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Eat Me, Drink Me

 
Album Review: Eat Me, Drink Me

  • Artist: Marilyn Manson
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: June 05, 2007
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

It's been a long time since Marilyn Manson truly seemed like a transgressive force, but when you spend a lifetime crafting a persona as a rock & roll boogeyman, it's not only hard to shake that image, it's unlikely that you'd want to shake it. Manson has never shown any indication that he's wanted to change, which somehow came as a surprise to his betrothed, burlesque diva Dita Von Teese, who according to published reports in the wake of their divorce seemed shocked, shocked that Manson wanted to stay up late and take drugs, the kind of eternally adolescent behavior that only rock & roll stars can get away with as they approach 40. Better for Marilyn to sever that marriage and turn toward a true teenager: Evan Rachel Wood, the blandly pretty star of Thirteen who provided MM with a brand-new muse for Eat Me, Drink Me, his sixth studio album. Frankly, Manson probably needed something to shake up his music, which started to become comfortably predictable in the wake of his popular/creative peak of Mechanical Animals, but the stab at soul-baring on Eat Me might not have been the way to do it. But Manson is such a true believer in rock & roll mythos that he's wound up embracing the cliché of the post-divorce confessional album, peppering this album with songs about broken relationships and new love. Personal songs are unusual for Manson, but that doesn't mean he's abandoned his tendency to write about grand concepts. The difference is that this time around, Manson himself is the grand concept -- there's no excursions into neo-glam or decadent German glamour -- which may give him a lyrical hook, but not a musical one. On a sonic level this is a bit of Manson-by-numbers -- all his signatures are in place, from the liberal appropriations of Diamond Dogs to the cheerful immersion in dirges and his tuneless vampire drone -- but it feels as if his usual murky menace has lifted, with the music sounding clearer, less affected, and obtuse, while still retaining much of its gothic romanticism and churning heaviness. If anything, Eat Me is a bit too transparent, as its clean arena rock production -- all pumped up on steroids, devoid of much grit -- makes the album sound safe, a bit too close to Manson cabaret for comfort, especially when he's penning songs whose very titles feel like unwitting self-parodies ("If I Was Your Vampire," "You and Me and the Devil Makes 3," "They Said That Hell's Not Hot"), or when he lazily spews out profanity as the chorus to "Mutilation Is the Sincerest Form of Flattery." These are the moments where Manson seems like the eternal teenager, unwilling and unable to grow up, and they provide a bitter ironic counterpoint to the rest of the record, where he is striving for an emotional honesty he's never attempted before. Put these two halves together, and Eat Me, Drink Me becomes an intriguing muddle, an interesting portrait of Manson at the cusp of middle-age melancholy even if as sheer music it's the least visceral or compelling he's ever been. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
If I Was Your Vampire (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (5:56)
Putting Holes in Happiness (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:31)
The Red Carpet Grave Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:05)
They Said That Hell's Not Hot Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:16)
Just a Car Crash Away (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:54)
Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (5:05)
Evidence (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (5:19)
Are You the Rabbit? Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:14)
Mutilation Is the Most Sincere Form of Flattery (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (3:52)
You and Me and the Devil Makes 3 (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (4:24)
Eat Me, Drink Me (Lyrics) Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold (5:40)

Credits

Tim Skold (Programming), Tim Skold (Producer), Tim Skold (Engineer), Tim Skold (Performer), Sean Beavan (Mixing), Liam Ward (Art Direction), Liam Ward (Design), Mark Williams (A&R)
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Wikipedia: Eat Me, Drink Me
Top
Eat Me, Drink Me
Studio album by Marilyn Manson
Released June 5, 2007 (2007-June-05)
Recorded October 31, 2006–February 26, 2007 in Hollywood, California
Genre Alternative rock
Gothic rock
Industrial rock
Length 52:22
Label Interscope
Producer Marilyn Manson, Tim Skold
Professional reviews
Marilyn Manson chronology
Lest We Forget: The Best of
(2004)
Eat Me, Drink Me
(2007)
The High End of Low
(2009)
Singles from Eat Me, Drink Me
  1. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)"
    Released: April 17, 2007
  2. "Putting Holes in Happiness"
    Released: October 19, 2007

Eat Me, Drink Me is Marilyn Manson's sixth studio album, released worldwide on June 5, 2007. Eat Me, Drink Me was recorded in a rented home-recording studio in Hollywood, California by lead vocalist Marilyn Manson and guitarist and bassist Tim Skold. A press-conference with Manson in April 2007 revealed that the album itself was a collaboration strictly between himself and Tim Skold. It was produced by Marilyn Manson and Tim Skold, and mixed by Sean Beavan.[1] It has been stated that there were originally around 20 embryonic songs, all written by Skold, 2 of which (that didn't make the album) Manson considered complete with lyrics and vocals. Manson stated that he had a difficult time cutting some of them, but felt he had to in order to prevent the album from being "diluted". This album was also the last to feature Tim Skold's contributions, having been replaced by Twiggy Ramirez the following January.[2]

Contents

Background information

Manson decided not to give up music and recorded a duet of “Don't You Want Me” with Shirley Manson. This was originally intended to support the forthcoming ‘best of’ release but was felt by both artists not to live up to their standards and has yet to see release.

Lest We Forget was released on September 28, 2004. It was referred to by the singer as his "farewell" album; however, he insisted that it would not be the final Marilyn Manson album. After the release of the single "Personal Jesus", the band made a number of promotional appearances. Lest We Forget was certified Gold in 2005. When promotion for Lest We Forget concluded the band returned to the studio and recorded eight embryonic songs – some of which had vocals, and one notably a tribute to Andy Warhol. It was supported by the Against All Gods world tour.

The Against All Gods tour was marked by one release, a 2005 EP of "The Nobodies" featuring a new mix of the song (by Chris Vrenna) and other remixes.

Recording

Manson began his singing on the album in November 2005 but was focused on his film Phantasmagoria, the process of opening an art gallery and personal troubles relating to his marriage. It was after opening the gallery, the Celebritarian Corporation Gallery of Fine Art on Halloween night of 2006, that Manson really began his contribution as a singer by working out melodies and structures around Skold's already existing compositions, writing lyrics quickly and usually recording on the same day. One result of this is that the album features six guitar solos from Tim Skold (comprising 3 minutes, 39 seconds of the album in total) and many other guitar moments while bass and keyboards – both played also by Skold – feature much less than on a usual Marilyn Manson release. Manson explained that "[he] was writing in the way you would write a diary" and as a result thinks that the record was written from a "more mature musical point of view."[3] Sonically the album is predominantly mid-tempo and is said to be Manson's most melodic work to date. Manson has since revealed that he sang most of the album lying down on the studio floor with his hands cupping the studio mic, resulting in a very distinctive vocal sound. Of Skold’s compositions a further two are said to have been turned into fully-fledged songs with lyrics, music and vocals completed but were not put onto album for fear of making it overwrought. Manson has raised the possibility of using the two as starting points for his next potential album, in which Manson has not confirmed or denied. On an interview in Denmark, Manson talked about Phantasmagoria, Eat Me, Drink Me, and Manson has said he will work on a new album as soon as his current tour has ended.

Activity

Manson announced via his website in mid-January that the record was ‘nearly finished’, titled Eat Me, Drink Me, and that the band would be touring the world in support of the record that is scheduled for release on June 5, 2007. The album's artwork (primarily the work of Nela Koening, Perou and Anthony Silva) was wrapped up in early February thus bringing an end to the creative process in preparation for the imminent promotion and publicization of details.

On February 26, 2007, Rolling Stone writer Austin Scaggs revealed his opinion in the Smoking Section column, writing:

[I was] blown away as Manson debuted his new album, Eat Me, Drink Me. The key cut is "If I Was Your Vampire," a six-minute epic…If anyone thought Manson was down for the count, think again.

Since then Manson appeared in Rolling Stone four times - the March article 'Manson's Dark Return', a further paragraph from the Smoking Section, a mention in the 50 Albums To Look Forward To This Summer issue and a small snippet featuring an explicit picture of Manson and Evan Rachel Wood in a hotel after the Heart-Shaped Glasses video shoot in which a naked Wood lies over Manson who has his fingers in the vicinity of her anus. Other publications to include original content with Manson have been the April issue of UK magazine Rock Sound ('Marilyn Manson Lays Soul Bare', the May issue of Revolver (Feeding Frenzy), an interview with French RockMag, an MTV online piece focusing on Manson’s suicidal ideation, a longer, more in-depth interview in Rock Sound (Alas, In Wonderland), a long, very descriptive and open piece in The Observer Magazine (The Life and Loves of a He-Devil), a partial transcript of a friendly chat with Alejandro Jodorowsky, an interview in Germany’s lifestyle monthly BlondMag, the cover story of June’s Spin magazine stretched out over eight pages entitled ‘The Last Rock Star?’, an article in Rolling Stone from Austin Scaggs who spends a fair amount of time with Manson judging by the five pieces in four months he has contributed, The Sun newspaper’s Something For The Weekend section.

Manson appeared twice on BBC Radio 1; on April 17 on the Zane Lowe Show and on May 23 in the Live Lounge where he and Skold performed an acoustic version of "Heart-Shaped Glasses" and a cover of Justin Timberlake’s "What Goes Around Comes Around", having been given a choice by the station of Timberlake, Green Day, Amy Winehouse or Muse.

To promote the album Manson first traveled to France, the UK and Germany where he held both press conferences and listening parties. Similar listening parties for journalists and fan club administrators took place in other European countries and America. Measures taken to prevent an unauthorized recording or copy of the album from leaking included bag searching and the prohibition of recording devices and mobile phones.

Promotion

On April 15, 2007 Marilyn Manson’s Interscope-administered Myspace page went live with promotional artwork. The next day "If I Was Your Vampire" was added to the player as Myspace Music’s ‘Single of the Week’. Hours later Manson’s official website went through a revision to coincide with the imagery of the new album. Later still but on the same day Interscope e-mailed out a press release containing the album artwork by Nela Koenig. Two days later Interscope opened a VampireFreaks account for Manson. The album leaked onto P2P networks on May 1, Manson said he was unconcerned by the leak as it mainly affects record companies and not the artists.

The next significant promotion – aside from the flood of magazine articles – took place on May 18 with the uploading to the official website of the album's 16-page linear booklet. The uploading coincided with Manson’s in store signing at Hot Topic in California where fans who had obtained an entry wristband days prior were given a copy of the booklet for Manson to sign though he signed other items on fans request for two hours. Also available at the event, and now available in Hot Topic stores and online shop, is an exclusive 2-track "Heart-Shaped Glasses" single. All Hot Topic stores across the USA held listening parties for the album on May 25. The stores are also added three new official t-shirts to the racks to coincide with the party and Manson recorded linking material for the songs.

Newbury Comics gave away licensed Eat Me, Drink Me pint glasses with each pre-order of the album. Further promotional oddities were to be found in the UK where boxes were distributed containing chocolates marked ‘Eat Me’ and mini bottles of Tequila with 'Drink Me' on the back.

An official Eat Me, Drink Me mini-site was discovered through a link found in the EU "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" single. The site, www.marilynmansonvault.com, contains lyrics, a photo gallery, a mosaic, and the ability to stream up to two tracks per day starting on May 28, 2007. Upon completion of the mosaic, an Eat Me, Drink Me wallpaper becomes available for download, and three preview tracks ("Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)", "If I Was Your Vampire", and "Evidence") become available for streaming. The official release of the single coincided with the opening of the vault itself (for those with the single) to access a screensaver, ringtone and two ‘classic tracks for download’ ("Disposable Teens" & "The Dope Show").

On May 31, the entire album was uploaded for streaming on Marilyn Manson's MySpace page, five days prior to its American release. Eat Me, Drink Me worldwide has sold more than 4 million copies as of May 2009.

Track listing

# Title Length
1. "If I Was Your Vampire"   5:56
2. "Putting Holes in Happiness"   4:31
3. "The Red Carpet Grave"   4:05
4. "They Said That Hell's Not Hot"   4:17
5. "Just a Car Crash Away"   4:55
6. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)"   5:05
7. "Evidence"   5:19
8. "Are You the Rabbit?"   4:14
9. "Mutilation is the Most Sincere Form of Flattery"   3:52
10. "You and Me and the Devil Makes 3"   4:24
11. "EAT ME, DRINK ME"   5:40

Bonus tracks

# Title Length
12. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (Inhuman Remix)" (International bonus track) 4:07
13. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (Space Cowboy Remix)" (UK/AU bonus track) 5:24
14. "Putting Holes in Happiness (Acoustic Version)" (Japan bonus track) 4:10
15. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand) (Penetrate the Canvas Remix)" (Best Buy bonus track) 4:48

Bonus DVD

Audio
# Title Length
1. "Putting Holes in Happiness (Boys Noize Remix)"   5:37
2. "Putting Holes in Happiness (Robots to Mars Mix)"   4:23
3. "Putting Holes in Happiness (Guitar Hero Remix)"   3:44
4. "Putting Holes in Happiness (Ginger Fish Remix)"   3:15
5. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (Penetrate the Canvas Remix)"   4:48
6. "Heart-Shaped Glasses (Hamel Remix)"   7:01
7. "You and Me and the Devil Makes 3 (Adam Freeland Remix)"   5:38
Video
  • "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand) (Explicit)"
  • "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand) (Clean)"
  • "Putting Holes in Happiness"
  • Track by track interview

Singles

1st single: "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)"

On March 27, 2007, Charts in France reported that James Cameron was filming a new music video with Marilyn Manson called "When the Heart Guides the Hand"[4], which will use a special effect in 3D. The Heirophant reported that it is planned to be released on DVD, and on March 28, 2007, The Heirophant also reported that Evan Rachel Wood and the SuicideGirls were to have been involved in the video as well.[5]

On April 24, 2007, "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" was added to the Marilyn Manson's official MySpace page.

On April 27, 2007, Marilyn Manson released a clip featuring the last 34 seconds of the then upcoming music video for "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" on YouTube, and later on the official website. On May 8, 2007, the following week, the music video was world premiered on Sevenload.de. The song peaked at #24 on U.S. Modern Rock Tracks.

2nd single: "Putting Holes in Happiness"

"Putting Holes in Happiness" is Marilyn Manson's second single from the album. Written on his own birthday Marilyn Manson describes the song as being "a romantic-misogynistic-cannibal-gothic-vampire ballad".

Personnel

Chart positions

Album

Year Chart Peak
position
2007 Australia 9
2007 Austria 2
2007 Belgium (Flanders) 19
2007 Belgium (Wallonia) 9
2007 Canada 8
2007 Croatia 7
2007 Czech Republic 12
2007 Netherlands 38
2007 Estonia 1
2007 France 5
2007 Finland 9
2007 Germany 4
2007 Greece 7
2007 Hungary 32
2007 Ireland 23
2007 Italy 8
2007 Japan Oricon 7
2007 Korea 2
2007 Mexico 12
2007 Norway 12
2007 New Zealand 18
2007 Poland 36
2007 Portugal 25
2007 Spain 7
2007 Sweden 10
2007 Switzerland 4
2007 Turkey 1
2007 U.S. Billboard 200 8
2007 UK 8

Singles

Year Single Chart Peak
position
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" U.S. Modern Rock Tracks 31
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" U.S. Mainstream Rock Tracks 24
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" UK Singles Chart 19
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" Sweden Singles Chart 27
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" Austria Singles Chart 41
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" Irish Singles Chart 46
2007 "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)" Germany Singles Chart 49
2007 "Putting Holes In Happiness" Germany Singles Chart 83

References

  1. ^ Dan Epstein. Feeding Frenzy, Revolver magazine, reported by The Heirophant May 2007. Last accessed March 23, 2007.
  2. ^ The Heirophant. The Red Carpet Grave, reported by The Heirophant May 2007. Last accessed May 23, 2007.
  3. ^ "Manson Interview with Oliver Tanson". Oliver Tanson. http://www.olivertanson.com/audioplayer.php?id=3427&name=Marilyn Manson. Retrieved 2008-01-08. 
  4. ^ Thierry Cadet. Marilyn Manson tourne avec James Cameron, Charts in France, March 27, 2007.
  5. ^ Norsefire. Marilyn Manson Includes Suicide Girls In New Video, The Heirophant, March 28, 2007.

External links



 
 

 

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