Editing Interview:2003/07 Outburn

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'''How have you adapted your life over the last 10 years to accommodate what Marilyn Manson has become?''' <br>
 
'''How have you adapted your life over the last 10 years to accommodate what Marilyn Manson has become?''' <br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
Because things run hand-in-hand, there’s no real distinction between fiction and reality.  I think the only compromise I’ve had to make is discovering new ways to survive, whether that be physically or mentally or with my career. It’s been a matter of dealing with a lot of people I idolize or identify with – whether it be Oscar Wilde or even someone a little more despicable like the Marquis de Sade, or Salvador Dali or David Bowie or Madonna – whomever it might be, just people who have faced problems that are generally created by the world’s dissatisfaction or hatred for what they represent and what they say.  I think the battle with Holy Wood, I find it symbolically kind of ending with my statement in Bowling for Columbine and going back to Denver and playing there and not getting killed, which everyone pretty much expected.  Even I was willing to take that risk.  That felt like I conquered something that I had started with Antichrist Superstar, and I saw it through and I showed people that I was a survivor.  When your conquer something, your build something new, and The Golden Age of Grotesque is a new way of looking at things for me.  It’s not feeling jaded or at the end of my rope, feeling like the people who started Dada or feeling like anyone who realizes that you can come to an end of history, whether it be with mankind or with art or with anything, and knowing that the genius of it all exists in the purity of childish thinking.  When you don’t know the rules, you aren’t read the rules; you don’t have to live by them.  When you make any record, you always want to disregard the rules that the rest of the music or art makes for you.  To adapt at this point, for me, I had to disregard all of my own rules that in some ways make up my style or my personality. <br>
+
Because things run hand-in-hand, there’s no real distinction between fiction and reality.  I think the only compromise I’ve had to make is discovering new ways to survive, whether that be physically or mentally or with my career. It’s been a matter of dealing with a lot of people I idolize or identify with – whether it be Oscar Wilde or even someone a little more despicable like the Marquis de Sade, or Salvador Dali or David Bowie or Madonna – whomever it might be, just people who have faced problems that are generally created by the world’s dissatisfaction or hatred for what they represent and what they say.  I think the battle with Holy Wood, I find it symbolically kind of ending with my statement in Bowling for Columbine and going back to Denver and playing there and not getting killed, which everyone pretty much expected.  Even I was willing to take that risk.  That felt like I conquered something that I had started with Antichrist Superstar, and I saw it through and I showed people that I was a survivor.  When your conquer something, your build something new, and The Golden Age of Grotesque is a new way of looking at things for me.  It’s not feeling jaded or at the end of my rope, feeling like the people who started Dada or feeling like anyone who realizes that you can come to an end of history, whether it be with mankind or with art or with anything, and knowing that the genius of it all exists in the purity of childish thinking.  When you don’t know the rules, you an’t read the rules; you don’t have to live by them.  When you make any record, you always want to disregard the rules that the rest of the music or art makes for you.  To adapt at this point, for me, I had to disregard all of my own rules that in some ways make up my style or my personality. <br>
 
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'''Such as what?''' <br>
 
'''Such as what?''' <br>
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'''How has this affected common day activities?  Do you still do your own grocery shopping or register your car at the DMV or things like that?''' <br>
 
'''How has this affected common day activities?  Do you still do your own grocery shopping or register your car at the DMV or things like that?''' <br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
No. Actually, apart from a few occasions, I’ve never done my own grocery shopping, because I was a mama’s boy.  Then I left home and went on tour and lived on a bus.  Then after that, sometimes I didn’t eat or I’d go to McDonalds or whatever the case might be.  Now, I live in a house for the first time in my entire life.  I lived in apartments and things like that, because we weren’t very rich growing up.  I’m not a person that goes  out a lot and becomes part of a nightlife scene, although I will on occasion.  My only way of communicating with people is through what I create.  That’s the unfortunate thing that I’ve found but it’s not a curse and its not something I complain about it’s a release and a gift.  It’s not a catharsis or anything  like that, although it has been at times.  This is my way of living.  Marilyn Manson is as much a creation as Mickey Mouse was for Walt Disney.  That in itself makes my lifestyle an art form, because I’m a living creation.  I can’t explain it. Is it an act anymore than anything else is it an act? Is it fiction? Is it reality? These are other people’s definitions.  I just do what I do.  I have no desire to be one thing.  I just do what I do. I don’t have any desire to be understood in one way.<br>
+
No. Actually, apart from a few occasions, I’ve never done my own grocery shopping, because I was a mama’s boy.  Then I left home and went on tour and lived on a bus.  Then after that, sometimes I didn’t eat or I’d go to McDonalds or whatever the case might be.  Now, I live in a house for the first time in my entire life.  I lived in apartments and things like that, because we weren’t very rich growing up.  I’m not a person that goes  out a lot and becomes part of a nightlife scend, although I will on occasion.  My only way of communicating with people is through what I create.  That’s the unfortunate thing that I’ve found but it’s not a curse and its not something I complain about it’s a release and a gift.  It’s not a catharsis or anything  like that, although it has been at times.  This is my way of living.  Marilyn Manson is as much a creation as Mickey Mouse was for Walt Disney.  That in itself makes my lifestyle an art form, because I’m a living creation.  I can’t explain it. Is it an act anymore than anything else is it an act? Is it fiction? Is it reality? These are other people’s definitions.  I just do what I do.  I have no desire to be one thing.  I just do what I do. I don’t have any desire to be understood in one way.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''In one of your new songs, you say “I’m not an artist, I’m a fucking work of art.” Does that ring a bell?'''<br>
 
'''In one of your new songs, you say “I’m not an artist, I’m a fucking work of art.” Does that ring a bell?'''<br>
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'''Is there any relationship between the meaning of “(s)AINT” and the title of the song, “[[Obsequey (The Death of Art)]]?'''<br>
 
'''Is there any relationship between the meaning of “(s)AINT” and the title of the song, “[[Obsequey (The Death of Art)]]?'''<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
That’s a good point.  The point being, I wanted the record to be about relationships.  I drew that from a lot of inspirations that weren’t things that I researched, like some people, I’d assume. It’s what part of my interest was over the past two or three years in films and books.  I saw a lot of inspiration and parallels between some of the artists in Berlin in the 1920‘s when expressionism was created and people saying, “ I don’t have to paint or talk about things that are there.  I can pull things from my imagination,” how they were treated and persecuted and how they lived their lives in the face of fear like there was no tomorrow.  That’s where the most dangerous and exciting art comes from. Taking all of that and realizing that a city like Berlin at the time was a lot like a relationship.  It starts out with a certain tension and builds to a certain point.  Whenever anything gets so intense and passionate or decadent or whatever the case might be, there’s always somebody in the relationship - in this case authority - thats like the father and son metaphor that want to destroy it because they’re afraid they can’t control it.  That then became to me an analogy for all the relationships I’ve been in, in my life.  The record itself has that same mark, it starts out with this almost alluring, not false pretense, but the way you start a relationship.  Sometimes you aren’t so much yourself as much as what you want to project other people would want you to be when you’re trying to get close to someone.  The record starts to take on a dark curve, an arc towards the end.  The last track, and even the first track, have a cinematic feel to it, because I spent so much of my time watching movies and making this record that I would wake up having dreams, and I’d want to take and image and make it into a song, whether it was a burning piano or a stampeding elephant or a chorus line of Bushy Berkeley girls.  So the end of the record could also be the end of my creative process, but then I looked at it as a film or an album ow whatever the case might be or how I approach life - it’s over, but you an start it again.  It’s that transformation - the snake eating its tail - that’s the cycle, and that’s how I found the ability to survive and continue.<br>
+
That’s a good point.  The pint being, I wanted the record to be about relationships.  I drew that from a lot of inspirations that weren’t things that I researched, like some people, I’d assume It’s what part of my interest was over the past two or three years in films and books.  I saw a lot of inspiration and parallels between some of the artists in Berlin in the 1920‘s when expressionism was created and people saying, “ I don’t have to paint or talk about things that are there.  I can pull things from my imagination,” how they were treated and persecuted and how they lived their lives in the face of fear like there was no tomorrow.  That’s where the most dangerous and exciting art comes from. Taking all of that and realizing that a city like Berlin at the time was a lot like a relationship.  i starts out with a certain tension and builds to a certain point.  Whenever anything gets so intense and passionate or decadent or whatever the case might be, there’s always somebody in the relationship - in this case authority - thats like the father and son metaphor that want to destroy it because they’re afraid they can’t control it.  That then became to me an analogy for all the relationships I’ve been in, in my life.  The record itself has that same mark, It starts out with this almost alluring, not false pretense, but the way you start a relationship.  Sometimes you aren’t so much yourself as much as what you want to project other people would want you to be when you’re trying to get close to someone.  The record stars to date on a dark curve, an arc towards the end.  The last track, and even the first track, have a cinematic feel to it, because I spent so much of my time watching movies and making this record that i would wake up having dreams, and I’d want to take and image and make it into a song, whether it was a burning piano or a stampeding elephant or a chorus line of Bushy Berkeley girls.  So the end of the record could also be the end of my creative process, but then I looked at it as a film or an album ow whatever the case might be or how I approach life - it’s over, but you an start it again.  It’s that transformation - the snake eating its tail - that’s the cycle, and that’s how I found the ability to survive and continue.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''This album has many more sexual references than anything you’ve done in the past.  With <i>The Golden Age of Grotesque</i> having to do with relationships, do you see a parallel here with songs like “[[Slutgarden]],” “[[The Bright Young Things]],” and “[[Para-noir]]?”'''<br>
 
'''This album has many more sexual references than anything you’ve done in the past.  With <i>The Golden Age of Grotesque</i> having to do with relationships, do you see a parallel here with songs like “[[Slutgarden]],” “[[The Bright Young Things]],” and “[[Para-noir]]?”'''<br>
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'''When you said you might have previously not put enough of your agenda or intention into your lyrics as opposed to your interviews or appearances, do you thing now that you are conscious of that exposure it will change the direction of your next material?'''<br>
 
'''When you said you might have previously not put enough of your agenda or intention into your lyrics as opposed to your interviews or appearances, do you thing now that you are conscious of that exposure it will change the direction of your next material?'''<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
Not in the way that I think that you mean.  I just felt like the challenge that faced me was to make people feel like they knew me without sitting down and explaining myself.  By, in someway, tearing open my consciousness, to create the opposite of a silent film in music, to sing in a cadence that drew people in if it wasn’t a language that they understood, to hit people in a primitive way that  ultimately to me has more levels than if you were to spell things out quite clearly. I don’t think that I regret or feel that there is any shortcoming in the stuff I’ve done in the past.  I just feel like I want to capture people’s attention in a different way.  It may not be something I can explain other than by letting people listen to the album.  I think that sometimes this record makes you smile and not in a way that you’re slapping your knee laughing, but in a way that it’s like, “ I didn’t think he would do that.”  It’s hard for me to make people feel like that when I’ve done so many things.<br>
+
Not in the way that I think that you mean.  I just felt like the challenge that faced me was to make people feel like they knew me without sitting down and explaining myself.  By, in someway, tearing open my consciousness, to create the opposite of a silent film in music, to sing in a cadence that drew people in if it wasn’t a language that they understood, to hit people in a primitive way that  ultimately to me has more levels than if you were to spell things out quite clearly. i don’t think that I regret or feel that there is any shortcoming in the stuff I’ve done in the past.  I just feel like I want to capture people’s attention in a different way.  It may not be something I can explain other than by letting people listen to the album.  I think that sometimes this record makes you smile and not in a way that you’re slapping your knee laughing, but in a way that it’s like, “ I didn’t think he would do that.”  It’s hard for me to make people feel like that when I’ve done so many things.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''Is there a point of acceptance where Marilyn Manson will delineate himself, meaning can you achieve such a broad appeal that your shock value is no longer shocking at all, it’s merely mass culture?'''<br>
 
'''Is there a point of acceptance where Marilyn Manson will delineate himself, meaning can you achieve such a broad appeal that your shock value is no longer shocking at all, it’s merely mass culture?'''<br>
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'''The song “[[This Is the New Shit]]” seems to be a very clear lashing out towards generic mainstream music. Not wanting to contradict exactly what you just said, could you go into what this song is about?''' <br>
 
'''The song “[[This Is the New Shit]]” seems to be a very clear lashing out towards generic mainstream music. Not wanting to contradict exactly what you just said, could you go into what this song is about?''' <br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
That song was a question and answer to me on where I was going with this record.  It was the first song that was written, and I opened it up by asking, ‘Everything’s been said before.  Where do I go from here?” I answered that question with the song itself. It was initially addressing pop culture, but in a broader sense; it’s addressing human behaviour and human behaviour in relation to pop culture and its control over it and its inability to not be controlled by it.  That’s one of those things that I feel defines this record, as approaching my philosophies in a different sense because it has an innocuous quality, a nursery rhyme Dada, a childish sort of mantra that says stronger things to me than some of the other songs I’ve written in my past that may have come across more heavy handed as opinionated.<br>
+
That song was a question and answer to me on where i was going with this record.  It was the first song that was written, and I opened it up by asking, ‘Everything’s been said before.  Where do I go from here?” I answered that question with the song itself. It was initially addressing pop culture, but in a broader sense; it’s addressing human behaviour and human behaviour in relation to pop culture and its control over it and its inability to not be controlled by it.  That’s one of those things that I feel defines this record, as approaching my philosophies in a different sense because it has an innocuous quality, a nursery rhyme Dada, a childish sort of mantra that says stronger things to me than some of the other songs I’ve written in my past that may have come across more heavy handed as opinionated.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''This album has a bit of a childlike feel to it; even with the adult subject material on songs like “[[Doll-Dagga Buzz-Buzz Ziggety-Zag]]” and spelling things out like “I got an F and a C, and I got a K too, and the only thing that’s missing is a bitch like U.” What this intentionally thought out?''' <br>
 
'''This album has a bit of a childlike feel to it; even with the adult subject material on songs like “[[Doll-Dagga Buzz-Buzz Ziggety-Zag]]” and spelling things out like “I got an F and a C, and I got a K too, and the only thing that’s missing is a bitch like U.” What this intentionally thought out?''' <br>
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'''Were any of these known entities or are they all just random found voices?''' <br>
 
'''Were any of these known entities or are they all just random found voices?''' <br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
They’re just people that I saw and thought they had a strange look in their eye, I just wanted to get them in a room with a microphone and see what they would say.  Everyone enjoyed it, and there wasn’t any sort of deception or exploitive experiments.  Some people thought the song was misogynistic, I thought it was quite the opposite, because it was some weird experiment and two different points of views on relationships.  When we recorded the music, I wanted to have a guitar solo in it, because a guitar solo has such a phallic macho context for me.  It’s not a common thing to put on one of my records, but my guitar player is such a skilled and talented musician that doesn’t drink or do drugs.  I really wanted to find his element of despair because that’s where things were coming from in this song. He has been known to have a bit of a sex addiction and have sex with sometimes four or five women on tour.<br>
+
They’re just people that I saw and thought they had a strange look in their eye, I just wanted to get them in a room with a microphone and see what they would say.  Everyone enjoyed it, and there wasn’t any sort of deception or exploitive experiments.  some people thought the song was misogynistic, I thought it was quite the opposite, because it was some weird experiment and two different points of views on relationships.  When we recorded the music, I wanted to have a guitar solo in it, because a guitar solo has such a phallic macho context for me.  It’s not a common thing to put on one of my records, but my guitar player is such a skilled and talented musician that doesn’t drink or do drugs.  I really wanted to find his element of despair because that’s where things were coming from in this song. He has been known to have a bit of a sex addiction and have sex with sometimes four or five women on tour.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''Yeah, who doesn’t?''' <br>
 
'''Yeah, who doesn’t?''' <br>
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'''What’s the chances that’s the first time anyone’s ever suggested that'''? <br>
 
'''What’s the chances that’s the first time anyone’s ever suggested that'''? <br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
You know, I’m not sure.  At least to my face, it hasn’t been suggested.  I understand people not wanting to  put someone like me in a responsible position without some sort of conventional engineer/producer guy.  The record was literally engineered by me and Tim Skold.  It has that homemade quality to it, but I think ultimately, it doesn’t sound like that.  I’m quite proud of the way it sounds.  It has that element that you get when you’re making a demo.  It’s personally detailed.  It has all of these raw performances, but it’s like a Bosch painting.  Each piece of static is carefully placed.<br>
+
You know, I’m not sure.  At least to my face, it hasn’t been suggested.  I understand people not wanting to  put someone like me in a responsible position without some sort of conventional engineer/producer guy.  The record was literally engineered by me and Tim Skold.  It has that homemade quality to it, but I think ultimately, it doesn’t sound like that.  I’m quite proud of the way it sounds.  It has that element that you get when you’re making a demo.  It’s personally detailed.  It has all of these rew performances, but it’s like a Bosch painting.  Each piece of static is carefully placed.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
'''I believe it was Mechanical Animals whose release was expedited because of an internet leak. Have you approached things differently since then'''? <br>
 
'''I believe it was Mechanical Animals whose release was expedited because of an internet leak. Have you approached things differently since then'''? <br>

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