Editing Interview:2015/02/09 Marilyn Manson Shows Us His Soft Side

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Few artists have stuck by their iconoclastic convictions as long as Marilyn Manson, now 46. Since emerging as the world's most welcoming scapegoat in the '90s, with belligerent anthems like "[[The Beautiful People]]" and rumors of horror-show concerts that featured him cutting himself and shredding Bibles onstage, the singer has become a hero to the downtrodden and an enemy to moral America. Now, with a newfound confidence that came in part from recent upheavals in his family, Manson has recorded a profound and morose LP that could change even the most wary listener's perception of him.
 
Few artists have stuck by their iconoclastic convictions as long as Marilyn Manson, now 46. Since emerging as the world's most welcoming scapegoat in the '90s, with belligerent anthems like "[[The Beautiful People]]" and rumors of horror-show concerts that featured him cutting himself and shredding Bibles onstage, the singer has become a hero to the downtrodden and an enemy to moral America. Now, with a newfound confidence that came in part from recent upheavals in his family, Manson has recorded a profound and morose LP that could change even the most wary listener's perception of him.
  
The ''[[The Pale Emperor|Pale Emperor]]'' -- named after the first Roman ruler to deny God, Manson gleefully offers -- finds him at his most vulnerable, singing about feeling alone ("[[The Mephistopheles of Los Angeles]]"), the inevitability of death ("[[Odds of Even]]") and the repercussions of violence ("[[Killing Strangers]]"). The music no longer bludgeons listeners with industrial rhythms and metal riff plonking but, thanks to mournful gothic guitar lines and spacious arrangements by co-producer and co-songwriter [[Tyler Bates]] (best known for his ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' and ''300'' movie scores), it makes its points with relative subtlety.
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The ''[[Pale Emperor]]'' -- named after the first Roman ruler to deny God, Manson gleefully offers -- finds him at his most vulnerable, singing about feeling alone ("[[The Mephistopheles of Los Angeles]]"), the inevitability of death ("[[Odds of Even]]") and the repercussions of violence ("[[Killing Strangers]]"). The music no longer bludgeons listeners with industrial rhythms and metal riff plonking but, thanks to mournful gothic guitar lines and spacious arrangements by co-producer and co-songwriter [[Tyler Bates]] (best known for his ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' and ''300'' movie scores), it makes its points with relative subtlety.
  
 
But that's not to say he's lost any of his biting wit. When I tell him that his pallid face will be gracing the "Beliefs" issue, he quickly rejoins, "'Lie' is right in the middle of that word."
 
But that's not to say he's lost any of his biting wit. When I tell him that his pallid face will be gracing the "Beliefs" issue, he quickly rejoins, "'Lie' is right in the middle of that word."

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