Trent Reznor Bio
Trent Reznor (b. 17 May 1965, Mercer, Pennsylvania, USA), the
multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, and creative force
behind Nine Inch Nails, trained as a classical
pianist during his small-town Pennsylvania childhood, but his discovery
of rock and early industrial groups, despite
his dislike of the 'industrial' tag, changed his musical direction
completely.
Following a period working in a Cleveland
recording studio and playing in local bands, Reznor began recording as
Nine Inch Nails in 1988. The dark, atmospheric
Pretty Hate Machine, written, played and co-produced by Reznor,
was largely synthesizer-based, but the
material was transformed onstage by a ferocious wall of guitars, and
show-stealing Lollapalooza performances in
1991. Coupled with a major US hit with 'Head Like A Hole', it brought
platinum status. Inspired by the live band,
Reznor added an abrasive guitar barrage to the Nine Inch Nails sound for
Broken (a subsequent remix set was titled
Fixed ), which hit the US Top 10, winning a Grammy for 'Wish'.
'Happiness In Slavery', however, courted
controversy with an almost universally banned video, where performance
artist Bob Flanagan gave himself up to be torn
apart as slave to a machine, acting out the theme of control common to
Reznor's lyrics. Reznor also filmed an
unreleased full-length Broken video, which he said 'makes "Happiness In
Slavery" look like a Disney movie'. By this
time, Reznor had relocated to Los Angeles, building a studio in a rented
house at 10050 Cielo Drive, which he later
discovered was the scene of the Tate murders by the Manson family
(much to his disgust, due to eternal interview
questions thereafter about the contribution of the house's atmosphere to
The Downward Spiral ). Occupying the middle
ground between the styles of previous releases, The Downward
Spiral 's multi-layered blend of synthesizer
textures and guitar fury provides a fascinating soundscape for Reznor's
exploration of human degradation through sex,
drugs, violence, depression and suicide, closing with personal
emotional pain on 'Hurt': 'I hurt myself
today, To see if I still feel, I focus on the pain, The only thing that's
real'. The
Downward Spiral made its US debut at number 2,
and a return to live work with Robin Finck (guitar), Danny
Lohneer (bass, guitar), James Woolley
(keyboards) and Reznor's long-time friend and drummer Chris Vrenna drew
floods of praise, with Nine Inch Nails being
one of the most talked-about acts at the Woodstock anniversary show.
The first non-Nine Inch Nails releases on
Reznor's Nothing label appeared in 1994 (beginning with Marilyn Manson
), and the band also found time to construct
an acclaimed soundtrack for Oliver Stone's film Natural Born Killers. In
the following year Reznor announced plans to
record an album with circus 'freak show' specialist Jim Rose, stating
with typical bombast: 'the record will
confront just about every issue that upsets people. It will be non-PC in
every
way imaginable'. In 1996/7 Reznor worked with
film director David Lynch on the music score for Lost Highway.
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This article
is provided courtesy Keith Duemling and Tracy Thompson from the collection previously
located at SUS.
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