2 1/2 stars
“The organizing principle of this book you are reading is meant to emphasize that the artistic expressions inspired by Manson, his Family, and their crimes, have often been compelled to engage with the Family’s own dramatic bent.”
Three-quarters of this book isn’t bad; after a lengthy introduction, author Jeffrey Melnick takes us through the Manson Family and the Tate/LaBianca murders as an historical concept, placing them in their time period, and discussing their influence on American society and culture. I found the Terry Melcher parts interesting and informative, and there was enough material in there for me, who has been over this ground time and again, to never be bored.
But the fourth section, which focuses more on Manson’s impact on the art world, is such a scattered mess that it all but obliterated what I’d read before. There is an undue obsession with the David Duchovny NBC procedural Aquarius (a show so cringey on its face that I, an armchair Manson scholar and X-Files fan, didn’t even attempt to watch). Then, he claims “the most important piece of counter cultural Manson art of the late 1980s” is the Helter Stupid album by the band Negativland. Now, that is a lot of qualifiers—it’s like saying “Debbie is the best white, over 40 Snickerdoodle baker on the west side of East Lansing, Michigan”—so I can’t get too mad. But what the fuck is he talking about? How is it important? To whom? In what way? I’ve heard of Negativland, but that’s about it. I don’t know this album. It didn’t change the culture in ANY way. It didn’t change the general worldview of Manson. It didn’t bring him to a greater public consciousness the way, say, Guns N Roses’ cover of “Look At Your Game, Girl” on *their* 1993 album The Spaghetti Incident did. It didn’t become a thing of myth, like the Heart song “Magic Man,” which he says that Ann & Nancy Wilson denied was about Manson in their memoir. (And, by the way, in a book that is endlessly footnoted, where is the footnote for that?) Again, what the fuck is he talking about?
Then it bangs on with a long discussion about Neil Young’s On the Beach album, which has a song Melnick says is Manson influenced, but he can’t quote it here because Young denied him permission. (Haha!) So instead, he spends forever analyzing the symbolism of the album’s cover, which isn’t directly related to Manson at all.
And there’s no mention of my sister’s favorite Manson-related contribution to pop culture: The Ben Stiller Show’s Manson sketch, starring everyone’s current favorite TV lawyer Bob Odenkirk.
The whole back quarter reads like some bloviating college term paper. The first three-quarters are worth a read for Manson completists.