Difference between revisions of "Cyclops"
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==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
* If the song is fast-forwarded by x1, the sinister moaning from "[[The Hands of Small Children]]" can be heard. | * If the song is fast-forwarded by x1, the sinister moaning from "[[The Hands of Small Children]]" can be heard. | ||
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+ | ==Review by J7== | ||
+ | *This section is only for archive purposes and has not been confirmed by any authority, and is only J7's interpretation written for your pleasure. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Just the title of this song stands out against the rest of the tracks on the album. What is a song named after a mythical beast doing on Portrait of an American Family? But the song isn’t about the literal Cyclops, instead it is about the pedestal beautiful women are propped upon in America, and the hideous personalities that grow inside of them because of it. Their lives become so centered upon themselves they can’t see anything but themselves. “She can’t see nothing, nothing at all . .” The enormous amounts of attention we pay them slowly consume them until they lose all sense of individuality. The best part of the song is when Manson growls the last lines “Dilate … Dilate” (Dilation of the pupils is due to fear) to explain it is the frailty of Americans today that keep them stagnant, it’s too difficult for them to stand up to the “Cyclops.” A future Manson song, The Beautiful People, would take certain parts of this theme and run with it. While the song is not as fleshed out as other tracks, Cyclops does contain one of the best riffs on the album. Good song, but not the best on the Portrait of an American Family. | ||
[[Category:1989-1995 Era]] | [[Category:1989-1995 Era]] |
Revision as of 08:09, 10 June 2011
"Cyclops" | ||
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Song by Marilyn Manson | ||
Album | Portrait of an American Family | |
Released | July 19, 1994 | |
Recorded | August–December 1993 at Criteria Studios in Miami, Florida, Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, California, The Village Recorder and Pig | |
Genre | Alternative rock | |
Length | 3:32 | |
Label | Nothing, Interscope | |
Writer | Marilyn Manson | |
Composer | Daisy Berkowitz, Gidget Gein, Madonna Wayne Gacy | |
Producer | Marilyn Manson, Trent Reznor |
"Cyclops" is the fifth track on the 1994 release Portrait of an American Family. The earliest recording of this song dates back to the band's After School Special cassette tape, released in January 1991.
Contents
Appearances
Cassettes
Albums
Spooky Kids Version
Genesis of the Devil
The Manson Family Album Version
Versions
- "Cyclops" (Demo) — Appears on After School Special.
- "Cyclops" — Appears on Portrait of an American Family.
Lyrics
cyclops woman got one eye in her head mascara-clotted vision she is fed cyclops woman can't see nothing at all she got a pin-prick-spiral hole she can't see nothing, nothing at all she can't see nothing, nothing at all cyclops woman dying in her shell guilt got her trapped in nailed in well cyclops woman is the eye of the world who's reflection's in the retina? she can't see nothing, nothing at all she can't see nothing, nothing at all dialate, dialate
Trivia
- If the song is fast-forwarded by x1, the sinister moaning from "The Hands of Small Children" can be heard.
Review by J7
- This section is only for archive purposes and has not been confirmed by any authority, and is only J7's interpretation written for your pleasure.
Just the title of this song stands out against the rest of the tracks on the album. What is a song named after a mythical beast doing on Portrait of an American Family? But the song isn’t about the literal Cyclops, instead it is about the pedestal beautiful women are propped upon in America, and the hideous personalities that grow inside of them because of it. Their lives become so centered upon themselves they can’t see anything but themselves. “She can’t see nothing, nothing at all . .” The enormous amounts of attention we pay them slowly consume them until they lose all sense of individuality. The best part of the song is when Manson growls the last lines “Dilate … Dilate” (Dilation of the pupils is due to fear) to explain it is the frailty of Americans today that keep them stagnant, it’s too difficult for them to stand up to the “Cyclops.” A future Manson song, The Beautiful People, would take certain parts of this theme and run with it. While the song is not as fleshed out as other tracks, Cyclops does contain one of the best riffs on the album. Good song, but not the best on the Portrait of an American Family.