Other albums by Marilyn Manson
Review
View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2012 180g Vinyl release of Mechanical Animals on Discogs. At the same time, Marilyn Manson’s promotion from underground to the heights of the mainstream culture questioned the ideology and sincerity of their music. Despite all this, Manson followed the course and released another top quality album, Mechanical Animals, in 1998.
Read More Read LessMarilyn Manson Mechanical Animals Free Download
- #TrackArtistLength
- 1Great Big White WorldMarilyn Manson5:1
- 2The Dope ShowMarilyn Manson3:46
- 3Mechanical AnimalsMarilyn Manson4:33
- 4Rock Is DeadMarilyn Manson3:9
- 5DisassociativeMarilyn Manson4:50
- 6The Speed of PainMarilyn Manson5:30
- 7PosthumanMarilyn Manson4:17
- 8I Want to DisappearMarilyn Manson2:56
- 9I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)Marilyn Manson5:3
- 10New Model No.15Marilyn Manson3:40
- 11User FriendlyMarilyn Manson4:17
- 12Fundamentally LoathsomeMarilyn Manson4:49
- 13The Last Day on EarthMarilyn Manson5:1
- 14Coma WhiteMarilyn Manson8:10
Marilyn Manson Album Covers
Antichrist Superstar performed its intended purpose -- it made Marilyn Manson internationally famous, a living realization of his fictional 'antichrist superstar.' He had gained the attention of not only rock fans, but the public at large; however, many critics bestowed their praise not on the former Brian Warner, but on Trent Reznor, Manson's mentor and producer. Surely angered by the attention being focused elsewhere, he decided to break from Reznor and industrial metal with his third album, Mechanical Animals. Taking his image and musical cues from Bowie, Warner reworked Marilyn Manson into a sleek, androgynous space alien named Omega, à la Ziggy Stardust, and constructed a glammy variation of his trademark goth metal. With pal Billy Corgan as an unofficial consultant and Soundgarden producer Michael Beinhorn manning the boards, Manson turns Mechanical Animals into a big, clean rock record -- the kind that stands in direct opposition to the dark, twisted industrial nightmares he painted with his first two albums. It can make for a welcome change of pace, since his glammed-up goth is more tuneful than his clattering industrial cacophony, but it lacks the cartoonish menace that distinguished his prior music. And without that, Marilyn Manson seems a little ordinary, believe it or not -- more like a '90s version of Alice Cooper than ever before. True, Mechanical Animals is the group's most accessible effort, but Manson should have remembered one thing -- demons are never that scary in the light.
Sample | Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 05:01 | ||
2 | 03:46 | |||
3 | Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 04:33 | ||
4 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez | 03:09 | ||
5 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 04:50 | ||
6 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 05:30 | ||
7 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez | 04:17 | ||
8 | 02:56 | |||
9 | Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 05:03 | ||
10 | 03:40 | |||
11 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 04:17 | ||
12 | 04:49 | |||
13 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez | 05:01 | ||
14 | Madonna Wayne Gacy / Marilyn Manson / Twiggy Ramirez / Zim Zum | 08:10 |
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