BEST ALBUMS OF 2008: #5: NINE INCH NAILS “Ghosts I-IV” and “The Slip”

NINE INCH NAILS
Ghosts I-IV
(The Null Corporation/RED)
Available on CD, quadruple-LP, and through NIN.com and AmazonMP3.com

NINE INCH NAILS
The Slip
(The Null Corporation/RED)
Available on CD, 180-gram LP, iTunes, AmazonMP3, eMusic, and NIN.com
Vee can wax rhapsodic about these two surprise releases from Trent Reznor and company more than I can (she’s been to see the group at least three times on their most recent tour, including the closing show in Las Vegas last month), but the sudden prolific nature of Trent Reznor’s post-Interscope period has been nothing short of interesting and satisfying. Ghosts I-IV would have been more than enough NIN goodness for anyone, even if an all-instrumental digital album, double-CD or quadruple-LP would seem daunting to casual listeners – but Trent, in the process of letting loose during the 10-week period that led to this project, proceeded to unconsiously reveal many of his childhood and adolsecent influences (Brian Eno, Tuxedomoon, Kraftwerk, Devo) in Ghosts’ 36 numbered, almost-eponymously titled tracks. But then, after a surprise digital single in “Discipline” (probably Trent’s best pop number since “Closer”), Trent drops The Slip on us – for free (and then several weeks later on CD and LP for those that want to thank Trent for his generosity by buying a tactile copy). Together, both albums prove to display an immense level of freedom within Reznor that could not have been possible under TVT or Interscope. How Trent follows these two albums up in 2009 is anyone’s guess, but he’s on a roll.
