- commentary
- WEDNESDAY APRIL 2 2008 1:00 PM
Nine Inch Nails' Ghosts
Submitted by Fatality
Edited by erin_broadley
Tags: Nine Inch Nails, Trent Reznor, Ghosts
It has always been frustrating for me to read new CD reviews
What are the critics saying about ____? The more important questions have always seemed to be Who are these critics and Why should I be interested in their value judgments?
So much of modern culture revolves around codifying, describing, and categorizing art products, arguing for the supremacy of one product, one CD, one painting over the other. We send our opinions into battle as logical concepts with Kant smiling in his grave over our ambiguous taste; we too smile smiles of silent contentment about knowing the truth, understanding the right answer, possessing good taste, having a better appreciation of the artistic facts than the man next door.
Its unavoidable, really, both the observation and experience of these phenomena, but today let us appreciate the fact that we will not have to do this with the new Nine Inch Nails material. I wont tell you that the songs are good or that the songs are bad, that NIN has improved over time or has become rubbish. I wont write that way because Nine Inch Nails' Ghosts doesnt ask to be critiqued in such a manner.
Nine Inch Nails, oh, Nine Inch Nails. Weve seen you practically establish the industrial rock genre. Weve been wowed by your live performances. We watched as you won multiple Grammy Awards. And, now, seven studio albums later, weve witnessed you really and truly probe the creative process. And that very idea is what this article focuses on: the artistic process entailed in producing Ghosts, NINs latest work. And, reader, you will soon understand why
why this thematic focus is practically necessitated.

The material was released on March 2nd via NIN.com. That website has also recently announced some dates for an extensive tour that begins in July and will be promoting the new tracks.
These songs. How were they made; how did they come about? Well, Trent Reznor has released several audio clips of him discussing that very process. The tracks certainly werent intended or anticipated; they just happened. Much to our surprise, Reznor says, we ended up with thirty-six tracks. Thirty-six tracks. Thirty-six tracks in ten weeks. TR had given himself a ten week timeframe within which to create, essentially, anything. One song might have come out, or one hundred. With the time period as the only structured preconception, Reznor was free to create. Free to do as he pleased. And a significant portion of this freedom is attributed to being without a record label, as he states, I wouldnt have been as comfortable trying to pull [this] off on a major label
something I wanted to do
that felt exciting and different and kind of fun. This album is the bands first that has not been released by Interscope since 1989s Pretty Hate Machine. Without limitations imposed by a label, TR was able to avoid the effort of funneling his music into a pop song mold.
The freedom involved in the composition process, which engendered songs that may likewise be described as free, went something like this
Reznor would sit down and picture a visual image; he would conjure up some vision and then attempt to create it with sound. The end results, he says, [are] basically soundtracks to daydreams that formed as he just pictured something in [his] head. This idea is similar to European classical program music that intended to suggest extra-musical ideas, images in the mind of the listener by musically representing a scene, image or mood.
The new Nine Inch Nails songs werent created in an effort to fulfill some externally imposed expectations; they were made out of pure spontaneity and enjoyment of the creative process. To me, this is an example of subverting the contemporary cultural machinery that has been established for distributing popular music. Reznors is a process that very much reminds me of Jacques Attali the French economist and scholar and his hope for saving music from the harrowing grips of capitalism wherein all art becomes interchangeable and of equal value.
In his book, Noise: The Political Economy of Music, Attali theorizes that the trend of promoting bad music that merely fits a certain popular image can only truly be obstructed when the musician plays primarily for himself, outside any operationality, spectacle, or accumulation of value
[when] music extricates itself from codes and emerges as activity that is end in itself and creates its own code with each work. And so we hear Trent Reznor similarly discuss abandoning major record labels and creating music for the pure pleasure of the endeavor, describing his experimentation with different sounds and textures and feelings as the most fun [hes] had in the studio in a long time.
To make Ghosts, yes, Trent Reznor was free from a label and its prescriptions, but he also worked to liberate himself from his own mind. What he wanted to do was to make a record without using the editorial brain. He never switched that brain on and, instead, just let his ideas turn into whatever they turn[ed] into. He wasnt critiquing every idea or painstakingly writing out melodies note-by-note; he was simply letting the music effortlessly arise from within him. Again, Reznor impresses me with his discussion of the creative process and reminds me of another theoretical dialogue. In the cross-section between psychology and Buddhism, there is a concept called flow.
Mihaly Csikszentmihaly wrote a book describing this idea wherein to truly and intimately experience life, we must engage in activities that we are able to lose ourselves in. The theory explains that, whether it be sex or painting or physics calculations, fully engaging ourselves in activities allows for the most valuable and meaningful experiences in life. These are the endeavors that we devote ourselves to without concern of anything else, that we use to distract ourselves from the humdrum progression of daily routine, that we look up from after an hour thinking that only a minute has passed
And this is exactly what Trent Reznor seems to have done in the creation of Ghosts. He says, If I didnt think about it
music just started to flow out
effortless, sort of formless. TR lost himself in the process of creation, not overanalyzing the sounds that he was creating, and ended up with a concept album that gives credence to the marksmans idea that if you focus too much on a rifle target, you wont hit the bulls eye; instead, you have to let go and lose yourself in experience.
The thirty-six songs created in this manner are all without titles, merely numbered tracks. This was a purposeful choice by Reznor so that the names wouldnt taint a listeners response to the music. Instead, he wants you listen to the songs as if you were on a journey, imaging scenes as the music carries you to someplace else. Though TR had specific images in his head as he created the tracks, he wants listeners to summon their own scenes to accompany the music. In fact, Reznor is calling for submissions to a Nine Inch Nails film festival.
Take the music of Ghosts and marry it up with the visuals you think are appropriate, send it back up to us via the official Nine Inch Nails channel on YouTube, and were going to attempt to sort through everything and pick the ones we think are exceptional and then present them back to you in some sort of film festival-like presentation.
And that kind of creative exploration is what this album is really about
at both the level of production and at the level of listening. So, Im not going to end this article with a summary of the motifs or the sounds of the styles of the new tracks, Im going to have to leave those judgments up to you. NIN.com has tracks available to download and purchase, in addition to various CD and limited edition sets. There is also a streaming player here.
The Ghosts tracks really seem to be ghosts amorphous, nameless, formless entities asking only to be defined by the imagination of the observer. And that observer is you.
Fatality secretly knows that I Ghosts 6 is actually the best track. Obviously and objectively so.




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EmXero
Las Vegas, NV
January 2005
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