Following the death of cult leader, murderer, and pop cultural icon Charles Manson, we examine 8 chilling songs about, influenced, or referencing him.
Infamous cult leader and mass murderer Charles Manson died on Sunday, November 19, 2017. Manson had been incarcerated for five decades, escaping a sentence that originally called or the death penalty. Since influencing his followers, The Family, to commit utterly brutal murders in 1969, including actress Sharon Tate, his influence within pop culture has run rampant. Manson has made a name for himselfβ¦albeit negative to the nth degree. Hmm, interesting how his βdashβ is definedβ¦
1. System of a Down, βATWAβ
Album: Toxicity, 2001
Sony Music Entertainment
βI donβt sleep anymore / I donβt eat anymore / I donβt live anymore / I donβt feel.β This most dark and unusual playlist about Charles Manson commences with System of a Down. The Armenian-American metal collective makes their first appearance on a The Musical Hype playlist β shocking. SOAD make quite an impression with βATWA,β which was inspired by the infamous cult leader and mass murderer.
ATWA itself is an acronym for air, trees, water, and animals. Itβs an βecological mandateβ that Manson promoted. Itβs a fitting title for the song, which centers around the mindset and feelings of the βmisunderstoodβ cult leader β at least from his perspective. The aforementioned lyrics, as well as the chorus give a clear portrait of how he felt.
βYou donβt care about how I feel
I donβt feel there anymore.β
2. Ozzy Osbourne, βBloodbath in Paradiseβ
Album: No Rest for the Wicked, 1988
Epic
βAs you lie bleeding, murdered in your bedβ¦/ Execution halts your breath / Helter skelter, spiral death / Bloodbath in paradise.β Ozzy Osbourne doesnβt play around covering Charles Manson on the bloody βBloodbath in Paradise.β Definitely unexpected β oxymoronic β as one doesnβt expect mass murder to occur in paradise (California contextually).
βCan you hear them in the darkness
Helter skelter, spiral madness Bloodbath in paradise
But thereβs nowhere you can run to baby
Bloodbath in paradise
Forever sleep in paradise.β
Osbourne sensationally paints a damning portrait of his eccentricity and ultimately, the loss of life for his respective victims.
βYouβre coming home
Thereβs blood on the walls
When Charlie and the family make house calls
If youβre alone
Then watch what you do
Because Charlie and the family might get you.β
Yeah, this is definitely NOT Charlie and the Chocolate Family. As aforementioned, Osbourne brilliantly references Helter Skelter, Mansonβs apocalyptic race war theory, etc.
βAnd California is turning red
No sign of life or the keepers of doom
In Charlie and the keeperβs scarlet room.β
3. Lana Del Rey, βFreakβ
Album: Honeymoon, 2015
Interscope
βYouβre cold as ice, baby / But when youβre nice, baby / Youβre so amazing in every way.β Oh boy. Anytime Lana Del Rey gets into the mix, thereβs always dark, mysterious, and strange beauty. βFreakβ from her 2015 album Honeymoon is no different.
βBaby, if you wanna leave, come to California
Be a freak like me, too
Screw your anonymity, loving me is all you need
To feel like I do
We could slow dance to rock music, kiss while we do it
Talk βtil we both turn blue
Baby, if you wanna leave, come to California
Be a freak like me, too.β
It should be noted that the song itself isnβt specific to Charles Manson. However, the music video, featuring Father John Misty, brings in a cultish element. Coupled with the lyrics β particularly the βslow dance to rock musicβ β thereβs the sense that Misty plays a Manson-inspired character. Del Rey gets some Jim Jones influence in as well, specifically the infamous βKool aid.β
4. White Zombie, βReal Solution No. 9β
Album: Astro Creep 2000: Songs of Love, Destruction and Other Synthetic Delusionsβ¦, 1995
Geffen
βHe cut through the bone, he cut through the wire.β Rob Zombie never yields a dull moment. Him and White Zombie beams with hellishness β musically-speaking. The proof lies in βReal Solution No. 9,β which references the crazed mindset of Charles Manson and his followers, as well as their murderous actions. Zombie and company donβt dwell on the specific horror, but there are enough hints that itβs clear Manson has managed to influence the band.
Such hints include the opening sample, with key lines such as ββIβm already deadββ and ββburn an X in your head.ββ On the first verse, Zombie paints a picture of the brutality and madness:
βWho will survive and what will be left of them? / Apocalyptic dreams see the ordinary madness.β
Apocalyptic is the key word, possibly related to Mansonβs apocalyptic Helter Skelter theory.
5. Rob Zombie, βDevilβs Hole Girls and the Big Revolutionβ
Album: Hellbilly Deluxe 2, 2010
Roadrunner
βDreaming be damned β this is control / Awaken your mind, yeah, awaken your soul / Dreaming be damned β this is control / Raping your mind, yeah, raping yourself.β Cult, cult, cultish stuff!
Even more accurately, itβs Rob Zombie, Charles Manson enthusiast, again. On his album Hellbilly Deluxe 2, Zombie references Manson ability to control on the colorfully-titled βDevilβs Hole Girls and the Big Revolution.β According to NPR, β¦Manson was a Master Manipulator, Even as a Child.
Besides the mind control, itβs clear that Manson and the infamous Family commune is on his mind because of location.
βDevilβs hole, the girls are one / Burning in the desert sun.β
Desert sun? Could that be Death Valley?
6. Deicide, βLunatic of Godβs Creationβ
Album: Deicide, 1990
Roadrunner
βLunatic of Godβs creation / No resist / Hear the voices of devastation.β Lyrically, American death metal band Deicide keeps things short and sweet on βLunatic of Godβs Creation.β βLunatic of Godβs Creationβ serves as the opener for their 1990 self-titled album. The lunatic would be Charles Manson, of course. On the first verse, frontman Glen Benton savagely sings:
βServants of death, enchanter of pain / From the land of no return, youβll kill again / Smear the blood on the naked corpse / Manson.β
Definitely hellish. The Hadean nature of Manson and company continues on the second verse, equally aggressive.
βThere is darkness in his eyes / And you wonβt see it, before you die / Feel the knife of the Lord Divineβs Creation.β
7. Neil Young, βRevolution Bluesβ
Album: On the Beach, 1974
Reprise
βI see bloody figures / And ten million dune buggies coming down the mountains / Well, I hear that Laurel Canyon is full of famous stars / But I hate them worse than lepers and Iβll kill them in their cars.β Ah, The Musical Hype welcomes another newbie to its playlists β Neil Young. The veteran Canadian singer-songwriter joins in dark fashion on βRevolution Bluesβ from his 1974 album, On the Beach. The aforementioned lyrics do justice in summing up the madness of Charles Manson, particularly Youngβs reference to βfamous stars.β
There are number of other troubling lyrics.
βSo, you be good to me and Iβll be good to you / And in this land of conditions / Iβm not above suspicion / I wonβt attack you but I wonβt back you.β
βWell Iβm afraid that heβs gone / It was such a drag to hear him whining all night long.β
8. Church of Misery, βSpahn Ranch (Charles Manson)β
Album: Early Works Compilation, 2011
Emetic
βOperation for new domination / Blind familyβs power / Stab them to death, my children.β Manson mind control to the nth degree! βSpahn Ranch (Charles Manson)β commences with a news report about the brutal murder of Sharon Tate by The Family.
βDemolition for new creation / Peace, love, and terror / Pigs must be killed, my children.β
Itβs accompanied by the dark, devastating music of Japanese metal band Church of Misery. This playlist is just one of many that the band has appeared on covering the deviants of society.
βNow is the time for revolution / Are you prepared for destruction? / Now is the time to creepy crawl / Helter Skelter is cominβ down fast! / Rise! Death to pigs! Helter Skelter!β
Photo Credits: Sony Music Entertainment, Epic, Interscope, Geffen, Roadrunner, Reprise, Emetic