Nine Inch Nails
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Nine Inch Nails Biography
Nine Inch Nails were the most popular industrial group ever and
were largely responsible for bringing the music to a mass audience. It
isn't really accurate to call NIN a group; the only official member is
singer/producer/multi-instrumentalist Trent Reznor, who always remained
solely responsible for NIN's musical direction (he was, however,
supported in concert by a regular backing band). Unlike the vast
majority of industrial artists, Reznor wrote melodic, traditionally
structured songs where lyrics were a focal point. His pop instincts not
only made the harsh electronic beats of industrial music easier to
digest, but also put a human face on a style that usually tried to
sound as mechanical as possible. While Ministry crossed over to heavy
metal audiences, NIN built up a large alternative rock fan base right
around the time of Nirvana's mainstream breakthrough. As a result,
Reznor became a genuine star and his notoriously dark, brooding persona
and provocateur instincts made him a Jim Morrison-esque sex symbol for
the '90s. A long period of inactivity and writer's block followed,
which gave virtually every alternative metal band of the late '90s a
chance to rip off elements of NIN's sound. By the time Reznor's
five-year hiatus finally ended, he was still a popular figure but his
commercial momentum had slowed somewhat.
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.
As Nine Inch Nails, Reznor began recording his own Ministry- and Skinny
Puppy-influenced compositions in 1988, playing all the instruments
himself. At first, he simply hoped to release a 12 single on a small
European label, but when he sent demo tapes to around ten American
labels, nearly every one offered him a deal. He wound up signing with
TVT, which released NIN's debut album, Pretty Hate Machine, in 1989
(after having rejected an initial effort called Industrial Nation).
Reznor quickly assembled a backing band and toured with Skinny Puppy
for a short time, but soon tired of playing for strictly industrial
artists. With a tighter outfit featuring Chris Vrenna on drums and
Richard Patrick on guitar (plus several revolving-door keyboardists),
he consciously chose to open for alt-rock acts (including, early on,
the Jesus and Mary Chain and Peter Murphy), partly for the challenge of
winning over fans who might not have liked industrial music. The
strategy helped expand Nine Inch Nails' fan base substantially; the
single Down in It got some airplay in dance clubs, reaching
Billboard's dance and modern rock charts, and MTV later picked up on
the video for the more rock-oriented Head Like a Hole. In 1991, after
settling on keyboardist James Woolley, Nine Inch Nails became part of
the inaugural Lollapalooza tour, which expanded their fan base by leaps
and bounds. Pretty Hate Machine's momentum kept building slowly, and
although it never climbed higher than number 75, it spent over two
years on the album charts and eventually sold over a million copies --
one of the first indie-label rock albums to do so.
TVT had a massive hit on their hands, and to ensure that Reznor would
produce another one, they attempted to take control of the follow-up's
creative direction. Enraged by the outside meddling, Reznor tried to
secure a release from his contract, leading to a vicious court battle.
His only recording outlets were side projects; in 1990, he co-wrote and
sang on Suck, a track on Pigface's debut album, Gub, and also sang on
the Al Jourgensen-led 1000 Homo DJs cover of Black Sabbath's
Supernaut. (TVT ordered Reznor's vocals removed from the track, but
Jourgensen actually just altered them slightly and said he'd
re-recorded it.) Eventually, he was able to sign with Interscope, which
helped him set up his own label, the Cleveland-based Nothing imprint.
Reznor had been recording new material on the sly, and in 1992 Nothing
released the EP Broken as well as a concurrent remix disc titled Fixed.
Broken featured more (and heavier) guitars than Pretty Hate Machine,
partly in response to NIN's live sound and partly as a sonic evocation
of Reznor's boiling frustration in the wake of the legal wars; it also
featured two bonus cuts, a version of Suck and the Adam Ant cover
(You're So) Physical, a nod to Reznor's new wave roots. Despite many
reviews characterizing the EP as a harrowing, difficult listen, Broken
-- supported by NIN's now-considerable fan base -- debuted in the Top
Ten and the first single/video, Wish, won a Grammy for Best Heavy
Metal Performance. Reznor enhanced his reputation as a provocateur with
a widely banned clip for Happiness in Slavery, which depicted S&M
performance artist Bob Flanagan being torn apart by a machine; there
was also a long-form clip for Broken that was never released
commercially due to its graphic content (a torture victim is
dismembered while viewing NIN videos).
Reznor moved to Los Angeles to craft the second full-length NIN album,
assembling a studio in the house where actress Sharon Tate was murdered
by Charles Manson's associates. The Downward Spiral was a highly
ambitious work, a concept album indebted to progressive rock that
featured the most detailed, layered studiocraft of any NIN release yet.
Hugely anticipated, the album debuted at number two and became one of
the bleakest multi-platinum albums ever. Richard Patrick had departed
the touring band to form Filter, and Reznor revamped the group with
drummer Vrenna, keyboardist Woolley, guitarist Robin Finck, and bassist
Danny Lohner. NIN caused a sensation at that summer's 25th-anniversary
Woodstock concert, performing a ferocious set after horsing around and
covering themselves in mud just before hitting the stage. Meanwhile,
MTV had put an edited version of the video for Closer in heavy
rotation and NIN scored one of the year's unlikeliest hits: a song
whose chorus began I want to f*ck you like an animal, which helped
make Reznor one of alternative rock's biggest sex symbols. The subdued
ballad Hurt gained some further airplay, even though it lacked the
titillating shock value of Closer. Later in the year, Reznor
assembled the soundtrack of Oliver Stone's controversial Natural Born
Killers, editing the songs together to create an innovative collage; he
also guested on Past the Mission, a track on Tori Amos' second album,
Under the Pink. In 1995, with new keyboardist Charlie Clouser, Nine
Inch Nails hit the road with David Bowie, whose late-'70s albums (along
with Pink Floyd) had been a major influence on The Downward Spiral. He
also contributed a cover of Joy Division's Dead Souls to the
soundtrack of The Crow and issued the remix album Further Down the
Spiral, which nearly reached the Top 20 (a testament to his popularity).
Using money from The Downward Spiral, Reznor built a state-of-the-art
studio in New Orleans in a building that had once been a funeral home.
While pondering his next move in the wake of his sudden stardom, he
produced Nothing signee Marilyn Manson's second album, Antichrist
Superstar, which did indeed make him a superstar. In 1997, longtime
friend Vrenna had a falling out with Reznor and eventually was replaced
by Jerome Dillon; Reznor's maternal grandmother also passed away that
year and his friendship with Manson soon deteriorated. Even so, he
produced another movie soundtrack, for David Lynch's Lost Highway, and
contributed the new single The Perfect Drug, which flitted
unpredictably between several different rhythm tracks. Though The
Perfect Drug kept him in the public eye for a time, Reznor was still
unsure what kind of statement would be an appropriate follow-up to The
Downward Spiral; that uncertainty resulted in a severe case of writer's
block. In the meantime, NIN were proving vastly influential on a new
crop of bands; major labels signed up industrial metal outfits like
Filter and Stabbing Westward, and an assortment of alternative metal
bands started grafting industrial production flourishes onto their
music; Guns N' Roses lead singer Axl Rose even fired the rest of his
band and holed up in a studio to pursue a more NIN-influenced direction.
Nine Inch Nails finally returned in 1999 with the double-CD opus The
Fragile. It debuted at number one with massive first-week sales, but
slipped down the charts rather quickly afterward, perhaps because the
musical climate had changed a great deal over the past five years. The
remix album Things Falling Apart followed a year later, as did an
extensive world tour. An album of live performances culled from the
tour, And All That Could Have Been, was released in early 2002. Reznor
was largely quiet during the next three years, finally re-emerging in
2005 with another chart-topper, With Teeth. Touring continued into
2006, where NIN spent the spring and summer on the road with various
support acts including Saul Williams, Bauhaus, TV on the Radio, and
Peaches. The EP Every Day Is Exactly the Same appeared in April 2006;
it contained the title track and five various remixes (all originally
from With Teeth). Touring America followed, and then late in the year
Reznor was back in the studio working on the next album. In early 2007
the band resumed touring, this time in Europe. A viral marketing
campaign began when USB key chains that contained new songs were found
in the restrooms during NIN shows. These key chains also contained a
noisy audio file that, when run through a spectrum analyzer, drew an
audio wave in the shape of a phone number. The phone numbers were
answering machines filled with conspiracy theories, there were fake
websites strewn across the net, and busy Internet forums and wikis
appeared to theorize about and document it all. The big payoff appeared
in April when the dystopian concept album Year Zero arrived. ~ Steve
Huey, All Music Guide
Written by Steve Huey