Editing Interview:2001/01/10 Marilyn: A Re-Examination

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 10: Line 10:
 
'''Marilyn: A Re-Examination'''<br>
 
'''Marilyn: A Re-Examination'''<br>
 
'''LA Weekly piece By Greg Burk on January 10, 2001 '''<br>
 
'''LA Weekly piece By Greg Burk on January 10, 2001 '''<br>
<br>
 
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
IT'S ALL [[Marilyn Manson|MARILYN MANSON]]'S FAULT. Violence. Drug abuse. Disrespect for authority. Rejection of religion. Lack of values. All the bleeding sores on the soul of youth except acne and orthodonture. And maybe those, too. He's responsible. Kill him, and the wounds will heal.
 
IT'S ALL [[Marilyn Manson|MARILYN MANSON]]'S FAULT. Violence. Drug abuse. Disrespect for authority. Rejection of religion. Lack of values. All the bleeding sores on the soul of youth except acne and orthodonture. And maybe those, too. He's responsible. Kill him, and the wounds will heal.
Line 135: Line 134:
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Meanwhile, Manson has subjected a bagful of other arts to his full treatment. His stage props, makeup, clothes and lighting are extravagant and artistic. His promo videos, directed with a surrealist fashion-show sense of composition and color by the likes of E. Elias Merhige (''Shadow of the Vampire''), R&B video director Paul Hunter and veteran D.P. Samuel Bayer, don't look like anything else on MTV; in fact, they're the only thing on the network worth watching. Two tour-documentary videos, ''[[Dead to the World]]'' and ''[[God Is in the T.V.|God Is in the TV]]'' (the latter also featuring all the Manson promo clips), are twisted, tightly edited and fascinating. Manson has always taken painstaking care with his photo images; ''Holy Wood'', in particular, is an art book as well as a CD, and its photographer, [[P. R. Brown|P.R. Brown]], will be exhibiting his collaborations with Manson in Hollywood this month. Before we leave the visual realm, it should be noted that Manson draws well and is also a remarkably distinctive painter.
+
Meanwhile, Manson has subjected a bagful of other arts to his full treatment. His stage props, makeup, clothes and lighting are extravagant and artistic. His promo videos, directed with a surrealist fashion-show sense of composition and color by the likes of E. Elias Merhige (''Shadow of the Vampire''), R&B video director Paul Hunter and veteran D.P. Samuel Bayer, don't look like anything else on MTV; in fact, they're the only thing on the network worth watching. Two tour-documentary videos, ''[[Dead to the World]]'' and ''[[God Is in the TV]]'' (the latter also featuring all the Manson promo clips), are twisted, tightly edited and fascinating. Manson has always taken painstaking care with his photo images; ''Holy Wood'', in particular, is an art book as well as a CD, and its photographer, [[P.R. Brown]], will be exhibiting his collaborations with Manson in Hollywood this month. Before we leave the visual realm, it should be noted that Manson draws well and is also a remarkably distinctive painter.
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Now to the verbal side. Manson's 1998 autobiography with [[Neil Strauss]], ''[[The Long Hard Road Out of Hell|The Long Hard Road out of Hell]]'', is the most self-abasing and funny piece of rock mythology ever written. A Manson-penned ''[[Holy Wood (novel)|novel]]'' based on ''Holy Wood'' will be published soon. His interviews, which he considers as important as his songs, flesh out his ideas with wit and concision. And his Web site, ''[[MarilynManson.com|www.marilynmanson.com]]'', is swollen with regularly updated info, as well as a sampling of choice Manson propaganda: "[[Is Adult Entertainment Killing Our Children? Or Is Killing Our Children Entertaining Adults?|IS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT KILLING OUR CHILDREN OR IS KILLING OUR CHILDREN ENTERTAINING ADULTS?|Is adult entertainment killing our children, or is killing our children entertaining adults?]]"
+
Now to the verbal side. Manson's 1998 autobiography with [[Neil Strauss]], ''[[The Long Hard Road out of Hell]]'', is the most self-abasing and funny piece of rock mythology ever written. A Manson-penned ''[[Holy Wood (novel)|novel]]'' based on ''Holy Wood'' will be published soon. His interviews, which he considers as important as his songs, flesh out his ideas with wit and concision. And his Web site, ''[[www.marilynmanson.com]]'', is swollen with regularly updated info, as well as a sampling of choice Manson propaganda: "[[IS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT KILLING OUR CHILDREN OR IS KILLING OUR CHILDREN ENTERTAINING ADULTS?|Is adult entertainment killing our children, or is killing our children entertaining adults?]]"
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 159: Line 158:
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
As the '90s closed, the heat reached a high boil. A 1999 tour co-billing the Jesus and Mary of rock depravity -- Marilyn Manson and [[Hole|Courtney Love]] -- was spiced by sniping between the two deities, and ended with Love's band, [[Hole]], huffing off before its slated dates had been completed.
+
As the '90s closed, the heat reached a high boil. A 1999 tour co-billing the Jesus and Mary of rock depravity -- Marilyn Manson and [[Courtney Love]] -- was spiced by sniping between the two deities, and ended with Love's band, [[Hole]], huffing off before its slated dates had been completed.
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 210: Line 209:
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Manson's art has always shown a special connection with youth -- consider song titles like "[[The Hands of Small Children]]," "[[Kiddie Grinder]]" and "[[Sweet Tooth]]." David Lynch, whom Manson has called his favorite filmmaker and to whose hallucinatory ''Lost Highway'' the Antichrist contributed music and a bit part, says Manson and Twiggy, invited to his workplace, got along great with his kids.
+
Manson's art has always shown a special connection with youth -- consider song titles like "[[The Hands of Small Children]]," "[[Kiddie Grinder]]" and "[[Sweet Tooth]]." [[David Lynch]], whom Manson has called his favorite filmmaker and to whose hallucinatory ''[[Lost Highway]]'' the Antichrist contributed music and a bit part, says Manson and Twiggy, invited to his workplace, got along great with his kids.
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 222: Line 221:
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
One nakedly emotional passage in ''[[The Long Hard Road Out of Hell|The Long Hard Road out of Hell]]'' describes the day, well into the second trimester, when the abortionist's forceps terminated the gestation of a child Manson and Missi might have had. Would the Antichrist ever want offspring?
+
One nakedly emotional passage in ''[[The Long Hard Road out of Hell]]'' describes the day, well into the second trimester, when the abortionist's forceps terminated the gestation of a child Manson and Missi might have had. Would the Antichrist ever want offspring?
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 243: Line 242:
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
True/false, creator/product, genius/idiot. Flip a coin. Much of what's been reported about Manson here and elsewhere is . . . negotiable. His persona and music have a cut-and-paste quality to them. He's said that nothing new can be done in rock music. But the art form remains stocked with an arsenal of effective tools, from which Manson draws at will. He's copped to the visual and musical influence of [[Alice Cooper]], [[David Bowie]], Iggy Pop, Ozzy Osbourne, Aerosmith, Guns N' Roses and others -- and he might as well; there'd be no point in denying it. From song to song, you can also hear snips of melodies directly pillaged from Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or [[KMFDM]], or Radiohead, or even War and the Eagles.
+
True/false, creator/product, genius/idiot. Flip a coin. Much of what's been reported about Manson here and elsewhere is . . . negotiable. His persona and music have a cut-and-paste quality to them. He's said that nothing new can be done in rock music. But the art form remains stocked with an arsenal of effective tools, from which Manson draws at will. He's copped to the visual and musical influence of [[Alice Cooper]], David Bowie, Iggy Pop, [[Ozzy Osbourne]], Aerosmith, Guns N' Roses and others -- and he might as well; there'd be no point in denying it. From song to song, you can also hear snips of melodies directly pillaged from Black Sabbath, or the Beatles, or [[KMFDM]], or Radiohead, or even War and the Eagles.
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 267: Line 266:
  
 
[[Category:Interviews|2001/01/10 Marilyn: A Re-Examination]]
 
[[Category:Interviews|2001/01/10 Marilyn: A Re-Examination]]
[[Category:Holy Wood era]]
+
[[Category:Marilyn Manson articles|Marilyn: A Re-Examination]]

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: