Anyone knows what's that interview from Trent where he says Year Zero, the ARG, everything is part of the art and there's no distinction on that, just the medium is different ? Or some thing like that, I don't remember well.
And also, what are the narrative common points between the album and the arg ? The Presence certainly, but I didn't find an explicit list on the wiki. If anyone knows ? That would be cool.
Is there any photo / video from the 2006/07/01 Chicago radio show where they performed 4 Joy Division songs with PM?
last 3 pictures here http://www.nin.wiki/2006_Radio_Sessions
^
Thank you!
I was on ninwiki yesterday, but the page of the gig doesn't have any photo, so I thought they don't have them.
What's that relatively high pitched sound at 2:35 panned half to the left in The Mark Has Been made ? Sound like a voice coupled with a creaking chair or something.
Is the seed0 Youtube channel known to have been made by Trent, or is it just a fan? I know seed0 is Trent's torrent username, so it's easy to assume this channel is him.
It has 2 videos when you do a channel search filter on Youtube, but only one is publicly viewable uploaded 12 years ago:
"Trent Reznor, Peter Murphy, TV On The Radio: Dreams".
Anyone know about the private/unlisted second vid?
As anyone on the web merged The Fragile and Deviations 1? Not a playlist but a new mix of the whole thing pieced together with vocals?
Yes, someone right here did that... https://www.echoingthesound.org/comm...483#post403483
Anyone interested? Row 1 Centre. Red rocks. Sept. 18.
https://www.echoingthesound.org/comm...045#post426045
Has anyone listened through all of the Fragility 2.0 bootlegs to determine the audio source for each song? I've been listening through them and just cannot seem to determine which performances were used for each song. Every time I think I've got a song figured out, I compare to the AATCHB version and there's a slight difference. I know the video for each song was spliced from multiple sources, but the audio wasn't...was it? I thought it was entire songs from a single performance but the entire audio experience is made up from multiple performances.
Audio was stitched as well, also partially overdubbed in the studio later. I don't think it's was explicitly explained by the band, but it seems to be a general consensus.
Surely they didn't cut between performances mid-song, did they?
And is it confirmed that they overdubbed in studio? Overdubbed what? Surely a re-recorded section would stick out like a sore asshole.
Last edited by butter_hole; 08-31-2018 at 05:25 AM. Reason: im a little drunk
it's more like they could take robin's guitar from one show, jerome's drums from a different show, charlie's theremin from yet a third show, etc. and make it sound like it's all from a single show because everything is individually recorded in multi-track format. and it's also possible that, say, trent's vocals for one section of "wish" sounded super powerful in one location, but the rest of the song wasn't punching as hard, so they grabbed them from a different show. this is pretty common practice in the studio and when you record the way they did on that tour, it's just as simple to do with live performances that are all the same tempo.
It’d probably be easy to construct something homogenous in the case of NIN, since every sound is based on a certain preset. Think about it – how many times have you heard the sound of a guitar in one song, or a synth in another, change during a tour, or seen someone go turn a knob on an amp? Zero. All the sounds are pre-programmed.
Every NIN tour since Self-Destruct basically just took a studio out on the road. Re-recording certain bits merely requires you to record with the same setup. For all we know, some songs could have bits and pieces from soundchecks spliced in. And no assholes were hurt during the process.
Wow. That's both awesome and somewhat disappointing but it totally makes sense, especially knowing what a perfectionist Trent is. It's only disappointing in the sense that it's not a "true" performance but really cool that each song is the best possible version it could be.
I do recall reading something (probably on the old pre-crash ETS) about Robin's guitar being re-recorded after the tour for certain parts of songs but maybe I'm just making that up...
About 20 years ago I thought I remember seeing a music video that showed a doll that looked like Trent riding a pig and Trent had his long hair and a NIN symbol on his chest. I thought it was a Skinny Puppy video but I can't find it anywhere. Anybody know if this exists or was it just a weird dream?
Dumb question: So I saw the Rage (Australian TV) tweet about it 'being 30 years since Trent Reznor started recording Nine Inch Nails tracks'. Does anybody know if this is based on a particular date being set somewhere, or its it just a case of 'he probably started working on them around about now in '88'?
I see nin.wiki refers to the Purest Feeling demo as being recorded in November '88, and if that's the case then I guess it's fair to say he had written a chunk of the material by September. Not sure I have the energy to trawl through old interviews to try and find more, but perhaps somebody here is nerdy enough to know if any firm dates are officially known from that era?
I'm happy to wait until September 2019 to have my own NIN is 30 party anyway, but still, I'm curious.
NIN made their live debut in Fall 1988 as an opening act for Skinny Puppy, almost a year before PHM was released. So yeah, celebrating 30th Anniversary this year is totally valid.
Does anyone still have a copy of the pictures of the endorsed paychecks from Bart Koster to Trent that were sold a few years ago on eBay? That would have a date on it that would indicate Trent's time at The Right Track.
Whatever happened to that music video they were making? It was learned through that photographer's instagram photo that Trent and co. were doing a music video for Bad Witch but we have yet to hear anything about it. Scrapped maybe?
Well, there you go. Trent was in The Right Track as of late 87, so work on what would eventually become NIN tracks could have started as early as then.