Product Details
Ghosts I - IV

Ghosts I - IV
Nine Inch Nails

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Ghosts I
  2. Ghosts I
  3. Ghosts I
  4. Ghosts I
  5. Ghosts I
  6. Ghosts I
  7. Ghosts I
  8. Ghosts I
  9. Ghosts I
  10. Ghosts II
  11. Ghosts II
  12. Ghosts II
  13. Ghosts II
  14. Ghosts II
  15. Ghosts II
  16. Ghosts II
  17. Ghosts II
  18. Ghosts II

Disc 2:

  1. Ghosts III
  2. Ghosts III
  3. Ghosts III
  4. Ghosts III
  5. Ghosts III
  6. Ghosts III
  7. Ghosts III
  8. Ghosts III
  9. Ghosts III
  10. Ghosts IV
  11. Ghosts IV
  12. Ghosts IV
  13. Ghosts IV
  14. Ghosts IV
  15. Ghosts IV
  16. Ghosts IV
  17. Ghosts IV
  18. Ghosts IV

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #127 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-04-08
  • Number of discs: 2

Customer Reviews

useless?...2
i was surprized when i bought this cd, this is the first negative review I've ever had to write about a nine inch nails cd.

i have loved all of nine inch nails' instrumentals so i figured it would be awsome.
unfortunetly it wasnt, ghosts is a creative work, but for all intensive purposes, its useless.
i expected a long, flowing, beautiful collection of insturmentals, what ghosts is is 36 compleatly different tracks that flow as smoothly as motor boat on a gravel road.
what the other reviewers said is correct, individualy most of these tracks are unique and enjoyable, but trying to memorize what each different ghost track sounds like and listen to them seporatly is almost not worth the trouble.
right now i just listen to the upbeat tracks while playing videogames, im not sure what to do with the rest of the songs though.

I have high hopes for the next ghosts album, i just hope it will flow a little better.

better luck next time trent

A long string of random music2
I tried "Ghosts I-IV" and found I really couldn't get into it, because for me, one track was identical to every other other track, and every other track was the same as every other other track, and with no titles or lyrics or any sort of distinction beyond "Ghost I" and so on. The songs were, on the whole, completely unremarkable on their own.

I haven't given up on the album but thus far it just seems to be one long, four or five or however many hour, jam session with separations in tracks given sometimes at random. Maybe it works for Jazz and some Rock, but I never liked Jazz, and I have a very hit and miss relationship with many musical genres.

Maybe this was a release to recuperate from giving away the actual album "The Slip" away for free, by recording a random jam session and trying to sell it without any hype so as to surprise fans into buying it without realizing they're not buying an actual album but one big jam session where one track is as discardable as another.

And please, no comments from NIN fans saying I'm not a "real" fan or don't know what I'm talking about or can't appreciate NIN's artistic style. I absolutely loved "The Fragile" and "The Downward Spiral" and thought they were the perfect blend of art and music. But it seems with this album and every other NIN release as of late that ART is starting to become more of a priority than MUSIC, most heavily displayed by Year Zero, where the "art" of electronic noises took the place of music, and the attempt at "art" became a pretentious smug excuse to not bother to play any real instruments for more than a cameo appearance alongside the warped static.

Not NIN enough2
I appreciate what Trent tried to do by avoiding the record labels, but this is lacking. It is essentially a collection of noise and single riffs. Not much in the way of actual songs. Half of the tracks are little more than noise that don't lead anywhere. Might be good for background music. The next album "The Slip" is much better.