City people live the city. We live in L.A., New York, we live in places where it's chaotic and you never know what's gonna happen. And that's the music - you never know what's gonna happen.
Drinking bear is easy. Trashing your hotel room is easy. But being a Christian, that's a tough call. That's rebellion.
From the moment I leave my house or my hotel room, the public owns me. The public made Alice Cooper and I can't imagine ever turning my back on my fans.
He (Marilyn Manson) has a woman's name and wears makeup. How original.
He didn't get the feeling that we wanted - nothing on him, but he wasn't on the same trip.
He started to, but we said we weren't happy with the feelings we got off the cut... the album now is more us than the other production that Frank did.
I appreciate an audience that reacts to the music, even if they jump on stage and try to beat us up, I think that's a fantastic reaction. I think that they're really hearing something then.
I think he was trying to produce more of a... sort of a cheaper image.
I'm 18 and I like it!
If it's total freedom, I guess the ultimate thing you can go into is total silence between the audience and performer, with the performer projecting something he doesn't even have to play.
If you confine it, you're confining a whole thing. If you make it spontaneous, so that anything can happen, like we don't want to confine or restrict anything. What we can do, whatever we can let happen, you just let it happen.
If you get murdered - what a great thing. What a great publicity thing.
If you're listening to a rock star in order to get your information on who to vote for, you're a bigger moron than they are.
It's a big flash of all these things and whatever you take out of that statement's one statement, one mind, one statement, one act, one show, and all the songs are one.
It's Frank's painting on the cover. We were originally going to use a Salvador Dali painting that we got permission from Salvador Dali to use, and Frank found this one, and it really did fit the music much more.
It's like this - these five members have been influenced of course by other groups, because that's where this generation's groups came from - an environment like the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, and The Who. People like that.
It's not an anti-sex trip. Like, we're taking sex, which is probably another half of American entertainment, sex and violence, and we're projecting it, and we're saying this is the way everything is right now.
People that haven't seen us yet are shocked because they think that Alice Cooper must be a female folksinger. They don't expect the whole thing.
So what this is is us, our personalities refined down on to a stage performance. In other words, the way we play is the end product of the way we live - we live in the cities, you see.
That was very close to getting killed. Usually at pop festivals we have people jumping on stage.
That's like making fun of a maniac because his brain isn't completely right, because he isn't in the norm.
That's where their heart is from the sex and violence of TV and the movies, and that was our influence. We weren't brought up under a blues influence.
The hippies wanted peace and love. We wanted Ferraris, blondes and switchblades.
They coincide with each other but they don't at the same time. So what it is, is when people come to see us the first time, they see this.
They pick all of us out, and then they decide, they computerize, decide if they like it or don't like it, and then they go home, and then they come back again because they're not sure what they saw.
They're reacting and that's wonderful. It's better than them sitting there doing nothing. I say make them react - do whatever's in your power to move the audience, and if that's where it is, and there where it is with America, sex and violence, then I say project it.
We can only take it so far, because man can only take it so far, lower self can only take it so far, and you have to realize that the public is only at a certain place.
We don't mind that, that's making them accept more, making fun that we accept that. The thing is this is the way we are. We think it's a gas.
We got on his label, and the Bizarre organization is just going up and up. So we have faith.
We identified with Frank. We were of course influenced - when everybody hears Zappa, they're influenced by him, just like The Beatles.
We just set it up and recorded it the way we played it. But that was the way we played it then.
We like reactions - a reaction is walking out on us, a reaction is throwing tomatoes at the stage, that's a healthy psychological reaction.
We play it differently now. If we did the album now it would be different.
We started combining the use of light and the use of theatrics and the use of as many art forms as possible, and it's still growing - that's the whole idea of it.
We take that subconscious power and put it on stage because you play what you're influenced by. I'm sure that blues-influenced people live the blues - real blues people.
We try to be as much involved in our product as possible, because then it's us.
We understood that there was someone thinking the same way and so when we got together with him it worked perfectly.
We wanted it more live and raw. We didn't want a studio sound.
We're tired of that and we won't accept that, we won't accept the blues except certain blues people that are real blues people.
Well, all of it is a freak thing, because it doesn't coincide with what the normal person thinks of the normal city.
Well, we were all in high school and we got together, and in college - we were in art college together.
When we get together and rehearse, which is always living with each other, we always talk about what would make it better, what would mean more, what would say more. So we're always improving and growing.
Yet I was Marilyn Manson - times 10.
You can't get the visual thing on the record as much as you'd like to. We produced this album, and we'd never done that before, except when we produced singles for ourselves.
You just let your lower self go, and then it takes on all these aspects of the society - the city with horns blowing, the people yelling things at each other, and the all-in-all violence and chaos of the city. Put that on stage with music, and that's what this is.
Cooper`s newest "Best of" album came out May 7th 2007.
Cooper`s song "School`s out" was featured on the Simpson`s season #4 episode "Kamp Krusty".
The album "A fistful of Alice" consits of many variations around the world including different songs.
Cooper`s album "A fistful of Alice" consists of 12 live songs and a pre-recorded song.
Cooper has a new gutarist named Jason Hook who is preforming at Cooper`s concerts from 2007-?.
Cooper has a total of 31 different albums.
Cooper has 25 gold albums.
In 1999, Cleopatra Records released "Humanary Stew: A Tribute to Alice Cooper", featuring a number of rock and metal all-star collaborations.
Cooper`s song "Great American Success Story" was going to be the theme song for the movie "Back to school" but it was not used.
Cooper`s music video "Hey Stoopid" features Ozzy Osbourne singing in one part.
Coopers music video "Feed my Frankinstein" features Wayne and Garth from "Wayne`s World".
Cooper wrote a song for Jim Morrison called "Desprado".
Cooper`s album called "Welcome to my nightmare" is for more deticated fans.
Alice Cooper did a show in Charlotte, NC in the mid 70's called Welcome To My Nightmare.
Bon Jovi did a song dedicated to Cooper called "The Ballad of Alice Cooper".
One time Cooper came out with a huge snake to wrestle Jake The Snake Roberts.
Cooper was granted a PhD (honorary) in Performing arts. The Grand Canyon University honored him with that in 2004.
Cooper loves to golf and is very good at it. He does golf outings for charity. He rarely if ever keeps the money for himself.
Cooper graduated from Cortez High School which is located in Phoenix, Az.
Cooper is never seen on stage without his black greasepaint around his eyes and mouth.
Cooper continues to tour regularly still doing his bizarre and dark horror themed theatrics.
Cooper has stated: Though the band didn’t deny these theory’s, they did this because they thought it would bring them publicity. They actually just picked the name at random because it sounded twisted.
Cooper's father moved them to Phoenix, Arizona when he was young and Cooper still lives in the State at the present time.
Beginning in 2004, Cooper began hosting a syndicated radio show called Nights with Alice Cooper.