Nine Inch Nails
Pretty Hate Machine

TVT    2610-2  (1989)

Rock/Pop
CD, 10   Tracks, 48:41  Length
01 Head Like A Hole Trent Reznor 04:59
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
02 Terrible Lie Trent Reznor 04:38
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
03 Down In It Trent Reznor 03:46
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
04 Sanctified Trent Reznor 05:48
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
05 Something I Can Never Have Trent Reznor 05:54
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
06 Kinda I Want To Trent Reznor 04:33
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
07 Sin Trent Reznor 04:06
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
08 That's What I Get Trent Reznor 04:30
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
09 The Only Time Trent Reznor 04:47
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
10 Ringfinger Trent Reznor 05:40
✷  Recording Date   1989  ✷ 
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Trent Reznor
Musician Nine Inch Nails
Producer John Fryer; Trent Reznor
Engineer John Fryer; Keith LeBlanc; Trent Reznor
Cover by Gary Talpas
Personal Details
Index # 2343
Owner Dave
Tags Industrial
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Virtually ignored upon its 1989 release, Pretty Hate Machine gradually became a word-of-mouth cult favorite; despite frequent critical bashings, its stature and historical importance only grew in hindsight. In addition to its stealthy rise to prominence, part of the album's legend was that budding auteur Trent Reznor took advantage of his low-level job at a Cleveland studio to begin recording it. Reznor had a background in synth-pop, and the vast majority of Pretty Hate Machine was electronic. Synths voiced all the main riffs, driven by pounding drum machines; distorted guitars were an important textural element, but not the primary focus. Pretty Hate Machine was something unique in industrial music -- certainly no one else was attempting the balladry of "Something I Can Never Have," but the crucial difference was even simpler. Instead of numbing the listener with mechanical repetition, Pretty Hate Machine's bleak electronics were subordinate to catchy riffs and verse-chorus song structures, which was why it built such a rabid following with so little publicity. That innovation was the most important step in bringing industrial music to a wide audience, as proven by the frequency with which late-'90s alternative metal bands copied NIN's interwoven guitar/synth textures. It was a new soundtrack for adolescent angst -- noisily aggressive and coldly detached, tied together by a dominant personality. Reznor's tortured confusion and self-obsession gave industrial music a human voice, a point of connection. His lyrics were filled with betrayal, whether by lovers, society, or God; it was essentially the sound of childhood illusions shattering, and Reznor was not taking it lying down. Plus, the absolute dichotomies in his world -- there was either purity and perfection, or depravity and worthlessness -- made for smashing melodrama. Perhaps the greatest achievement of Pretty Hate Machine was that it brought emotional extravagance to a genre whose main theme had nearly always been dehumanization.