Third Day of a Seven Day Binge
"Third Day Of A Seven Day Binge", a brand new song from MARILYN MANSON, A free download of the track is presently available over at Marilynmanson.com. A new album from Manson is in the pipeline with more details to come. Marilyn Manson recently completed work on a new studio album for an early 2015 release. Earlier this year we celebrated the 20th anniversary of Marilyn Manson’s debut album Portrait Of An American Family. The outlandish shock factor associated with Manson back then has long since subsided, but the guy might be ready for a renaissance if new single “Third Day Of A Seven Day Binge” is anything to go by. It’s a surprisingly upbeat and jangly glam-rock tune that scans as the most immediately appealing Manson material in recent memory. The song is the first to be revealed from an album coming next year. Check it now, or download it at Manson’s site. The shock rocker's most recent full-length CD, "Born Villain", his eighth overall, debuted in the Top 10 on The Billboard 200 chart. The effort earned Manson his fourth Grammy nomination at the 2013 Grammys in the Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance" category for the album's lead single, "No Reflection". Manson has been cast in a recurring role in the hit FX series "Sons Of Anarchy". Manson plays Ron Tully, a "white supremacist prison shot-caller" who Charlie Hunnam's character, "Sons Of Anarchy" president Jax, uses to expand his power base during the show's seventh season. Manson has been steadily working his way into television in the past couple of years, making appearances on Showtime's "Californication", the Sundance Channel's "Wrong Cops" and HBO's "Eastbound & Down", along with voicing a demonic character on ABC's "Once Upon A Time". The singer made his TV scoring debut in April with the song "Cupid Carries A Gun", heard on the new WGN series "Salem". Manson told The Hollywood Reporter that the track "was the last track we just finished for my new album," adding "I liked the themes of 'Salem'. It looks at the witch trials without being cliche like most modern films."