Editing Interview:2020/09/01 Marilyn Manson on 'Chaos,' Collaboration, How Elton John Made Him Cry

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 75: Line 75:
 
'''TAYLOR''' To me, you've never been the same on any record, aesthetically. You've never been the same, musically. And I think that part of the question that I was going to ask, the second part of the question, was when you start a record, do you have a certain idea of what direction that you want to lean towards, or do you let whoever you're collaborating with, in this case, Shooter, help shape and form what you're leaning towards?
 
'''TAYLOR''' To me, you've never been the same on any record, aesthetically. You've never been the same, musically. And I think that part of the question that I was going to ask, the second part of the question, was when you start a record, do you have a certain idea of what direction that you want to lean towards, or do you let whoever you're collaborating with, in this case, Shooter, help shape and form what you're leaning towards?
  
'''MANSON''' I think it would be hard to recall on every record, but I do remember that it was always important for me, going in, to start maybe a first song or something, or just when suddenly after two songs, you know that you begin a record. I believe that that would be the way of looking at it for me. It's usually ... I remember very painstakingly trying to take my hair from black to red. A lot of times it starts with change in my look. In the midst of writing, you had just to kind of shed your skin like a snake or even ... I found out recently that tarantulas shed their entire bodies, including their fangs, which is really unusual. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but I'm not scared of them.
+
MANSON I think it would be hard to recall on every record, but I do remember that it was always important for me, going in, to start maybe a first song or something, or just when suddenly after two songs, you know that you begin a record. I believe that that would be the way of looking at it for me. It's usually ... I remember very painstakingly trying to take my hair from black to red. A lot of times it starts with change in my look. In the midst of writing, you had just to kind of shed your skin like a snake or even ... I found out recently that tarantulas shed their entire bodies, including their fangs, which is really unusual. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but I'm not scared of them.
 
+
'''TAYLOR''' Can you imagine having to grow new teeth?
+
 
+
'''MANSON''' Just in the general sense, just shedding your past ... It's almost like a cleansing or a rebirth, or something. But it does really depend on it. And plus, I don't like to get too comfortable in my own skin. I mean, once I'm committed to something I like about myself — which is very difficult to happen, because I'm very critical of myself — once I commit to something, then it helps in the whole creative process because it's not just songs. It's the painting that I did for the record, which was the first time I ever did that. And I paint on my knees.
+
 
+
So I just remember finishing the painting for the cover, and there's the second one that's on the inside. There's a couple other ones included, but because I paint on my knees, my legs were all stained black, and I had black all over my hands. And then realizing I woke up the next day and I'm like, "What?" Not like a fugue state, but a bit of a trance when I was painting the cover of the album. And that was probably about six or seven months ago. And I sent a picture of it still wet to Shooter and he thought it was amazing.
+
 
+
And that then spawned Side Two of the record, ''Infinite Darkness'', because that's what I called the painting. And that's the second side of the record ... Come to think of it, I was having my house renovated after I got off tour during a large portion of finishing of the album, and I was staying in a house that wasn't mine, and I couldn't really change it into what my house is. So I was in an alien environment.
+
 
+
So I was stripped of all of my normal trappings, so I was sort of forced to become more creative. It's almost like when you're limited to only using black and white and you don't have the whole color palette, metaphorically with music, as well. So I was kind of stripped down, so I could only go with my notebook to Shooter's studio. And so what we created there was concentrated, because I didn't have the distractions of what might be now considered comforts being trapped in your home. I had somewhat like [the experience of] being on tour or being in a hotel room, in a sense, but it was a house. And then going to a safe place, which was a studio, which I was very used to and comfortable with. That helped the working relationship greatly.
+
 
+
And he and I, we share such a love for the same things. Same records. And we share stuff with each other as far as musically. ... I feel like there's a strange part of the New Wave era of music. There also exists lesser-heard Seventies music and some sexy stuff. A dreariness ... for example, a song like "How Soon Is Now?" by the Smiths, that guitar screeches in the background — ''waaat errro''. That is a tone, and an unusual quality in music in songs that are essentially pop, but they have this haunting quality that I grew up with. [David Bowie's] ''Scary Monsters'' being one of the first records that I remember hearing and seeing "Ashes to Ashes" on MTV. And that's just sticking with me, just that it was very eerie. It wasn't scary, but it was odd. And it just drew you in, and he wanted you to find your own story in it. And that's really what I was hoping to capture lyrically, and with Shooter, he was on the same exact page with me on that one.
+
  
 
[[Category:Interviews]]
 
[[Category:Interviews]]
 
[[Category:WE ARE CHAOS era]]
 
[[Category:WE ARE CHAOS era]]

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: