Editing Interview:2016/09/26 Marilyn Manson: All-American Nightmare

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[[Marilyn Manson]] has had a rough week. He is touring his 2015 album, ''[[The Pale Emperor]]'', with [[Slipknot]], and the reviews so far have been mixed. Articles online question his sanity and demeanour, citing ten-minute rants between tracks, stumbles off-stage, snot-flinging, incoherent slurring and full-on cancellations. Tonight, he performed a song he doesn’t usually include in his setlist, “[[Coma White]]”, which he tearfully dedicated to his dying cat, [[Lily White]]. Fans will recognise Lily from the many paintings Manson has made of her, and the photoshoots featuring the two. He has described Lily, with whom he tours, as his closest friend.
 
[[Marilyn Manson]] has had a rough week. He is touring his 2015 album, ''[[The Pale Emperor]]'', with [[Slipknot]], and the reviews so far have been mixed. Articles online question his sanity and demeanour, citing ten-minute rants between tracks, stumbles off-stage, snot-flinging, incoherent slurring and full-on cancellations. Tonight, he performed a song he doesn’t usually include in his setlist, “[[Coma White]]”, which he tearfully dedicated to his dying cat, [[Lily White]]. Fans will recognise Lily from the many paintings Manson has made of her, and the photoshoots featuring the two. He has described Lily, with whom he tours, as his closest friend.
  
It’s been close to 30 years since Manson formed his band, and, judging from the violent reactions his aberrant behaviour on stage is inspiring this year, not much has changed since 1989. Why, then, are concertgoers still surprised? On the phone, Manson is the lucid, articulate gentleman the world met in an interview with documentarian Michael Moore for the 2002 film, ''Bowling for Columbine''. He is clearly devastated by loss, but he understands that the persona he’s created for himself doesn’t allow much room for private grieving. He isn’t surprised that fans won’t give him a moment’s peace, only that they care so much, after all these years. A man in the crowd at tonight’s show in Detroit, he says, wanted to start a fight with him. “I got punched in the face and couldn’t hit back because I have priors,” Manson deadpans. “But that’s not relevant to our story. You can say my fucking face hurts.” Still, he describes the night as “the best one yet this tour. I didn’t get arrested, which I did the last time I was here (in 2001), so that’s a good thing. This is where I got arrested for assaulting a security guard in a sexual manner – but I was exonerated. So, this time I had to behave.”
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It’s been close to 30 years since Manson formed his band, and, judging from the violent reactions his aberrant behaviour on stage is inspiring this year, not much has changed since 1989. Why, then, are concertgoers still surprised? On the phone, Manson is the lucid, articulate gentleman the world met in an interview with documentarian [[Michael Moore]] for the 2002 film, ''[[Bowling for Columbine]]''. He is clearly devastated by loss, but he understands that the persona he’s created for himself doesn’t allow much room for private grieving. He isn’t surprised that fans won’t give him a moment’s peace, only that they care so much, after all these years. A man in the crowd at tonight’s show in Detroit, he says, wanted to start a fight with him. “I got punched in the face and couldn’t hit back because I have priors,” Manson deadpans. “But that’s not relevant to our story. You can say my fucking face hurts.” Still, he describes the night as “the best one yet this tour. I didn’t get arrested, which I did the last time I was here (in 2001), so that’s a good thing. This is where I got arrested for assaulting a security guard in a sexual manner – but I was exonerated. So, this time I had to behave.”
  
 
That dictum, ''to behave'', is not something the 47-year-old Manson, AKA Brian Warner, finds agreeable. The man who started Marilyn Manson & the Spooky Kids in 1989 hasn’t let the fact that the fashion world now finds him charming – he’s lately starred in a Marc Jacobs campaign, while every it-label and pop star merch-maker from Demna Gvasalia of Vetements to Virgil Abloh and the teams behind Rihanna’s and Zayn Malik’s tours have brought back the long-sleeved shirt design Manson made popular in the 1990s – disarm him. That the ultra-positive millennial set is suddenly interested in the look that, when Manson created it, was too metal for the goths, too punk for the metalheads, and too new for the punks, forming its own subset of misunderstood MTV-generation youth, doesn’t seem to register. During this shoot in New York with friend Terry Richardson, Manson described the styling concept as outside of his wheelhouse, even if it was based on the current season’s obsession with his very own image. “Fashion-wise, I didn’t really know what I was walking into,” he explains. “No one told me it was sort of a Club Kids retrospective, which has now come back into fashion in a different way. I wore things I would not have imagined wearing, but Terry is very persuasive with me.”
 
That dictum, ''to behave'', is not something the 47-year-old Manson, AKA Brian Warner, finds agreeable. The man who started Marilyn Manson & the Spooky Kids in 1989 hasn’t let the fact that the fashion world now finds him charming – he’s lately starred in a Marc Jacobs campaign, while every it-label and pop star merch-maker from Demna Gvasalia of Vetements to Virgil Abloh and the teams behind Rihanna’s and Zayn Malik’s tours have brought back the long-sleeved shirt design Manson made popular in the 1990s – disarm him. That the ultra-positive millennial set is suddenly interested in the look that, when Manson created it, was too metal for the goths, too punk for the metalheads, and too new for the punks, forming its own subset of misunderstood MTV-generation youth, doesn’t seem to register. During this shoot in New York with friend Terry Richardson, Manson described the styling concept as outside of his wheelhouse, even if it was based on the current season’s obsession with his very own image. “Fashion-wise, I didn’t really know what I was walking into,” he explains. “No one told me it was sort of a Club Kids retrospective, which has now come back into fashion in a different way. I wore things I would not have imagined wearing, but Terry is very persuasive with me.”
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Manson’s professed disregard for the current cultural zeitgeist and simultaneous expert knowledge of it is apt from a frontman whose tabloid-trashing message has always come from a philosophical standpoint. “[[The Dope Show|We’re all stars now, in the Dope Show]]” is as true today as it was when first uttered in 1998, and yet, the singer consumes pop culture to the point of inserting himself into it, with TV cameos and celebrity selfies that could make diehard Manson fans cringe. Unlike Slipknot and similar-sounding acts, Manson isn’t afraid of a little glamour. The lyrics he’s most known for ring, in 2016, more Warholian than Machiavellian: after all, his very stage name is a comment on the decentred celebrity, a mash-up of the tragically overexposed actress Marilyn Monroe and the music-industry obsessed psycho-killer Charles Manson. And his music is, of course, only part of the equation: to some he’s a menace to the church, to others a scapegoat for teen violence, but to most of us, he’s a misfit among misfits, too commercial to be truly cool. Now that the dust of Manson’s initial affront to parents has pretty much settled, Marilyn Manson the glam rock-like musician comes clearly into focus. The songs even sound catchy.
 
Manson’s professed disregard for the current cultural zeitgeist and simultaneous expert knowledge of it is apt from a frontman whose tabloid-trashing message has always come from a philosophical standpoint. “[[The Dope Show|We’re all stars now, in the Dope Show]]” is as true today as it was when first uttered in 1998, and yet, the singer consumes pop culture to the point of inserting himself into it, with TV cameos and celebrity selfies that could make diehard Manson fans cringe. Unlike Slipknot and similar-sounding acts, Manson isn’t afraid of a little glamour. The lyrics he’s most known for ring, in 2016, more Warholian than Machiavellian: after all, his very stage name is a comment on the decentred celebrity, a mash-up of the tragically overexposed actress Marilyn Monroe and the music-industry obsessed psycho-killer Charles Manson. And his music is, of course, only part of the equation: to some he’s a menace to the church, to others a scapegoat for teen violence, but to most of us, he’s a misfit among misfits, too commercial to be truly cool. Now that the dust of Manson’s initial affront to parents has pretty much settled, Marilyn Manson the glam rock-like musician comes clearly into focus. The songs even sound catchy.
  
Manson clearly isn’t your average eye-rolling alternative rocker, unimpressed by the mainstream. Instead, like [[David Bowie|Bowie]] before him with his constant questioning of celebrity, he has himself become the new textbook rock star. His claims to be “bigger than Satan” (recently mimicked on a t-shirt by Justin Bieber) have all but come true, and now, luckily for us, he has that axe to grind as well. For a fanboy from Florida with a cynical take on fame who makes music best heard at top volume on bondage night at a strip club, he is uncomfortably massive. His early work is cemented on screen as part of the golden age of music videos, and this autumn, he’ll release a secret stash of shelved footage to promote a 20th anniversary edition of his most celebrated album, ''[[Antichrist Superstar]]''. To prove he’s still the same irreverent kid that put out such a seminal album two decades ago, Manson is also promising a new record, ''[[Heaven Upside Down|SAY10]]'', for 2017 that keeps in mind what made him form a band in the first place: to get girls to like him.
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Manson clearly isn’t your average eye-rolling alternative rocker, unimpressed by the mainstream. Instead, like [[David Bowie|Bowie]] before him with his constant questioning of celebrity, he has himself become the new textbook rock star. His claims to be “bigger than Satan” (recently mimicked on a t-shirt by Justin Bieber) have all but come true, and now, luckily for us, he has that axe to grind as well. For a fanboy from Florida with a cynical take on fame who makes music best heard at top volume on bondage night at a strip club, he is uncomfortably massive. His early work is cemented on screen as part of the golden age of music videos, and this autumn, he’ll release a secret stash of shelved footage to promote a 20th anniversary edition of his most celebrated album, ''[[Antichrist Superstar]]''. To prove he’s still the same irreverent kid that put out such a seminal album two decades ago, Manson is also promising a new record, ''[[Say10|SAY10]]'', for 2017 that keeps in mind what made him form a band in the first place: to get girls to like him.
  
 
'''Do you feel like you were, or are, a Club Kid?'''
 
'''Do you feel like you were, or are, a Club Kid?'''
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''Hair (Marilyn Manson) Liz Martin, hair (additional talent) Peter Butler at Tracey Mattingly, make-up Kanako Takase at Tim Howard Management using M.A.C, talent (in print edition) Marilyn Manson, Teale Coco, Really Doe Dusty, Hirakish, Ian Isiah, Trassh Anime Girl IRL, Ladyfag, Casey Spooner, Scotty ‘Sussi’ Susman, photographic assistant Evan Schafer, fashion assistants Savage, Miguel Sanchez, Marta Del Rio, additional talent hair assistant Michelle DeMartino, make-up assistants Kuma, Kento Utsubo, production Julia Reis at Art Partner, special thanks Ludlow Studios LES''
 
''Hair (Marilyn Manson) Liz Martin, hair (additional talent) Peter Butler at Tracey Mattingly, make-up Kanako Takase at Tim Howard Management using M.A.C, talent (in print edition) Marilyn Manson, Teale Coco, Really Doe Dusty, Hirakish, Ian Isiah, Trassh Anime Girl IRL, Ladyfag, Casey Spooner, Scotty ‘Sussi’ Susman, photographic assistant Evan Schafer, fashion assistants Savage, Miguel Sanchez, Marta Del Rio, additional talent hair assistant Michelle DeMartino, make-up assistants Kuma, Kento Utsubo, production Julia Reis at Art Partner, special thanks Ludlow Studios LES''
 
==Scans==
 
{{Gallery
 
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[[Category:Interviews]]
 
[[Category:Interviews]]

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