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Nine Inch Nails - Ghosts V: Together CD (album) cover

GHOSTS V: TOGETHER

Nine Inch Nails

 

Crossover Prog

4.14 | 19 ratings

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Dapper~Blueberries
Prog Reviewer
5 stars To be honest this listen took way longer than it should've, but that's neither here nor there. Nine Inch Nails, a band I am guessing needs no introduction. Industrial rock band slowly became a lot more experimental, and is led by Trent Reznor. I won't say I am a huge fan, but I do really enjoy their music and I really appreciate what they've done for music and for culture as a whole. I have listened to their entire discography, except for this album. This album has been an illusion for me. I always intend to listen to this but I never found the right opportunity or mood for it. I knew what it was about since I've already heard its companion album Ghosts VI: Locusts, but I didn't know what I'd think about it fully. That changes today, and I'll review whatever this album brings.

It starts with Letting Go While Holding On. This is a very elegant and droning track with a slightly muddy backing harmony in the back. This song brings me both comfort and a strange feeling of worry. This song feels very much like it is in the uncanny valley, where I feel like I am safe while hearing it, but I also feel like I am being watched, and the more I realize the thing that feels off with the song, the more I really start to see the big picture. Trent Reznor knows how to make someone feel ways they never felt before with songs, and no matter if it's loud and hard industrial sounds with Closer or this more quiet, and delicate piece, he has a knack for this sort of thing which I always appreciated. It's uncomfortable in the best way possible.

Next is the pseudo title track of the album, Together. This is also a droning melody, however with a much more clear harmony for a lead. Right off the bat all those uncomfortable emotions from the last song washes away, but are replaced with a feeling of sadness? Melancholy? Loneliness? I cannot tell honestly but I do feel something along those lines. The more the song goes on, the more it feels like it is drowning in bitter sorrow. It almost hurts to listen to. Strangely this sound and style reminds me of some of the music in Silent Hill, mostly the piano pieces where they express moods of uncomfortableness and or sadness to really heighten the fear, emotions, or messages the characters face in their terrifying journey through a desolate town. It's that sort of feeling that doesn't disappoint when done right, and here it definitely doesn't falter whatsoever.

Right up next is Out In The Open. The uncomfortability washes over again but stronger this time. While shorter than the first track, this one lets itself be known as a strong and very worrying drone piece that makes me feel very tense for some reason. It's that emotion and feeling thing I said before that makes you have a sudden feeling of negativity without knowing why, whether it be fear or sadness. I know I am safe, but this song makes me feel otherwise. It's strangely heavy, and I love it a lot.

Afterwards it is With Faith. This song is scary for all the right reasons I said before. Leading with very strange and repetitive hymns with a weird and disorganized melody in the back, I feel strangely anxious, and I guess that is the theme with the album, strangely anxious. On one hand I am feeling safe and secure, but on the other I am looking around in case there is something that I might be missing, or something that might resolve all this tension even when there is none. I don't know what to fear more, the music, or Trent's ability to make this music, but either way I do find a strange love and passion to be brimming in this release, and I cannot deny that already it is shaping itself to be one of my favorite Nine Inch Nails album. Good work so far, hope it still leads into more and more great sounds.

Next in the wake is Apart. Wow, even after that scary track of With Faith, Trent really is cranking the same terrifying vibes in this one, and making it the longest song on the album, being 13+ minutes, doesn't help. I do admit at this point I do feel like I am sensing a pattern, a droney piece that is relatively long with a backing melody that evokes fear with each song getting a little more uncomfortable or hurtful. However I see this less of an issue and more of a flex on Trent's craftsmanship. Where some artists pale in creating a cohesive ambient album with a core structure, Nine Inch Nails, despite being the Da Vinci of heavy alt 90s rock, still comes out on top as even masters of drone music. It's strange but welcoming, and I think that is a perfect descriptor for this piece of music.

After all is said and done, we get into Your Touch. While being the shortest, it still effortlessly pulls out the strangeness the last songs have, but I feel no fear, rather an melancholic source that I had no idea was there. It hurts, it sounds like a melody trying to free itself, but in doing so deforms what it holds so dear, and that'd be its harmony, so it becomes a mess of beeps and boops. I cannot believe it, but I find myself feeling pity for this album, even when it isn't breathing. It's magical to say the least.

At this point it's best to keep going, and Hope We Can Again seems to take the melancholy of the previous track and reshape it back into uncomfortableness. Not all that pity is reshaped to a feeling of dread, a looming presence that only gets stronger with time. It spends my mind so it releases chemicals that make me feel nervous and dreadful, however strangely in a therapeutic sense. It's like facing your worst fears, and while scared by them, you go through them without an issue, leaving better and better, but still remembering what happened long before. And man, that middle part where all the melodies wash away and a high pitched ringing starts to play with ghastly synths in the back creating a scary sounding noise just brings me to such a state of mind that feels relaxing in its terror. I flat out love this track man.

And now we get into the last song, Still Right Here. I never really looked at the lyrics until now and I realized that this album seems to have a layer of grief, which definitely works for the feelings I sense with this album. This is probably the saddest, and most hurtful song on this album. It's almost like the album finally realizes it'll have to end soon, and so plays whatever it has left, a scornful and bitter melody with a ton of drones and harmonies. Heck the drone sounds like an ambulance siren, like the album is being rushed to a hospital on life support. The fact Trent Reznor perfectly made an album feel alive is just mind blowing. However the album does give one last thing that we haven't heard before, a guitar melody, showcasing the band's industrial side of things, almost like this piece is proudly showing what it truly is, a Nine Inch Nails song, as it switches gears to a beat driven song filled with weird and disorganized beeps and boops as that same guitar quietly plays in the back. Even in its final minutes, the album fully realizes what it is, at least for a few seconds, until it is stopped and leads back into those uncomfortable drones. If anything it just makes me feel even more pained by Trent's abilities, and I cannot deny that this album and how it feels are definitely the strongest I've ever seen in any electronic music album ever. I hope we get more like this cause it's glorious.

This album is such a banger, and one I hope for all that it is worth, gets appreciated as one of Nine Inch Nails' best projects. The band has evolved to the point where industrial rock is behind them and they can fully go wherever they choose and how they see fit. I'd say this is a masterpiece and should absolutely be listened to if you love Nine Inch Nails and Trent Reznor's other works.

Dapper~Blueberries | 5/5 |

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