"Mars Needs Women", the new video from
ROB ZOMBIE, can be viewed below (courtesy of
AOL's
Noisecreep). Footage for the clip was compiled during the
"Gruesome Twosome Tour" featuring
Zombie and
Alice Cooper.
In other news, the CD/DVD edition of
Zombie's latest album,
"Hellbilly Deluxe 2", will arrive in stores on September 28 via
Roadrunner Records. The expanded version of the album will feature three brand new tracks recorded with the band's current touring lineup, including
SLIPKNOT drummer/
MURDERDOLLS guitarist
Joey Jordison, along with a reworked version of the song
"The Man Who Laughs". A bonus DVD featuring live footage and a 30-minute touring documentary, dubbed
"Transylvanian Transmissions", will also be included.
"Hellbilly Deluxe 2" special-edition track listing:
CD:
01.
Devil's Hole Girls And The Big Revolution (new song)
02.
Jesus Frankenstein03.
Sick Bubblegum04.
What?05.
Theme Of An Angry Red Planet06.
Mars Needs Women07.
Werewolf, Baby08.
Everything Is Boring (new song)
09.
Virgin Witch10.
Death And Destiny Inside the Dream Factory11.
Burn12.
Cease To Exist13.
Werewolf Women Of The SS14.
Michael (new song)
15.
The Man Who LaughsDVD:
01.
Mars Needs Women02.
School's Out (ALICE COOPER cover) (feat. Alice Cooper)
03.
Transylvanian TransmissionsAs
BLABBERMOUTH.NET first reported on July 21,
ROB ZOMBIE and
ALICE COOPER will join forces for the
"Halloween Hootenanny" tour in September/October. Support on the trek will come from
MURDERDOLLS.
Rob Zombie's fourth solo album,
"Hellbilly Deluxe 2", debuted at No. 8 on the
Billboard album chart on February 10, selling 49,000 copies in its first week of release. That total is less than 50 percent of the number of copies that his previous effort,
"Educated Horses", sold in its first week back in April 2006, when it moved 107,000 copies to land at No. 5 on the chart.
Zombie was originally supposed to issue the album last November through his longtime label,
Geffen Records, but delayed its arrival to February 2 after abruptly leaving to sign with the
Roadrunner label. He admitted to
The Pulse of Radio that he was a little unsure at first whether that was the right thing to do. "Well, I mean, it was weird because at first you think like, well, you know, you're on
Geffen, do you want to make the switch, should you just change next time on the next record, you know, just ride out what you started," he said. "I struggled with it but I thought, you know, my gut is telling me this is the thing to do because I have a feeling if I put it out in November, the label's not gonna support it, and by December the record will be dead. And I just said, you know, screw it. Whatever the repercussions, let's just do it."
