Nine Inch Nailed

 
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The double-payment drama reminded me of the bind some Radiohead fans found themselves in last winter, when the group debuted its new record online. While Radiohead's brand spankin' new MP3s downloaded just fine on the first day of sale (Trent, give Thom Yorke a call), fans were crestfallen over the low bitrate, or audio fidelity, of those files. At least Radiohead had instituted a pay-what-you-wish scale for their online gambit. But some fans who had paid CD-style prices out of loyalty found out only a week later that Radiohead would be selling higher-fidelity MP3s and CDs through other retailers in the near future. Much grousing ensued, as hardcore fans wound up buying the music twice: once for the sake of instant gratification and a second time to get proper quality.

On Sunday night Reznor tried to do us all one better by offering an unprecedented degree of consumer choice. His tiered system of payment—$5 for MP3s only, $10 to get the MP3s now as well as the double CD upon its future release, and more expensive fetish sets for the hardcore fans—almost succeeded. The only thing he forgot was make sure people could download the music right after paying. (As of Tuesday morning NIN's Web site declared, "We're back," though my personalized download link was still busted.)

OK, so how is the (increasingly expensive) music? Well, Reznor was right when he claimed this would be worth all the hassle. Making an all-instrumental record has saved him from having to write yet another sheaf of angst-ridden lyrics. In the past many Nine Inch Nails fans simply ignored his bad writing in order to enjoy the texture of the music itself. This time there's no need. "Ghosts I-IV" is cringe-free and all texture, welding banjo, piano, distorted guitars and funky electronics into an ambient pleasure in which no one idea is forced to outstay its welcome in the service of anything so conventional as a "song." It's the kind of absorbing musical experience that the surviving ranks of know-it-all record-store clerks would be pushing on customers, if only they could offer it for sale.

© 2008

 
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  • Posted By: incendiarysound @ 03/07/2008 12:33:28 PM

    Comment: You neglected to mention that you could have downloaded the first volume through the officially posted torrent that was linked in the "We F**ked Up" post.
    Don't go bashing a guy for having to pay for something twice when you could have gotten a volume for free in seconds to tide you over while the site was fixed.

  • Posted By: kellit26 @ 03/07/2008 9:53:31 AM

    Comment: I agree with GG1000!!! Trent's lyrics are they lyrics I would write if only l could! Even without lyrics, Ghost is amazing!! Without the lyrics, the music sings to your heart and soul!!!

  • Posted By: GG1000 @ 03/07/2008 1:32:13 AM

    Comment: Dude, these things take experimenting, fine-tuning and time. Muchos kudos to Trent for trying to cut out the greedheads and trying to give everyone a choice. The kinks will get ironed out, some others will try it and before long we won't remember what a CD is (and thank God).

    "What have I become, my sweetest friend? Everyone I know, goes away in the end. And you can have it all, my empire of dirt. I will let you down; I will make you hurt." Have you never had a dark night of the soul? (Or a long, dark teatime?). Don''t rag on Trent's lyrics, dude! Or else I'll impose the ultimate punishment. You'll have to listen to James Blunt's "You're Beautiful" every day until you show some understanding of what banal music REALLY is. In fact, I just might make you listen anyway. Every day. Of your life, In perpetuity.

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