Details

Track Listing 1. Piggy (Nothing Can Stop Me Now) - (remix) 2. Art of Self Destruction, Part One, The - (remix) 3. Art of Self Destruction, Part Two, The 4. Downward Spiral, The (The Bottom) - (remix) 5. Hurt (Quiet) 6. Eraser (Denial, Realization) 7. At the Heart of It All - (remix) 8. Eraser (Polite) 9. Self Destrcution, Final 10. Beauty of Being Numb, The 11. Eraser, Over, Out
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Dave Navarro, Kim Bullard | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Nine Inch Nails: Trent Reznor, Chris Vrenna, Robin Finck, Danny Lohner, Charlie Clouser. FURTHER DOWN THE SPIRAL features Nine Inch Nails songs remixed and recreated by J.G. Thirwell, Coil, Aphex Twin, and Nine Inch Nails. It has become clear that Nine Inch Nails' one-man fuse Trent Reznor has been given free reign to construct his releases in whatever ways he sees fit. And since he has continually railed against pop's constrictive borders, it should come as no surprise that FURTHER DOWN THE SPIRAL rebels against the standard remix album formula. Instead, Reznor allows like-minded deconstructionists to go wild with a blank canvas, and some dark hues provided by THE DOWNWARD SPIRAL. So rather than having dance mixes from the likes of Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, this 64-minute EP (!) features the technology-driven sonic landscapes of Aphex Twin, and the thorny abstractions of Foetus' J.G. Thirlwell. Few of these song titles match their DOWNWARD SPIRAL counterparts, choosing--like the mixes themselves--to only hint at the originals. "Piggy (Nothing Can Stop Me Now)" charges with a new-found frenzy to the strains of Dave Navarro's guitar, only to veer off into a decidedly house music-like break. In the hands of the members of Coil, "The Downward Spiral (The Bottom)" becomes an industrial collage, incorporating bleak dins, dark ambient figures, and a grey-noise version of the "Closer" hook. Only "Hurt (Quiet)," the one track redone by a solo Reznor, resembles its former self. Soft but emotionally taxing, it becomes the sleek and brooding post-modern ballad it always threatened to. And like the rest of FURTHER DOWN THE SPIRAL, it's a gateway into Reznor's psyche--a place where the disenfranchised not only get their say, but get to remix it as well.
Industry Reviews Recommended - ...the shifting sequences of beats and clattering guitars grafted on by [remixer Rick] Rubin [make] for a significant improvement on the original [of `Piggy']....[elsewhere], maximum sonic carnage is the order of the day... Melody Maker (05/27/1995)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...a fastback trip through industrial noise to techno and ambient netherworlds. At 60 minutes, FURTHER gets close to [NATURAL BORN] KILLERS adding new dimensions to [Trent Reznor's] cameo role as tortured artist. Q (07/01/1995)
8 - Very Good - ...the guests do include reps from ambient's schools old...and new..., but FURTHER DOWN...is hardly gentler, and certainly no kinder than THE DOWNWARD SPIRAL itself....The record's best parts are either concentrated noise washes or chilling atmospherics... Spin (09/01/1995)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...a fastback trip through industrial noise to techno and ambient netherworlds. At 60 minutes, FURTHER gets close to [NATURAL BORN] KILLERS adding new dimensions to [Trent Reznor's] cameo role as tortured artist. Q (07/01/1995)
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