
Nine Inch Nails: Pretty Hate Machine (CD)
Although Nine Inch Nails mastermind Trent Reznor became the poster boy for industrial rock in the early 1990s, his '89 debut, Pretty Hate Machine, actually has a stronger foothold in '80s synth-pop. The guitar-heavy opener, 'Head Like A Hole,' is the most aggressive track on the album and proved to be the signature song for Reznor's initial breakthrough, but much of the disc sounds like Depeche Mode in a particularly bad mood.
All of the tracks on Pretty Hate Machine are based on synthesizer lines and programmed beats, with other elements - such as the distinctive bass on 'Sanctified' and sampled explosions on 'That's What I Get' - filling out the sound. Despite Reznor's morose lyrics, a number of ... Hate Machine's finest moments are energetic dance tunes, particularly 'Down In It' and the surging 'Sin.'
Oddly enough, Reznor's fiercer - and seemingly less accessible - subsequent work (the Broken EP and The Downward Spiral) led directly to his mainstream success, but Pretty Hate Machine reveals NIN's aesthetic origins.
- Head Like A Hole
- Terrible Lie
- Down In It
- Sanctified
- Something I Can Never Have
- Kinda I Want To
- Sin
- That's What I Get
- The Only Time
- Ringfinger
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Description
Although Nine Inch Nails mastermind Trent Reznor became the poster boy for industrial rock in the early 1990s, his '89 debut, Pretty Hate Machine, actually has a stronger foothold in '80s synth-pop. The guitar-heavy opener, 'Head Like A Hole,' is the most aggressive track on the album and proved to be the signature song for Reznor's initial breakthrough, but much of the disc sounds like Depeche Mode in a particularly bad mood.
All of the tracks on Pretty Hate Machine are based on synthesizer lines and programmed beats, with other elements - such as the distinctive bass on 'Sanctified' and sampled explosions on 'That's What I Get' - filling out the sound. Despite Reznor's morose lyrics, a number of ... Hate Machine's finest moments are energetic dance tunes, particularly 'Down In It' and the surging 'Sin.'
Oddly enough, Reznor's fiercer - and seemingly less accessible - subsequent work (the Broken EP and The Downward Spiral) led directly to his mainstream success, but Pretty Hate Machine reveals NIN's aesthetic origins.
- Head Like A Hole
- Terrible Lie
- Down In It
- Sanctified
- Something I Can Never Have
- Kinda I Want To
- Sin
- That's What I Get
- The Only Time
- Ringfinger


















