The ten best Nine Inch Nails deep cuts (2024)

By Niall Doherty

published

Heading into the darker corners of Trent Reznor's industrial-rock titans

The ten best Nine Inch Nails deep cuts (1)

Across Nine Inch Nails’ three-and-a-half-decade career, there have been 11 albums, 20 singles, a truckload of EPs and remix albums, a revolving door of band members, at least three prolonged absences, at least three triumphant comebacks, and some of the finest and fiercest alternative-rock music ever made. For most of their lifespan, Trent Reznor has been the group’s sole official member but since 2016 he has been joined by Atticus Ross, with whom he has also made many excellent film scores. When NiN go big, anthemic and for your throat, they are unstoppable– think The Hand That Feeds from 2005’s With Teeth, We’re In This Together from 1999’s The Fragile, Terrible Lie from their debut Pretty Hate Machine, Closer from The Downward Spiral, or The Beginning Of The End from Year Zero. But it’s in the darker corners of their catalogue where they make some of their most interesting and intriguing music. Tread carefully: here’s ten of the best NiN deep cuts.

The ten best Nine Inch Nails deep cuts (2)

Something I Can Never Have, from Natural Born Killers: A Soundtrack For An Oliver Stone (1995)

Reznor made his first move into film music when he oversaw production of the soundtrack to this controversial Oliver Stone-directed and Quentin Tarantino-written film about a couple (played by Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis) who embark on a killing spree. Alongside tracks by Leonard Cohen, Patti Smith, Cowboy Junkies, Bob Dylan and more were three of Reznor’s own cuts, the pick of which was this reworking of the haunted ballad from Pretty Hate Machine. Now prefaced with a lover’s tiff between the murdering couple (serial killers have feelings too, OK?), it feels even more unsettling and beautiful, Reznor’s soulful vocal gliding over minimalist, plaintive piano and eerie droning.

A Warm Place / Eraser, from A Downward Spiral (1994)

Yes, technically two tracks but they go together in the same way Golden Slumbers and Carry That Weight on The Beatles' Abbey Road do, sliding into each other, one making the other sound better. To listen to A Warm Place’s hypnotic and slow-building ambience – it sounds like a bit like Ryuichi Sakamoto’s Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence future-fied for Blade Runner – without letting it morph into the brutal, industrial thump of Eraser is like hearing half a song.

Dead Souls, from The Crow Soundtrack (1994)

There haven’t been too many recorded cover versions by Nine Inch Nails over the years, Trent Reznor presumably scarred by covering Queen’s Get Down, Make Love as a B-side to 1990 single Sin. That, apparently, was meant to be tongue-in-cheek but you imagine the devotion was a little more earnest on this cover of the Joy Division song that appeared on the soundtrack to Brandon Lee’s goth action film The Crow in ’94. It’s a faithful reworking, albeit slightly slower and with crunchier guitars, but it sounds fantastic, Downward Spiral-era Reznor the perfect maniac to give Ian Curtis & co.’s dark classic a frazzled 90s update.

The Frail (Remix), from Things Falling Apart (2000)

In a nod to his electronic roots and the fact that he likes f*cking things up, Reznor has made a habit of following up studio album releases with remix and reworked collections. The album that rewired A Downward Spiral – 1995’s Further Down The Spiral – was a downright eerie and discombobulating listen but 2000’s Things Falling Apart, which gave some cuts from The Fragile a doing over, was much more enticing. There’s a swaggering redux of Into The Void (Slipping Away), The Wretched gets turned inside out into an electro-goth stomper, but this is the best of the lot. Less a remix and more of a counter-part, it takes the piano interlude from the original and gives it a mournful, orchestral redo. I mean, it wasn’t that chirpy in the first place but still.

The Hand That Feeds (Photek Straight Mix), from The Hand That Feeds (2005)

The Hand That Feeds was one of the best comeback singles of the 00s, bringing Reznor and NiN back into the fray after a few years in the wilderness. This remix by British DJ and producer Photek transforms it into a club banger, all cascading beats, swarming synths and razorsharp guitar lines. It would probably sound great in a spin class if clubbing isn’t your thing. Or on a quite intense walk if spin isn’t your thing.

Right Where It Belongs (Version 2), from With Teeth (Bonus Tracks) (2005)

A bonus song on 2005’s With Teeth, this alternative version of the album’s closer is one of NiN’s most untinkered-with recordings. The original filters the keyboard through warped phasers but here it sounds untouched, all the more mesmeric for it, just Reznor’s solemn vocal reflecting over some minor chord splendour.

Get the Louder Newsletter

The latest news, features and interviews direct to your inbox, from the global home of alternative music.

Various Methods Of Escape, from Hesitation Marks (2013)

Behind pulsing lead single Came Back Haunted, NiN’s 2013 album Hesitation Marks was a mixed affair, a little too one-paced for a band whose fervent dynamism usually keeps you on your toes. Buried in the second half of the record, though, this was excellent, taking its time to build up over layers of airy vocals, treated guitars and stop-start beats until it eventually explodes into rolling drums and what sounds like the world’s most tuneful siren at the end. Brilliant.

Head Like A Hole (live), from And All That Could Have Been (2002)

Taken from 2002’s And All That Could Have Been, still the only official NiN live release, this is a fantastically jolting version of their early hit, so spruced up and up’n’at’em it very nearly renders the original redundant. But hey we wouldn’t want anyone out of a job so close to Christmas so make sure to give the OG listen now and then too.

34 Ghosts IV, from Ghosts I-IV (2008)

A mammoth collection of instrumental ambient and atmospheric pieces, from a distance 2008’s Ghosts I-IV seems like Trent Reznor warming up for the fruitful career diversion he’s taken into film scores since scoring David Fincher’s The Social Network in 2010 – he’s worked on every Fincher film since. This is one of the collection’s most curious cuts since it combines Reznor’s captivating, spectral take on electronica and also nods to his recent influence on pop music – a sample of it was used as the backbone to Lil Nas X’s huge hit Old Town Road.

The Lovers, from Add Violence (2017)

A brilliant cut from 2017’s Add Violence EP. Lead track Less Than showed that NiN were still a ferocious electronic rock band when they wanted to be, but The Lovers was something new, almost like Reznor and new member Atticus Ross introducing Burial-style dubstep into the mix. With a yearning Reznor vocal sitting in the middle of ominous pianos and twitchy beats, it’s one of NiN’s best modern numbers.

The ten best Nine Inch Nails deep cuts (3)

Niall Doherty

Niall Doherty is a writer and editor whose work can be found in Classic Rock, The Guardian, Music Week, FourFourTwo, on Apple Music and more. Formerly the Deputy Editor of Q magazine, he co-runs the music Substack letter The New Cue with fellow former Q colleagues Ted Kessler and Chris Catchpole. He is also Reviews Editor at Record Collector. Over the years, he's interviewed some of the world's biggest stars, including Elton John, Coldplay, Arctic Monkeys, Muse, Pearl Jam, Radiohead, Depeche Mode, Robert Plant and more. Radiohead was only for eight minutes but he still counts it.

More about louder

Alt-pop megastar Aurora wants to make a metal album: “My heart wouldn’t be complete without it”Watch Machine Head prove their might as festival headliners in this pro-shot video of their full Hellfest set

Latest

Max Cavalera isn’t open to a classic Sepultura reunion anymore: “The more the time passes by, the more I feel that I don’t need to”
See more latest►

Most Popular
“A mix of heatstroke and cannabis led to a month of terror and confusion… Writing about it probably helped but I never touched drugs again”: The Groundhogs’ prog credentials
Billie Joe Armstrong calls Bad Nerves "the best new band in England right now" but they're ready to take on the world - even if it means living at home with mum
"On a night when I needed to feel young, he made me feel like I was hearing music for the very first time": The story of the Bruce Springsteen show that saved his career and made him a star
"We knew how good we were. That onour day we needn't be afraid of anybody": In 1970 Free had the world in the palm of their hands... and they let it blow away
"My hope is that most fans of progressive music are fans of experimental stuff, so I leave it in their capable hands." How Simon Godfrey returned with Shineback
“Peter Gabriel was forced to start slipping into this persona… If we’d not had two 12-strings to retune, would he ever have started telling all those stories?” Why so many musicians envy Anthony Phillips’ career after Genesis
“Prog? There was a university pretentiousness about it. People asked what we did and I’d say, ‘10cc music’”: However you describe it, The Original Soundtrack is a progressive landmark
The best new rock songs you need to hear right now
“Deathcore? None of those bands can do what we do”: Suicide Silence had a point to prove to the haters, and with No Time To Bleed they rammed it home
"Gazza had the rhythm, everything, but you cannot understand one word of what he’s saying": the making of New Order's classic England anthem World In Motion
“I don’t know if any orgies were ‘thrown’. Those things had a way of happening on their own”: in 1977, Kiss were on top of the world – and Paul Stanley was loving every second of it
The ten best Nine Inch Nails deep cuts (2024)
Top Articles
Lufkin Craigslist Pets
baltimore office & commercial - craigslist
Arkansas Gazette Sudoku
Unitedhealthcare Hwp
Evil Dead Rise Showtimes Near Massena Movieplex
Gore Videos Uncensored
Tlc Africa Deaths 2021
Legacy First National Bank
Deshret's Spirit
LeBron James comes out on fire, scores first 16 points for Cavaliers in Game 2 vs. Pacers
litter - tłumaczenie słowa – słownik angielsko-polski Ling.pl
Https //Advanceautoparts.4Myrebate.com
No Strings Attached 123Movies
2024 Non-Homestead Millage - Clarkston Community Schools
Craigslist Deming
National Weather Service Denver Co Forecast
Xomissmandi
Itziar Atienza Bikini
Edicts Of The Prime Designate
Aris Rachevsky Harvard
Hdmovie 2
Mail.zsthost Change Password
Dwc Qme Database
How to Grow and Care for Four O'Clock Plants
Jail View Sumter
The Many Faces of the Craigslist Killer
Stihl Dealer Albuquerque
Bidrl.com Visalia
Unreasonable Zen Riddle Crossword
Vht Shortener
Login.castlebranch.com
Guinness World Record For Longest Imessage
Ups Drop Off Newton Ks
Uno Fall 2023 Calendar
LG UN90 65" 4K Smart UHD TV - 65UN9000AUJ | LG CA
Craig Woolard Net Worth
Lichen - 1.17.0 - Gemsbok! Antler Windchimes! Shoji Screens!
Reading Craigslist Pa
Geology - Grand Canyon National Park (U.S. National Park Service)
Pensacola Cars Craigslist
Thanksgiving Point Luminaria Promo Code
Jason Brewer Leaving Fox 25
Gravel Racing
Joey Gentile Lpsg
Marcal Paper Products - Nassau Paper Company Ltd. -
Tyco Forums
Walmart Front Door Wreaths
Where and How to Watch Sound of Freedom | Angel Studios
Compete My Workforce
Psalm 46 New International Version
Gainswave Review Forum
Lux Nails & Spa
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 5583

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-12-23

Address: 4653 O'Kon Hill, Lake Juanstad, AR 65469

Phone: +494124489301

Job: Marketing Representative

Hobby: Reading, Ice skating, Foraging, BASE jumping, Hiking, Skateboarding, Kayaking

Introduction: My name is Cheryll Lueilwitz, I am a sparkling, clean, super, lucky, joyous, outstanding, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.