'Eat Me, Drink Me,' Marilyn Manson
Even as he approached middle age, former music journalist Brian Warner wasn't sure if he wanted to give up his gothy stage persona, Marilyn Manson. So it made sense for him to channel 'Alice,' he told the Albuquerque Journal, which "was about a person who doesn't know who their identity was supposed to be." Written like a diary, the 2007 'Eat Me, Drink Me' album, featuring the title song, is an 'Alice' tale, except in this case the rabbit hole leads to hell -- or, at least, something close to it.
Even as he approached middle age, former music journalist Brian Warner wasn't sure if he wanted to give up his gothy stage persona, Marilyn Manson. So it made sense for him to channel 'Alice,' he told the Albuquerque Journal, which "was about a person who doesn't know who their identity was supposed to be." Written like a diary, the 2007 'Eat Me, Drink Me' album, featuring the title song, is an 'Alice' tale, except in this case the rabbit hole leads to hell -- or, at least, something close to it.


