Label:
Catalog#:
HALO 27
Format:
10 x File, MP3, Album, VBR
Country:
US
Released:
05 May 2008
Genre:
Electronic,
Rock
Style:
Alternative Rock,
Contemporary,
Ambient
Notes
Released initially as a free digital download only. Contains a 14 page pdf booklet. The physical copy (CD/vinyl) was released sometime in July/August 2008.
Available in VBR MP3, FLAC lossless, FLAC high definition 24bit / 96kHz, M4A apple lossless, and high definition WAVE 24bit / 96kHz.
Mastered at Bernie Grundman Mastering, Hollywood, California.
Published by: Form and Texture (ASCAP)
Label: The Null Corporation
© 2008 niin
Thank you:
Bob Morelli, Alan Becker, Danny Buch and everyone at Red, Digidesign, Elena Dickstein and Preferred Travel, Jeffrey Ehrenberg and Vintage King, Jeffrey Horton and Native Instruments, Paul J. Cox Studio Systems, Phillip Scholes and SSL, Rockit Cargo, Roger Cordell and Big City Music, Ross Garfield and Drum Doctors, Shawn Cleary and Analogue Haven, Shivaun O'Brien and Sound City Studios, Sudjam, Topspin Media Inc., West L.A. Music
Bruno Bondanelli, Candy Soo, Chris Whitemyer, Christina Lum, Craig Johnson, David Phillips, Irina Volodarsky, Jeff Davis, Jeff Masud, Jessica Trento, John Coleman, Josh Smith, June Munsinger, Karen Ciccone, Kelly Jao, Marie Lewis, Rich Fownes, Ross Rosen, Shamal Ranasinghe, Sherri Durrell, Tamar Levine, Zia Modabber
This album is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike license. More information @ Creative Commons official website.
Total Running Time: 43 minutes, 51 seconds
When it comes to music, everyone will have an opinion, of course, but I think that if a poll was taken that the highest scoring (and best selling I may add) album by NIN is The Downward Spiral. In fact, though my personal favorite NIN album is Pretty Hate Machine, The Downward Spiral was much more ground breaking than The Fragile was. To me The Fragile would have been a much better album as one CD and not two, which feels like a lot of 'filler' material was added. And though going from Pretty Hate to Broken was a greater contrast, Downward Spiral still brought to the table a whole new experience in emotion and sound that Reznor has never since recaptured.
I am spending way too much time in this section writing about someone else's viewpoint, and not even about the album The Slip, and I apologize for that. As far as The Slip goes, I think it is a decent album. Between the time of With Teeth and The Slip, Year Zero is my favorite, with The Slip coming in a close second. Indeed Reznor has not reinvented anything with these albums, but for die hard fans, "more of the same" never is bad in my opinion.