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View Poll Results: Who is/was more shocking | |||
Alice Cooper | 12 | 66.67% | |
Marilyn Manson | 6 | 33.33% | |
Voters: 18. You may not vote on this poll |
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12-01-2017, 09:55 AM | #81 (permalink) |
Godless Ape
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Britannia
Posts: 1,255
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Anal Beads.
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12-02-2017, 01:30 AM | #82 (permalink) |
Music Addict
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Colorado
Posts: 513
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I think the two have a lot in common in that they take their stage persona very seriously, and really play their character when they're recording and when they're performing. Manson gets an awfully bad rap for how good his early career was IMO. Last edited by Maajo; 12-02-2017 at 01:36 AM. |
12-02-2017, 02:45 AM | #83 (permalink) | ||
Cuter Than Post Malone.
Join Date: Sep 2015
Posts: 4,978
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Quote:
And Batlord, don't blame the fans for ICP's ****ty music. If ICP was pandering to juggalos they would put out another Hell's Pit. Juggalos have been begging ICP to go back to doing darker music like that again. A lot of juggalos hate their new poppy bull****. That's all ICP. They chose to cover Christina Agulara while juggalos wanted another Hell's Pit. They chose to rap about magnets while juggalos wanted another Riddle Box. This ****ty development of the past decade is all Violent J's idea that he's been trying to shove down the juggalos throats. In fact, Violent J said the he didn't even really want to do that album because after Shangri La he wanted to make happier music or something because he found god or some dumb ****. And I still take Marilyn Manson. His first 4 albums were incredible. The 5th was alright then he definitely fell off losing his creativity. He seems to be making a comeback, but no where near as good as it once was. I think Manson was more shocking because he was more raw and real than Cooper who was goofy and campy to me. Manson made genuinely disturbed music that attracted genuinely disturbed people and I think that shocked more people than Cooper did. I remember watching something where Manson received a really depressing letter from a 12 year old that was written in his own blood. Not only that, but Manson had a point. He wasn't just shocking for the shake of shocking. He had intelligent things to say. That's not something you see a lot of in shocking artists. Manson in his heyday was a cultural icon and a voice for a generation. He was probably the last artist to really scare people too.
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12-02-2017, 04:01 AM | #84 (permalink) |
Call me Mustard
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Pepperland
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I don't know, Lucem. I lived in the era of Alice Cooper and parents were absolutely terrified of the guy.
I will agree with your points about Marilyn Manson though. I do think he may have thought out what he did a little more than Cooper and, in Bowling in Columbine at least, he proved to be quite the articulate fellow. I actually started this thread because I did think Manson was being unfairly targeted by who I thought were people, probably in my age group, that had conveniently forgotten about Alice Cooper. |
12-02-2017, 05:29 AM | #85 (permalink) | |
Cuter Than Post Malone.
Join Date: Sep 2015
Posts: 4,978
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I wasn't around for it and I guess I never really looked into Alice enough to understand how shocking he was back then. Just going off of the little I've seen and honestly it's probably past his prime. I just know that he hasn't been forgotten though it's only been 20 years. Not that Cooper has been forgotten he's just not as well remembered or as prominent of an influence these days. Might have more to do with Manson probably being much more mainstream and a huge pop star.
For Manson, I think the biggest thing that shocked people was how polarizing he was to his fans. They would start dressing like him and wearing the outlandish clothes and kind of use this as a temporary identity crutch where as I don't think Cooper fans really tried to adopt the persona.
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12-02-2017, 05:41 AM | #86 (permalink) |
Call me Mustard
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Location: Pepperland
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That's true. We didn't dare go out dressed like Alice Cooper. He might have been seen as a little gay by the homophobes that were around in that time.
Of course it was different by the time Kiss came around. People would wear their makeup and would try to breathe fire like Gene Simmons to their own peril. I may have mentioned it either here or on another forum, but one kid breathed fire for an English project and almost blew his face off (he did singe his eyebrows some). He got an A. |
12-02-2017, 07:45 AM | #87 (permalink) | |
carpe musicam
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Les Barricades Mystérieuses
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I guess the guy who started all that before Alice, Kiss and Marylin was Arthur Brown, back in the 60s. I don't know of anyone earlier than him in Rock music doing that kind of stuff, farding make-up, playing with fire, donning outlandish costumes, etc etc.
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"it counts in our hearts" ?ºº? “I have nothing to offer anybody, except my own confusion.” Jack Kerouac. “If one listens to the wrong kind of music, he will become the wrong kind of person.” Aristotle. "If you tried to give Rock and Roll another name, you might call it 'Chuck Berry'." John Lennon "I look for ambiguity when I'm writing because life is ambiguous." Keith Richards |
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