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Nine
Inch Nails Classic 'The Downward Spiral' Heard in 'Deluxe Edition'
Versions Featuring Bonus B-Sides, Remixes, Rarities, Music
Videos and Previously Unreleased Demos.
Los Angeles, Nov. 18 /PRNewswire/ - In 1994, a dark, brutal
album turned music upside down and became a modern masterpiece.
Now, in its 10th anniversary year, Nine Inch
Nails' "The Downward
Spiral," a
landmark album in modern rock, in industrial music and in pop culture
returns in a "Deluxe Edition" (Interscope/UMe), released November
23, 2004.
"The Downward Spiral - Deluxe Edition" is offered in two versions,
each digitally remastered. Both packages also include a 28-page
booklet filled with photos and graphics. The SACD Hybrid version
(playable on all CD, DVD and SACD players) features Disc One with
the original album in CD Audio, SACD Stereo and SACD 5.1 Surround
Sound, and Disc Two in CD Audio and SACD Stereo with 10 b-sides,
remixes and rarities and a trio of previously unreleased demos.
Disc Two includes "Burn" from the "Natural
Born Killers" soundtrack; "Closer
(Precursor)," "Closer To God" and "Memorabilia" from the "Closer
To God" EP; "Piggy (Nothing
Can Stop Me Now)," "Hurt (Quiet)" and "The
Downward Spiral (The Bottom)" from the "Further
Down The Spiral" remix
album; "A Violet Fluid" and "All
The Pigs, All Lined Up" from the "March
Of The Pigs" single; "Dead
Souls" from "The Crow" soundtrack, and
previously unreleased demos for "Ruiner," "Liar" and "Heresy."
As presented on one of the first ever DualDiscs the original album
is featured on both the CD side and the DVD side, with the latter
also boasting DVD-Audio Advanced Resolution Stereo and Surround
Sound(for playback on DVD-Audio capable players, Dolby Surround
and Stereo (for playback on all DVD players) and DVD-Video presentations
of music videos for "Closer" (in Surround Sound), "March
Of The Pigs" and "Hurt" (live).
One of the most influential albums of the '90s, "The
Downward Spiral" is Trent
Reznor's industrial-cum-tragic opera view of the
world. The second full-length album from his Nine
Inch Nails --
after 1989's breakthrough "Pretty Hate Machine" -- "The
Downward Spiral" was the highly ambitious concept album that propelled singer/producer/multi-instrumentalist
Reznor to star status and brought industrial music to mainstream
audiences.
Reznor states, "I'm very proud and excited to present The
Downward Spiral in Surround Sound as well as a newly remastered stereo version.
When the idea came up to remix The Downward
Spiral in Surround
Sound, I knew it would be an interesting and much more open approach.
As I revisited the original sessions / master tapes, I was surprised
at how well the tracks lent themselves to the Surround format.
I think we have stayed true to the essence of the original but
managed to utilize the surround format to truly expand the experience
of The Downward Spiral. It is even more disturbing, if I do say
so myself."
Recorded in a studio in the Los Angeles house where actress Sharon
Tate was murdered by Charles Manson's gang, "The
Downward Spiral" debuted
at #2 pop and went quadruple platinum, becoming the group's best-selling
album and perhaps the bleakest multiplatinum album ever. The tracks "Closer" (with
its provocative lyrics one of the year's most controversial and
unlikely hits), "Hurt" and "Piggy" all charted Top 20 Modern Rock,
with "March Of The Pigs" attaining a #5 Dance ranking.
While having a huge impact on alternative metal bands of the decade,
and being the most popular group in the industrial genre, Nine
Inch Nails would not be heard from again until 1999's #1-charting "The
Fragile." "The Downward Spiral," however, remains atop modern rock
as its ultimate dark classic.
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