Editing Interview:2003/07 Outburn

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'''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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I think it was the ability to be in a relationship with my girlfriend [[Dita Von Teese|Dita]] and also with my bandmates and with collaborators with Gottfried Helnwein, I’ve surrounded myself now.  There was a matter of really deciding that this is what I need again to survive and to go further than I’ve gone before in my ability to take my imagination and make it real and manifest it for other people to experience.  You’re going to hate it or love it.  I had to surround myself only with people that saw my vision or my lifestyle as their own.  It wasn’t them following me or being part of me, but us all feeling the same thing.  It wasn’t a sit-down meeting where we sat with a flow chart and said, “This is what we’re going to do.” It’s just the way that life works.  Having that gave me the ability to look back and see what it took for me to get there.  Because I’ve had so many sexual hang-ups growing up, I think I’ve finally gotten to a place where I feel comfortable and not satisfied where it makes me lazy - because that’s when there’s no excitement in your life anymore - but to a point where I can live right in that center of the danger of chaos and order, which is the basis of Marilyn Manson.  Maybe it’s taken me all of this time to get where I’ve always wanted to be.  I think I’ve made all of these records to fight to get to a point to make this record, which is the beginning of a new era for me. I’m finding control by letting go.<br>
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I think it was the ability to be in a relationship with my girlfriend [[Dita]] and also with my bandmates and with collaborators with Gottfried Helnwein, I’ve surrounded myself now.  There was a matter of really deciding that this is what I need again to survive and to go further than I’ve gone before in my ability to take my imagination and make it real and manifest it for other people to experience.  You’re going to hate it or love it.  I had to surround myself only with people that saw my vision or my lifestyle as their own.  It wasn’t them following me or being part of me, but us all feeling the same thing.  It wasn’t a sit-down meeting where we sat with a flow chart and said, “This is what we’re going to do.” It’s just the way that life works.  Having that gave me the ability to look back and see what it took for me to get there.  Because I’ve had so many sexual hang-ups growing up, I think I’ve finally gotten to a place where I feel comfortable and not satisfied where it makes me lazy - because that’s when there’s no excitement in your life anymore - but to a point where I can live right in that center of the danger of chaos and order, which is the basis of Marilyn Manson.  Maybe it’s taken me all of this time to get where I’ve always wanted to be.  I think I’ve made all of these records to fight to get to a point to make this record, which is the beginning of a new era for me. I’m finding control by letting go.<br>
 
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'''<i>Holy Wood</i> was the first part of a completion of a trilogy including <i>[[Mechanical Animals]]</i> and <i>[[Antichrist Superstar]]</i>. Where does <i> The Golden Age of Grotesque</i> come into the story or is it a new chapter?'''<br>
 
'''<i>Holy Wood</i> was the first part of a completion of a trilogy including <i>[[Mechanical Animals]]</i> and <i>[[Antichrist Superstar]]</i>. Where does <i> The Golden Age of Grotesque</i> come into the story or is it a new chapter?'''<br>

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