Yep, that was definitely me that had posted that. DigitalChaos, I had essentially used your comment, since that's all that really needed to be said about it!
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The first comment was also an ETS member who connected to me via facebook. He was a member of the old ETS but still lurks here now.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/A4nvaXFCQAEZEIl.jpg:large
Posted on the Sound City twitter. I believe that be Tren Rezn.
And just in case no one recognised, that's Dave Grohl in the foreground.
And just in case no one knows what a Dave Grohl is, it's a drum machine.
Can't wait to see the whole Sound City thing.
Not sure if this has ever been posted, but in the most recent Matt Darey - Nocturnal Podcast, the first track was a pretty chill track with In This Twilight samples.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=25s6B1OtCis
On Sunday, October 21, 2012, on Ovation, episode 106 of "Song By Song" will air, titled "Johnny Cash: Hurt". Synopsis:
"One of Cash's final and most unlikely hits, this painful ballad was written and first performed by superstar Trent Reznor; the Nine Inch Nails front man explains why he was reluctant to allow Johnny to record the song."
http://ovationtv.com/events/song-by-song/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ex0EQUG9Do
Wait, I thought Johnny Cash wrote Hurt
quick, someone rename this thread to "youtube comments"
Yet another list - enjoy:
http://loudwire.com/best-nine-inch-nails-songs/
I think The Fragile would be better as an album if it had at least one or two really strong "single material" track. Singles are not always a bad thing. Closer being so ridiculously catchy is something that sort of holds TDS together better. The second disc of Mellon Collie & The Infinite Sadness wouldn't be that awesome if it weren't for 1979 - arguably its biggest single - being there.
wait, Sevendust didn't write Hurt?
I think WITT is one of NIN's best singles, and Starfuckers was also really catchy and a good single too, even Into The Void was a good single.
The problem (commercially) for The Fragile was that it was a double album full of instrumental and too experimental songs compared to the stuff that was popular back then when nu-metal, poppy boy bands and teenage singers had taken control of the music media. The Downward Spiral would have never been a success if it had been released 5 years before or 5 years later, it succeeded because "alternative rock" was popular then, otherwise I doubt it would have sold so many copies.
10 years ago I used to sing No, you don't in shower
Mariqueen as one of the "hottest rockstar wives":
http://loudwire.com/mariqueen-maandig-hottest-rockstar-wives/
I logged into the TOIOU twitter for the first time in forever to find that someone had written a thesis on NIN's relationship with digital media for the Empirical Musicology Review entitled "Artist autonomy in a digital era: The case of Nine Inch Nails".
Full copy here: https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/...124a-Brown.pdf
Trent and the Byrne?Quote:
Originally Posted by @trent_reznor