Nine Inch Nails (Trent Reznor's nom de musique) have bestowed another
album full of pastoral folk ballads about courtly love, the wonders of Nature
and God. Had you going there, huh? Actually Reznor's fans (all million or so of
you) won't be surprised by his hook-wise industrial-dance turbulence or lyrical
obsessions. Our man is still a mite disturbed. It's hard to know if his
agitation is genuine or a pose, but regardless, aficionados of nihilism will
definitely feast on The Downward Spiral.
I've largely ignored industrial-dance, including NIN's Pretty Hate Machine and
Broken, with little regret. Except for Cabaret Volitaire, early Meat Beat
Manifesto and 1000 Homo DJ's cover of Sabbath's 'Supernaut', the genre leaves
me numb and headachy. Besides, I already know that televangelists are
hypocrites, war is evil and killing animals is wrong. But Reznor has always
displayed more pop sense than most of his industrial brethren (it is
overwhelmingly a male sound) but his anguished howls caused the opposite of
catharsis-I felt as if I'd implode if I absorbed that voice for longer than one
song. Let the rich white suburban kids revel in industrial music, those sullen
brats who wear their unearned angst as one more fashion accessory. This thing
wasn't leading to heaven, to paraphrase Harry Crews.
But
you've gotta hand it to Reznor. He lays himself on the line, warts n' all,
spewing his poisoned, self-abnegating thoughts for millions of strangers to
hear. Reznor's so relentlessly bleak he must be sincere. Either that or he's
hell of a method actor. Nobody (except maybe Mark Kozelek of Red House Painters)
is taking confessional songwriting to Reznor's extremes. If he comes off
sounding like a suicidal megalomaniac in primal scream therapy, so be it. It's
a great spectacle, if nothing else.
While
Reznor's lyrics are affecting and amusing in their excessive darkness, his
music-at times equally as extreme as the words-seems to have become more
interesting in its use of strange textures and distortion. The Downward Spiral
may be less accessible than Pretty Hate Machine but Reznor's pop savvy still
resonates often enough to assure his record company that it still has another
platinum platter on its hands. Fortunately, those who dig noise and distortion
won't go wanting either.
Reznor's
unhinged persona is in your face from moment one. "Mr. Self Destruct"
barges in with a locomotive chug and stabbing guitars con mucho warpage,
building to an annihilating intensity. Reznor charges up "Piggy", a
subdued slinky number with subtle use of black noise and chilling synth miasma,
over which he intones, "Nothing can stop me now/because I don't care
anymore". That may be Trent's manifesto, unless it's "Your God is dead and no one cares/if
there is a hell I'll see you there."
More unconventional sounds appear on the funky-as-hell "Ruiner",
wherein a synth imitates a malfunctioning windshield wiper. A nasty guitar solo
contributes to the track's epic chaos. In "Eraser", my favorite cut
here, Reznor screams as if his dick's been struck by lightning, "hate
me/smash me/erase me/kill me" over an ominous synth drone and some Bad
Moon Rising era Sonic Youth guitar plinks. After this madness the gothic,
funereal instrumental beauty of "A Warm Place"
nicely drains the tension.
On
"Closer" Reznor wields Prince's lubricious rhythms to Gary Numan's
frozen waterfall synth majesty. This is robotic electrosoul whose subtext is
that sex can never go too far, that too much is not enough. It could be a hit
single if it weren't for the line "I want to fuck you like an
animal."
At least three more songs deserve plaudits but I've already surpassed my word
count. To sum it up, The Downward Spiral is a hell of an album, in all senses
of the word. Reznor's musical integrity and lyrical megalomania cut through my
cynicism and won me over big time. I kind of feel ashamed.
Dave Segal
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