leaked

Marilyn Manson – The High End Of Low

by ZombieSkittles on May 20, 2009

We’ve made it; the third and final post about Marilyn Manson’s latest piece of work The High End Of Low. There is definitely something satisfying about finally being able to listen to the album in it’s entirety, polished and finished without needing to question “will the final version sound anything like this?”. For those who haven’t read them, I wrote about the first released song We’re From America and the leaked demos, here and here respectively. And now, the “review”.

It became immediately obvious that the record was going to be slower on the whole, than the bands previous efforts. The first five songs in the album also happened to be the ones whos demos became public a few months ago, and it definitely comes as a relief to hear them sounding much more polished and complete. Devour is a love song (of sorts), which being at the front of the album makes me think of it as a much shorter (by around half, thank fucking god) version of If I Was Your Vampire from Eat Me Drink Me. After Devour, you’re given a few seconds silence to get over the pace of the last song, before rocking out to the second track, Pretty As A Swastika. The title makes it seem like he’s grasping for anything that may shock people, but to little effect. Be that as it may, when the sound of Twiggy’s rusty guitar and Manson chanting “YEAH!” welcome you into the song, it feels a lot like something that would of come out of the recording sessions for Antichrist Superstar rather than anything he’d make in recent times.

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The next few songs were all improved 100% from their demos, and make this sound like the album to “bring back the old Marilyn Manson”.  Even Four Rusted Horses, while temporarily slowing down the tempo of the album (which is a little sporadic anyway), kept me much more interested than it had before. Arma-Goddamn-Motherfuckin-Geddon completely blew me away too; it is entirely deserving of being the first “official single”.
Speaking of which; the music video for the song was released the other day, and features clips which make direct references to the band back in the nineties, when they brought out Antichrist Superstar. The clip itself is really well done, and I love it:

The video is disabled for embedding on YouTube (because they’re a bunch of douchefags). Watch it on DoucheTube here.

I got a temporary lack of faith when the track Blank and White kicked in. The song, unlike the rest of the album, has more of a twang to begin with, which made me picture Marilyn Manson in overalls, playing a washboard. A piece of wheat dangling out the side of his mouth, and maybe a cow in the near background, chewing on some cud. On closer look, you notice that one of the buttons on Manson’s overalls has fallen off, making one of the straps dangle against his stomach.
Enough of that though; the song quickly hardens the fuck up and brings us what we expect of Manson…in a way. I found the song too trying on me, especially for four minutes worth. But if that’s long, then the next two songs go on forever. The aptly named Running To The Edge Of The World, which clocks in at over six minutes, slows down again, bringing in a more acoustic sounding guitar, and hits us with sad vocals much easier on the ears than when he belted out the harsh “ballad” Just A Car Crash Away on the last album. Then just over three and a half minutes into it, the song moves into VERY familiar territory. A small voice in falsetto spookily singing about death, almost exactly as in the title track from Holy Wood, In The Shadow Of The Valley Of Death.

HighendoflowSix minutes not long enough? Well, the next song tops that with EIGHT MOTHERFUCKING MINUTES. The song I Want To Kill You Like They Do In The Movies doesn’t really have much going for it. Being at around the same tempo as the previous track, the song is far more boring, trying to cover that up by seeing how many vocal tracks they can overlap before their software hits it’s limit. As long as you don’t pay much attention to it, the song is decent enough, for filler.
And that brings us to the track WOW. I didn’t say much on it, other than I really didn’t like it. However, listening to the album version now, I can say I was effectively, retarded. Like a motherfucker. The song hits me as being what Para-noir from Golden Age Of Grotesque would of sounded like, had you of removed the female vocals, and given it more influence from David Bowie. Much more influence. It reminds me of Golden Years to a degree.
Wight Spider once again sounds like Marilyn Manson attempting more Holy Wood-esque sounds, keeping with the same slow sound from the past few songs, and more angsty sad vocals. The song itself didn’t really appeal to me, and could of probably been dropped from the album completely and I doubt anyone except Manson would of missed it.
At this point, as soon as Unkillable Monster starts with MORE SLOW MUSIC, I can’t help but wonder if this is all that’s left for the album; that Manson and co didn’t just brainstorm for the new album and go “I know, let’s attempt to fill up the rest of the album with as many ballad type songs as human possible. That will really get the fans pumped!” Thank god, when we hit We’re From America, as repetitive as it is, we get to rock out a little. Shall I get my cock out? No? Then let us move on.
While the album lacks a title track (a first for Marilyn Manson’s major releases since Smells Like Children, which was named after an unrecorded track at the time), the song I Have To Look Up Just To See Hell serves as one anyway, repeating the title of the album numerous times. Only slightly faster than the previous four slow fucking songs (disregarding WOW and We’re From America entirely in that statement), the song is far more enjoyable; deep drums and screaming vocals fill it, and make for a decent listen.

Then we get to the wailing. There is always wailing. Why does there have to be wailing? I personally don’t want wailing. Into The Fire is pretty much exactly the same as it’s demo counterpart, and it shows that Marilyn Manson learned from the last album; it’s the only one to feature a full guitar solo, and as such is thoroughly enjoyable to hear.
The final track is…very unusual. 15 really can’t be described, and you need to hear it yourself. See what I did there? I didn’t talk about the entire album, leaving you with something that remains at least for the majority, a mystery. Do I mean weird as in the Untitled tracks from previous albums, or the hidden track that features in Smells Like Children to make you shit your pants? Find out.

To conclude, because every blog post needs a conclusion; the album is GOOD. I am so glad for that. You can hear multiple references to earlier eras of the band, and it seems there’s a fair bit of borrowed content from their past. However, for the most part, it is an enjoyable listen. My only complaint, is there is far too much sadness and and too many songs that could be called ballads. Not too happy about that, but hey, since when did it have to be perfect?

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Links in April

by ZombieSkittles on April 27, 2009

On The Blog:

  • Gay. –a rather misled opinional about the word gay, that could of best been summed up by the following tweet by @bonsushi, “@betterwords gay is also not a synonym for homosexual. it is now, but it used to only mean happy. words change. get used to it.” Of course, the post was made to continue the discussion with @bettwords, who, as you can guess, bailed due to overwhelming hate for his cause.
  • nin:access – One of my favourite posts I have ever written, about the new official Nine Inch Nails application in the iTunes app store.
  • The High End Of Low – Marilyn Manson – This article keeps getting hits because people are desperately searching for that fabled complete link of the album. It’s also another of my favourites.
  • Colourful (My CD Collection) – What can I say, it’s pretty.
  • LOL Energy Drink – I had the most fun ever making this article about a really bad drink.

(Not So) On The Blog:

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The High End Of Demos

by ZombieSkittles on April 14, 2009

1
Hey,
talking about Marilyn Manson again?

Well, I managed to download the leaked demos of the forthcoming album, The High End Of Low, and decided it merited a follow up…of course, I will be following up again when the complete polished album comes out, but until then, I have an urge to write, and the demos are all that’s available.

So I’ve been listening to We’re From America, and as I and others have said, it’s a great song that showed that Marilyn Manson might be lifting himself above what was Eat Me Drink Me, and back into the darker style he is renowned for. Listening to the leaked tracks, this both is and isn’t the case. None of the songs sound anything like WFA. In fact, every song is completely different to each other in style and sound, nothing at all like what the band has done in the past.
The song Arma-God-Dam-Mother-Fuckin’-Geddon, which is set to be a single, makes an attempt at being catchy, with a heavy beat letting Manson bounce the lyrics along almost like he were singing a pop song. In some places it looked like he was having trouble trying to cram the lyrics into the beat he’d set for himself, but he manages to pull it off.
As soon as the piano started in the track Into The Fire I immediately thought “he’s not really going to try another Man That You Fear, is he?” Because I’m one of the vain Manson fans who compare everything to his older stuff, even though it’s completely different. See what I did there? I pretty much added a disclaimer admitting my opinion is flawed to a degree. That’s cooled being smooth. This? This is called being stupid and spelling it out. The song felt the same to me as “Just A Car Crash Away” from Eat Me Drink Me; that is, an emotionless void where Manson tries to fake it, but doesn’t quite obtain the same feelings as he did with songs like Coma White. It just wasn’t for me.
May Be Harmful If Swallowed, which has apparently been renamed to Leave A Scar for the album, got straight into it, and I got the impression it might be an okay song. Different to what I expected, but the guitar sounded catchy, with that irresistible tinny twang  giving me hope. Manson’s vocals kick in, and he slips straight into the song, blending perfectly for the most part, and letting his vocals ripple at just the right moments. Then the chorus kicks in, with perfect Manson imagery; ‘Whatever doesn’t kill you is gonna leave a scar’. However, the delivery of screaming out every syllable slowly, made me cringe, and was definitely the deal breaker for me with this song.
The less said about The Wow, the better. There is always one song on a Marilyn Manson album that I just CANNOT stand, and it seems that this might be the one.
I only managed to download one other song, and that is Four Rusted Horses. It starts off suspiciously with acoustic guitar, and deep bass in the background (which as always, is a building block for most of Manson’s songs). Manson starts with rather monotone vocals, singing the lyrics with a sort of morbid despair, only switching to louder wavering sounds for the chorus. The song is good, but after a couple of minutes I found it to get boring and repetitive, the lyrics just blending together. However, just as you go to hit the skip button, the chorus changes slightly, bringing in overlapping vocals to create a more sinister effect, and it works; your hand moves away from the button and you listen to the rest of the song in curiosity.

The demo tracks aren’t exactly top quality, but are listenable. The songs essentially came across like a beefed up Eat Me Drink Me, and while they don’t appeal to me (with the exception of Arma…geddon) as much as We’re From America, I can appreciate that they are a good step forward in the band’s sound. From listening to these tracks, my decision to buy the new album when it comes out next month has been set in stone. Of course, when that happens, the blog will be the victim of another entry about the band again. Until then, enjoy the break of non-Marilyn Manson related material that will hopefully be coming.

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