Genre: Industrial Rock, Alternative Rock
Label Number: 7 92346-2
AllMusic Review by Steve Huey
☠: Selected by Lass
© 1994 Nothing/Interscope RecordsAllMusic Review by Steve Huey
The Downward Spiral positioned Trent Reznor as industrial's own Phil Spector,
painting detailed, layered soundscapes from a wide tonal palette. Not
only did he fully integrated the crashing metal guitars of Broken,
but several newfound elements -- expanded song structures, odd time
signatures, shifting arrangements filled with novel sounds, tremendous
textural variety -- can be traced to the influence of progressive rock.
So can the painstaking attention devoted to pacing and contrast -- The Downward Spiral
is full of striking sonic juxtapositions and sudden about-faces in
tone, which make for a fascinating listen. More important than craft in
turning Reznor
into a full-fledged rock star, however, was his brooding persona.
Grunge had the mainstream salivating over melodramatic angst, which had
always been Reznor's
stock in trade. The left-field hit "Closer" made him a postmodern
shaman for the '90s, obsessed with exposing the dark side he saw behind
even the most innocuous façades. In fact, his theatrics on The Downward Spiral -- all the preening self-absorption and serpentine sexuality -- seemed directly descended from Jim Morrison. Yet Reznor's
nihilism often seemed like a reaction against some repressively extreme
standard of purity, so the depravity he wallowed in didn't necessarily
seem that depraved. That's part of the reason why, in spite of its many
virtues, The Downward Spiral
falls just short of being the masterpiece it wants to be. For one
thing, fascination with texture occasionally dissolves the hooky
songwriting that fueled Pretty Hate Machine. But more than that, Reznor's
unflinching bleakness was beginning to seem like a carefully calibrated
posture; his increasing musical sophistication points up the lyrical
holding pattern. Having said that, the album ends on an affecting
emotional peak -- "Hurt" mingles drama and introspection in a way Reznor had never quite managed before. It's evidence of depth behind the charisma that deservedly made him a star.
tags: nine inch nails, the downward spiral, 1994, the down ward,
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