Marilyn Manson | Discography Blogspot
While social media and streaming algorithms try to flatten music history into a "This Is:" playlist, Blogspot remains the underground zine of the internet. For the Manson fan, the hunt is the reward. So fire up your browser, type that keyword into the search bar, and dive into the glorious, grotesque archive of one of rock’s last true rebels.
The final part of the triptych. Easily his most complex intellectual property.
Originally intended as a remix EP, it became a multi-platinum release off the back of the iconic cover of Eurythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)." Marilyn Manson Discography Blogspot
A critique of Hollywood culture, drug numbness, and emotional alienation.
Marilyn Manson's discography spans 12 studio albums and over 50 million records sold, characterized by distinct thematic eras including "The Triptych". Following recent activity in 2024–2025, the artist has continued to produce music and tour, with recent releases including "As Sick as the Secrets Within". For a detailed overview of the band's discography, visit the Marilyn Manson discography Wikipedia page . AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more While social media and streaming algorithms try to
Manson concluded what fans refer to as "The Triptych" with Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) in 2000. Written in the shadow of the Columbine High School massacre—for which the media unfairly scapegoated the band—the album served as a defensive, aggressive counter-attack. It seamlessly blended the industrial rage of Antichrist with the melodic hooks of Mechanical Animals , delivering a scathing critique of American gun culture, religion, and the media's obsession with violence.
A blues-infused, dark-rock masterpiece. The album stripped away the heavy industrial programming in favor of gritty, organic instrumentation and soulful, grizzled vocal performances. The final part of the triptych
"The Beautiful People," "Tourniquet," "Irresponsible Hate Anthem." Mechanical Animals (1998)
Driven by the guitar work of Daisy Berkowitz and the production of Trent Reznor and Sean Beavan, tracks like "The Beautiful People" and "Irresponsible Hate Anthem" defined a generation of disaffected youth. The imagery was fascist, the sound was abrasive, and the message was clear: the establishment was rotting. This is the album that made Marilyn Manson the boogeyman of the 90s.
The blog “Marilyn Manson Discography” (hosted on Blogspot) aims to be a comprehensive, fan-driven repository of everything from Portrait of an American Family to the latest rarities. For collectors and obsessive fans, it’s a treasure trove. For casual listeners, it’s overwhelming and legally murky.
2. The Trent Reznor Era: The Rise of Shock Rock (1994–1995)