Editing Interview:1998/12 CMJ Omega Man

From MansonWiki, the Marilyn Manson encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in.

Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 15: Line 15:
 
The good news is that [[Marilyn Manson]] doesn’t go out of his way to dress, shall we say, provocatively for band rehearsals.  In other words, his ass wasn’t hanging out of his trousers when he left for work earlier this evening.  He saves those sorts of gestures for special occasions, like, you know, the MTV Video Awards.  He may not be the Christian Coalition’s idea of a respectable citizen, but then again, neither is the current President of the United States.  And that doesn’t appear to be hurting either of them at the polls.<br>
 
The good news is that [[Marilyn Manson]] doesn’t go out of his way to dress, shall we say, provocatively for band rehearsals.  In other words, his ass wasn’t hanging out of his trousers when he left for work earlier this evening.  He saves those sorts of gestures for special occasions, like, you know, the MTV Video Awards.  He may not be the Christian Coalition’s idea of a respectable citizen, but then again, neither is the current President of the United States.  And that doesn’t appear to be hurting either of them at the polls.<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
The bad news is that I’ve been waiting three days for Manson to call.  But, hell, he’s a busy guy.  Anyway, it’s a little after 9p.m. Manson’s time, which is around midnight in my part of the country, and the singer who’s gotten under more people’s skin the past couple of years than he’d care to count is somewhat amused by the fact that I’ve opted to break the fiber-optic ice by asking what he’s got on over his. “It’s not as elaborate as what I would wear on stage or in a video or photo shoot,” he replies in the guarded deadpan that he’s cultivated for his many interactions with the media, a sort of reflective aloofness that belies the fact that he’s oh-so used to the Q&A routine.  “But I don’t automatically turn into some normal guy that wears Dockers.  My style, or whatever you want to call it, well there’s a volume knob for it I guess.  Sometimes it’s up high, sometimes it’s down low, but it’s still kind of the same.  I mean I wouldn’t wear something that I don’t like.  So, yeah, I wore a plain pair of black leather pants and some shirt.”<br>
+
The bad news is that I’ve been waiting three days for Manson to call.  But, hell, he’s a busy guy.  Anyway, it’s a little after 9p.m. Manson’s time, which is around midnight in my part of the country, and the singer who’s gotten under more people’s skin the past couple of years than he’d care to count is somewhat amused by the fact that I’ve opted to break the fiber-optic ice by asking what he’s got on over his. “It’s not as elaborate as what I would wear on stage or in a video or photo shoot,” he replies in the guarded deadpan that he’s cultivated for his many interactions with the media, a sort of reflective aloofness that belies the fact that he’s oh-so used to the Q&A routine.  “But i don’t automatically turn into some normal guy that wears Dockers.  My style, or whatever you want to call it, well there’s a volume knob for it I guess.  Sometimes it’s up high, sometimes it’s down low, but it’s still kind of the same.  I mean I wouldn’t wear something that I don’t like.  So, yeah, I wore a plain pair of black leather pants and some shirt.”<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
There probably isn’t a question Manson hasn’t been asked in some form or another - everything from the meaning of life to what he had for breakfast - in marathon grilling sessions that would make a Kenneth Starr subpoena seem like a parking ticket.  and yet he continues to make himself available because, as he so candidly admits, it’s an integral part of his art.  “It’s all the same to me,” he’ll say.  “The media is an element of what I do.  A lot of people see it as a task, or something that they get abused or bothered by.  But I see it as just another part of my life.  I figured that if I wrote a book people would leave me alone.  But I know it’s not going to go away.<br>
 
There probably isn’t a question Manson hasn’t been asked in some form or another - everything from the meaning of life to what he had for breakfast - in marathon grilling sessions that would make a Kenneth Starr subpoena seem like a parking ticket.  and yet he continues to make himself available because, as he so candidly admits, it’s an integral part of his art.  “It’s all the same to me,” he’ll say.  “The media is an element of what I do.  A lot of people see it as a task, or something that they get abused or bothered by.  But I see it as just another part of my life.  I figured that if I wrote a book people would leave me alone.  But I know it’s not going to go away.<br>
Line 45: Line 45:
 
“Different people are going to accept it on different terms.  It’s a record that’s being treated differently than things that I’ve done in the past because musically it’s more in focus this time.  I think what people are probably missing is that to me, this is the darkest record that we’ve done.  And at times the songs that are pop, which are deliberately referential to songs that influenced me growing up - you know the glam rock sound that we incorporate - are the darkest most depressing ones.  A lot of people miss the sarcasm in that.  You know, fame can be so alienating and can be almost like childhood or highschool.  In a way  you can feel completely out of place.  The ways I dealt with that on the record was with two distinct personalities - the very sarcastic, bombastic, over the top “[[The Dope Show|Dope Show]]” satires, and the more painful, more hollow and more depressing songs like “[[Great Big White World]].”<br>
 
“Different people are going to accept it on different terms.  It’s a record that’s being treated differently than things that I’ve done in the past because musically it’s more in focus this time.  I think what people are probably missing is that to me, this is the darkest record that we’ve done.  And at times the songs that are pop, which are deliberately referential to songs that influenced me growing up - you know the glam rock sound that we incorporate - are the darkest most depressing ones.  A lot of people miss the sarcasm in that.  You know, fame can be so alienating and can be almost like childhood or highschool.  In a way  you can feel completely out of place.  The ways I dealt with that on the record was with two distinct personalities - the very sarcastic, bombastic, over the top “[[The Dope Show|Dope Show]]” satires, and the more painful, more hollow and more depressing songs like “[[Great Big White World]].”<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
That bipolar thematic separation has made explicit in the [[Mechanical Animals]] CD booklet, one side of which features the androgynous innocent Manson and the lyrics to the disc’s more reflective/depressive material, while the other depicts the mechanical [[Omega]] and has lyrics to the disc’s more over-the-top tunes.  “I’ve always felt like “Why be one thing, which is what the rest of the world wants you to be, when you can be so many different things?”  Manson postulates in answer to my question about his multiplying personalities.  Which raises the issue Manson is most often asked to clear up: Does he distinguish between Marilyn Manson the person, and Marilyn Manson, the persona?<br>
+
That bipolar thematic separation has made explicit in the [[Mechanical Animals]] CD booklet, one side of which features the androgynous innocent Manson and the lyrics to the disc’s more reflective/depressive material, while the other depicts the mechanical [[Omega]] and has lyrics to the disc’s more over-the-top tunes.  “I’ ve always felt like “Why be one thing, which is what the rest of the world wants you to be, when you can be so many different things?”  Manson postulates in answer to my question about his multiplying personalities.  Which raises the issue Manson is most often asked to clear up: Does he distinguish between Marilyn Manson the person, and Marilyn Manson, the persona?<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
  

Please note that all contributions to The Marilyn Manson Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see The Marilyn Manson Wiki:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)

Templates used on this page: