Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"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.
The television series Interview with the Vampire also includes "Home Is Where You're Happy", which was written by American criminal and musician Charles Manson, and appears the end of the episode "A Vile Hunger for Your Hammering Heart". Vulture included the song in its list of the top-ten uses of existing pop music on television in 2022. [25] [26]
Vampire (Iz*One song) Vampire (Olivia Rodrigo song) Vampires (Godsmack song) Vampires Will Never Hurt You This page was last edited on 13 March 2023, at 13:40 ...
AMC Networks greenlit a second season renewal for Interview with the Vampire back in September 2022, a month before the first season even premiered. Now, season two is set to drop on May 12, 2024.
Eat Me, Drink Me is the sixth studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson.It was released on June 5, 2007, by Interscope Records.It was recorded in a rented home studio in Hollywood by lead vocalist Marilyn Manson and guitarist and bassist Tim Sköld, and was produced by Manson and Sköld.
It was co-written by Ure and Danny Mitchell (of Ultravox's tour opening band Messengers) and released as the first single from Ure's debut solo studio album, The Gift (1985). The song reached No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart for one week in September 1985. The track also reached number one in Ireland and peaked within the top 20 in eight other ...
New music releases include Lil Uzi Vert's album, a song from K-pop group EXO, Fall Out Boy's take on a Billy Joel hit and Olivia Rodrigo's "Vampire."
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.