New Nail Art Designs Biography
(Source google.com)
Throbbing Gristle and Test Dept.
We have very little to do with it other than there is noise in my music and
there is noise in theirs. I'm working in the context of a pop song structure
whereas those bands didn't. And because someone didn't come up with a new name
that separates those two somewhat unrelated genres, it tends to irritate all
the old school fans waving their flags of alternativeness and obscurity. So,
I'd say I've borrowed from certain styles and bands like that. NIN's songs
cover a range of genres; as a body of work, they cannot be pigeonholed.
"The Perfect Drug" has the flavor of drum and bass, vocals in
"Down in It" seem influenced by early rap & hip-hop,
"Happiness in Slavery" is in the vein of Skinny Puppy and Ministry,
"The Frail" is a melancholy piano piece, and most of Pretty Hate
Machine could be considered dark synth pop. NIN's debut album, Pretty Hate
Machine (1989), largely consists of studio versions of demo recordings. This
was also NIN's first collaboration with producer Mark 'Flood' Ellis. It went
triple platinum in the US
and produced the singles "Head Like a Hole," "Down in It"
and "Sin". Music videos were made for all three tracks, but the one
for "Sin" was never released to the public, due to video never being
finished. However, since 1997 this video has been available on Halo 12.
"Something I Can Never Have" also appeared on the soundtrack for
Natural Born Killers. Trent Reznor is planning to release a re-mastered version
of Pretty Hate Machine but due to certain mishaps, fans might have to wait for
it a little longer as on August 17 2005, the ownership rights to Pretty Hate
Machine will be put on auction block by TVT Records, compliments of Prudential
Securities Financial Services. Pretty Hate Machine is part of an overall
biddable package that also includes the rights to the Television's Greatest
Hits compilations and the Mortal Kombat movie soundtracks. In addition, the
highest bidder will be able to collect a percentage on future sales of Nine
Inch Nails' other TVT-related releases, including Broken, Fixed, The Downward
Spiral and Further Down the Spiral.
NIN's second major release was
Broken (1992), an EP of six tracks plus two bonus tracks. It was originally
released in a fold-out format, containing the first six tracks on a regular CD
and an additional three-inch minidisc with the remaining bonus tracks. It was
later released as one CD, with the bonus songs as "hidden" tracks 98
and 99. The song "Wish", aided by the video directed by Peter "Sleazy"
Christopherson of Coil, won a Grammy in the "metal" category. Jon
Reiss directed a music video for "Happiness in Slavery," which was
almost universally banned due to its graphic content. The video depicts
performance artist Bob Flanagan strapping himself to a machine that
subsequently pleasures, tortures and kills him. A video for "Pinion"
aired twice on MTV before being banned for its objectionable content, although
images from it did become a fixture in the opening title sequence of the MTV
show 120 Minutes. A full length video informally called The Broken Movie was
also made by Sleazy, but has not seen an official release. The Broken movie, as
of 2005, can only be found on bootleg. Broken was followed by the remix EP
Fixed. NIN's second full album and third major release was The Downward Spiral
(1994).
This was NIN's second collaboration with Mark Ellis (Flood). It went
quadruple platinum and is often considered by critics to be NIN's best work.
There were two singles released, "March of the Pigs", "Closer",
"Hurt" was sent to radio only, but never released as a single, and
"Piggy" was also only sent to radio. Music videos were made for the
singles "March of the Pigs", "Closer", and official live
videos Michael Trent Reznor was born May 17, 1965, in the small town of Mercer , PA; he went by
his middle name to avoid confusion with his father Michael. At age five,
Reznor's parents divorced and he wound up being raised mostly by his maternal
grandparents; even so, Reznor stated repeatedly that his childhood was mostly
happy. He began playing the piano at age five, studying classical music, and
later learned tenor sax and tuba in the school band; he also acted in musicals
and became an avid Kiss fan. Reznor spent a year studying music and computers
at Allegheny College ,
but dropped out after a year to pursue music full-time; he soon packed up and
moved to Cleveland
with high school friend Chris Vrenna. Around the same time, he was discovering
new wave and assorted underground music; he was most fascinated with early
industrial, since it offered an edgy, aggressive way to use electronic
instruments. At age 19, he successfully auditioned to join an AOR band called
the Innocent, which released one album, Livin' in the Streets (Reznor's picture
does appear on the jacket). He quit the Innocent after just three months and
subsequently gigged with local bands; he also worked in a keyboard store and as
a janitor in the local Right Track recording studio. Eventually, he became a
studio engineer, teaching himself various computer applications and working on
his own material during off hours. In 1987, Reznor appeared in the Michael J.
Fox/Joan Jett film Light of Day, where he played keyboards with a trio dubbed
the Problems during a bar scene. Reznor recruited a band and hit the road with
the Lollapalooza circus in 1991, expanding the NIN fan base with a series of
inspired performances and subsequent release of the explosive Broken EP in
1992. Flirting with top-of-the-charts popularity, Reznor martialed the troops
to produce 1994's The Downward Spiral, a prog-rock concept album that was
recorded in the Hollywood house where Sharon
Tate met her fate at the hands of the Manson Family. A year later, Further Down
the Spiral, an extended EP of remixed tracks from The Downward Spiral, was
released on Interscope. Their 1997 single, "The Perfect Drug," was
included on the Lost Highwaymovie soundtrack and earned a Grammy nomination for
Best Hard Rock Performance. As the millenium draws to a close, Reznor is widely
regarded as one of the most influential voices in alternative music, earning
himself a slot in a canon of musical auteurs previously carved out by the likes
of Bowie, Reed, and Eno. NIN's sound has variously been described as alternative,
electronica, heavy metal, rock, synth pop, or, most commonly, industrial.
Regarding his music being categorized as industrial, Reznor had this to say in
a 1994 Axcess magazine interview: for Eraser (which was never aired) and
"Hurt", with the edited MTV version of "Closer" becoming
very successful. The video for "Closer," in many ways, set a standard
for Nine Inch Nails videos with its eerie images of pigs' heads and S&M
paraphenalia. The album's final track, "Hurt", would enjoy success
once again when it was covered, with slight alterations to the lyrics, by
Johnny Cash in 2003. The Downward Spiral was followed by the remix EP Further
Down the Spiral.
A remastered version of the album was released on November 23,
2004, with an accompanying CD of b-sides and rarities. The Remaster was also
released as a two-sided DualDisc Format The SACD edition of the remastered
album featured multichannel and stereo SACD versions of the album as well as a
remastered standard CD layer, disc 2 featured stereo SACD and standard CD
layers. The DualDisc contains a remastered CD-Audio on one side and features a
DVD-Audio format side containing High Resolution Stereo and 5.1 Surround mixes
of the entire album with expanded album art, a discography and Music Videos
[Closer(in Stereo & 5.1 audio), March of the Pigs, and Hurt (Live).
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