Marilyn Manson
Who is the Antichrist What it took him to get there
An Unofficial Chronology and History of Marilyn Manson

by Golgotha


Our subject is a five-piece band from the Fort Lauderdale area of southern Florida, previously best known for its metal
scene. By all reports, it was founded sometime in 1989, when a restless journalism major with a dark exacting take on
American culture and a notebook full of poem/commentaries met an equally restless guitarist-composer with five bands
behind him and an itch to do something really different. The writer had done some music coverage for local publications; the
musician had last been involved in a Cocteau Twins/Sonic Youth blend of ethereal noise called India Loves You; neither was
content. Lyrics and music clicked, and the pair joined forces.

The writer's first move was to change his name. Immersed for months in tabloid TV shows, he had decided on one that he
felt displayed the entire spectrum he wanted to project, borrowed from two classic icons of the 1960s: Marilyn Manson. The
guitarist agreeably followed suit and became Daisy Berkowitz, setting the pattern for all members of the band until 1996.

By 1990 they were Marilyn Manson and the Spooky Kids: Manson singing and Berkowitz as lead guitarist, drum machine
programmer and general tech whiz kid. Their earliest known lineup included Olivia Newton-Bundy on bass (Brian Tutunick,
later to join Florida metallers Collapsing Lungs before moving on to Nation of Fear), Zsa Zsa Speck on keyboards (a
shadowy figure who wasn't there long and may have been named Perry) and a nameless drum machine. Newton-Bundy and
Speck were soon replaced by bassist Gidget Gein and keyboardist Madonna Wayne Gacy.

Their first cassette releases, Meat Beat Cleaver Beat big black bus, were created during this membership shakeup. Except
for confirmation that MBCB is the band's first release, no information of any kind has turned up regarding it. According to
studio engineer "Graveyard Ralph" Cavallaro, the lineup on big black bus was solely Manson and Berkowitz - Gein and
Gacy, though in the band at the time, did not play on these sessions. Keyboard effects were created by the versatile
Berkowitz (who also played both lead and bass guitars and programmed the drum machine) on a Yamaha RX8 synthesizer.

Among their gigs at this point was one which which would have far-reaching consequences: they opened a show on Nine
Inch Nails' summer tour. NiN was still embroiled in the TVT battle, and Trent's ownership of his own label was a long way
off, but he liked the young band ("It must have something to do with both of us coming from the Midwest," says the
Ohio-born Manson, though probably only a relocated Floridian would think of Mercer, PA, as Midwestern) and became a
friend and informal mentor. Manson and Reznor would stay in touch and trade tapes over the following few years.

The Spooky Kids were set apart from the start by Manson's ambitious and imaginative promotional campaign. The
memorable logo he designed - the now-well-known black and white "Eyes" design - displayed "MARILYN MANSON" in
a dripping monster-movie font with narrow images of Marilyn Manson's seductive gaze above and Charlie Manson's
wild-eyed stare below. The band wasted no time in getting this striking visual onto a line of T-shirts and stickers, a move
credited with grabbing them a good deal of local attention. Meanwhile, connections Manson had made while wearing his
journalist hat helped to spread the band's name and get tracks from big black bus onto local radio.

At the same time, the Spooks were tossing a wide range of theatrical, visual, and shock devices into their rapidly evolving
stage presentation. Anything might turn up, from a Lite-Brite [TM] toy arranged to read "Kill God" or "Anal Fun" and
peanut-butter-&-jelly sandwiches tossed from the stage, to caged or crucified girls, skinned goats' heads, nudity and arson.
Manson might wear an entire outfit of stripes or a woman's bathing suit while playing Charles Manson soundbites or reading
from "The Cat in the Hat". Gacy had a little booth marked "Pogo's Playhouse" standing over his keyboard (he had already
adopted child-killer Gacy's clown pseudonym as his own nickname). Berkowitz might play in skirt, halter and long blonde
wig, guitar worn low and cigarette hanging off his lip, born to the role of cute debutante gone bad. Anything was fair game for
maximum effect.

It's hard to be this flexible while tied to a programmed rhythm track, so in 1991, the Spooks retired their drum machine, an
event celebrated by a jubilant little newsletter. Illustrated with a mixture that would become a band trademark - Manson's
morbid cartoons and band caricatures, altered Dr. Seuss figures, guns, needles, and characters from "Scooby-Doo" - it
welcomes Sara Lee Lucas, who is credited with "baked goods and percussion". The addition was a good one, and the band
began to draw notice. By now they were writing and performing songs that are still staples of their repertoire, including
"Cake and Sodomy" and "My Monkey". (They carried lunchboxes, too.) By the time South Florida's Slammies, designed to
offer recognition to the overlooked thrash, hardcore and "hard alternative" scene, held nominations for its first award show in
1992, the Spooks' fan following was large and vocal enough to get them nominated for both Best Hard Alternative Band and
Band of the Year.

Another 1992 event of note was the "Miami Rocks" East Coast Music Forum, held Jan. 30 - Feb. 2 1992 at the Button
South. A promotional event designed by local music business folk to draw national attention to the Florida scene, it featured
bands submitted for consideration by area managers and chosen by a panel that included radio and recording studio reps.
Marilyn Manson made the cut (beating out their then-manager John Tovar's other submission, the redoubtable
Amboog-A-Lard) and played on February 1st. A cassette tape was issued to promote this event.

Some of the aforementioned fan loyalty is almost certainly due to the band's direct efforts to connect with its listeners. They
issued a newsletter, designed and distributed elaborately illustrated concept flyers for shows, and operated an answering
machine "hot line", evidently taking the role of mentor quite seriously. In a 1991 Florida newspaper article on the band,
Manson explains that he wrote the lyrics of "Learning To Swim" in response to a request for advice, and says, "...in this
position I've put myself in, I have the responsibility of influencing the minds of teenagers. So I do choose my words...because
I care. I care about what I say." [Such earnest gravity, from someone all of 22 years old at the time. Though the nickname
was frequently used with perverse overtones, it's still no wonder that fans began calling him Daddy.]

Another means of staying in touch, and one that's perhaps more interesting to current fans, was the band's series of
self-produced and self-marketed cassettes. It's difficult to get exact dates on these, but the first - as stated above - was
reportedly Meat Beat Cleaver Beat, followed by 1990's big black bus, named for the vehicle used by the original Manson
Family - Charlie's, that is. An entire side of this was reportedly taken up by answering machine messages, a practice the
band has never abandoned. big black bus may have been followed by a phantom title, Snuffy's VCR (there's no
documented proof of its existence); it was definitely followed by the very real Grist-O-Line, Refrigerator, Lunchbox,
After-School Special, and The Family Jams cassettes, the last in 1992. (That's another original Manson reference - The
Family Jams was the name of the rock group Charlie tried to organize from among Family members.) Produced and mixed
by the multi-capable Berkowitz and decorated with more of the above-mentioned idiosyncratic artwork, these little gems
feature the first recorded versions and variations of "Cake and Sodomy", "Dope Hat", "Lunchbox", "My Monkey", "Dogma"
(as "Strange Same Dogma"), and "Cyclops", along with a wealth of otherwise unavailable originals. Though produced in tiny
batches -Refrigerator was an edition of only 100 copies - and sold only at the band's shows and in local record stores, the
cassettes still prove the Spooks' determination not only to be heard but to be presented on their own terms and maintain
complete creative control.

By the end of 1992 the name "Marilyn Manson and the Spooky Kids" had apparently become too awkward, and was
trimmed to just Marilyn Manson. This caused some temporary confusion with the lead singer's chosen name, but after tossing
it around a little (he's credited as simply "M. Manson" on the Refrigerator cassette and as "Mr. No Name Manson" on The
Family Jams) he settled on the semiformal "Mr. Manson" for general purposes

None of the changes troubled the fans one bit. They turned out loyally in the voting for the 1993 Slammies, piling up a stack
of nominations for MM: Band of the Year, Best Hard Alternative Band, Best Local Release (the Family Jams cassette),
Song of the Year ("Dope Hat") , and even a Best Vocalist nomination for Mr. Marilyn Manson. "Dope Hat" won in its
category, and the Mansons collected their first Band of the Year award. --Mr. Manson also added a memorable touch to
the ceremony as presenter of the Best National Release award, which went to Saigon Kick for The Lizard. To a chorus of
boos from the crowd (home-state fans considered SK to have abandoned them at their first touch of national fame), Manson
ascertained that there was no representative to collect their engraved ceramic skull, and simply tossed it into the moshpit,
where it was stamped to bits. (Amusing side note. Manson had a cohort in this small crime: the Slammie-winning rhythm
guitarist for local metal band Amboog-A-Lard, a close friend of Manson's. Within the year he would undergo a magical
transformation...)

The summer of 1993 was a busy stretch for the Mansons, who picked up not only their first Slammies but a genuine
recording contract. Having finally won a measure of independence from TVT, and launched his own label, nothing, Trent
Reznor had offered the band nothing's first contract plus a support position on his upcoming "Self-Destruct '94" spring tour.
Both were accepted, and they headed into Criteria Studios to begin recording their first LP, Portrait of an American
Family.

The sessions, however, didn't go well. Reznor, then busy with The Downward Spiral, assigned producer Roli Mossiman to
the band. Mossiman, who had worked with Young Gods, Machines of Loving Grace, and Jim Thirwell's multi-named Foetus
project, was expected to bring a raw sound to the mix. By all reports, however, he did just the opposite. The band was
unhappy with the results they were getting, feeling that the sound was being smoothed and polished out of all recognition.
Manson: "I thought, 'This really sucks.' So I played it for Trent, and he thought it sucked." Reznor, supporting the band's
decision, took over the production reins, and they spent seven grueling weeks of fifteen-hour days in L.A.'s Record Plant,
tearing down, repairing, even recreating parts of Portrait from scratch. (Reznor is credited as Executive Producer on the
LP.) In January 1994, the project was finally finished and presented - doubtless with a collective sigh of relief - to
Interscope, distributor for nothing.

By Christmas 1993, however, bassist Gein was no longer a member of Marilyn Manson. In Mr. Manson's words, "he felt
that his drug addiction was more important than playing bass for us." (One might speculate that it was the stress of the studio
marathon that forced the issue.) His replacement was - you guessed it - that aforementioned member of Amboog-A-Lard,
who was apparently more than willing to mutate from jeans-wearing rhythm guitarist to transvestite bass player. In a move
that caused harsh words and a reportedly permanent chill between the Amboogies and the Mansons, Twiggy Ramirez
became the newest member of Marilyn Manson.

While Twig went into training for the NiN tour, Interscope's qualms about Portrait were settled (two photos were removed
from the design for the sleeve, including a childhood shot of Mr. Manson, discreetly nude), and things seemed to be on a
relatively smooth upward course for the band. Their first single was "Get Your Gunn", released with accompanying - and
widely unplayed - video on June 9, 1994, followed by the LP on July 12. The album's release was celebrated by the band
and 1200 or so close friends on July 3rd at the 1994 Slammie Awards, where the Mansons headlined the show and won
their second "Grand Slammie" for Band of the Year. Mr. Manson also collected that year's skull (plus a free tattoo) for Best
Vocalist, his only receipt of that honor.

[Side note: Fans will have noticed that in the sleeve and promotional photos for POAAF and its singles, Mr. Manson is still
wearing blue contact lenses in both eyes. It's not certain when he decided to wear only one lens, creating the bicolored
blue/brown stare that has become his trademark. Quite possibly one blue lens was simply lost or damaged. It is however
definite that the blue eye is a contact lens and not a glass or artificial eye; in early Spooky Kids video footage his normal
amber-brown color is clearly visible in both eyes.]

After some scattered May and July 1994 dates with NiN, the band officially hit the road with them for fourteen weeks, from
August 29th to December 11th. This was, without a doubt, the major breakthrough of Marilyn Manson's career, establishing
in one swoop virtually their entire non-Florida fan base. Their powerful material, combined with an intense and highly visual
stage show which had developed and tightened steadily since the early days of animal entrails and women in cages, made
instant converts. (Footnote: It also caused enough invasion of new MM fans into the Usenet newsgroup alt.music.nin that the
eventual proposal to establish alt.music.marilyn-manson passed virtually unchallenged. Today the band is represented on the
Internet not only by that newsgroup, but also by at least two mailing lists and a constantly-growing host of Web pages. In
fact, if you look up the name "Manson" in AltaVista, you'll find more citations for Marilyn than for Charlie.)

The tour produced several incidents which have made their way into MM history, notably the Salt Lake City, Utah, show on
October 18th. Though this episode is commonly blamed on the city's notoriously conservative Mormon patriarchy, it was
actually an independent decision by the equally tense management of the evening's venue, the Delta Center. Center staff had
gotten advance warning about the Mansons and sent a delegation to view their October 16th show in Las Vegas, which they
found objectionable on several points. As a result, the Center first made some stipulations about the presentation (which
were accepted by NiN and MM); then, when the tour reached town, decreed that Nine Inch Nails would be allowed to
play, but MM - though they would be paid - were forbidden to play unless they met an additional and more stringent list of
conditions. According to a SLCity radio interview with Manson at the time, these conditions included demands that Manson
not say anything between songs, that he alter the lyrics of certain songs, and that MM not sell any of its t-shirts or other
merchandise at the venue.

The bands allegedly agreed to these terms, but during NiN's set the newly-ordained Reverend Manson was invited to join
Trent onstage. He brought along a copy of the Book of Mormon. Reznor read a letter explaining why MM was forbidden to
play, then offered his candid opinion of the letter and the situation in general. The Reverend made a few pointed comments
about sin and the crowd's general beliefs, shredded the book (intoning the old daisy-petal chant "He loves me, He loves me
not..." topped off with a bitter "--xxxx Him!"), tossed it to the crowd and went off to help trash the dressing room. --When a
Salt Lake City date was announced for the 1996-97 tour, no one was surprised to see that it was not at the Delta Center.
(Or that it, too, was eventually postponed and relocated out of town.)

October, it should be noted here, had already included an event of personal importance, namely Mr. Manson's meeting with
Dr. Anton Szandor LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan. Long influenced by LaVey's writings and philosophy, Manson
arranged the meeting while the band was in California, and the two had an apparently cordial conversation. "He shared with
me a lot of very important things that I've taken into effect in my life," said Manson to Seconds magazine, "and he also
expressed that he felt Marilyn Manson was one of the more Satanic bands to come around in our time.... I was very happy
that he noticed me for what I was doing." As a "reward for my good work", Dr. LaVey named Manson a priest of the CoS,
and he has accordingly taken to using the title "Reverend", particularly when signing his writings. (It also seems to be his
favorite form of direct address.) --The California date nearest to LaVey's San Francisco residence was in Oakland on Oct.
14th, so Mr. Manson quite probably received his new title a mere few days before the Salt Lake City show.

The other incident which has become well-known is the elaborate hazing which NiN engineered and excuted on the hapless
Mansons on the last night of the tour, December 11th. Something was expected, Manson explains, since it's commonplace
for the headliners to prank the opening act at tour's end. This one, however, began before MM's set with a fistxxxxing dare
(Manson duly performed the deed), followed by a dousing in salsa and baby powder; male strippers sent onstage during the
set; a further dousing after the show (whipped cream this time), and the topper: handcuffing the Mansons, hauling them away
in a pickup truck, and stranding them, soaking wet in 25-degree weather and with exactly $1.00 between them, in the very
nasty downtown area of Philadelphia with a parting "Find your way home." By a nearly miraculous turn of luck, they were
able to persuade some college students to drive them back to the venue. (Manson has commented that he was able to
respect this, as it represented considerably more cruelty to a friend than he thought himself capable of, but what he thought at
the time can only be imagined.)

After this, the Mansons may have counted themselves lucky to be back in Florida's relatively friendly surroundings, but by
now they had seemingly become a trouble magnet. Hardly more than two weeks later, kicking off a set of four in-state dates
at Jacksonville's Club 5, they discovered that their audience included a clutch of vice cops. Mr. Manson was arrested after
the set, harrassed, and spent sixteen hours in jail on a charge of "violation of the Adult Entertainment Code" - i.e., public
nudity. Club management had been under pressure from the Christian Coalition to cancel the band's performance, and
Manson has said he feels the club basically handed them over to the law.(--When MM played the same club about six
months later on the Danzig tour, their set was cut short by a sudden loss of electricity. Curious...)

With the second single from POAAF, "Lunchbox", now in release - accompanied by a video shot in 48 hours snatched from
the NiN tour back in September, under the direction of notorous underground filmmaker Richard Kern - the Mansons hit the
road once again for two months in early 1995, this time headlining, with Monster Voodoo Machine as support. MVM, an
energetic hard rock-metal outfit, proved a fairly comfortable fit, and the shows were impressive. However, the next key
element in the MM pocket mythology - the chicken - was about to assume prominence, and MVM must be held somewhat
responsible.

Once again, it was the last night, this time March 11th, at Alcatrazz in Columbia SC. Acting on the January 13th incident at
Trees in Dallas TX -- in which MM knocked a caged chicken around the stage, then tossed it into the mosh pit, and were
later widely reported to have killed/sacrificed the bird (though it in fact escaped without losing more than a few feathers) --
MVM blanketed the stage with chicken parts, forcing the Mansons to perform in a slippery minefield of raw meat. [To be
fair, the Mansons, having apparently learned bad habits from NiN, had sent their road crew to assault MVM during their set
and plaster them with eggs, tomatoes, flour and vinegar; "got the makings of a complete Greek salad up here," cracked
MVM singer Adam at one point. However, the voodoo monsters' retaliation was particularly inspired.] The set was
disastrous, exacerbated by an indifferent-to-hostile audience, but some of MM's improvisations - notably MWG's "kill the
chicken!" and of course "Next motherxxxxer's gonna get my chicken" - became staples of the following tour, along with a
flock of similar references. (We can testify that during at least one 1995 Ohio soundcheck the band was heard to play a
thunderous new song with a chorus that unmistakably howled "Kill the chicken, break its wings!" Pity it wasn't committed to
tape.)

It should also be mentioned here that the previous night's show had featured another milestone, namely the last straw for
drummer Sara Lee Lucas. Relations between Manson and Lucas had reportedly been tense for much of the tour (the
Limelight show had featured a running barrage of water bottles and drumsticks between the two), and Manson had been
repeatedly frustrated during the North and South Carolina gigs by local ordinances barring elements of their performance.
Bad combination. Mistakenly believing this was the last night of the tour (he overlooked the Alcatrazz gig, which had been
scheduled to make up for an earlier cancellation), he decided to go all-out with his beloved butane, torching not only his usual
lunchbox but Sara's drum kit for a grand finale. Problem is, Sara was still behind it at the time, and found his exit route
suddenly blocked by a bank of flame. The unnerved drummer lost some hair in his hasty escape, and by several reports, quit
as soon as the tour was over. (Later remarks from Manson that Sara couldn't keep time may or may not be so, but almost
certainly isn't the only reason for his departure.)

The hardworking Mansons, who had now been on the road virtually nonstop for seven months, took a bare two weeks off
to catch their breath and run drum auditions. New drummer Ginger Fish, a likeable and accomplished studio tech, rose
commendably to the considerable dual challenge of mastering their set in next to no time and making peace with the
good-looking Lucas' disappointed fans.

Then they were off again. This time they centered the bill between KORN and black-metallers Danzig, from March 24th to
May 19th, 1995. Anyone who speculated that there might be some interesting common ground between Glenn Danzig's
oft-mentioned interest in diabolical lore and Mr. Manson's connections with the Church of Satan - misinformedly, of course,
as the CoS doesn't believe in an actual Devil - was disappointed, as no such camaraderie materialized. Mr. Manson told a
startled interviewer from South American MTV's Headbangers' Ball that "we've been naked with his (Danzig's) bus driver
[the now-infamous Tony Wiggins], but that's as close as we came to sharing." (And said it with a straight face, too.)
--Indeed, interband relationships reportedly grew a bit edgy as the tour progressed and the Mansons, tight, ferocious and
honed to a killing edge, consistently blew the headliners' performance off the stage. If anyone thought being stripped of their
usual props, limited to an abbreviated set, and (incidentally) plagued by equipment problems would show them up as a
gimmicky concept band, s/he soon ate those words raw; Marilyn Manson won more fans every night with a series of blazing
gigs that proved their stage sets and toys mere buttercream frosting.

--Not to suggest there was serious hostility between the bands, however. Mr. Manson soberly credits Glenn with saving his
life at an East Coast venue, where "security" thugs took offense to being spat upon, and attacked Manson, Pogo, and road
manager Frankie after the set. The assailants meant business, and this might be a shorter and sadder article had not the
muscular Danzig waded into the fight swinging a baseball bat.

With all this going on, it's understandable that the Mansons didn't go home for the 1995 Slammies. Nominated for Band of
the Year, Best Vocalist, Best National Release (for Portrait of an American Family) and Best Single (for "Lunchbox"), they
won the latter two. "The only band not on hand to accept their skulls was Marilyn Manson," noted the ceremony's press
release in disappointment. "The band is filming a new video in New Orleans, where they plan to relocate." You can just hear
them thinking: Saigon Kick all over again. --However, the band's New Orleans move was only temporary, and they remain
based in South Florida to our best knowledge.

By now online fandom was buzzing about the next single, "Dope Hat", originally rumored to come out in late June/early July
with another headining tour in support. But twas not to be. The Mansons wrapped up the Danzig tour and took a
much-deserved but semi-working summer vacation, which included not only the shooting for the "Dope Hat" video but the
studio sessions for what was rapidly spreading and crawling out of all semblance of a mere single. As summer became fall the
"Dope Hat" single morphed into the EP Smells Like Children (the title's a quote from beloved Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
villain The Child-Catcher), a 15-track mini-album including some of the band's most loved cover versions and illustrated with
an inspired photo-portrait of Manson as a nightmarishly charming synthesis of Willy Wonka, the Child-Catcher, and the Cat
in the Hat. It debuted on the Billboard charts at #53, while Portrait of an American Family finally achieved gold status in the
fall of 1995. And speaking of Willy Wonka, the mind-boggling "Dope Hat" video, a hallucinatory, brightly colored and
deeply disturbed riff on the boat ride sequence from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory," was approved and rejected
by MTV enough times to give it a complex (they did actually play it a handful of times, albeit nervously, in an edited version,
and in the freak-basement hours of 2-5 AM).

By October 24th, when SLC was released, Marilyn Manson had become cool news. Mainstream rock magazines began
elbowing the newspapers and local zines aside in their haste to describe, review and interview this latest voice of the extreme
edge. RIP's cover story led the way for features in Live Wire, Metal Edge, and a big push from that voice of grassroots
American fandom, Circus. Guitarist Daisy even got a solo interview in Guitar World. Formula/nothing's clever press release
for SLC sounds downright prescient in retrospect: "See them now before they are in jail, dead, or the hottest rock band in
America!" "Hottest in America" is stretching it a long way (remember, POAAF had only just gone gold) but they were
definitely growing out of cult status.

And see them you could, because they were back on the road as headliners, with thud/thrashers Clutch and a scattering of
others opening. (Dull as wet cement and Christian to boot, Clutch failed to endear themselves to Manson fans, and will not
be mentioned again.) The "Smells Like Children" tour opened on Sept. 12, 1995, at Cain's Ballroom in Tulsa OK, and ran
almost nonstop until the first week of February 1996, when it wrapped up on the Mansons' Florida home turf. Those five
months took the band and their fans through some of the most extreme and bone-chilling winter weather in U.S. history;
when in January a tired-out and flu-suffering Daisy dubbed it the Snow Tour, no one disagreed. Manson, prone to
respiratory ailments, was ill with varying degrees of colds, flu and bronchial pneumonia for much of this stretch. This played
havoc with his throat and vocal capacity, and at several venues he resorted to hits from an oxygen tank to carry on. As the
tour wore on, such measures were no longer enough, and a string of January shows was cancelled altogether.

The most famous incident of the Snow Tour, and one of the few MM stories that's purely comical, is the stranding of the
band in Allentown, PA, after their Jan. 6th show at Starz. The culprit was the titanic Northeast blizzard of that weekend,
which dumped 2-3 feet of snow on the seaboard, completely closed the city of Philadelphia, and generally forced anyone
anywhere in Pennsylvania to stay put for at least the following few days. (Except, of course, us. We had no idea what we
were heading into, and headed home from Allentown the morning after the gig; the usually-casual 3-hour
Philly-to-Washington-DC drive took us eight scary and grueling hours. --But I digress.) The Mansons' Allentown hotel was
also temporary home to, as only a fate on drugs would have it, the touring company of "Sesame Street Live" and the Orlando
Magic basketball team, home of seven-foot superstar Shaquille O'Neal. A memorable quote to the New York Times from
Orlando backup center Jon Concak sums it up: "Remember the bar scene from Star Wars with all the animals [aliens]?
That's what it looked like last night. It was the Twilight Zone, man. A bunch of basketball players, Sesame Street, and some
guy with green hair dressed like the Grim Reaper, chain-smoking." --At last report, all parted on friendly terms, though there
may not have been the 3 AM "C Is For Cookie" singalong we can all picture.)

As the New Year 1996 got underway, news and rumors were already beginning to circulate about the band's forthcoming
second LP, Antichrist Superstar. The interviews which describe the history and creation of this "soundtrack for the
Apocalypse" are without a doubt the strangest given by Manson and Twiggy to date, and boosted the fear among online fans
to a level of sustained dread which has yet to subside. The album was already recorded, because it came from the future,
they said; it meant the end of Marilyn Manson, the end of the world, the end of everything; it was being created in Trent's
New Orleans studio, in an organized torture chamber of sleep deprivation, pain, Kabbalistic magick and heavy drugs that
made it possible for them to exactly capture Manson's vivid dreams; and it would be their last recording. No one knew what
to make of this, and literal-minded speculations of band separation and even mass suicide were pandemic.

Out of this period also came another wave of rumors, and these regrettably proved true: lead guitarist and MM co-founder
Daisy Berkowitz was unhappy with the new music, on the outs with Manson, and planning to leave the band. After a flurry of
announcements and denials, during which it was unclear if he was even present in the ACS recording sessions, his departure
was made official in early April. Fan sorrow was keen, as the good-natured guitarist with the vivid blue-green hair and unique
sonic style was a great favorite. Tension had obviously been developing throughout the Clutch tour --most blatantly displayed
in the NYC New Year's Eve show, when Manson actually shoved Daisy off the edge of the stage at the end of the set-- but
outsiders couldn't be aware things were this bad, and the shock expressed online was genuine.

Manson has since made a number of statements regarding Daisy's loss (Daisy himself, as is typical for departed Manson
members, has made none). According to these, the main cause of friction between them was Berkowitz' insistence on
maintaining a degree of his own musical style and personal expression within MM, versus Manson's equal determination that
band members must be willing to submerge their own intent and do what's deemed most effective for the song and the band
as a whole. Manson also characterizes Daisy as not truly committed to the band and its ideas - regarding it essentially as a
successful day job - and both unwilling and unable to contribute to MM's new musical direction, to the point of becoming an
actual hindrance. While admitting to CMJ magazine that he had "dreaded" the impact Daisy's departure would have on the
music, he adds that he now feels it has only made MM stronger and more focused. --Despite all disagreements, the split
seems to have been relatively amicable. The Artist Formerly Known As Daisy is now involved in a new musical project using
the name Scott Mitchell (a version of his full given name).

Spring and plans therefore progressed, and the second single and video from Smells Like Children were released. This was
the much-contested "Sweet Dreams," a darkened cover of the 1984 Eurythmics hit. Easily the most accessible and
radio-friendly of the SLC tracks, it was the natural choice for a single - a deceptive bait for SLC's trap. With the help of a
cryptic and visually striking but carefully inoffensive video, which (to some fans' horror) attained Buzz Clip status on MTV,
SD looked likely to be Marilyn Manson's next breakthrough. But its very openness attracted a wide range of new listeners,
from the newly devoted to the merely curious and the thoughtlessly trendy, and this influx of strangers into our little world
polarized MM fandom like nothing before. The debate raged among online "Spooks" (the "Spooky Kids" moniker dropped
by the band has been adopted by its followers) for months - some tearful and bewildered, some reasonable, many defensive
and furious. Who were these know-nothing Manson newbies, the much-reviled "SweetDreamers"? Mindless consumers,
sucklers at the MTV nipple; flighty fun-seekers who'd be gone tomorrow; cynical sensation junkies here to vampirize the
energy; violent mosh addicts out for blood; or genuine could-be Family members who'd just arrived a little late?

--All of the above, of course, but that didn't keep many online fans from pulling up the drawbridge and taking to the
barricades in a determined attempt to keep the newcomers out. To a degree this is understandable. The core of Marilyn
Manson fandom is hurt and troubled kids to whom MM's music and ideas are intensely personal. Like NiN fandom when
"Closer" became an unexpected hit and swamped them with hordes who only knew "that xxxx-you-like-an-animal song,"
many Spooks thought of the SD'ers as outsiders who didn't and couldn't truly understand. Eventually it should dawn on
everyone that we were all new here once, but SD is still a bone of great contention, and any new arrival who wants to be
taken seriously is quick to state that s/he is not a SweetDreamer.

As the summer passed, rumored release dates for Antichrist Superstar came and went. June 6th (6/6/[9]6 - cute) was
popularly batted about for awhile, but October eventually delivered both the true release date, 10/8/96, and the schedule for
the band's next headlining outing. In America, some record stores opened at midnight to sell copies of ACS as soon as
October 7th became October 8th -- an unusual tribute for a band of MM's stature, as special openings are usually reserved
for hot commercial acts like Hootie or long-standing stars such as U2. Keen speculation and a few clandestinely-leaked
advance tapes had helped push fan anticipation to a fever that undoubtedly boosted ACS to its surprising debut in Bilboard's
#3 slot. Reviews were overall positive, generally agreeing that ACS was a serious, dark and intense work showing
considerably more maturity and depth than POAAF. Fan feeling ranged from mesmerized awe to a rather poignant regret, as
some mourned the stark darkness of tone and the loss of the old songs' creepy carnival humor. Others dove into analysis of
the new work, recalling Manson's statements about the use of Kabbalah, numerology and other occult systems in its creation.
The cryptic and complex packaging was scrutinized almost as closely as the songs, much time being devoted to figuring out
the numerical codes and sigils tracing through it. Deserving of equal study is Dean Karr's evocative photography, including an
amazing sequence which shows Manson's actual metamorphosis from a half-larval "wormboy" to a triumphal insect-winged
angel-form.

The Kabbalah, an ancient system of Jewish mysticism, also served to provide the name for the newest Manson member, Zim
Zum. After screening a reported 150 respondents to their Village Voice ad, Marilyn and Twiggy chose as their new guitarist
this Gothic-looking Chicagoan, formerly (briefly) with Life Sex and Death. (He does not play on LSD's one CD, which had
already been released when he did his two-week stint with them.) While the name Zim Zum has been defined to some of the
press as the name of "an angel who did God's dirty work," it seems as likely to derive from the Kabbalistic term tzimtzum or
tsimtsum, which refers to the empty space God made (i.e., withdrew his presence from) in the Universe, to make room for
the Creation. Magickally-inclined fans can perhaps see the parallel here, in which band co-creator Daisy is withdrawn,
leaving an empty space that must be filled with a new creation. (It should be noted that diligent Spooks did manage to turn up
a serial killer and a fashion model who could fit the name "Zim Zum" into the pre-existing nomenclature mold. Zim himself
admitted he was impressed by their ingenuity, but the name isn't intended to match that pattern.) --Zim was introduced to
fans in the video for ACS' first single, "The Beautiful People" - where some baffled fans mistook him for Trent Reznor - and
was featured in the flood of publicity that accompanied ACS' release.

This barrage of coverage was the most impressive - and somewhat unsettling- that Marilyn Manson has ever received. At
one point in late 1996 it was possible to walk into your local magazine dealership and see the band's name or Mr. Manson's
face on the covers of no fewer than ten periodicals at once, from the cheesy pulps - Hit Parader, Metal Edge and Metal
Maniacs - to high-end glossies like Details and Rolling Stone. HuH Magazine did an insightful feature with moody
sepiatone portraits of Rev. Manson by James&Matthew; Details went for a full-splash fashion spread delectably
photographed by Bettina Rheims, putting the Rev in velvet tuxedoes and riding jackets by Gucci and Jean-Paul Gaultier, or
sheer rayon minidresses and dripping stigmata, sprawled and bloody Zim and clutching Twiggy at his feet; veteran UK metal
mag Kerrang! announced its sponsorship of the band's forthcoming British dates; a full-color, inch-square, 1992 photo of
the Spooky Kids --yes, the Spooky Kids, with Gidget and Sara Lee! -- even appeared in, of all places, Seventeen
magazine. (September 1996 issue, page 108. Check Marilyn's red vinyl jacket and Sara's leopard spots.) Fans who had
been distressed when SD became an MTV Buzz Clip must have found this flash of high visibility downright nightmarish; even
for those of us who didn't really mind, it was acutely surreal. The band we were convinced was just too weird and subversive
to ever appeal to any but a cult following was suddenly this month's mass-market slice of freak chic.

Zim Zum's first live show with MM was at this year's "Nothing Night" showcase on September 5th in New York City.
According to all reports, it was a rocky debut, ending in havoc, thrown guitars and overnight hospitalization for drummer
Ginger. Trent Reznor, thanking the attending bands at the close of the show, pointedly did not mention Marilyn Manson.

This can't have reassured the new kid, who, like Ginger before him, now faced the prospect of setting out on tour within a
mere few weeks of accepting his Manson role. The stats in themselves were daunting. The "Dead To The World" Tour was
to be the band's most extensive yet: 18 months, including MM's first ever shows in South America, Europe and the UK, plus
showcasing an elaborate stage design unlike anything MM have used before. About the only mercy the fledgling guitarist
could count on was that he didn't have to learn much of the band's older repertoire along with the new material, as the set for
this tour is predominantly songs from ACS.

(The stage production, it should be admitted, is truly impressive. It includes a full backdrop suggesting a ruined church
complete with stained-glass window (depicting a female angel in combat with Satan), framed by impaled angels; a pipe organ
for Gacy; a towering podium for Manson; costume changes and even snow machines.)

Tied tightly to a precisely-timed succession of pre-recorded material and audiovisual/lighting cues, the tour's stage
presentation was early on plagued by technical glitches and the resultant frayed nerves, causing a string of Eastern shows to
conclude unfinished. Reviews from Europe haven't mentioned these technical problems, so it's to be hoped they're now
ironed out, and western fans can look forward to seeing the full set as designed when the American tour resumes in January.

(Side note: The nervous tension was doubtless worsened by a series of macabre rumors that raced with viral speed through
the Internet during September and October 1996, predicting Manson's onstage suicide at the band's Hallowe'en concert. It
was shocking to see how many audience members (we will not call them "fans") at the Oct. 30th and 31st shows clearly
believed their ticket price included a good look at the public death of at least Mr. Manson and possibly the whole band. The
Reverend is reported to have stated decisively that he wouldn't be that easy to get rid of.)

In December, while Manson was dealing with media hysteria and shows in Great Britain hastily relocated under pressure of
moral outrage, an old enemy resurfaced at home. In mid-December, former "drug czar" turned self-styled "culture warrior"
William Bennett held a press conference to chide MCA Music for releasing several objectionable CD's - one of which was
Antichrist Superstar. (We and our "NiNnie" cousins well remember Bennett as then-Senator Dole's ally in the 1995 attack
on Time-Warner, which prominently targeted Nine Inch Nails.) Bennett alleged that MCA head Edgar Bronfman, who as
CEO of Seagrams (the well-known whiskey distillery) purchased the 50% of Interscope which Time-Warner was harried
into selling, had promised Bennett he would not profit from the sale of any "violent or profane" material. --Alas for Bill, with
sales of 600K units ACS may well be considered profitable. Bennett, flanked by Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-Conn) and
long-time pro-censor/anti-rock & rap crusader C. DeLores Tucker, made a memorable presentation backed by an
enlargement of the ACS back cover art. Indicating the image, which shows Madonna and Twiggy inhaling from face-mask
hoses attached to Manson's prosthetic dildo, Bennett charged that if Bronfman "can't tell this is filth and crap" he shouldn't
even be in the business. Bronfman's response is not recorded. --The news conference was actually reported on CNN,
probably the widest single exposure of Marilyn Manson's name and image thus far.

In the band's future: the tour returns to America (early reports say these shows are going splendidly); cover features in
Rolling Stone and Spin magazines (yes, like his beloved Dr. Hook, Manson finally makes the "cover of the Rolling Stone"
--and within days of his birthday too); the already-legendary February 14th 1997 show; the "Tourniquet" single and video;
and breast implants for Marilyn and Twiggy. (Or so they say. =)
Whats it all about then ?
The Antichrist Superstar

In order to reduce civilian interference with the mission of this powerful coalition, certain clarifications must be brought to the
attention of the conscientious objector.

The Antichrist Superstar, the legend and its present incarnation, was endangered in response to increasing world tension. Mr
Marilyn Manson, one of very few in a position to convey a message of impending doom, has taken it upon himself, with the
aid of his well trained associates, namely: Twiggy Ramirez, Madonna Wayne Gacy, Ginger Fish, and the latest incarnate Zim
Zum, to do so.

Just as any institution for change must metamorphosize frequently to remain consistent with its dogma, the music of the Third
Coming of Marilyn Manson, Antichrist Superstar, reflects the many changes that these visionaries have undergone. To the
dismay of those who wish to bring a turnabout to the human condition, change has been stigmatized through association with
entropy, disorder and other such undesired qualities. The music, having been extracted from the inner revelations of Mr.
Manson using various techniques of torture and sleep deprivation, is the sound track to a transmutation itself.

This metamorphosis, in particular, operates in accordance with the natural evolution of all things, and must be regarded as a
positive development, rather than something to be feared or misconstrued. Mr Manson stated, "I try to relate my story,
which is somewhat autobiographical, in the metaphor of a worm that transforms into-- what it believes to be -- a beautiful
angel. But thats not exactly how the world sees it. The world views it as much more of a demon or devil."

It is this misunderstanding, the confusion of angel for devil that will lead to resistance.

Marilyn Manson would like us all to heed the words of the following passage taken from the doctrines of 'Antichrist
Superstar':

"We have combined Hebrew Kabalism, numerology, narcotics, and computer technology to create a musical ritual to bring
about the apocalypse. Whether it is an armageddon of the subconscious or destruction of the world as we know it, is up to
the listener to decide."

The Antichrist is the perfect villian. To many, so is Mr. Manson. Both characters elusive, asymetrical, and dangerously
potent. Both catalysts to the self examination of American Values. Both prophets of their own tellings, and both legends.
With 'Antichrist Superstar' having come to its fruition, on the eve of its finest hour, one question remains: Is Marilyn Manson
the Antichrist? and the answer is no. He is a superstar.

"The lyrics and ideals expressed on this album are those of a character called Antichrist Superstar who is portrayed by me
and every other person in America. Those who fail to admit and realize this, are the ones who will be afraid and offended.
This is what you should fear, you are what you should fear."

So now it is up to you: conscientous listener, casual observer, disillusioned skeptic, to come to your own conclusions. One
man's villian is always another man's hero. Decide for yourself. After all, it's only a record...or is it?

Judgement Day: October the 8th 1996.
 
Favourite Links
 

Marilyn Manson - Spooky Kids page
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When its up and running


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