Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 25, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A14
A 14 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 ENTERTAINMENT winnipegfreepress. com
L OS ANGELES - Around 8 p. m.
on a recent Wednesday night,
in a candlelit, marble- plated
West Hollywood hotel room,
Marilyn Manson reached into his
pocket and flicked open a switchblade.
" The Roman emperor Constantius was
referred to as the ' Pale Emperor.' He
liked to dress up as a woman and ( torture)
men and have them dance for him,"
Manson insisted. " I identify with that
petulant pursuit of chaos."
Manson's blade ( and his own rows of
metallic teeth) glinted gold in the candlelight.
For a moment, it seemed like he
might actually be pondering something
sinister. Instead, he looked down at the
knife and grinned.
" I prefer using this to eat oysters," he
said.
Nearly 20 years after his 1996 album Antichrist
Superstar made him America's most
infamous musician, Marilyn Manson still has
the power to unnerve. In person, however, he's
also droll and self- aware, prone to knife- twirling
goofiness and southern gentleman affectations.
What's even more startling is that, at 46, he just
made one of the best albums of his career.
The Pale Emperor , released this week, is a
10- song LP that's just as quick and ferocious as
his switchblade. The album largely sheds his
trademark industrial- music howl, replacing it
with slinky, glamorous brooding that evokes
goth- punk pioneers such as the Birthday Party
and Christian Death.
After his widely praised acting on Sons
of Anarchy ( where he played an imprisoned
white- supremacist gang leader) and a cameo on
Eastbound & Down ( where he played a schlub in
orange shorts and a moppy brown wig), Marilyn
Manson may be preparing for a new role: a musician
at the unexpected height of his powers.
As befits his imperial album title, Manson
doesn't really have conversations. He holds court.
Within minutes of sitting down on his suite's
couch, he's already gone over the repulsion he
still feels toward his home state of Florida, ancient
Chilean astronomical discoveries and how
he finally buried the hatchet with his longtime
' 90s rock adversary, Billy Corgan. He was especially
giddy over a recent gift from a friend, a
copy of Goethe's Faust he said was " once owned
by a very unsavoury character, a German's personal
copy."
Did he mean Hitler?
" I think you can figure it out," he said, affecting
a cryptic flair.
The Pale Emperor comes after probably the
most difficult stretch of his career. After his
then- label Interscope Records released him from
his contract ( a move largely attributed to slow
sales of his 2009 album, The High End of Low ),
his relationship with actress Evan Rachel Wood
ended, and 2012' s Born Villain didn't revitalize
his career as hoped. His once- sinewy frame
began to soften from drinking, drugs and age.
Some of the hardest moments came, he said,
when his mother died during the making of
The Pale Emperor . Even for someone as deathobsessed
as Manson, when he talks about her, he
curls into the couch a bit.
" It's inevitable, I know, and I made my peace
with her a few years ago, when she was no longer
aware of who I was," he said.
In the record's liner notes, he dedicates the album
to her, following her dementia- related death
in 2014.
" My father drove from Ohio to California to see
my show on Halloween. I didn't understand why
he drove, but he later told me he was spreading
her ashes on Route 66."
Two unanticipated new relationships changed
his outlook on songwriting. The first and more
personal one, with the photographer and fellow
goth- complexioned muse Lindsay Usich, brought
him a more stable ( by Manson standards) home
life. The second, with producer Tyler Bates -
the film composer behind scores for Hollywood
action romps such as Guardians of the Galaxy
and 300 - helped him reimagine what Marilyn
Manson could sound like.
" He is a living performance- art experiment.
He is a school bus full of children perched on
a ledge, and you can't look away," Bates said.
" There aren't a lot of real rock stars left, and he's
one of them."
The two met on the set of the Showtime series
Californication , where Manson was playing
himself. Bates started recording with him as a
casual, friendly collaboration, to get Manson's
head back in the game. But the sessions ( often
starting with just a microphone, a digital kick
drum and Bates playing guitar) soon yielded an
unprecedented new sound for both of them.
" He really gave himself over to a process unlike
any other for him so far," Bates said. " For
me, writing music for film is listening to the
story and writing for character roles. This was a
really different project, but I applied that same
idea to working with Manson."
The end result is a record that is the best possible
way to imagine Manson staring down age
50. The self- anointed " Mephistopheles of Los Angeles"
takes the open post- punk space of Siouxsie
and the Banshees and adds a heavy drum swing
and vocal wails that seem to come straight from
the back of the Bronson Canyon caves in the
Hollywood Hills. The single Third Day of a Seven
Day Binge rides a grime- caked bass line into a
lament about ( or maybe an ode to) imminent selfdestruction.
" A lot of people say the record has a blues
sound to it, but ' blues' goes to a few core things,"
Manson said. " It's actually quite Faustian, with
( legendary bluesman) Robert Johnson selling his
soul to the devil. So there were a lot of strange
parallels on this record, like a snake eating its
tail."
It won over Tom Whalley, the former chairman
and CEO of Warner Bros. Records who had
worked with Manson during his time at Interscope
in the ' 90s. Whalley is releasing The Pale
Emperor on his Loma Vista imprint, where more
polite acts like Spoon, St. Vincent and Rhye now
count the Beautiful People singer as a labelmate.
Initially, a new Manson album " wasn't something
I was chasing," Whalley admitted. " It felt
like a long shot for me to be interested in it, and
his last few records weren't really up to his past
standards. But I heard the songs, and I was beyond
impressed."
He knew they'd have a difficult job convincing
skeptics Marilyn Manson was really, truly back.
Sure, Manson's core audience will always give
him a fair shake.
But the harder part, Whalley said, was " how
to get people who wouldn't think they'd like it to
open up to listening. We'd play his music for our
other acts and their teams, and all of them would
say, ' Oh, my God, I like it. I never thought I'd like
a Marilyn Manson album in today's world.' That's
part of why people are intrigued with this - he's
a living, breathing rock star who has found a
fresh moment."
How that fresh moment will play out commercially
is anyone's guess. Between the current ' 90s
revival in fashion and music and an affection for
occultish, drugged- up esthetics across hip- hop
and underground music, it's an appropriate time
for a Manson revival. When Kanye West released
his stomping 2013 single Black Skinhead , many
fans wrongly assumed it was based on a sample
of Manson's The Beautiful People , and they found
the prospect enticing.
Whalley doesn't reasonably expect to sell much
more than half a million records worldwide. But
by comparison, it took Yeezus seven months to go
platinum.
" The goals are to have an impact, period,
which can mean many different things. ( Fans)
watch the videos and stream his songs millions
of times, the social media engagement is incredible
- the music will have ( a) reach far beyond
commercial sales."
As Manson's assistant, a beefy fellow with a
shaved head, finally beckoned him off to other
obligations, the singer invited this writer to pick
the chat back up at his house later that weekend.
" We've already had this conversation a million
times over. Maybe that's what d�j� vu is - it's
just us hearing our echoes from a long time ago,"
he said.
Then, he wrote down a number on hotel stationery.
" This is my cell. Come by, and we'll get some
eight balls and strippers and have a long night."
He was probably joking. Was he?
The phone number turned out to be for an unknown
Uber driver with an automated reply message.
Maybe Manson was yanking this writer's
chain. Maybe he'd found a side gig as a part- time
town car driver.
Whatever the case, as the door to his hotel bedroom
closed, Marilyn Manson once again slipped
off into the night.
- Los Angeles Times
By August Brown
' There aren't a lot of real rock stars left, and he's one of them'
Modified Manson
Rocker returns with a new sound
PAUL A. HEBERT / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Marilyn Manson's new album, The Pale Emperor, is a departure for the singer. Producer Tyler Bates, who has composed scores for major Hollywood films, calls Manson ' a living performance- art experiment.'
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