Each member of the band has varied influences, and the same diversity is reflected in our fanbase.
If you make it sound too much like a synth, it will just sound like a guitar part played on a synth.
I'm open to getting more equipment, but I really won't have time to look into that until after the tour.
Experimenting with different sounds is great, but when it comes down to it, you're still playing a guitar.
But the exposure we got by doing the stint with Nine Inch Nails brought us a lot of attention.
It was a good chance for us to play for people who would never have heard us otherwise.
Nobody seems to play Yamaha electrics, but it's the best guitar I own.
I even have a Harmony Rocket and a Stratocaster with a scalloped neck back in Florida.
We're approaching things quite differently this time, but it will still sound like Marilyn Manson.
What you hear about the band is always going to be more disturbing than any particular song.
It's like tabloid news programs that talk about how horrible something is, while at the same time they're glorifying it as their top story.
We're playing the same songs, the same way, that we have for years.
It's great, because different groups of kids can laugh at each other and still enjoy the show.
We'll only be playing four new songs live, but all the material for the next album is basically finished.
We were like psychedelic folk combined with Sonic Youth's noise.