Encyclopedia > Nine Inch Nails

  Article Content

Nine Inch Nails

Nine Inch Nails were formed in Cleveland, Ohio in 1988 as an industrial rock band.

The founder of the band, Trent Reznor, is its principal member and does most of the work on Nine Inch Nails albums; when the band plays live he is joined by a full line-up which has rotated considerably since the band's formation.

Their first album, Pretty Hate Machine (1989), is 3x platinum in the US. It produced the singles "Head Like A Hole," "Down In It" and "Sin."

The second major Nine Inch Nails release is Broken[?] (1992), an EP of six tracks and two hidden tracks. The song "Wish" won a Grammy, oddly enough, in the "metal" category. An album of remixes from Broken[?], entitled Fixed[?], is also available.

The second album, 4x platinum The Downward Spiral, was released in 1994. It helped the band to much greater prominence, especially through the second single from the album, "Closer." The other single from the album was "March of the Pigs." Like Broken[?], The Downward Spiral produced a remix album, this one entitled Further Down the Spiral[?]. The Downward Spiral powerfully evokes images of both aggressive and depressive states, and many people find it unlistenable. Others consider it to be Reznor's finest work. Reznor has publicly stated that he has suffered from depression, and has been reported as suffering from bipolar disorder.

Considerably different versions of this album were released in the UK and the US.

There was a long gap before the release of the next album, The Fragile (1999). It produced three singles, one released in the US ("The Day The World Went Away"), one in the UK ("We're In This Together") and one in Japan and Australia ("Into The Void"). Like the previous two albums, it was followed by a remix album, entitled Things Falling Apart[?].

Each Nine Inch Nails release is given a "halo" number. The currently released Halos are as follows:

The most famous NIN moment is probably their disastrous, mudsoaked performance at Woodstock 1994.

Reznor also recorded the background music for the id software computer game Quake, released in 1996, but this is not considered a canonical Nine Inch Nails release. Reznor was also put in charge of compiling the soundtrack to the film Natural Born Killers. Some of the tracks on the soundtrack to the David Lynch film Lost Highway are credited to Reznor alone, in addition to it featuring the Nine Inch Nails track "The Perfect Drug." Reznor also contributed the track "Deep" to the soundtrack for the movie Tomb Raider.

Trent has collaborated with such artists as Tori Amos, adding backing vocals to "Past the Mission" from Under the Pink. He has also worked with David Bowie, Pigface, Marilyn Manson, The Neptunes, 1000 Homo DJs, and Peter Gabriel. TapeWorm is Reznor's own collaborative band, with a rather enigmatic line-up, tentatively featuring Danny Lohner and Maynard of Tool. The general audience has yet to hear any official release from the band, outside of a live performance of a single TapeWorm song (Vacant) which A Perfect Circle has arranged for its own 2001 live tour, to the initial irritation of Trent Reznor.

External links and references



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Great River, New York

... and 1.2 km² (0.4 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 8.91% water. Demographics As of the census of 2000, there are 1,546 people, 509 households, and 417 ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 38.5 ms