Disposable Teens (from English - “One-off adolescents”) - the first single from the fourth studio album by Marilyn Manson entitled “ Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) ”, released on November 7, 2000 .
| Disposable teens | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marilyn Manson single from the album Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) | ||||
| Party "B" | "Working Class Hero" | |||
| Released | November 7, 2000 | |||
| Format | Cd single | |||
| Genres |
| |||
| Duration | 3:01 | |||
| Producer | ||||
| Label | Nothing / Interscope | |||
| Marilyn Manson Singles Chronology | ||||
| ||||
General Information
The chorus text from the song is to some extent borrowed from the song “Revolution” by The Beatles . The text of the song also describes the irony of the teenage rebellion among those adolescents who first fiercely fight against parental and social power, and then ultimately become the same power that they themselves had previously fought against. That is, in fact, the text of the song beats the expression “rebellion without a reason . ” This can be heard in the chorus of the song: "I say you want a revolution, man, and I say that you are full of shit." (From English - "You say you want a revolution, dude, and I say that you full of shit "). The song also borrows a quote "Rebel from the waist down" (from English - "A Rebel below the Belt") from George Orwell's " 1984 ".
The song was used in the film “Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2” . Dale Oliver also created a remix that was used by TNA Wrestling as an introductory theme for Christopher Daniels.
Video Clip
The video composition begins with the slow elevation of Marilyn Manson over the lake, in which there is a symbolic connection with t. the third and last beast . Manson himself in the clip appears in several different scenes and images, one of which is the appearance of the Pope . At the Last Supper presented in the video, Manson himself appears as food. In the alternative version of the clip, which is completely different from the “dramatized” version, Marilyn Manson’s “live” performance was captured surrounded by a “ fascist ” type of police with wands in the form of crucifixes .
Song List
Below is one of the options for release, namely - the British version of it.
Disposable Teens (Part 1)
- Disposable teens
- Working Class Hero [3]
- Diamonds & pollen
Disposable Teens (Part 2)
- Disposable teens
- Five to One [4]
- Astonishing Panorama of the End Times [5]
Charts
| Chart (2000) | Position |
|---|---|
| Australian Singles Chart [6] | 46 |
| Dutch Top 40 [6] | 99 |
| French Singles Chart [6] | 67 |
| Italian Singles Chart [6] | 7 |
| Spain ( PROMUSICAE ) [7] | 6 |
| Swedish Singles Chart [6] | 52 |
| Swiss Singles Chart [6] | 73 |
| UK Singles Chart | 12 |
| US Mainstream Rock Chart [8] | 22 |
| US Modern Rock Chart [8] | 24 |
Notes
- ↑ Disposable Teens . NME . The appeal date is March 13, 2016.
- ↑ Bad boy Manson delivers the goods . the Guardian . The appeal date is March 13, 2016.
- ↑ Acoustic cover of John Lennon's song.
- ↑ A cover version of The Doors .
- ↑ The title of the song in the single booklet is written with an error: instead of “end times” there should be “endtimes”.
- 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 Marilyn Manson - Disposable Teens (Song) . Australian-charts.com . The appeal date is June 23, 2010.
- Spanish " Spanishcharts.com - Marilyn Manson - Disposable Teens" Canciones Top 50 .
- ↑ 1 2 [ Disposable Teens (English) on AllMusic Marilyn Manson Billboard Singles] . Allmusic . The appeal date is June 23, 2010.
Links
- Disposable Teens Pt. 1 on Discogs
- Disposable Teens Pt. 2 on Discogs