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Lest We Forget: The Best of Marilyn Manson
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46 ratings
Album Reviews: 2
Album: Lest We Forget: The Best of Marilyn Manson
Artist: Marilyn Manson
Release Date: 9/28/2004
Genre: Rock/Pop

It's rather ironic that Marilyn Manson, an artist who kept the idea of the concept album alive during the '90s, turns out to have a greater impact as a singles artist, as the 17-track hits compilation Lest We Forget: The Best of Marilyn Manson illustrates. While each of his post-Portrait of an... [+] Expand

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Lest We Forget: The Best of Marilyn Manson by Marilyn Manson!

Recent User Reviews

A 50/50 affair
FULL REVIEW
posted Nov 30, 2004
MANSON DID HIS VERSION OF THE SONG TITLED: PERSONAL JESUS.HE DID IT MUCH BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL ARTIST!HE'S OUTSTANDING!
FULL REVIEW
posted Sep 15, 2007

Critic's Review

4.0 out of 5 stars Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
It's rather ironic that Marilyn Manson, an artist who kept the idea of the concept album alive during the '90s, turns out to have a greater impact as a singles artist, as the 17-track hits compilation Lest We Forget: The Best of Marilyn Manson illustrates. While each of his post-Portrait of an American Family LPs were designed to be heard as a whole, their singles unfailingly distilled the attitude and ideas behind the individual albums to their catchy core. Yes, catchy -- at his best, Marilyn Manson had a knack for a heavy, glammy hook, the kind that's hard to get out of your head, no matter how hard you try. Not every single had a great hook -- "Tourniquet" is a moody dirge, indicative of what awaits a listener on the album tracks -- but the best of them did, whether it was "Lunchbox" from the debut, the delirious "The Beautiful People," the glam-stomp of "The Dope Show," or the Faith No More homage "mOBSCENE." All these are here, but Lest We Forget doesn't have all the hits -- charting singles "I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)" and "Rock Is Dead" are conspicuously missing, as are video hits like "Dope Hat," "Man That You Fear," and "Coma White." These omissions are curious, considering that album tracks and covers are used as substitutions. Nevertheless, it has enough of the hits to make this worthwhile for the casual fans, as well as those listeners who never wanted to admit that these late-'90s alt-rock radio staples were guilty pleasures. [Lest We Forget was also released as a limited-edition set, featuring a bonus DVD containing all the music videos Manson released during the '90s.]
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