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Disc one is a live album of most of the band's normal set list of the time, while disc two contains a studio album titled Still, containing "deconstructed" versions of previous Nine Inch Nails songs and some new material. The double DVD set, sold separately, includes video recordings of the songs performed on the CD, as well as additional song ...
Beside You in Time is the third video album by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, released in Europe on February 26, 2007 and in the United States on February 27, 2007. The video documents the band's 2006 Live: With Teeth Tour , and is available on DVD , HD DVD and Blu-ray formats.
Like the previous Nine Inch Nails studio album Ghosts I–IV, The Slip was released under a Creative Commons attribution-noncommercial share-alike license, in effect allowing anyone to use or rework the material for any non-profit purpose, as long as credit is provided and the resulting work is released under a similar license.
Nothing Records was an American record label specializing in industrial rock and electronic music, founded by John Malm Jr. and Trent Reznor in 1992. It is considered an example of a vanity label, where an artist is able to run a label with some small degree of independence within a larger parent company, in this case the larger company being Interscope Records.
After the Self Destruct tour, Chris Vrenna, member of the live band since 1988 and frequent contributor to Nine Inch Nails studio recordings, left the act permanently to pursue a career in producing and to form Tweaker. [9] [10] "On a lot of that tour, I don't even remember playing the shows," Reznor sighed in 1999.
Better known as "heaven's receptionist," the 26-year-old is providing comfort, hope and humor to total strangers to help them cope with the loss of their loved ones.
Closure is the first video album by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, released on November 25, 1997.The double VHS set consists of one tape of live concert and behind-the-scenes footage from their Self-Destruct and Further Down the Spiral tours and one tape of music videos.
Ghosts VI: Locusts received generally positive reviews from music critics, with an average rating of 80 out of 100 based on ten reviews on Metacritic. [9] NME critic James McMahon has described the record "as unsettling as a record entitled Locusts should be," while referring to the whole project as "music for daydreams."