filming a show means nothing...lots of bands film shows and then never release them (Trent and Robert Smith have a library of shows they never released)
filming a show means nothing...lots of bands film shows and then never release them (Trent and Robert Smith have a library of shows they never released)
Jesus christ we know your opinion on the matter by now. I can't even count the number of times I've seen you post essentially the exact same message about Trent Reznor and Robert Smith not releasing all the shows they've filmed. Everyone. Gets. It. That's not what's being discussed anymore.
Is there a gif of Trent doing this from the AATCHB DVD?
But we're the ones actually citing evidence and you're the one talking nonsense. You still absolutely COULD be right -- but, y'know, broken clock style.
At this point, if Trent really is working on new music, I can understand if the excitement of that overwhelms the urge to look back. Hell, I'm inclined to agree. Though at the very least, I hope they update the YouTube/Vevo show to include the full performance of Tension.
Edit: Bill, please don't take that as a prompt to cite all your past "examples." You've been proven wrong on every single one, and every tour video project announced by Nine Inch Nails has ALWAYS come out -- and the one time it didn't, they gave us The Gift.
Does anyone know how long Trent's shortest break was between tours?
There's a tour film for 95/96. It's called Closure. Trent has been on record as saying he didn't like how the pro-shot footage of that tour came out. Wasn't there a quote about it looking like a Bon Jovi concert or something? Just because YOU don't like Closure, doesn't mean it doesn't count as a tour video.
Bowery 09 was never actually announced. It was always just a maybe, and it seems clear even from the way TR blocks livestreams of NIN shows when the visuals aren't ready that he likes archives of live NIN to be the big production shows. ACL being an awesome exception, of course.
So yes, you've been proven wrong on all your claims. Every officially announced tour document for the band known as Nine Inch Nails has been released. I look forward to you pretending you haven't seen this post, and responding to some new poor soul two days from now with the exact same bluray-denial nonsense as always.
Last edited by howdidislipinto; 12-05-2014 at 01:48 AM.
I don't remember anybody posting a text of "in conversation" from itunes version of Hesitation marks, is that kind of thing available anywhere?
the official 1995 tour film was shot and completed and edited and tucked away in the vaults...you did get 2 songs of it on Closure though. so 2 of 16...good ratio
Rob boy mentioned Bowery 09
If you've followed my posts, most of the time I am proven right (case in point-Grammy awards)
Im done talking about tension if.and/when it comes out. Its like talking about Tapeworm. Its old....I am sure the day it gets released in a 4 dvd/blu ray deluxe package I will eat my words, but until then.....keep wishin upon that star
What did Trent use to create the "hammer synth" patch that starts the song "That's What I Get"?
I read that it came from something like a steel drum keyboard preset or something... Please don't tell me it's from his Moog lol... I would find it hard to believe that a Moog could make that sound unless it was layered with more notes and frequencies and maybe sampled and played back with his Mirage...
This has been a curiosity to me for so long I'm just dying to know how Trent got that patch/sound.
Is there any interview in which Trent Reznor talked about his voice change and the influence on writing and performing? Thanks in advance
How funny. I don't think its so hiliraous as it seems to you. Maybe, the term "voice change" isn't really accurate to describe, but I am not a native speaker. Nevermind. However I am pretty sure of the fact that his varying vocal range may affect his work: which songs he performs (for example he does not really sing the songs with a higher pitch anymore (on his own), if he does vocal training and so on. Thus, I only wanna know if this has yet been discussed in interviews.
i don't mean to belittle your question, however, that's not a subject he's likely to approach — i mean, what would he say? "yes, my voice has changed, so i don't sing certain songs anymore"? it's pretty obvious this is the case; he's been dropping keys on certain songs for years and years ("The Great Below" was a semitone down during the Fragility tour, and that was before he even beefed up; once he did, other songs dropped too, like "We're in This Together") and new material tends to stay in the lower comfort range on basically every song now. he barely even screams in studio recordings anymore, and our copious amounts of bootlegs tell pretty much the whole story about how long he can go before even the comfort-range material wears him down on tour (see: Lights in the Sky soundboards from Portland/Vancouver/Sacramento).
the only vocal question that really needs to be broached is where the hell all the "heys" and "unfs" came from after he got sober. is this influenced from certain bands he started listening to? nascent results of his hip-hop obsession? did he step on a lot of Legos on stage? (why does it matter?)
He got old. He cant scream anymore. Hes not Mike Patton.....that sums it up. no need to obsess and over-analyze every detail on his voice change
Was the CD side of the DualDisc version of With Teeth digitally remastered?
Yes, I've also thought of that, but I still wanted to be sure if the CD side of the With Teeth DualDisc didn't get the same treatment that the CD side of The Downward Spiral DualDisc got. For quite a while, I used to think that all CD sides of DualDisc albums were either digitally remastered or remixed in 5.1 surround sound.
Last edited by Halo Infinity; 12-08-2014 at 11:06 PM.