Most Popular
-
Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
-
Cock and Awe
St. Louis pickup artists rule the roost.
-
Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
-
John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
-
Dora Magrath was blessed with a beautiful voice. She's gone, but you can still hear it.
-
Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week (13)
-
Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor (3)
-
John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory. (3)
-
Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras (13)
-
A to Z (2)
-
Dora Magrath was blessed with a beautiful voice. She's gone, but you can still hear it.
-
Feeling Gravity's Pull: R.E.M. hurtles toward the future on Accelerate
-
The Monads turn tradition on its tail with a stomping live show and new CD
-
Slice of Life
John Vanderslice celebrates warmer weather with an exclusive mix of tunes.
-
Remaking Michael
Why waste money (or steal) those bogus Thriller remixes when you can get better Michael Jackson reinventions legally — for free? Plus, the history of the classic Harlem Globetrotters song "Sweet Georgia Brown."
-
"Birds of a Feather" Feature: Map of St. Louis Bail Bond Agencies
03:00PM 04/16/08 -
AdOne Media CEO Jim Neumann Files for Bankruptcy
08:46AM 04/16/08 -
The Count and Sinden featuring Kid Sister, "Beeper"
04:33PM 04/15/08 -
Download Trackstar's Boogie Bang 13 Here
03:52PM 04/15/08 -
Hell's Kitchen: Episode 3
02:47PM 04/16/08 -
In This Week's Issue: Pappy's Smokehouse and Taco Bell Bowls
01:18PM 04/16/08
What we are writing about
- 7-Up
- A Closer Walk with...
- Araka
- Central West End...
- COCA
- Cory Spinks
- Craft Alliance
- foie gras
- Kevin Kline Awards
- Ludo
- Mensa
- Mexican cuisine
- Mosaic
- musicals
- Othello
- Playstation
- RFT DJ Spin-off
- sexual harassment
- St. Louis theater
- The Black Rep
- The Ghost of the Forest
- Three Monkeys
- Tuesdays with Morrie
- University City
- Vashon High School
- Washington University
- White Flag Projects
- Wii
- Xbox
- ~scape
Recent Articles By D.X. Ferris
-
Native-American healing and a Trans-Siberian Orchestra guitarist rejuvenate metal thrashers Testament
-
Have two Nirvana producers helped create the next Metallica?
-
Patrick Sweany
8 p.m. Saturday, February 2. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue.
-
VNV Nation
-
Charlotte Sometimes
8 p.m. Wednesday, October 24. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
National Features
-
Seattle Weekly
Back from Iraq
Camaraderie is in short supply between today's soldiers and older vets.
By Nina Shapiro -
Village Voice
Scientology 's Celebrity Defector
TV star Jason Beghe reveals secrets of the controversial church.
By Tony Ortega -
The Pitch
Spirited Away
Can't get a Catholic exorcism in Kansas City? James Vivian is here to help.
By Peter Rugg
Nine Inch Nails main man Trent Reznor makes the most of his recent hard-won freedom on the two-disc, all-instrumental Ghosts I-IV. It's the kind of record Interscope probably wouldn't have allowed Reznor to release when he was under contract — not only because it lacks vocals, but also because it sounds a little like The Fragile, NIN's unjustly slagged masterwork from 1999. In fact, most major labels would balk at Ghosts' content. They would also positively spaz over Reznor's Radiohead-like decision to release the album as a $5 download. (An old-school CD version came out April 8.)
Ghosts' 36 untitled cuts cover most of Reznor's rarely matched areas of proficiency. Even if nothing here tops The Fragile's most elegant zeniths ("La Mer" and "Just Like You Imagined") the songs scrape and lull — spanning toothy pop (track 16), droning interludes (track 2), '80s homages (track 24), the wankery, disposable digital noise from the remix albums (track 7), and, mostly, cinematic scenes that turn your ear buds into a personal transport system to charred landscapes beneath a gray sky. As with most double albums, some of Ghosts' songs are forgettable, but there are many great ones here as well. Fans of Reznor's under-heralded, minimalist piano prowess will be delighted from the start. They'll also likely wear out the tuneful suite that comprises tracks 12 and 13 by the end of the next overcast day.— D.X. Ferris







