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The Art of Making Mistakes
The industrial metal guru Trent Reznor sells records, is praised by
critics and has been a huge influence on the musical scene of the 90's.
GAFFA went through his career with him in Barcelona.
Trent Reznor, synonymous with the one-man band Nine Inch Nails, is not
particularly tall. Nor is he very tanned (rather pale as death). Old
haircut. As he is sitting there dressed in military boots, a worn green
army jacket, black jeans and a ditto T-shirt, he doesn't look like a man
with an album on the top of the US hitlist. And he is hard to recognize
a few hours later when he is standing as the center of attention in a
spectacular live show, which shows that he can not only match the idols
Pink Floyd musically, but also visually. The first Nine Inch Nails-show
in four years knocks the dumbfounded Spanish audience of their feet. The
show is a tour through the one-man-band's almost ten year old career,
with emphasis on the current album The Fragile, which has been on the
way for five years. The career started with Pretty Hate Machine from '89
and the hit Head Like A Hole. An album, which sounded mostly, like a
rock-version of Depeche Mode.
The Forerunner
"When I made Pretty Hate Machine I was discovering what Nine Inch Nails
should be and what it should sound like. Many of my sources of
inspiration were British bands. In the early 90's there was Wax Trax in
the USA, who released Ministry, Front 242 - and Skinny Puppy were also a
part of this scene. They were bands who really inspired and motivated
me. Bands I thought were really cool. I didn't notice what was going on
in the American rock scene at that time. Jane's Addiction came at that
time. That was the only one of importance, but it wasn't what I was
working with. When alternative music started selling to a larger
audience, bands like Jane's Addiction and Nirvana ended Guns N'Roses and
such, made them look out of place. The fact that we were performing at
the first Lollapolooza-tour in USA at the same time also made people
take an interest in us. We were cripples in Europe since the shitty
company we were signed with in America, TVT, wouldn't license us until
we were bigger. So we were two years behind. It's funny, because when
Pretty Hate Machine was released the radio wouldn't play it. They said
it was too hard. And now it seems tame but not necessarily out of place.
The times have changed. And after touring with that material for two
years it is suddenly on MTV: 'New music here! First!' And it has been
out for two damn years, and you wouldn't play it. I would like to
believe that we have moved people towards a direction to be more
open-minded, accumulates Trent who characterizes the debut album as
'charming in its naivete'."
The Industrial Metal Rock
It wasn't until the EP Broken that Nine Inch Nails found the more mature
rock expression and developed the industrial rock/metal, which have
since been copied by dozens of bands. When you listen to Broken it's not
hard to hear where Gravity Kills, Stabbing Westward and Marilyn Manson
(who Trent Reznor also produced two albums for) have found their
inspiration. The song Wish from the EP received a Grammy and were
followed by Fixed. One of the first remix-albums in the world of rock.
"The concept with Fixed was to throw Broken into a blender. Have all my
friends, whom I respected, destroy it even more and see what happened. I
did the same with Further Down The Spiral. It's fun for me as an artist,
because it is less straining. I can have more fun. But it's also a bit
pretentious."
Many artists have adopted the remix idea. "The difference is when I hear
one of those remix-albums, e.g. White Zombie, they want to make all the
songs into dance-hits. 'Let's make some people mix this and turn it into
a dance thing.' To me that's selling out. I feel that if you should
reinterpret something, then let's really fuck it up. Not calculate every
song. 'Oh no, this is not hot in the club scene. Let's change that.'
That doesn't appeal to me at all," Reznor firmly declares.
The Spiral and the Fragile
In 1994 The Downward Spiral followed. An album so dark and gloomy, so
self destructive and nihilistic that it repelled most of the press when
it was released. With the result of a lot of bad reviews. It has since
been reevaluated and is now considered to be a masterpiece. "I also
found that interesting. Because when the album was released it got lousy
reviews in Europe, and it got good but not great reviews in USA. But now
with the new album being released I read: 'The classic '94-Downward
Spiral-masterpiece.' And it gets votes for best album of the decade. And
I think: 'If I remember correctly that wasn't what you were saying when
it was released,'" Reznor says with a laugh. - "But it's better then if
it was the other way around. When I look back I believe it's finding
it's rightful place in proportion to what we did. I remember when The
Downward Spiral was released and it went straight to second place, and I
thought: 'There's nothing that sounds anything similar to this at this
end of the list.' I can say the same for The Fragile, which went
straight to no. 1. Look at what it's surrounded by: Backstreet Boys and
so on. It's a little like this: 'See what record doesn't fit in.' The
type of record I like best is the kind that's transient; you don't get
it the first time. But there's something about that makes you give it
another chance. After the second time listening, it makes more sense. By
the fifth it makes perfect sense. By the tenth it's your favorite.
Rather that than a rFecord that sounds great the first time, but you're
getting tired of it by the third time," says Trent while shifting
between eye contact and staring at the floor.
First Came the Word
About The Downward Spiral you said: "I hope the reason people like my
music is the lyrics." Do you still feel this way? (Long pause). "I put a
lot into the lyrics. They're always the hardest to do. To be honest:
(Long pause) When I was writing The Fragile I suffered from a very bad
depression. And I didn't want to write lyrics. I didn't wish to look for
what was going on inside of me. I think my lack of trust in the lyrics
makes this album less lyrically intense, as perhaps some of the previous
stuff has been. I'm not saying that I don't like them. My head was just
in a different place when I made this album. The music became more
expressive. It was more interesting for me to focus on the music this
time. I don't hope it will continue to be this way. If I had to start an
album today I would wish to solely concentrate on the lyrics. I think I
was leaning too much against the music this time and I did it because I
was afraid of being honest."
What Song Lyric is Your Favorite from The Fragile?
"Probably the song 'Even Deeper.' I like where it's going and itıs
confessing character. I think the line: 'For once in my life I feel
complete and I still want to ruin it' is a reoccurring theme in my life
and I just stumbled over it. It makes a lot of sense to me." You also
said that you wanted to get away from the very depressing. "That didn't
happen (laughing). I have learned that I can sit and talk about what I
want to do, but when I'm in the middle of it, it has to be where my head
and heart is at that time."
Reznor's Ambition
It's very clear that there is an idea and notion to everything Reznor
does and through it all shines the will not to compromise. He knows only
the difficult and hard way to get a result that's why it is so
time-consuming to make a NIN-album. Reznor characterizes the majority of
today's music as either perishable pop or retro-fixated and is vexed
that so few look to the future instead of the past. Trents own search
originated in the latest technological conquests. But he is careful not
to lose the coincidental and human touch in the music, despite of the
many machines used.
"To have emotional quality is the strength in my music. To have a
feeling or humanity to it. This time it was recorded on computers, but
it was real instruments being manipulated and that meant it had flaws.
It was played in a strange way or on defective instruments. Then when
it's processed by a computer it can sometimes sound very mechanical, but
most of the times it won't. Some music should be perfect and some has
beauty in the imperfection. When you're working with computers it's easy
to make it too perfect. Then it gets boring and cold. When you're
working with a media where you can just push a button and then
everything will be perfect, then it's hard to keep it coincidental and
fragile."
Since the break with TVT and the start of Nothing (Reznor's own record
company) all of Nine Inch Nails' albums have been blessed with an
exclusive and sensational wrapping. And that's certainly not a
coincidence. Trent is very interested in getting the artwork and music
to compliment each other: "I'm the type of fan that when vinyl was the
only thing, I would go out and buy the Swans 12" import version at the
price of 15$ and it was awful, but it looked great. Or from companies
like 4AD where the wrapping added another layer. Where the wrapping
helps the music become art and treats music as art. David Carsonıs name
came up when we were doing artwork for this album. I played the CD to
him and he almost got sick. He said, "That's weird, nothing seems to be
in its right place on it." The whole idea of taking pictures either
close to or from a distance, the half logo, that everything was out of
proportions. That was a good experience. It costs more to make a good
wrapping, but that's not what matters. When you see the artwork, the
album has a frame and the songs can live in this spectrum of colors and
suddenly it makes more sense to me."
On Marilyn Manson
"I would like to produce more when NIN doesn't take up all of my time.
To work with Manson's Antichrist Superstar was very rewarding. I also
produced the first, but that wasn't where we did it right. It was a
group of guys, who were very close and had some ideas, and I felt that I
was capable of helping them carry out these ideas. Help them be as
ridiculous or threatening, or however they wanted it to be. At one point
we had a talk and they said: 'We wanna be cool'. So my response was:
'Fuck being cool. Let's make it ridiculous, let's exaggerate it.'"
On Soundtracks
"Natural Born Killers was a pleasure to work with, cos I really liked
the movie and was very involved. There were some very creative people
working on it. It was something away from NIN, with no pressure. On Lost
Highway I had the possibility of working with David Lynch and he is one
of my heroes. To sit in a room with him, that moment was worth all the
work. I see them as minor projects, not insanely important. If I should
make another soundtrack, then I would write the music from the start,
not just pop- or rock songs."
On Atari Teenage Riot
"I like the collision of technology and pure hardcore. Right in the
face. I like the anger, the ridiculous and exaggeration about it. It
could be fun to form such a band, but they do it better than I would. I
think they're inspiring."
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