Editing Interview:2020/09/08 Marilyn Manson on WE ARE CHAOS, Pandemic Life, New Wave Influences, and Favorite David Bowie Album

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It comes from a couple of different places. I suppose that when I listen to or read the words to the record, a lot of times I think I’m talking to myself when I wrote them, like holding a mirror up to myself. So it’s not always a story about someone else, but there is a romance to the album in the traditional sense, not in a love song sense as much, although there is that element that can be derived from it. I listen to it, and it makes me feel emotional in a romantic way, sometimes in a sad way, sometimes in a happy way.
 
It comes from a couple of different places. I suppose that when I listen to or read the words to the record, a lot of times I think I’m talking to myself when I wrote them, like holding a mirror up to myself. So it’s not always a story about someone else, but there is a romance to the album in the traditional sense, not in a love song sense as much, although there is that element that can be derived from it. I listen to it, and it makes me feel emotional in a romantic way, sometimes in a sad way, sometimes in a happy way.
  
If you think about history, it isn’t really the past always, but sometimes it’s the present. History is a living thing. It happens every second. What we just started the conversation with is history. So you can’t always look at things on a very linear calendar or watch, whatever element of time keeping, especially when you’re in sort of a ''Twilight Zone'', 24/7 confusion of losing track of what day it is. It’s very difficult to remember what day it is and let someone tell you, or if you have a calendar, but in some ways I kind of found that freeing, even though that this record was completed far before any of this happened to the world. We finished in January. And [the song] “WE ARE CHAOS” was written at least a year and a half ago, initially lyrically. It was more me thinking about how I can relate to the rest of the world, emotionally and mentally, and not dwelling on politics or religion so much, although there are political and religious references in there. But I suppose they’re more loose to interpretation because I wanted the record to be a book.
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If you think about history, it isn’t really the past always, but sometimes it’s the present. History is a living thing. It happens every second. What we just started the conversation with is history. So you can’t always look at things on a very linear calendar or watch, whatever element of time keeping, especially when you’re in sort of a Twilight Zone, 24/7 confusion of losing track of what day it is. It’s very difficult to remember what day it is and let someone tell you, or if you have a calendar, but in some ways I kind of found that freeing, even though that this record was completed far before any of this happened to the world. We finished in January. And [the song] “WE ARE CHAOS” was written at least a year and a half ago, initially lyrically. It was more me thinking about how I can relate to the rest of the world, emotionally and mentally, and not dwelling on politics or religion so much, although there are political and religious references in there. But I suppose they’re more loose to interpretation because I wanted the record to be a book.
  
 
I’ve imagined I just filled all the pages with mirrors, and you fill in your own story when you listen to it. It’s a concept record that tells a story that’s going to be different for every single person, including me, every time I hear it, but it’s definitely, there’s an arc to it. I’m still wrapping my head around it because it’s still new to me, but I always ask people, “Do you get a happy ending from it or is it a sad ending or is it tragic?”
 
I’ve imagined I just filled all the pages with mirrors, and you fill in your own story when you listen to it. It’s a concept record that tells a story that’s going to be different for every single person, including me, every time I hear it, but it’s definitely, there’s an arc to it. I’m still wrapping my head around it because it’s still new to me, but I always ask people, “Do you get a happy ending from it or is it a sad ending or is it tragic?”
  
I wanted it to be like any movie or any great book or any painting or any poem that it becomes part of the listener’s experience, not just mine. And it just reminds me of what I got out of my favorite records growing up, whether it be [David Bowie’s] ''Diamond Dogs'' or <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Alice Cooper]]’s<nowiki>]</nowiki> ''Welcome to My Nightmare'' or [Pink Floyd’s] ''The Wall'' or something where you feel like you’re a part of something bigger that you can insert yourself into. And I think escapism is an important thing to have now. I wasn’t necessarily anticipating being in lockdown when I wrote the record, but it happens to be a good escape for me to have done it and to listen to it now, and to see what people will think when it comes out. Hopefully, it will give them a way to interpret it in a way that maybe I didn’t even realize.
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I wanted it to be like any movie or any great book or any painting or any poem that it becomes part of the listener’s experience, not just mine. And it just reminds me of what I got out of my favorite records growing up, whether it be [David Bowie’s] Diamond Dogs or [Alice Cooper’s] Welcome to My Nightmare or [Pink Floyd’s] The Wall or something where you feel like you’re a part of something bigger that you can insert yourself into. And I think escapism is an important thing to have now. I wasn’t necessarily anticipating being in lockdown when I wrote the record, but it happens to be a good escape for me to have done it and to listen to it now, and to see what people will think when it comes out. Hopefully, it will give them a way to interpret it in a way that maybe I didn’t even realize.
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'''On the song “WE ARE CHAOS” and its glam, goth and new wave influences'''
 
'''On the song “WE ARE CHAOS” and its glam, goth and new wave influences'''

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