Saturday, August 29, 2009

Trent Reznor Opens His Heart on Cornell, the Indusrty & NIN


Mr. Self-Destruct

This weekend’s Virgin Festival gig could be Nine Inch Nails' last Canadian show ever. In an exclusive interview, Trent Reznor gives the pigs their marching orders.

By Liisa Ladouceur

You can’t say he didn’t warn you.

When Trent Reznor walks off the Molson Amphitheatre stage this Sunday night he won’t just be closing the Virgin Festival, but also powering down his entire Nine Inch Nails juggernaut for good. He’s been careful not to call it the end, a split or even a hiatus. But when he announced this past February, via a post on nin.com, that, after 20 years, “it’s time to make NIN disappear for a while,” you could hear the sucking chest-wound sound caused by all those plugs being simultaneously pulled from the black hearts of those who’ve faithfully followed him long before you could do it on Twitter. Lucky for them, (and by “them,” I truly mean “us”) there’s been plenty of chance to bust out the combat boots and give the band a proper farewell salute.

First there was a tour of Australia and New Zealand, followed by the summer NIN/JA tour opening for Jane’s Addiction, billed as the last go-round for North America. Then, an extensive tour of European and Asian festivals. And then, just five weeks after what was supposed to be his final Toronto appearance with NIN/JA (and after telling crowds at Bonnaroo they were witnessing the band’s “last show ever” in the United States) Trent revealed yet another tour, dubbed Wave Goodbye. So what gives? Is Trent the new Cher?

“What happened was that when we finished the NIN/JA tour, my own personal feelings were, ‘Well, that’s it.’ I was happy,” says Trent, calling from his L.A. home on one of his few days off the road. “But for winding up NIN, it kind of felt it would be nice to have a few shows that could be a little freer, and not so constricted with time.”

NIN’s headlining spot at Virgin Fest is the only goodbye gig you can still get tickets for, after all eight club/theatre shows in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles sold out in moments. Trent admits the V-Fest paycheque will help fund the other shows, which will lose money, but that it wasn’t the only reason to come back. “There is a bit of a mercenary aspect to it, but at the same time I do truly enjoy playing the Toronto area.”

Toronto seems to enjoy hosting him: from club shows, like opening for Peter Murphy at RPM (now the Guvernment) in 1994, through Lollapalooza at the CNE and big arena/stadiums tours with Bowie, Manson, A Perfect Circle, plus two sweaty sold-out gigs at the Kool Haus for his With Teeth comeback in 2005, and the technical spectacle that was last year’s Lights in the Sky tour.

Asked for his favourite Toronto-area show memory, Trent picks out NIN’s 1994 visit to Molson Park in Barrie, which also featured Pop Will Eat Itself, the local live debut of Marilyn Manson and reigning alt.rock gods Soundgarden, all of whom were upstaged by the sonic trauma, digital theatrics and Grand Guignol chaos that was NIN in its post-Woodstock ’94, drug-fuelled heyday.

“The one that sticks in my mind is that festival we played with Soundgarden,” he says. “We had a chip on our shoulder about Soundgarden because their record [Superunknown] came out the same day Downward Spiral came out, and they beat us to No. 1 on Billboard. That became a kind of professional showdown. And we did show them.”

Before agreeing to this interview, Trent’s management requested that I not ask about “the state of the industry.” But after I follow his Soundgarden story with a quip about his heavily publicized Twitter feud with Chris Cornell earlier this year, Reznor sounds off all on his own.

“I really have no personal issue with Chris at all,” he begins. “The thing I said on Twitter… it goes deeper than what have may appeared on the surface. We were on [Interscope]. And I have had Jimmy Iovine, the president of that label, come up to me on every record from With Teeth onwards saying I should do some sort of urban thing — it was Timbaland for a while, then it was Pharrell for a while — because ‘that’s how you sell records.’ The idea seemed so preposterous and insulting.

"I’m not talking about ‘let’s go make a record with Dr. Dre,’ because that would be kind of cool. What he’s talking about is making your record sound like what’s on the radio, whether it’s appropriate or not. And that’s what Chris did. I think that when somebody who is respected like he is goes that route, it sends the message that it’s OK to give up any kind of core values you had to be the fashion of the moment. I don’t think that’s OK. I think it’s harmful. If I have one major fight in the world of the music business, it’s trying to keep art first and commerce second.”

Viewed in this light, Reznor’s decision to retire his band as a touring entity can be seen as an act of rebellion against the wheels of industry. After celebrating his independence from recording contracts by giving away MP3 copies of his last two albums, Ghosts I-IV and The Slip, for free (Ghosts became the first Creative Commons album to be nominated for a Grammy and made over $1.6 million in paid downloads and physical copies), he’s turning away from the one thing that still makes money for the music business.

“I got into this because I felt that I had something to say; it wasn’t to get rich and it wasn’t to get famous,” he says. “But in the climate today, there are people nudging me towards, ‘OK, you’ve made some money, let’s make more money.’ And you make money touring. But I find that, as a 44-year-old man, that’s not really what I want to do all the time. I’m not saying I don’t enjoy playing shows, but I don’t need to do it for a year, living the same day over and over again. My time would be much better spent creatively, rather than sitting on a tour bus because it’s a money-making machine.”

He’s not saying exactly what’s next (“I know better than to be specific because then I’ll get harassed by my fans”) but reiterates his interest in software development and says the idea for a Year Zero TV series is “still alive.” He also admits two things he won’t do: write an autobiography or take time off.

First, though, there will be just a few more nights at the mic, spewing out angry rhyming couplets, torturing his gear, his techs and his guitarist, Robin Finck. And when they inevitably close their set with 1989’s underground smash “Head Like a Hole,” those watching for the last time might find comfort that 20 years on, Trent is still making good on his mantra: “I’d rather die, than give you control.”

“I don’t ever want Nine Inch Nails to be a responsibility,” he says firmly. “Well, it is, I guess. It’s my whole life. But I don’t want it to be something that feels like a job, or an obligation that punishes me. I don’t feel that Nine Inch Nails is out of ideas. But it is starting to feel comfortable. And I want to throw myself into something that feels uncomfortable and risky and see what happens.” (Eye Weekly)

Thanks to Ana Martins.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Axl Rose Bringing "Democracy" to China?


Guns N' Roses
2009 Asia Tour, Taipei

Date: Dec. 11, 2009

Time: 20:00

Venue: Taipei County Stadium

www.bbh.com.tw

Axl Rose released Chinese Democracy last November after a 17-year wait and a reported $13 million budget.

In March, GN'R manager Irving Azoff told Rolling Stone that the band has big plans for this year. "Axl has been basically quiet, keeping out of the limelight for almost 15 years. People think they know him but they only really only know what has been said about him by questionable people, he is a good guy and often misunderstood — he is a professional who has worked very hard to build and maintain a high creative standard for Guns N' Roses, which I support. We have some exciting things in the works this year for GN'R, I’m looking forward to it."

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Lady Gaga Is Kurt Cobain, Axl Rose And David Bowie Rolled Into One


By Kyle Anderson

It's official: Lady Gaga will bring her fashion-forward stage show to the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, as she is set to perform at the ceremony on September 13. Though I love Jay-Z, Green Day and the other acts already announced as performers, I'm most looking forward to Gaga. I echo James Montgomery's enthusiasm for The Fame — even without the juggernaut singles, it would still be one of the more impressive pop albums of the past decade. When you add in her phenomenal approach to fashion, her ultra-quotable interviews and her extraordinary visual sense (hence her nine VMA nominations), you get a tremendous package. (No pun intended.)

But the woman born Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta didn't simply drop from the sky fully formed. Rather, she's a careful construction of a number of other stars. Think of her as the FrankenStar, made up of the parts below.

David Bowie: Bowie spent most of his early career pretending he came to this planet from outer space. Those shiny suits Gaga wears? Totally Bowie. And Ziggy Stardust was also obsessed with the concept of fame — in fact, it was the title of one of his biggest hits.

Grace Jones: A woman who plays a hybrid stew of pop styles and has a commitment to stage costumes? That sounds familiar.

Axl Rose: Axl was a great singer and frontman (and hell, an underrated dancer), but the thing he was great at was creating a sense of unpredictability and danger wherever he went. Gaga has yet to refuse to perform because her deli tray wasn't up to snuff, but every time she shows up to an interview in costume or performs live, there's always the possibility that something could get out of hand — and that's awesome.

Kelis: Gaga probably wishes every night that she was the one who wrote "Milkshake," as it's probably the best double-entendre tune of the past 20 years. But perhaps Gaga's greatest skill is making things sound dirty — after all, "Bluffin' with my muffin" sounds like it should be filthy, but maybe it isn't after all.

Kurt Cobain: It may seem like a stretch, but one of the genius things that Cobain did during his all-too-brief career was not take himself seriously. Whether it was in videos, on stage or during interviews, Cobain sometimes came across like a guy who didn't care about being famous or even being a musician. Gaga is the same way — sometimes, it seems like she's just going to stand up and say "Gotcha!" and laugh at our expense. Again, that sort of unpredictability is so rare that it becomes truly thrilling.

I'm putting my money down now: Lady Gaga will steal the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Run, Don't Walk


Girl Loves Distortion - You Better Run, Your Highness (2009, Etxe records)

DC's own Girl Loves Distortion has done it again.

On 2008's Earth Beings on Exhibit, GLD set a new high-water mark for artistic excellence. This time they've aimed even higher, and succeeded.

The new album is all killer and no filler.

On You Better Run, GLD fuses piano, organ, mellotron and synths with lo-fi guitars, drums & bass to create a mindbending musical stew that is smart, fun, and just downright musical. Imagine if The Byrds had drawn their influences from The Minutemen instead of Bob Dylan.

There are beautiful harmonies and soaring guitar leads to draw the listener in, and enough abstraction in the lyrics to hold up to repeated listening. The band's playful aggression keeps the mood light without being silly, and dark without being morose.

The opening cuts, "Weighing" and "UFOs" are reminiscent of everything that's good about bands like Sonic Youth and Pavement.

But it's with tracks 3 and 4 where the fun really begins. The title track is absolutely hypnotic. The trio works together, like a musical Voltron, slaying rock 'n' roll cliches with a guitar attack. Without a doubt, it's the finest instrumental cut of 2009. There's alot going on in these songs. Girl Loves Distortion puts so much care into making records that they're almost "retro." "Dick and/or Jane" has a nasty, X-rated groove and a face-melting organ solo. The closing track, "Ascend," does just that as Jenn, Steve and Chris prove that rock and roll can still save your life.

*****

You can purchase the record here.

You can read my review of the GLD's first album, Earth Beings on Exhibit, here.