Editing Interview:2017/09/11 Marilyn Manson knows where you fucking live

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It’s the early afternoon in Berlin, although you wouldn’t know it (we’re sat in a gloomy, gothic underground bar not dissimilar to Kubrick’s depiction of the Overlook Hotel’s Gold Room) and [[Marilyn Manson]] is nursing a tall vodka, his numerous silver rings clinking against the glass as he discusses “[[WE KNOW WHERE YOU FUCKING LIVE|We Know Where You Fucking Live]]”, speaking in hushed, gravelly tones from behind huge sunglasses. It’s a song that is archetypal Manson, a menacing all-American missile of revenge and paranoia that acts as the statement piece on his new album ''Heaven Upside Down'', a record that was finished in the throes of personal trauma.
 
It’s the early afternoon in Berlin, although you wouldn’t know it (we’re sat in a gloomy, gothic underground bar not dissimilar to Kubrick’s depiction of the Overlook Hotel’s Gold Room) and [[Marilyn Manson]] is nursing a tall vodka, his numerous silver rings clinking against the glass as he discusses “[[WE KNOW WHERE YOU FUCKING LIVE|We Know Where You Fucking Live]]”, speaking in hushed, gravelly tones from behind huge sunglasses. It’s a song that is archetypal Manson, a menacing all-American missile of revenge and paranoia that acts as the statement piece on his new album ''Heaven Upside Down'', a record that was finished in the throes of personal trauma.
  
“I didn’t know that my [[Hugh Warner|father]] was going to die,” he says. “It didn’t really affect the way the record came out, but it did affect the whole ending of the story. Saturn travels around the earth every 29 years and passes in front of the moon – it began right when we were finishing the record and it ended on the morning of my father’s death. The last song I wrote was ‘[[Saturnalia]]’ and the one before that was ‘Heaven Upside Down’. There’s the mythology of Saturnus – the father eating his child – maybe it was my dad’s way of saying ‘OK you’re done son, get this record out,’ because he didn’t get to hear it. I felt it (the album) had to be done – not to save the world, not for rock and roll purposes, not because I want to make a great record. All of those things are included in the package, but I’m here to fuck shit up. That’s my job. I’m a tornado and you can sit back and watch it.”
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“I didn’t know that my father was going to die,” he says. “It didn’t really affect the way the record came out, but it did affect the whole ending of the story. Saturn travels around the earth every 29 years and passes in front of the moon – it began right when we were finishing the record and it ended on the morning of my father’s death. The last song I wrote was ‘[[Saturnalia]]’ and the one before that was ‘Heaven Upside Down’. There’s the mythology of Saturnus – the father eating his child – maybe it was my dad’s way of saying ‘OK you’re done son, get this record out,’ because he didn’t get to hear it. I felt it (the album) had to be done – not to save the world, not for rock and roll purposes, not because I want to make a great record. All of those things are included in the package, but I’m here to fuck shit up. That’s my job. I’m a tornado and you can sit back and watch it.”
  
 
Manson’s father comes up frequently in our coversation. At one point he mentions ''The Defiant Ones'', a documentary that focuses on Interscope founder Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre but, in its third episode, details how [[Trent Reznor]] signed Manson to his label and the impact that the deal had on rock music and pop culture at large. “Jimmy Iovine says something about how, when people see something real, they know it’s fucking real,” says Manson. “I did get a little emotional watching it, in a way that I thought, ‘Wow, my dad would be really proud to see this,’”
 
Manson’s father comes up frequently in our coversation. At one point he mentions ''The Defiant Ones'', a documentary that focuses on Interscope founder Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre but, in its third episode, details how [[Trent Reznor]] signed Manson to his label and the impact that the deal had on rock music and pop culture at large. “Jimmy Iovine says something about how, when people see something real, they know it’s fucking real,” says Manson. “I did get a little emotional watching it, in a way that I thought, ‘Wow, my dad would be really proud to see this,’”

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