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"If I Was Your Vampire" is a song by American rock band Marilyn Manson. It is the first track on the album Eat Me, Drink Me. Marilyn Manson wrote the song on Christmas Day in 2006. The song was uploaded to Manson's MySpace on April 16, 2007 and was officially released on June 5, 2007 on the album.
An instrumental version of the entire album entitled Bonus Track and Instrumentals from the Album Eat Me, Drink Me was leaked in late 2007 on YouTube. It features all tracks from the album without the vocal track and also includes a remix of "Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)", which was released as a bonus track on most ...
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A major problem with early success is getting past it — case in point, the cheerful bop of Vampire Weekend’s first two albums and their image as peppy college boys who’d studied Paul Simon ...
One Assassination Under God – Chapter 1 is the twelfth studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson. It was released on November 22, 2024, by Nuclear Blast Records and produced by Marilyn Manson and Tyler Bates. The album was preceded by the release of three singles: "As Sick as the Secrets Within", "Raise the Red Flag" and
"I'm Not a Vampire" is the third single from the debut album, The Drug in Me Is You, of the band Falling in Reverse. Like other songs on the album, Ronnie Radke wrote the song while incarcerated for parole violation, before the formation of Falling in Reverse. [1] [2]
The Orion Experience have a song titled "Vampire" on their Sugar Deluxe album. Vocaloid musician Deco*27 has a song titled "The Vampire" (ヴァンパイア) on his album MANNEQUIN. The music video depicts Hatsune Miku as a vampire. Pop Star Olivia Rodrigo has a song titled Vampire on her second studio album, Guts
On January 28, 2008, Michael Hogan of Vanity Fair interviewed Ezra Koenig regarding the title of the song and its relevance to the song's meaning. Koenig said he first encountered the Oxford comma, a comma used before the conjunction at the end of a list, on Facebook and learned of a Columbia University Facebook group called Students for the Preservation of the Oxford Comma.