Editing Interview:1998/4/8 Time Out - Talk Of The Devil

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What exactly the gangling rock star wants to lie about, I'm not sure.  The truth is much more interesting than anything he can dream up. He is, after all, a self-styled antichrist superstar who has hustled his way to riches and infamy through the applying of copious gothic make-up, the unleashing of much melodramatically dark pop-metal with industrial trimmings, and the perceived encouragement of Satanism among middle-America's impressionable youth. While implementing his rock masterplan, the onetime poet, journalist and pupil of Heritage Christian School, Ohio, has indulged in enough demented on-the-road behaviour - on and offstage - to redefine the parameters of Rockpig cliches, and provoke a furious backlash from those noble guardians of American values, the Moral Majority.  It wasn't that rabid coalition of right-wing power-brokers and fundamentalists nutters that posted those rumours on the Internet, though.  That was Marilyn Manson ''fans''.  And his real name is Brian Warner.
 
What exactly the gangling rock star wants to lie about, I'm not sure.  The truth is much more interesting than anything he can dream up. He is, after all, a self-styled antichrist superstar who has hustled his way to riches and infamy through the applying of copious gothic make-up, the unleashing of much melodramatically dark pop-metal with industrial trimmings, and the perceived encouragement of Satanism among middle-America's impressionable youth. While implementing his rock masterplan, the onetime poet, journalist and pupil of Heritage Christian School, Ohio, has indulged in enough demented on-the-road behaviour - on and offstage - to redefine the parameters of Rockpig cliches, and provoke a furious backlash from those noble guardians of American values, the Moral Majority.  It wasn't that rabid coalition of right-wing power-brokers and fundamentalists nutters that posted those rumours on the Internet, though.  That was Marilyn Manson ''fans''.  And his real name is Brian Warner.
  
But the real life killer is also one of the main reasons we're here, in a studio overlooked by the Hollywood sign, on the famous hill where Manson now lives near those other American show-biz stalwarts, Diana Ross and Johnny Mathis.  It is called ''[[The Long Hard Road Out of Hell]]'', it is written by Marilyn Manson with the help of ''Rolling Stone'' journalist Neil Strauss, and it is the best rock autobiography this non-industrial/metal fan has read since Iggy Pop's "I Need More".  Not just for its warts 'n' all honesty, or even its breathless and sardonic descriptions of hideous rock excess.  But for the intelligence with which it shows how an ordinary backwoods loser, dismissed by everyone, goes about embarking on a long and glorious revenge, without ever sparing its author from the most damning judgements of his own sharp intellect.  Plus it's laugh-out loud funny to boot.
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But the real life killer is also one of the main reasons we're here, in a studio overlooked by the Hollywood sign, on the famous hill where Manson now lives near those other American show-biz stalwarts, Diana Ross and Johnny Mathis.  It is called ''[[The Long Hard Road Out Of Hell (book)|The Long Hard Road Out of Hell]]'', it is written by Marilyn Manson with the help of ''Rolling Stone'' journalist Neil Strauss, and it is the best rock autobiography this non-industrial/metal fan has read since Iggy Pop's "I Need More".  Not just for its warts 'n' all honesty, or even its breathless and sardonic descriptions of hideous rock excess.  But for the intelligence with which it shows how an ordinary backwoods loser, dismissed by everyone, goes about embarking on a long and glorious revenge, without ever sparing its author from the most damning judgements of his own sharp intellect.  Plus it's laugh-out loud funny to boot.
  
 
'The Long Road...' trawls through his miserable creepy childhood; his discovery of those All-American teen staples, metal, Satan and horror stories; his fumbling first attempts at sexual relationships; the nastiness of Christian school; his long affair with the long-suffering [[Missi]], through infidelity, abortion and inevitable break-up; the invention of the Manson persona and stage act; and fairly uncomplimentary judgements of his first recordings, '94's '[[Portrait of an American Family|Portrait Of An American Family]]' and '95's '[[Smells Like Children]]', which featured his first real breakthrough, a brutally effective version of the Eurythmics' '[[Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)|Sweet Dreams]]'.  But even his record company, owned by Manson mentor [[Trent Reznor]] - leader of [[Nine Inch Nails]], friend of David Bowie, darling of the US industrial scene and owner of the house where Charles Manson's family murdered Sharon Tate - thought Mazza was doomed to cult popularity until 1996's '[[Antichrist Superstar (album)|Antichrist Superstar]]'. A concept album following Manson's slow and painful transformation from Brian Warner, miserable 'worm' to Marilyn Manson, first horseman of the rock apocalypse, it went multi-platinum in the States alone and continues to be an essential fashion accessory for the nihilistic white teen.  It includes Manson's one great musical moment thus far, '[[The Beautiful People]]', and was such a nightmare to make it pushed Manson into what he now admits was a nervous breakdown.
 
'The Long Road...' trawls through his miserable creepy childhood; his discovery of those All-American teen staples, metal, Satan and horror stories; his fumbling first attempts at sexual relationships; the nastiness of Christian school; his long affair with the long-suffering [[Missi]], through infidelity, abortion and inevitable break-up; the invention of the Manson persona and stage act; and fairly uncomplimentary judgements of his first recordings, '94's '[[Portrait of an American Family|Portrait Of An American Family]]' and '95's '[[Smells Like Children]]', which featured his first real breakthrough, a brutally effective version of the Eurythmics' '[[Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)|Sweet Dreams]]'.  But even his record company, owned by Manson mentor [[Trent Reznor]] - leader of [[Nine Inch Nails]], friend of David Bowie, darling of the US industrial scene and owner of the house where Charles Manson's family murdered Sharon Tate - thought Mazza was doomed to cult popularity until 1996's '[[Antichrist Superstar (album)|Antichrist Superstar]]'. A concept album following Manson's slow and painful transformation from Brian Warner, miserable 'worm' to Marilyn Manson, first horseman of the rock apocalypse, it went multi-platinum in the States alone and continues to be an essential fashion accessory for the nihilistic white teen.  It includes Manson's one great musical moment thus far, '[[The Beautiful People]]', and was such a nightmare to make it pushed Manson into what he now admits was a nervous breakdown.

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