Trent Reznor: Difference between revisions

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He got a job at [[Midtown Recording|Right Track Studio]] (now known as Midtown Recording) as a handyman. Studio owner Bart Koster commented how Reznor "is so focused in everything he does. When that guy waxed the floor, it looked great." [http://nothing.nin.net/int12.html] Koster allowed Reznor to use the studio during off hours, which he used to record demos for songs that ended up on Nine Inch Nails' first album, ''[[Pretty Hate Machine]]''. These demos were later released as a bootleg under the name ''[[Purest Feeling]]''.
[[Image:Reznormanson.jpg|right|thumb|Trent Reznor (right) and Marilyn Manson at a 2000 concert]]
Reznor was the credited producer for [[Marilyn Manson (band)|Marilyn Manson]]'s albums ''[[Portrait of an American Family]]'' (1994), ''[[Smells Like Children]]'' (1995), and ''[[Antichrist Superstar]]'' (1996), as well as the soundtrack for the films ''[[Natural Born Killers]]'' and ''[[Lost Highway]]''. Reznor is credited for "Driver Down" and "Videodrones; Questions" on the soundtrack for ''[[Lost Highway]]''. One other track, "[[The Perfect Drug]]" is credited to Nine Inch Nails instead. Also featured in the soundtrack for the [[Gregg Araki]] film "''[[The Doom Generation]]"'' ("Heresy"), as well as Zack Snyder's "''[[300]]"'' ("Complication").
 
Reznor likes [[video game]]s, most notably ''[[Doom]]'' by [[id Software]], which he has said he played on the Nine Inch Nails tour bus after doing shows. He also created the soundtrack for [[ID Software]]'s hit ''[[Quake computer game|Quake]]''. The NIN logo also appears on the [[nail gun]] ammo boxes in ''Quake'' and prior to this, embedded in both the floor and ceiling of a [[secret passage|secret room]] in ''Ultimate Doom''.