Nine Inch NailsThe Fragile (Nothing/Interscope)
In the time NIN's been away, some weird shit has gone down. Hardcore drummers have gotten bored playing the same damn beat ("dukka-dukka-dukka-dukka") and realized hip hop has a totally bad-ass sound, while producers and talent scouts (read: "muck suckers") woke up to realize that hip hop is scarier than those empty-threat death metal bands. Ditto with that guy who took up so much of Trent's time in the first place trying to reanimate glam rock. Thus the "nü metal" we keep hearing so much about (by the way, check the archives for the Korn reviews we've done. Just because a band's popular doesn't mean we automatically hate them. Or does it?). Anyway, Trent's come back to the scene to find his guitar sounds co-opted, his beats carjacked, and his lyrics... well, at least he got to keep something. Only thing is, they got it all wrong. Remember a few years back when Trent said he was going to make The Fragile more hip hop? Yeah, well I do. Shut up. That was before all this other crap got off the ground, and it appears Trent actually paid attention. Here's the quintessential hip hop beat: Big downbeat, space, backbeat, space, then a whole lotta little stuff at the end - like the whole phrase got tipped to one side and all the beats piled up at one end. It's not ripping off James Brown's "Funky Drummer" riff anymore, which is what nü metal is doing. Listen to "Even Deeper" on disc one. At first, it sounds like familiar Nails stuff, but the beats man, the beats. They wake up Trent's guitars (not powerchords, by the way - nü metal's second mistake) and add a menacing undertone to an already creepy song. Try "Where is Everybody?" on disc two. It has the "phat" bass, heavy beats, and even a sweet (term used loosely) chorus behind his shout-raps. But ultimately, just like when his Broken and Fixed albums came along to show hardcore industrial how it's really done, "No, You Don't" sits nü metal down and gives it a good scolding. Ultimately unnecessary, but sometimes it's fun to pick on the village idiot(s). But it wouldn't be a NIN album without a few drawn-out instrumentals. The Fragile is full of 'em. Especially on disc two. But Trent goes pretty far out on "La Mer." Scoff if you will, but it sounds like Windham Hill meets King Crimson. In a dive bar. And I kinda like that. Fuck, he's always been arty, so let the man stretch his legs. I mean, he employed the classical technique of leitmotif on The Downward Spiral, that ten-note melody that ran through half the songs. You know, the one at the end of "Closer." He's got more than one now, found in "The Frail" and "The Fragile," as well as "La Mer" and "Into the Void," among others. It's up to the listener to decide if the use of leitmotif and lack of vocals means Trent is a musical innovator or if he just ran out of ideas and words while the sequencer was running (hint: considering the length of some of his interviews, I wonder when he has a chance to take a breath).
One more thing: Even if you disagree with everything I've said, at least listen to the production. It's perfect. Damn, he's good.
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