Trent Reznor – Unsung Sundays https://unsungsundays.com What you should be listening to. Wed, 31 Jan 2018 14:47:58 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.1 Nine Inch Nails: Not the Actual Events https://unsungsundays.com/album-reviews/nine-inch-nails-not-actual-events/ Thu, 19 Jan 2017 17:47:29 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=album_reviews&p=1611 Not the Actual Events is the most ferocious Nine Inch Nails release in decades, but its teasing brevity and self-importance almost make it disappointing.

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Not the Actual Events is, for all intents and purposes, a warning sign of things to come. It’s in the title. Not the Actual Events is not the actual event you’re looking for. It’s not a full album, and considering the build-up around the EP from Reznor (hushed murmurs of grandeur before a sudden surprise release), it’s nearly disappointing. But there’s a visceral quality to Not the Actual Events that’s been missing since The Downward Spiral and The Fragile.

I’m on record as being a huge Nine Inch Nails and Trent Reznor fan, but it’s hard not to acknowledge that the group’s last few records have either been formulaic or, in the case of Ghosts, different to the point of being occasionally uncomfortable. While Not the Actual Events is sometimes predictable, it often has a brashness and urgency to it that Reznor hasn’t had in a long time.

A quick listen to the alternately pulsing and attacking “Branches / Bones” reveals Reznor at his peak. “The Idea of You” is reminiscent of the angriest moments of With Teeth, but it goes beyond that and reminds me of The Downward Spiral’s most furious moments. And finally, “Burning Bright (Field on Fire)” mixes Black Sabbath-style ferocity with the curious meandering of “Right Where It Belongs” to create something that truly embodies a modern Reznor-ian sound.

Now we just have to wait for the actual event.

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Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross: Before the Flood https://unsungsundays.com/album-reviews/trent-reznor-atticus-ross-flood/ Sun, 30 Oct 2016 12:02:48 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=album_reviews&p=1582 This new soundtrack from Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross is their first to feature outside collaboration. Mogwai and the composer of Brokeback Mountain both lend their styles to these compositions of hope and unease.

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I love the soundtracks Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross make together. Beginning with The Social Network, the pair have specialized in making aesthetically beautiful and sonically relevant music. You don’t need to see the associated film to love the music, either. Trent and Atticus are some of the only composers working today whose music stands on its own.

For Before the Flood, a new documentary about global warming from Leonardo DiCaprio, Trent and Atticus have expanded their traditional boundaries. Before the Flood is the first time they’ve worked with “outsiders” on music, bringing in Mogwai and Gustavo Santaolalla (the composer behind Brokeback Mountain).

This lends an additional touch to the compositions. Gustavo’s horn work and textural abilities are a good match for the aesthetic qualities of Reznor and Ross. Mogwai’s tracks feel as if they come from an entirely different perspective, but rather than clashing with the other compositions, they add a variety that otherwise wouldn’t exist.

What’s most interesting about Mogwai’s tracks is how optimistic they sound, by comparison. Reznor and Ross are known for making uneasy music — or music that starts laid back and quickly decomposes — but Mogwai has a whole different feel. Check out “Ghost Nets”, a Mogwai track that’s bookended by the Reznor and Ross’s more “traditional” “And When the Sky Was Opened” and “Trembling”. “Ghost Nets” is an entirely different track, without the same elements of unease that riddle the others.

This is the variety that makes the record work as a whole. Unlike Trent and Atticus’s soundtrack for Gone Girl, which was both beautiful and exhausting, Before the Flood is easy to absorb as a whole. I firmly believe this is because of Mogwai’s contributions — the unsung heroes of the record.

You don’t need to watch Before the Flood to enjoy the music on stage here. In fact, I didn’t (and haven’t). I’m not even sure the documentary has premiered yet (I think it’s a television premiere to boot, and we don’t have cable). But even without seeing it, the level of sobriety on hand here — the hope for our planet’s future and the fear of its potential destruction — is plainly evident.

This is, in my opinion, the best work that Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross have done together since The Social Network. It’s already become a staple in my ambient music collection.

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Nine Inch Nails: Hesitation Marks https://unsungsundays.com/album-reviews/nine-inch-nails-hesitation-marks/ Sun, 08 Sep 2013 12:05:25 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=album_reviews&p=950 Hesitation Marks is a welcome return to form for Trent Reznor, and while it’s not perfect, it’s a daring outing that reveals Reznor at his most fragile.

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As usual with discussing what’s undoubtedly going to be a popular record, I feel like a personal touch is in order. I got into Nine Inch Nails in my late high school years, but really absorbed Reznor’s ferocity during my first year of university. As I’ve grown old and my tastes have expanded, I’ve come to love Reznor’s later records (in particular, Ghosts and even The Social Network Soundtrack).

My expectations for Hesitation Marks were really high, and I’m actually very pleased. This is a Reznor who isn’t so filled with rage and self-loathing, and his music sounds more mature — but he hasn’t lost his sense of artistry.

Find My Way is as introspective as his best tracks were, and Copy of A has the same intensity as some of the best tracks off Slip or With Teeth. Come Back Haunted is dangerously sharp and dramatic, and will be sure to please old-time fans. All Time Low has that same old groove and bounce he’s familiar for, but is a good example of a track that isn’t as dark as it would have been in years gone by. I Would For You is fantastic, but it’s quickly toppled by In Two. While I’m Still Here is beyond impressive, playing with elements I never would have thought Reznor would have tried.

The album isn’t perfect, and some tracks are clearly flawed and lack the bite that vintage Nine Inch Nails carried. Reznor isn’t as angry as he used to be (and if he was, the record wouldn’t sound authentic at all). This isn’t the best Nine Inch Nails record, but who cares? We should just be glad he’s back.

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Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross: The Social Network Soundtrack https://unsungsundays.com/album-reviews/trent-reznor-atticus-ross-social-network-soundtrack/ Sun, 18 Aug 2013 12:04:30 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=album_reviews&p=675 Trent Reznor and David Fincher make a delightful pairing. The soundtrack for The Social Network is darkly beautiful and as powerful on its own as it is when married to the film.

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I haven’t recommended a soundtrack before on this site, but I’m glad The Social Network is the first one. It’s a great collection of music — it’s dark and energizing, in the sense that it’s easy to get work done while listening. In fact, it’s one of my go-to records if I need something motivating in the background while I work. There are no vocals to distract me, but the thump of the bass keeps me going.

Trent Reznor’s work here is obviously influenced by his more electronic Nine Inch Nails records, which I love. In fact, some songs — like In Motion — are remixes of work from Nine Inch Nail’s Ghosts (which is also a fantastic record).

Hand Covers Bruise is drenched in melancholy, but A Familiar Taste is dripping with angst. The Gentle Hum of Anxiety is a perfect title for one of the most anxiety-inducing bits of music from a film I’ve ever heard. But at the end of the day, the track you most need to hear from this is the cover of In the Hall of the Mountain King.

If there was ever an obvious pairing, it’s Trent Reznor and David Fincher. Both of them are fascinated by using digital techniques to improve what are traditionally analogue mediums. While both are praised by fans and critics, there’s also a left-wing conservative group of people in both mediums who say they’re going against what music and film is all about. But it doesn’t matter. With The Social Network in particular, they’ve made their piece de resistance: a piece of digital art in an analogue framework about a movement to make real relationships more digital and artificial. There’s something beautiful about that.

Film soundtracks are interesting because they rarely stand on their own. The Social Network not only stands on its own, but it’s one of my all-time favourite albums — and perhaps my favourite electronic album of all time.

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