Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The Beautiful People" is a song by American rock band Marilyn Manson. It was released as the lead single from the band's second studio album , Antichrist Superstar , in September 1996. Classified as industrial metal , the song was written by frontman Marilyn Manson and Twiggy Ramirez , and was produced by Trent Reznor , Dave Ogilvie and Manson.
Brian Hugh Warner (born January 5, 1969), known professionally as Marilyn Manson, ... Manson's song "The Beautiful People" was featured in WWE SmackDown!
Antichrist Superstar is the second studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson.It was released on October 8, 1996, by Nothing and Interscope Records.It was recorded at Nothing Studios in New Orleans and produced by the band's eponymous vocalist along with Sean Beavan, former Skinny Puppy producer Dave Ogilvie and Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails.
Wood claimed that two of Warner’s Marilyn Manson albums – 2007’s Eat Me, Drink Me, and 2009’s The High End of Low – serve as timestamps for the beginning and eventual breakdown of their ...
Rhythmically, the song has been compared to "The Beautiful People" by Marilyn Manson and "Summertime Blues" by Eddie Cochran. [7] In a direct lift of the hook from "The Beautiful People", [citation needed] a crowd repeatedly chants "the will of the people" throughout the track, forming both the song's bridge and the backing vocals to the choruses.
Manson emerged as a musical star in the mid-1990s, known as much for courting public controversy as for hit songs like “The Beautiful People” and hit albums like 1996’s “Antichrist ...
VH1 included Marilyn Manson at seventy-eight on their list of the '100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock', [366] and also included "The Beautiful People" at number eighty-six on their list of the 100 Greatest Hard Rock Songs. [367] Similarly, Gigwise included Manson at number thirty-six in their list of the '60 Greatest Solo Artists of All Time'. [368]
"The Beautiful People" (song), by Marilyn Manson, 1996 "The Beautiful People", by Tom Sankey from The Golden Screw, 1967; Other uses