Editing Interview:2003/09 Metal Edge

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:''So sings Marilyn Manson in "[[This Is the New Shit|This Is The New Shit]]," the opening track of his latest canon, [[The Golden Age of Grotesque (album)|The Golden Age of Grotesque]]. He's tired of the same old shit. He has been for quite some time, actually. And while critics may cite Manson's overpowering persona as yesterday's news, his music says otherwise.''
 
:''So sings Marilyn Manson in "[[This Is the New Shit|This Is The New Shit]]," the opening track of his latest canon, [[The Golden Age of Grotesque (album)|The Golden Age of Grotesque]]. He's tired of the same old shit. He has been for quite some time, actually. And while critics may cite Manson's overpowering persona as yesterday's news, his music says otherwise.''
  
:''His [[Portrait of an American Family|Portrait of An American Family]] debut and [[Smells Like Children]] EP follow-up exposed an artist who wasn't afraid to turn his back on anything and everything the music industry had embraced, in turn, forging a path directly into the American psyche, a twisted amalgamation of everything that's come before him, with everything he envisioned his future becoming. It was candy-coated horror, an evil so sweet, it mesmerized onlookers with a sadistic Grin. As the Antichrist Superstar, Manson turned religion on end with an album so brilliant, it may have scarred his enemies more than it inspired his fans-No small feat, as he single-handedly hoisted the gothic subculture from the reclusive ranks of teenage bedrooms, to a noticeable presence in the malls of America. On [[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]], he turned his image on end, transforming from the prince of darkness, into an androgynous superstar bent on twisting his extremes into an uncanny crossbreed of pop-cultural commentary. [[Holy_Wood_(In_the_Shadow_of_the_Valley_of_Death)|Holy Wood]] shrink-wrapped the two existences into one, the final tri-mester of a three album birth process that brought us to The Golden Age of Grotesque.''
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:''His [[Portrait of An American Family]] debut and [[Smells Like Children]] EP follow-up exposed an artist who wasn't afraid to turn his back on anything and everything the music industry had embraced, in turn, forging a path directly into the American psyche, a twisted amalgamation of everything that's come before him, with everything he envisioned his future becoming. It was candy-coated horror, an evil so sweet, it mesmerized onlookers with a sadistic Grin. As the Antichrist Superstar, Manson turned religion on end with an album so brilliant, it may have scarred his enemies more than it inspired his fans-No small feat, as he single-handedly hoisted the gothic subculture from the reclusive ranks of teenage bedrooms, to a noticeable presence in the malls of America. On [[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]], he turned his image on end, transforming from the prince of darkness, into an androgynous superstar bent on twisting his extremes into an uncanny crossbreed of pop-cultural commentary. [[Holy_Wood_(In_the_Shadow_of_the_Valley_of_Death)|Holy Wood]] shrink-wrapped the two existences into one, the final tri-mester of a three album birth process that brought us to The Golden Age of Grotesque.''
  
 
:''If America has truly reached a point, as many suggest, where nothing's shocking, what does that mean for Manson, an artist whose shock value has often overpowered the impact of his music? "It doesn't mean that I would take back or change anything I've done on the past," says the prolific poet of rock'n'roll rebellion. "But I could take another step further and show people all the parts of my personality that you get from hearing my album, or from seeing may art show, or from hearing what I have to say in an interview, or in a movie like Bowling For Columbine, or spending time with me personally and getting my sense of sarcasm."''
 
:''If America has truly reached a point, as many suggest, where nothing's shocking, what does that mean for Manson, an artist whose shock value has often overpowered the impact of his music? "It doesn't mean that I would take back or change anything I've done on the past," says the prolific poet of rock'n'roll rebellion. "But I could take another step further and show people all the parts of my personality that you get from hearing my album, or from seeing may art show, or from hearing what I have to say in an interview, or in a movie like Bowling For Columbine, or spending time with me personally and getting my sense of sarcasm."''

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