle sonic shading of Mechanical Animals with the ugly, neo-industrial metallicisms of Antichrist [Superstar]."[35] PopMatters commented: "The central flaw of Holy Wood is that the power of its message, an important and provocative one, is watered down by its artistic pretensions. While Holy Wood is often affecting, it would be a better album if it was shorter and dealt with its subject matter directly, instead of through the veil of the 'concept album'."[1] Drowned in Sound, which assigns a normalized rating out of 10, gave the album a score of 10 while noting, "There're a number of criticisms that could come Marilyn Manson's way: too much more of the same, too much philosophical posing, too much sloganeering. Regardless, all this needs to attain perfection is a few minutes shaved off of the overall running time...[and] lyrically it actually says something intelligent for once and musically it has a lot more variation and scope than the Limp Bizkits of the world."[41] Katherine Turman of Amazon commented "The impact of Marilyn Manson's subversive musical agenda has waned, and what's left is a provocative, talented artist writing affecting, powerful, and yes, controversial songs...Rife with references to the Beatles and the Kennedys, and full of pop-culture barbs, Holy Wood is a musically diverse and powerful statement...Like Marilyn Manson the man, Holy Wood is intelligent, dynamic, and multifaceted, with myriad charms that are evident to the tuned-in listener."[44]

According to LA Weekly, "Yeah, it's a party. And it's great rock music. Those who claim Manson "went back to Goth" and reclaimed Antichrist's noise after Mechanical proved too subtle for kids are only partly right. Okay, he virtually cloned his hit "The Beautiful People" in "Disposable Teens." And there are several familiar yell-and-stomp numbers on Holy Wood. But even those almost all contain a double-take chord change or a textural overdose or a mind-blowing bridge, and they'll be terroristic in concert. More important, there are a bunch of plain brilliant tracks where Manson anoints bits of rock history into his own church."[45] Billboard Magazine said, "Manson proves again that he's one of the most skilled lyricists in rock today." [45] DOTMusic commented "Where 'Holy Wood' does come together and threaten to transcend its at times cliched parts is in its clarity of vision. This is a lean, visceral album that is as tripwire lithe as its maker. Manson's also remembered to write some great pop-goth tunes this time out, nowhere more so than with first single 'Disposable Teens'."[45] Sonicnet commented "Nonetheless, while more ambitious than almost all of today's metal-flaked rock competition, the 19-track Holy Wood is not without its problems. On numbers such as "President Dead" and "Cruci-Fiction in Space," the band seems to be just rehashing old terrain. And, while The Wall may be a worthy role model, Manson and company don't quite have Pink Floyd's lyrical or musical range, adding to the rote feeling that troubles some of this overlong (60+ minutes) disc."[45] Joshua Klein of The A.V. Club opined "[This] sort of agitprop is thoroughly predictable, and the only thing that could prove shocking about Manson's antics would be if the singer actually evinced any power over his followers. Here, he seems entranced by his own power, which may be why his dark worldview sounds baseless even as he offers sharp hooks others would kill for."[46] Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times commented "Manson can go on teasing his fan base with his Grand Guignol circus show, but it's hard to imagine in the age of Eminem and other hard-core rappers that he is still even in the Top 10 on parents' most-feared list. That makes him seem severely dated--and he doesn't do much to correct the impression. For someone with the ambition and possibly the talent to be the new David Bowie, Manson appears resolved to settling for the new Alice Cooper. Manson is a smart, articulate, likable guy. He's too talented to be wasting his time chasing the ghost of Alice Cooper."[40][47]

Commercial performance

Since early critical appraisal of Holy Wood was far less favorable than the band's previous effort, Mechanical Animals, many critics and retailers questioned if Manson still carried appeal in the music scene of the early 2000's. Best Buy's sales projections in 2000 for the record estimated its first week sales would be around 150,000 units nationally, significantly less than the 223,000 units sold by Mechanical Animals in its first week.[48] In the US, the album debuted and peaked at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 with first week sales of 117,000[49] and was awarded a gold certification from the RIAA in March 2003 for shipments of over 500,000 units.[50] In the UK, the album peaked at No. 23.[51] The album has sold over 9 million copies worldwide.[52]

Accolades

In 2001, UK music magazine Kerrang! named Holy Wood the year's "Best Album" at their annual Kerrang! Awards.[53] Kerrang! ranks Holy Wood 9th in their 2000 list of Albums of the Year. [54] The record ranked 30th in the Critics Top 50[55] and 9th in the Popular Poll[56] of German magazine Musik Express/Sounds in their 2000 Albums of the Year. The French edition of the British magazine Rock Sound ranked Holy wood 15th in the 'Le choix de la rédaction' (Editor's choice) and 5th in 'Le choix des lecteurs' (Reader's choice) of their 2000 Choix des critiques (Critic's choice) Albums of the Year.[57] British magazine Record Collector also listed the album among their Best of 2000 list.[58]

Legacy

Kerrang! published a 10th anniversary commemorative piece on the album in their November 10, 2010 issue titled Screaming For Vengeance[2] in which they called the album "Manson's finest hour...A decade on, there has still not been as eloquent and savage a musical attack on the media and mainstream culture as Manson achieved with Holy Wood...[It is] still scathingly relevant today." The article goes on to say, "...perhaps that's where Holy Wood achieved its greatest success. In deflecting the attention that was targeted at him back onto the [news] media, they reacted exactly as he knew they would: by blustering and further exposing their own inadequacies... The shame of it all, though, is that so little has changed. That the album is still so relevant today suggests it failed in its task of changing attitudes. That it exists at all, though, is a credit to a man who refused to sit and take it, but instead come out swinging."[2]

Guns, God and Government Tour

Main article: Guns, God and Government
Holy6.jpg

Following the release of Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death), Marilyn Manson staged a worldwide stadium tour, titled the Guns, God and Government Tour. Beginning on October 27, 2000 and lasting until September 2, 2001, the tour included six legs spanning Europe, Japan and North America with a total of 125 shows.[19] The Ozzfest leg of the tour is particularly notable since it marked Marilyn Manson's first performance in Denver, Colorado (on June 22, 2001) since Columbine. Predictably, the band met heavy resistance from conservative groups with the performer receiving numerous death threats and calls to skip the date.[59][60] The Christian organization Citizens for Peace and Respect asserted on their website that the band "promotes hate, violence, death, suicide, drug use, and the attitudes and actions of the Columbine killers".[61] In response, Manson promised,

I will provide a show where I balance my songs with a wholesome Bible reading. This way, fans will not only hear my so-called 'violent' point of view, but we can examine the virtues of wonderful Christian stories of disease, murder, adultery, suicide and child sacrifice. Now that seems like 'entertainment' to me.

The Denver show also provided the backdrop for Manson's landmark interview on America's climate of fear and culture of gun violence in Michael Moore's 2002 documentary Bowling for Columbine.[62]

Three concert films depicting the tour, Guns, God and Government, Guns, God and Government - Live in L.A., and The Death Parade, were recorded.

Track listing

All lyrics written by Manson.[3]

A: In the Shadow

1. "GodEatGod" – 2:34
2. "The Love Song" – 3:16
3. "The Fight Song" – 2:55
4. "Disposable Teens" – 3:01

D: The Androgyne

5. "Target Audience (Narcissus Narcosis)" – 4:18
6. ""President Dead"" – 3:13
7. "In the Shadow of the Valley of Death" – 4:09
8. "Cruci-Fiction in Space"' – 4:56
9. "A Place in the Dirt" – 3:37

A: Of Red Earth

10. "The Nobodies" – 3:35
11. "The Death Song" – 3:30
12. "Lamb of God" – 4:39
13. "Born Again" – 3:20
14. "Burning Flag" – 3:21

M: The Fallen

15. "Coma Black: a) Eden Eye, b) The Apple of Discord" – 5:58
16. "Valentine's Day" – 3:31
17. "The Fall of Adam" – 2:34
18. "King Kill 33°" – 2:18
19. "Count to Six and Die (The Vacuum of Infinite Space Encompassing)" – 3:24

Bonus tracks

20. "The Nobodies" (Acoustic Version) (Bonus track on UK and Japanese versions) – 3:33
21. "Mechanical Animals" (live) (Bonus track on Japanese version) - 4:41

B-sides

Notes
  • The disc contains a data track which leads to a video no longer hosted by Interscope's website. [3] This video was later included as a secret track on the companion DVD of Lest We Forget.[63]

Autopsy

A short film known as Autopsy could be viewed by running a "START.exe" program included in the disk (in the same way one would run a similar program to listen to the hidden track "Untitled" on the previous album Mechanical Animals. While the video, in which a dead Manson has a fetus removed from his skull during autopsy, was originally hosted on the Interscope website it is no longer featured there and can only be viewed as an easter egg on the Lest We Forget (The Best of) bonus DVD.

Album credits

ALL LYRICS BY M. MANSON ·· 1. (music: MANSON) keyboards and bass · synth: Manson · Vocals: Manson · Guitars: John5 · Lead guitar: T. Ramirez · Ambience: M.W. Gacy · Synth: Bon Harris · Noise rhythm guitar: Dave Sardy ·· 2. (music: RAMIREZ., 5) Vocals and ouro-lead guitar: Manson · Guitar and Bass: T. Ramirez · Guitars: John5 · Keyboards and samples: M.W. Gacy · Live drums and siren loop: Ginger Fish · Synth and drum programming: Bon Harris ·· 3. (music: 5) Vocals: Manson · Bass and additional guitar: T. Ramirez · Rhythm and lead guitar: John5 · Keyboards and loops: M.W. Gacy · Live drums: Ginger Fish ·· 4. (music: 5, RAMIREZ) Vocals: Manson · Bass: T. Ramirez · Guitar and synth guitar: John5 · Synth and electronic percussion: Bon Harris · Live drums: Ginger Fish · Keyboards: M.W. Gacy · Pills: D. Sardy ·· 5. (music: RAMIREZ, 5) Vocals and Optigan: Manson · Bass and additional lead guitar: T. Ramirez · All guitars: John5 · Loop and live drums: Ginger Fish · Synth and loops: M.W. Gacy · Drum programming and synth: Bon Harris ·· 6. (music: RAMIREZ., 5, GACY) Vocals, syncussion, and mellotron: Manson · Rhythm Guitar and bass: T. Ramirez · Lead and rhythm guitar: John5 · Loop and live drums: Ginger Fish · Keyboards: M.W. Gacy · Backing Vocals: Alex Suttle ·· 7. (music: RAMIREZ., 5) Vocals and distorted flute: Manson · All Keyboards: M.W. Gacy · All guitars: John5 · Death Loop and live drums: Ginger Fish · Bass: T. Ramirez ·· 8. (music: RAMIREZ., 5, GACY) Vocals and piano: Manson · Rhythm guitar, bass: T. Ramirez · Rhythm and lead guitar: John5 · Live drums: Ginger Fish · Keyboards, loops and ambiences: M.W. Gacy · Insect hi-hat: Bon Harris ·· 9. (music: 5) Vocals and Ambience: Manson · Synth bass and keyboards: M.W,. Gacy · Live drums and loop: Ginger Fish · Bass: T. Ramirez · Acoustic, electric and slide guitars: John5 · Synths, sleigh bells and manipulation: Bon Harris ·· 10. (music: 5, MANSON) electric harpsichord: Manson · Guitars: John5 · Bass: T. Ramirez · Keyboards and ambiences: M.W. Gacy · Drum machine and live kit: Ginger Fish · Vocals: Manson ·· 11. (music: 5, MANSON) Vocals: Manson · guitars: John 5 · Bass: T.Ramirez · Synth bass and electronics: Bon Harris · Loop and live drums: Ginger Fish · Children's choir and canned laughter of dead people unsure of why they are laughing: M.W. Gacy ·· 12. (music: RAMIREZ.) Vocals, piano and pianette: Manson · Bass, lead and Leslie guitar, keys and drum loop: T. Ramirez · Acoustic, rhythm and lead guitar: John5 · Live drums: Ginger Fish · Ambience: M.W. Gacy · Synths: Bon Harris ·· 13. (music: RAMIREZ., 5) Vocals and synth bass: Manson · Bass and verse guitar: T. Ramirez · Guitar and lead guitar: John5 · Keyboards: M.W. Gacy · Drum Programming: Ginger Fish and Bon Harris · Bass and other synths: Bon Harris · Additional loops: Danny Saber · Recorded live February 14, 1997 ·· 14. (music: RAMIREZ., 5) Vocals: Manson Guitar and bass: T. Ramirez · Guitar: John5 · Live drums: Ginger Fish · Organic drum programming: Bon Harris and D. Sardy · Synth and destructive manipulation: Bon Harris · Keyboards: M.W. Gacy ·· 15. a)(music: MANSON, 5, RAMIREZ.) Vocals and clean rhythm guitar: Manson · Bass, warped rhythm guitars and add. lead: T. Ramirez · Phase, lead and rhythm guitar: John5 · Loops and live drums: Ginger Fish · Synths, ambience and keyboards: M.W. Gacy · b)(music: MANSON) Vocals and clean guitar: Manson · Rhythm Guitar: John5 · Bass and lead guitar: T. Ramirez · Loop: Ginger Fish ·· 16. (music: RAMIREZ., MANSON) Vocals and piano: Manson · Bass and noise lead guitars: T. Ramirez · Loop and live drums: Ginger Fish · Lead and rhythm guitars: John5 · Keyboards and mellotron: M.W. Gacy · Synthesizers: Bon Harris ·· 17. (music: RAMIREZ., 5) Vocals: Manson · Acoustic, rhythm and synth guitar: John 5 · Bass and rhythm guitar: T. Ramirez · Live drums: Ginger Fish ·· 18. (music: RAMIREZ) Vocals: Manson · Bass: T. Ramirez · Guitars and synth guitars: John5 · Keyboards and Synth: M.W. Gacy · Live drums: Ginger Fish ·· 19. (music: 5) Vocals: Manson · Synth strings and Ambiences: M.W. Gacy · Piano: Bon Harris ····· Celebritarian™ used by permission

···ALL TRACKS ©2000 EMI BLACKWOOD MUSIC ON BEHALF OF ITSELF, SONGS OF GOLGOTHA MUSIC (BMI), BLOOD HEAVY MUSIC (BMI) & DCLXVI MUSIC (BMI). ALL RIGHTS ADMINISTERED WORLDWIDE BY EMI BLACKWOOD MUSIC INC. · MANSON: ALL TRACKS, SONGS OF GOLGOTHA MUSIC · RAMIREZ: ALL TRACKS, BLOOD HEAVY MUSIC, EXCEPT 1, 3, 9, 10, 11, 15b, 19 · JOHN 5: ALL TRACKS, GTR. HACK MUSIC / CHRYSALIS MUSIC ASCAP, EXCEPT 1, 12, 15b, 16, 18 · GACY: TRACKS 6 & 8 DCLXVI MUSIC ©2000 NOTHING/INTERSCOPE RECORDS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN CANADA.

HOLY WOOD CONCEIVED AND ARRANGED BY MARILYN MANSON
PRODUCED BY MARILYN MANSON & D. SARDY · MIXED BY D. SARDY
ENGINEERED BY GRED FIDELMAN · ALL PRO-TOOLS: GREG FIDELMAN · EDITING, PROGRAMMING & PRE-PRODUCTION BY BON HARRIS · ADDITIONAL ENGINEERING BY PAUL NORTHFIELD · RECORDED @ THE MANSION · ADDITIONAL RECORDING @ HOLLY STUDIOS, SUNSET SOUND FACTORY AND WESTLAKE AUDIO · MIXED @ LARRABEE EAST
ASSISTANT ENGINEERS: NICK RASKULINECZ, JOE ZOOK, KEVIN GUARNIERI AND STEVE MACAULEY · MASTERING: MARCUSSION · MANAGEMMENT: TONY CIULLA/CIULLA MANAGAMENT · BUSINESS MGT: JAY SENDYK · LEGAL: JEFFREY TAYLOR LIGHT · AGENT: RICK ROSKIN, CAA · EU AGENT: EMMA BANKS (HELTER SKELTER) · ART DIRECTION: P.R. BROWN AND MARILYN MANSON · PHOTOGRAPHY & DESIGN: P.R. BROWN @ BAU-DA DESIGN LAB [LA]. · MAKE UP: MARILYN MANSON & RALLIS KAHN
CLOTHING: DEBORAH @ T'AINT · OFFICIAL WEBSITE: MARILYNMANSON.COM
INFO: 7336 SANTA MONICA BLVD., #730, LOS ANGELES, CA 90046

Cover gallery

Charts, certifications and procession

Template:Multicol-start

Album

Charts (2000) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[64] 8
Austria (Ö3)[64] 6
Belgium (Flanders) (Ultratop 50)[65][64] 34
Belgium (Wallonia) (Ultratop)[64] 29
Canada (CANOE)[8][66] 13
Germany (Media Control)[67] 11
Finland (Mitä Hitti)[64] 25
France (SNEP)[64] 12
Ireland (IRMA)[68] 21
Italy (FIMI)[64] 7
Netherlands (MegaCharts)[64] 53
Norway (VG-Lista)[64] 12
New Zealand (RIANZ)[64] 18
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[64] 7
Switzerland (Hitparade)[64] 20
United Kingdom (OCC)[69] 23
United States (Billboard 200)[8][66] 13
Top Internet Albums[8][66] 10


Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United Kingdom November 13, 2000 Interscope Records Compact disc 4908292
Australia November 14, 2000 Interscope Records Compact disc
North America November 14, 2000 Interscope Records Compact disc 490790
Japan December 5, 2000 Interscope Records Compact disc

Template:Multicol-break

Certifications

Region Provider Certification Shipment Actual Sales
Canada CRIA Gold[70] 50,000+
Switzerland IFPI Gold[71] 20,000+
United States RIAA Gold[50] 500,000+ 573,000+[72]

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
2000 "Disposable Teens" Australia (ARIA)[73] 24
France (SNEP)[73] 67
Italy (FIMI)[73] 7
Mainstream Rock Tracks[74] 22
Modern Rock Tracks[74] 24
Netherlands (MegaCharts)[73] 99
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[73] 52
Switzerland (Hitparade)[73] 73
United Kingdom (OCC)[69] 12
2001 "The Fight Song" Austria (Ö3)[75] 59
Finland (Mitä Hitti)[75] 19
United Kingdom (OCC)[69] 24
"The Nobodies" Austria (Ö3)[76] 56
France (SNEP)[76] 94
Italy (FIMI)[76] 17
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[76] 8
Switzerland (Hitparade)[76] 96
United Kingdom (OCC)[69] 34

Template:Multicol-end

Trivia

  • The front cover of the demo Big Black Bus features the band's first use of the term "Holy Wood", where the words "HOLYWOOD PROD." can be seen on the side of the school bus. The term was later used in a July 28, 1999 post by Manson on MarilynManson.net's message board, which opened with the line "Hello from the depths of Holy Wood..."[77]
  • The term "Holy Wood" was once used in a poem by Aleister Crowley, to whom Marilyn Manson frequently references. It is also used as a mockery of Hollywood, as per the imagery in the album's cover art.
  • There are three different covers for this album: The standard cover depicting Manson as The Hanged Man, the censored UK cover depicting "stains" on its cover, and a alternate sleeve release depicting a jawless Manson on the front, and the aforementioned "stains" on the back.
  • The album's working title was simply "In the Shadow of the Valley of Death".
  • To promote the album in Italy, a promotional CD-ROM called Holy Manson was released to the country in 2001.

Personnel

Template:Multicol-start

Marilyn Manson[78]
  • Marilyn Manson — arranger, vocals, producer, art direction, concept, syncussion, optigan, mellotron, distorted flute, synth bass, keyboards, piano, pianette, ambiance, electric harpsichord, rhythm guitar
  • Twiggy Ramirez — bass, guitar (rhythm, lead, Leslie, warped), keyboards
  • John 5 — guitar (lead, rhythm, acoustic, synth, electric, slide, phase)
  • Madonna Wayne Gacy — synths, ambiance, keyboards, samples, bass synth, synth strings, mellotron, "Children's choir and canned laughter of dead people unsure of why they are laughing"
  • Ginger Fish — drums (live, drum machine), death & siren loops, keyboards

Template:Multicol-break

Production[78]
  • Bon Harris of Nitzer Ebb — synthesizers, programming, pre-production editing, organic drum programming, bass, keyboard, "Insect hi-hat", sleigh bells, (destructive) manipulation, electronics, piano
  • Paulie Northfield — additional engineering
  • D. Sardy (Dave Sardy) —- producer, synths, (organic) drum programming, mixing, noise rhythm guitar, "pills"
  • P.R. Brown — art direction, design, photography
  • Greg Fidelman — engineer, all Pro-Tools
  • Nick Raskulinecz — assistant engineer
  • Joe Zook — assistant engineer
  • Kevin Guarnieri — assistant engineer
  • Danny Saber — additional loops
  • Alex Suttle — backing vocals

Template:Multicol-end

See also


Cite error: <ref> tags exist, but no <references/> tag was found