*European pressing.
Contains 12 tracks total.
Country: U.S.A.Genre: Industrial Rock
Label Number: 0602517365230
© 2007 Interscope Records
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
© 2007 Interscope Records
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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.
tags: marylin manson, eat me drink me, 2007, flac,
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