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Revision as of 23:15, 20 April 2024 (view source)
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Latest revision as of 04:04, 5 April 2025 (view source)
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<blockquote>The first album art I was ever tasked with making was for NIN's ''Things Falling Apart.'' It was a companion album to ''The Fragile,'' which David Carson did the art for. Carson was a design hero of mine, so of course playing in his style was exhilarating but also very intimidating for a very young, very new designer. A lot of Carson's imagery was accidental snapshots of every day things that he'd capture with disposable cameras and polaroids, and the out-of-focus nature of them turned simple things into abstract art (the red texture on the cover of The Fragile is an out-of-focus snapshot of the inside of a shell, for example). To start capturing some of my own for TFA, I experimented with a macro lens for the first time, and later bought one to make imagery with. It sounds like basic art school shit now because you can get a macro lens for your phone for like $30, but it was very expensive niche equipment back then. Through that lens, and taking what I'd learned from Carson, I started to see art and texture in everything I looked at. Needing new imagery for a project and just looking around wherever I am and finding tiny details in it has never steered me wrong ever since.</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>The first album art I was ever tasked with making was for NIN's ''Things Falling Apart.'' It was a companion album to ''The Fragile,'' which David Carson did the art for. Carson was a design hero of mine, so of course playing in his style was exhilarating but also very intimidating for a very young, very new designer. A lot of Carson's imagery was accidental snapshots of every day things that he'd capture with disposable cameras and polaroids, and the out-of-focus nature of them turned simple things into abstract art (the red texture on the cover of The Fragile is an out-of-focus snapshot of the inside of a shell, for example). To start capturing some of my own for TFA, I experimented with a macro lens for the first time, and later bought one to make imagery with. It sounds like basic art school shit now because you can get a macro lens for your phone for like $30, but it was very expensive niche equipment back then. Through that lens, and taking what I'd learned from Carson, I started to see art and texture in everything I looked at. Needing new imagery for a project and just looking around wherever I am and finding tiny details in it has never steered me wrong ever since.</blockquote>
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The typeface used on ''Things Falling Apart'' is Index-Book, designed by Josh Darden & Timothy Glaser.
  
 
==Album Credits==
 
==Album Credits==

Latest revision as of 04:04, 5 April 2025

Halo 16 - Things Falling Apart

Things Falling Apart (also known as Halo 16) by Nine Inch Nails, released on November 21, 2000, is described as a collection of "various manipulations of songs recorded from The Fragile sessions." An official website was set up for its release. A two-track promotional version of Into The Void was released in the US and was incorrectly labeled as Halo 16.

Contents

  • 1 Track Listing
    • 1.1 CD Release
    • 1.2 Vinyl Release
  • 2 Artwork
  • 3 Album Credits
  • 4 Promotional Trailer Credits
  • 5 External Links

Track Listing

About the release

CD Release

  1. "Slipping Away" - 6:11
  2. "The Great Collapse" - 4:42
  3. "The Wretched" (Version) - 5:52
  4. "Starfuckers, Inc." (Version) - 5:11
  5. "The Frail" (Version) - 2:47
  6. "Starfuckers, Inc." (Version) - 6:06
  7. "Where Is Everybody?" (Version) - 5:07
  8. "Metal" - 7:05
  9. "10 Miles High" (Version) - 5:11
  10. "Starfuckers, Inc." (Version) - 5:09

Vinyl Release

     A1  "Slipping Away" – 6:11
     A2  "The Great Collapse" – 4:42
     B1  "The Wretched" (version) – 5:52
     B2  "Starfuckers, Inc." (version) – 5:11
     C1  "The Frail" (version) – 2:47
     C2  "Starfuckers, Inc." (version) – 6:06
     C3  "10 Miles High" (version) – 5:11
     D1  "Metal" – 7:05
     D2  "Where Is Everybody?" (version) – 5:07
     D3  "Starfuckers, Inc." (version) – 5:09

Artwork

In a February 2020 Reddit AMA session[1], Rob Sheridan elaborated on the process of creating the artwork and how it informed his creativity going forward:

The first album art I was ever tasked with making was for NIN's Things Falling Apart. It was a companion album to The Fragile, which David Carson did the art for. Carson was a design hero of mine, so of course playing in his style was exhilarating but also very intimidating for a very young, very new designer. A lot of Carson's imagery was accidental snapshots of every day things that he'd capture with disposable cameras and polaroids, and the out-of-focus nature of them turned simple things into abstract art (the red texture on the cover of The Fragile is an out-of-focus snapshot of the inside of a shell, for example). To start capturing some of my own for TFA, I experimented with a macro lens for the first time, and later bought one to make imagery with. It sounds like basic art school shit now because you can get a macro lens for your phone for like $30, but it was very expensive niche equipment back then. Through that lens, and taking what I'd learned from Carson, I started to see art and texture in everything I looked at. Needing new imagery for a project and just looking around wherever I am and finding tiny details in it has never steered me wrong ever since.

The typeface used on Things Falling Apart is Index-Book, designed by Josh Darden & Timothy Glaser.

Album Credits

CD Release

  • All songs written by Trent Reznor except 4, 6, 8, 10
  • 4, 6, 10 written by Trent Reznor and Charlie Clouser
  • 8 written by Gary Numan

Manipulated by:

  • 1, 2, 8 Trent Reznor and Alan Moulder
  • 3, 9 Keith Hillebrandt
  • 4 Adrian Sherwood for 140dB

additional production: Adrian Sherwood and Mark Stewart engineered by Alan Branch

  • 5 Benelli

production: Joshua Eustis, Turk Dietrich violin: Steve Hakel cello: Marc Paradis

  • 6 Dave Ogilvie
  • 7 Danny Lohner featuring Telefon Tel Aviv

production: Danny Lohner, Joshua Eustis, Charles Cooper Joshua Eustis and Charles Cooper appear courtesy of Hefty Records (www.heftyrecords.com)

  • 10 Charlie Clouser
  • Management: John A. Malm, Jr. for Conservative
  • Publicity: Susan Celia Swan for Nothing
  • International: Simon Baeyertz for Nothing
  • Design and photography: Rob Sheridan
  • Special thanks: Jeff Anderson and Steve Bottomley

Promotional Trailer Credits

  • Director: Bill Casanova
  • Assistant DP: Alex Vlacos
  • Producer: Chris Risner
  • Editor: Rob Sheridan
  • Format: 16mm
  • Broadcast version: 30 seconds
  • Full version (web only): 60 seconds

External Links

  • Things Falling Apart TV spot
  • Things Falling Apart at nincatalog.com
  • Things Falling Apart at Amazon
  • Things Falling Apart at eBay
Discography
Previous release - "We're In This Together" Halo number: 16 Next release - "And All That Could Have Been and Still"
Retrieved from "https://www.nin.wiki/index.php?title=Things_Falling_Apart&oldid=64006"
Last edited 2 months ago by Piggy
  • This page was last edited on 5 April 2025, at 04:04.
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