Monday, October 12, 2009

Marilyn Manson creates a New Dawn

Band: Marilyn Manson with support from Hatchet Dawn
Venue: Festival Hall
Date: 10th October 2009
Reviewed By: Espylyn

Arrival to festival hall tonight and upon impact of the ear drums we are met with the local Melbourne band – Hatchet Dawn. Described as groove crushing metal blended with spooky heavy, guttural rock with riffs and catchy vocal hooks, they are a new dawn of darkness. With their debut EP titled Faith In Chaos they’ll no doubt have many grim followers who feel at home with the group. Instead of playing in a morgue or under the silvery light of the moon, tonight they made festering hall shudder under their weeping arms of uber loud music connecting with the mosh pit of emo’s, old rockers and die hard Manson fans. Great light show ensued with a very tall lead singer, Loki, with his vocals sounding like he just had his voice box removed and instead spoke through a machine! There were a few groovy riffs amongst the clutter of grave music. Hearing the bassist talk was kind of odd after hearing the singing as he spoke with a good ole Aussie accent and it didn’t fit the sound! Loki asks us how we feed and the crowd screams their unforbidden answers.

This tour marks the seventh album for the Marilyn Manson band and a circuit of 20 years in the business. Critics have hailed this as a major return to form with the album titled The High End Of Low which debuted at number 12 on the Aussie charts and number 4 on the US charts – their highest in the US for years.

Marilyn Manson made headlines many years ago with his shock look and different ways of expressing himself which led to him perhaps being crowned the King of Goth come glamour come rock. Manson is often seen with gorgeous girls and wives around him whilst speaking whatever the hell he wants to talk about, whether it be offensive or not. These days’ people aren’t shocked about his traits and churches don’t try banning him from entering our country. However the man puts on a mean show and is still a sensational performer – hat changes, coat changes, glitter to the max spewing out into the crowd and two slaves who bring him tablets of some sorts, mask with oxygen perhaps and provide him with towels and beer – although I must add out of a slab of beer he was given throughout the show, he would have only drunk half of one bottle as the rest was spat out at whoever was in his path and the rest thrown into the crowd! Then we’re given speeches mentioning how he ought to teach us about religion, drugs or sex but won’t to which the punters booed him and agreed with him.

The gig starts with the curtain covering the stage and it isn’t dropped when Manson and crew explode on stage, a few bars are played before the curtain is gone before us. Manson looking uber cool with his jacket pronouncing HELL ETC on it with any reports of swine flu appearing to be behind him and into the song We’re From America he launches. The stage remains hazy throughout the entire gig (I think I saw splashes of a band) with Manson being the sole view point whether he be in a stage held spotlight, a small light attached to the microphone or general stage lights, he is always the attention. ‘We love to hate, we hate to love’ the punters chant and into peril for Irresponsible Hate Anthem the band claim. Then straight onto Dried Up, Tied and Dead To The World and it’s almost cat and mouse games with his slaves, he’ll throw anything and everything on stage and out the slaves dash ready to collect his hat, or prop back his microphone in case Manson delivers a nasty execution to them perhaps?! Knife on the microphone is reminiscent of Psycho bath scene and he delivers Dope Show to the respondent crown. If you didn’t know all his songs then a few songs do sound the same but he’s still entertaining and you can’t help but watch this lead singer continuously. I’m not sure about putting a towel down your pants then throwing to the crowd is really umm becoming but hey, the fan that caught it is probably never going to wash it.....ever!

Rock is Dead is performed with Mason at the end telling off a punter for almost raping a girl and Manson’s statement is ‘nobody hurts a girl but me’. Tourniquet springs more crowd participation and then the Eurhythmics cover Sweet Dreams which consist of spooky light on the microphone which allows Manson to have a silent and deadly look about him (more than normal) and before we know it the encore takes place. Tonight’s gig ends on The Beautiful People with white confetti bursting out and covering the black crowd and it looked fantastic.

A sold out gig, a mosh pit with hungry emo’s and characters chanted and showed their enthusiasm for the man who is Marilyn Manson – prepare to be offended, mesmerised and taken aboard as a prisoner.

As seen on http://www.thedwarf.com.au/

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