Thursday, October 31, 2013

A mi barba

A mi barba:

Te extrañaré

Mi cara estará desnuda
Vulnerable
Se verán mis labios y lunares
El viento y el frio bailarán libres
No me podrás proteger
Contra la nieve, la lluvia, el sol
El viento, el frio, el calor

Adios, mi barba

Te extrañaré

Lo rojo mezclado con negro
Como sangre derramada en el espacio exterior
Cobre brillando en la oscuridad
Como en la luz se rie una sensación de paz
y calmada violencia

Adios, mi barba

Te veo en otra estación
En algunos meses
En algunas semanas

En mis memorias

Adios, mi barba

Monday, October 21, 2013

Review: Year Zero

Year Zero
Nine Inch Nails
2007

I remember Year Zero came out when I was in my last year of high school. I remember hearing someone remark about how amazed he was that "[he] heard [Survivalism] on the radio so soon after [With Teeth had been released]" In this context, it doesn't make sense at first glance but what he meant was that it's shocking to hear new Nine Inch Nails material less than 5 years after the last album had been released. The good kind of shocking, mind you. When I got my hands on it, I was fascinated not only by the album cover but by the fact that the CD changed colors in temperature and this is where my review starts.

What has always fascinated me about Year Zero, apart from the fact that the CD changes color in temperature was what I barely remember reading about its production and the image I have of Trent Reznor playing keyboards in a cramped van to record the album, as he probably did while on tour. Remember, he recorded Year Zero while still on tour for support for With Teeth. What also fascinated me was how different it sounded from stuff I had heard, especially with the extensive marketing campaign behind it. Not necessarily bad but just different.

I understand that it's Nine Inch Nails but is it Nine Inch Nails in name only? There is no denying that Year Zero definitely has a political slant to it, as the term Year Zero refers to- what can in a nutshell be described as, a purge of ideas and history. Everything prior to the year zero is destroyed (physically or metaphorically) and considered irrelevant, and everything after replaces the old way of life. It's not the most difficult thing to understand.

That being said, the same traits that make Nine Inch Nails are still present but something different looms above all things. It's not necessarily the presumably rushed nature of the project because that's never hindered anyone before (Led Zeppelin's Presence was recorded in 18 days, pretty rushed when you think about it), or the sound which for all intents and purposes is NIN- screwing with the definition of industrial, or even the tone because there is still aggression in the lyrics, violence in the delivery, and that same connection between NIN and the listener is still there. I really think the "different" is the political slant.

Up to this point, I had never really thought of NIN as a medium for any sort of political discourse but that's the way it was back in 2007. Frustrations over a government led by what many people believe to be a jackass (I try my best to stay out of politics so I never offer an opinion unless I know the facts), and the ceaseless war that cost a seemingly endless amount of lives and money. Everybody was pissed in some way, shape, or form.

With all that being said, Trent continues his tradition of articulating the (political or otherwise) listener's frustrations and mess that dwells inside their heads. The album opens strong with Hyperpower!- one of my favorite tracks on this album and goes right into The Beginning of the End which makes the paranoia and mistrust of any gubernatorial entity very vivid. Subsequent tracks like Survivalism, The Good Soldier, Capital G, only serve to make the political slant far more obvious than before. Speaking of which, in 2008 I attended my first Nine Inch Nails concert. During one of the songs, I believe it was Capital G, they displayed an image of John McCain (Republican presidential candidate) and as they performed the image morphed into that of George W. Bush. The crowd went fucking nuts.

While, Year Zero is a Nine Inch Nails album, it doesn't particularly feel like one because it's less personal, more detached and more political. That doesn't mean it's bad only different than what we're used to.

8/10

Review: With Teeth

[WITH_TEETH]
Nine Inch Nails
2005

I recall listening to With Teeth for the first time, somewhere near the end of high school and definitely during my first year of college. Well, definitely a couple of songs over and over. You know the ones. I remember being left in awe at the album both as a whole and in pieces and this is where my review starts.

With Teeth has always stood out as one of the best NIN albums for me. Where The Fragile seemingly faltered, With Teeth did the opposite and lunged forward and stood tall. The funny thing is that With Teeth is actually kind of far from "standard NIN". This time around, it's not just Trent playing every instrument himself with a heavier industrial synthesizered* lean like before. This time around the instruments extend beyond the norm in a more obvious way. You know, you can actually tell with greater ease that there are guitars and basses (redundant) at work. You also have to give it up for guests who do a damn great job (Dave Grohl, for instance on drums on tracks like Only and Getting Smaller).

Trent delivers on all levels, as if he learned from the misstep that is The Fragile. The level of aggression on With Teeth is awesome, to say the least (and also to use the most commonly used phrase of adoration). It is only enhanced by the fact that it at least seems less synthesizered* and therefore comes off as more human, more primal, more visceral. The same vicious NIN we've come to love over the years brought one step closer to you, the listener. The angry, seething, appreciative listener who more often than not, seeks someone to understand them. As do songs like Only, Getting Smaller, Sunspots, Every Day is Exactly the Same, and The Hand that Feeds. 

All of articulate what you have a hard time expressing sometimes: your anger, frustration, horniness, conflicts with your own self, an intense dissatisfaction with being blinded in a cyclical routine with almost no end. A chorus of increasing anger "... there is no you / there is only me / there is no fucking you / there is only me" serves as a perfect example of how With Teeth is that album that speaks volumes about what's trapped inside you, just dying to break free, to scratch, claw, fight, and bite its way out.

* That term is only there so we could be on the same page.

10/10