~ Info ~
"They're looking to stamp out everything
that isn't Christian. They're looking to have all of these books
burned and rock albums banned. They're looking to suppress
different ways of thought, same-sex marraiges. That, to me, is very similar to Nazism.
People trying to suppress Christianity just seems reasonable to me. It seems like trying
to level the playing field because Christianity has been in power for so long. "In God
We Trust" is on the dollar bill, that says it all. It's all about money. Nobody really cares
about morality. In the end, it just comes down to selling a book or a t-shirt or selling a
record.
I'm not saying I'm any different. I'm just saying
at least I'm trying to admit that everything is as full of shit
as it is. Saying you're a hypocrite makes you less of one than
the people who live in self-denial."
- Marilyn Manson
Click here to purchase Marilyn Manson's Smells Like Children album from CDnow
Members:
- Marilyn Manson - Brian Warner
- Twiggy Ramirez - Jeordie White
- Zim Zum - Mike Yipp or Mike Nataski (you figure it out)
- Madonna Wayne-Gacy (Pogo) - Steven Bier
- Ginger Fish - Frank Wilson or Kenny Wilson (you figure it out)
Past/Other Members:
- Daisy Berkowitz - Scott Putesky
- Zsa Zsa Speck - Wasn't this Pogo's old name?
- Gidget Gein - Brad Stewart
- Sara Lee Lucas - Fred Streithorst
- Olivia Newton-Bundy - Brian Tutunick
Home Base: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
Label Affiliation: Nothing/Interscope
Formed: 1989
-- Biography --
The shtick is old, but Marilyn Manson's devotees don't seem to know it.
Whether or not you buy the neo-Satanism hype doesn't matter--the
fans do, and there are enough of them to have propelled the five-piece
hard-rock band to platinum status. While they've landed on morality-
czar William Bennett's hit list, Marilyn Manson's disciples revel in
their outside-looking-in status: being called "filth and crap" by
America's self-declared "cultural warrior" has done nothing but
increase the fervor of the band's hard-core fans.
If you're a death-metal neophyte, you should note that Marilyn
Manson is both the name of a band from Florida and the name of that
band's lead singer; for the most part, the two are the same. Marilyn
Manson, the singer, came into the world as Brian Warner, a
Midwestern boy who spent a fairly typical childhood in Canton, Ohio:
his parents stayed together, he hung out at the malls, and he spent
plenty of time making crank phone calls, just like any other red-
blooded American kid. All of which makes you wonder where his
newfound persona came from. Perhaps most all-American boys
relish the idea of becoming the latest personification of Ozzy
Osbourne.
When he turned eighteen, Warner moved to Florida, where he worked
as a music critic in the Tampa Bay area. In 1989, he bumped into a
guitarist who, in his post-Manson incarnation, goes by Scott Mitchell.
The two hit it off, and discovered they shared some similar ideas
about the South Florida music scene. Taking his influences from
tabloid talk shows and his name from two sixties icons, Manson
convinced Mitchell to change his name to Daisy Berkowitz (a freak-
show combo of Daisy Duke and Son of Sam killer David Berkowitz),
thereby setting the stage for the names of the new band members
over the years. When bassist Gidget Gein and keyboardist Madonna
Wayne-Gacy joined up, they actually had a real band--Marilyn
Manson and the Spooky Kids--complete with paying gigs, their own
cassettes, and some homegrown special effects (everything from
Manson's makeup to Lite-Brite toys reading "Kill God" and "Anal
Fun"). They soon replaced their drum machine with Sara Lee Lucas
(later replaced by Ginger Fish)--a change that gave them much more
of a hard-core than an industrial sound--and in 1992, they were
nominated by fans for both Best Hard Alternative Band and Band of
the Year in South Florida's Slammies awards.
Deciding that the entire band name was too much to swallow, they
sliced their moniker down to, simply, Marilyn Manson. This didn't
seem to confuse their fans a bit, and during the summer of 1993,
they racked up five more Slammie nominations, and won the hefty
honor of Band of the Year. More importantly, Trent Reznor dished
them up a recording contract with his Nothing Records label, and the
chance to open for Nine Inch Nails in the spring of 1994. Manson
accepted both offers, and the troop laid down their first full-length
album, Portrait of an American Family, which was released in July of
1994.
The Nine Inch Nails tour started giving the Mansons the exposure
they craved. Twiggy Ramirez had come onboard as the new bassist,
replacing the drug-addled Gidget Gein, and the tour generated several
episodes which have gone down in Marilyn Manson lore. Banned by
the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Manson was invited up onstage
by Reznor during NIN's set, at which point he proceeded to rip apart
a copy of the Book of Mormon, which led to a frenzied trashing of the
dressing rooms. In October of 1994, he arranged a meeting with Dr.
Anton Szandor LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan, who bestowed
upon Manson the title of "Reverend."
Back in Florida after the tour, Manson quickly wound up in jail on a
charge of "violation of the Adult Entertainment Code" following a
nudity-filled gig in Jacksonville. As soon as Manson was sprung, the
band went on tour again, this time as headliners. In South Carolina
they ran into the greatest controversy of their young careers: the
chicken incident. Apparently, the band decided to toss a chicken
from the stage and into the vicious wilds of the mosh pit during their
show. But instead of being shredded by belligerent fans, the bird was
eventually rescued by a Marilyn Manson/PETA fan. Still, the
chicken's ultimate fate did nothing to dispel rumors of Manson
offering sacrifices to Satan, not to mention the murmur that he had
removed several of his own ribs in order to perform fellatio on himself.
The EP Smells Like Children was released in October of 1995, and
Marilyn Manson's cover of the Eurythmics classic "Sweet Dreams
(Are Made of This)" grabbed airplay, MTV, and media attention.
Suddenly, it became cool to dig Marilyn Manson. A five-month
weather-bludgeoned tour followed; highlights included Manson
shoving Berkowitz off the stage on New Year's Eve, and a snowed-in
night in Allentown, Pennsylvania, during which the Mansons found
themselves trapped in the same hotel and the same bar as the
touring company of "Sesame Street Live" and the Orlando Magic
basketball team.
Upon their return to Florida, Berkowitz quit the band, and although
he's credited in the liner notes, some insiders claim he doesn't
actually appear on Marilyn Manson's 1996 LP, Antichrist Superstar.
(The band placed an ad in the Village Voice to find a new guitar
player, and after sifting through 150 responses, they finally settled on
a Chicagoan dubbed Zim Zum.) The album, which was released in
October of 1996, debuted at the No. 3 spot on Billboard's charts and
acquired general critical acclaim. The songs were lyrically deeper
and far more intense than their earlier carnival-style efforts; it was a
far more "serious" effort than the Mansons had yet produced.
Currently, Marilyn Manson is at the top of its rather peculiar genre.
Shortly after the release of Antichrist Superstar, you couldn't spit
without hitting a new fan wearing a Manson T-shirt or a mainstream
magazine carrying Manson interviews. If you owned a radio during
this period of time, the single "The Beautiful People" was
unavoidable. Some fans have realized that once the media came
crawling to him, Manson embraced them as willingly as he had
embraced the Devil himself, and the sincerity of his actions has been
questioned. After all, it's tough to be on the outside looking in when
you're sitting in a hot tub talking to Rolling Stone. Many of his
followers have started to wonder whether Marilyn Manson really is a
dedicated Satanist death-rocker--or just a cagey con man who has
been superbly manipulating the system. Of course, this raises
another question: do people really expect sincerity from their Satanic
heroes?
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