Down in It

Nine Inch Nails song


title: "Down in It" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1989-debut-singles", "nine-inch-nails-songs", "song-recordings-produced-by-keith-leblanc", "song-recordings-produced-by-adrian-sherwood", "songs-written-by-trent-reznor", "tvt-records-singles", "fiction-about-snuff-films", "1989-songs", "american-hip-hop-songs", "rap-rock-songs"] description: "Nine Inch Nails song" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Down_in_It" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Nine Inch Nails song ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox song"]

FieldValue
nameDown in It
coverNin-down_in_it.jpg
typesingle
artistNine Inch Nails
albumPretty Hate Machine
releasedSeptember 15, 1989
recorded1989
genre{{flatlist
*Hip hop{{cite magazineurl
*industrial dance{{cite magazineurl
*{{nowraprap rock{{Cite web
length03:46
labelTVT
writerTrent Reznor
producer{{flatlist
next_titleHead Like a Hole
next_year1990
misc{{Extra chronology
artistHalo numbers
typestudio
titleHalo 1
year1989
next_titleHalo 2
next_year1989
::

| name = Down in It | cover = Nin-down_in_it.jpg | alt = | type = single | artist = Nine Inch Nails | album = Pretty Hate Machine | released = September 15, 1989 | recorded = 1989 | studio = | venue = | genre = {{flatlist|

"Down in It" is the debut single by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, released on September 15, 1989. Taken from the band's debut album Pretty Hate Machine, it was the first song ever written by frontman Trent Reznor.

Production

Reznor, Keith LeBlanc and Adrian Sherwood had completed production on the 12-inch "Down In It" single by June 1989. The outro contains lyrics referencing the nursery rhyme "Rain Rain Go Away".

Release

Initially released only on vinyl, a CD version of the single was later created following the album's success. The first track on the single edition, "Down in It (Skin)", is the mix found on Pretty Hate Machine. The cover art is very similar to Joy Division's first album, Unknown Pleasures, with Joy Division always being cited as an influence by Reznor, and Nine Inch Nails later covered the Joy Division song "Dead Souls" on the soundtrack to the 1994 film The Crow.

Promotion

Around the time of the single's release, the band lip-synced a performance of the song on the dance music show Dance Party USA. Originally thought to be lost, the footage was rediscovered in 2012 and went viral after being uploaded to YouTube. Reznor responded to the video on his Twitter account, stating that the band had decided to appear on the show after deciding it was "the most absurd choice [they] could come up with at the time" for a television program on which they would be interested in performing, but were surprised when they were booked to appear on the program.

Releases

The single was included in the 2015 Record Store DayBlack Friday exclusive box set Halo I–IV.

Music video

A music video for "Down in It", filmed on location in the Warehouse District of Chicago, was released in September 1989. It was produced by Jim Deloye and directed by Eric Zimmerman and Benjamin Stokes for H-Gun Productions. Special effects were applied to scenes such as a television set falling forwards and backwards, writing in lights, and strobe flashing. In the video, Reznor runs to the top of a building while Chris Vrenna and Richard Patrick follow him. The original version of the music video ended with the implication that Reznor's character had fallen or jumped off the building, and he was seen lying on the ground with a deathly pallor created by applying starch powder to his face. MTV edited the scene out of all airings. To film the video's ending, Zimmerman and Stokes used a camera tied to a balloon, with ropes attached to prevent it from flying away. Minutes after they started filming, the ropes snapped and the balloons and camera floated away; eventually landing in a cornfield in Michigan. The farmer whose property it landed on handed it to the FBI, who began investigating whether the footage was a snuff film portraying a person committing suicide. The FBI identified Reznor, who later remarked, "Somebody at the FBI had been watching too much Hitchcock or David Lynch or something."

Police distributed flyers asking for leads and were contacted by an art student who worked for H-Gun and recognised the image from the video. Having established Reznor was alive and well, in September 1990, the Chicago Police Department told reporters, "The bottom line is we don't have a body and we don't have mystery or homicide." The television news magazine show Hard Copy covered the story on their March 3, 1991, episode, which Reznor called, "Total junk gossip exploitative journalism. That was the icing on the cake: getting on the worst TV show in America." Despite the sensationalist tone of the report, which likened "Down In It" video footage to a "satanic ritual" of "cult-like murder," the band's label used the controversy as a promotional tool, with clips from the Hard Copy interview included on an Island Records press kit for the UK release of Pretty Hate Machine. Some British music journalists then questioned whether the whole incident had been engineered as a publicity stunt, but Reznor insisted that was not the case, telling Melody Maker: "I swear to God that was accidental - it sounds like the greatest publicity scam, but it wasn't; the whole story's been distorted. ... It's stupid, but true."

At least two versions of the music video exist - one around 3:50 in length using the "Skin" remix also found on the Pretty Hate Machine album and a longer 6:58 edit using the "Shred" remix.

Critical reception

At the time of release, Billboard described the 12-inch single as an "Aggressive midtempo technonumber with an industrial edge that is easily accessible." The single edition of the song was largely panned by AllMusic reviewer Christian Huey, who described the two remixes included as inferior to the original. Since all three tracks were later released on the "Head Like a Hole" single, he labeled the "Down in It" single as "completely superfluous and useful only to NIN completists."

Describing the 6:58 version of the music video in a Billboard review segment for "club-oriented artists", Bill Coleman said, "Hard, funky techno number drives even harder with an appropriate clip that rams the point home with fast editing of potent industrial scenes and images," later simply calling it a "fab video."

Similarities to the song "Dig It" from Skinny Puppy's 1986 album Mind: The Perpetual Intercourse were noted shortly after the single's release. Reznor later admitted his original demo had been "a total rip-off."

Covers, soundtrack appearances and legacy

A "Down in It" remix was used in an early 1990s Gatorade television advertisement. Originally, "Steppin' Out" by Joe Jackson was to be featured in the commercial, but Jackson declined the offer. Reznor unsuccessfully sued the production company that created the commercial for copyright infringement after he saw it in 1993, accusing them of illegal use of the song without permission.

Track listing

All tracks remixed by Adrian Sherwood and Keith LeBlanc. | title1 = Down in It | note1 = skin | length1 = 3:48 | title2 = Down in It | note2 = shred | length2 = 6:56 | title3 = Down in It | note3 = singe | length3 = 7:03 | total_length = 17:47

Year-end charts

::data[format=table]

Chart (2001)PositionCanada (Nielsen SoundScan)
185
::

References

;Bibliography

References

  1. Partridge, Kenneth. (November 10, 2014). "Nine Inch Nails' 'Pretty Hate Machine' at 25: Classic Track-by-Track Album Review".
  2. Childers, Chad. "10 Best Nine Inch Nails Songs".
  3. Krajewski, Jill. (June 7, 2016). "An Essential Guide to Nine Inch Nails". [[Exclaim!]].
  4. Weisbard, Eric. (February 1996). "Sympathy for the Devil".
  5. Coleman, Bill. (10 June 1989). "Dance Trax". P-MRC.
  6. Battan, Carrie. ''[http://www.pitchfork.com/news/45955-watch-rare-amazing-footage-of-nine-inch-nails-performing-on-dance-party-usa-in-the-late-1980s Watch Rare, Amazing Footage of Nine Inch Nails Performing on Dance Party USA in the late 1980s].'' [[Pitchfork Media]]. Retrieved 2011-30-03
  7. Kaye, Ben. (October 28, 2015). "Nine Inch Nails releasing Halo I-IV vinyl box set for Record Store Day Black Friday".
  8. Grebey, James. (October 28, 2015). "Nine Inch Nails to Release Vinyl Box Set, 'Halo I-IV,' for Record Store Day Black Friday".
  9. . (13 September 1990). "No Murder, Just a Rock Video". *The Washington Post Company*.
  10. Mico, Ted. (31 August 1991). "NINE INCH NAILS: BRISTLE WHILE YOU WORK". IPC Media.
  11. (March 1990). "Getting Down in It".
  12. Bains, Jon. (November 1991). "Nine Inch Nails Lollapalooza 1 Summer 1991".
  13. ''Welcome to the Machine'' ([http://theninhotline.net/archives/articles/manager/display_article.php?id=536 transcript]). ''Industrial Introspection'' (June 1991). Retrieved 2011-06-18.
  14. Huxley (1997), p. 40
  15. Perry, Neil. (March 1991). "Hard As Nails".
  16. (2018-06-22). "When the FBI Investigated the 'Murder' of Nine Inch Nails's Trent Reznor".
  17. (20 November 2010). "NIN "Down In It" report on "Hard Copy," March 3rd 1991". [[Vimeo]].
  18. (19 October 2019). "Nine Inch Nails Pretty Hate Machine Island Records Electronic Press Kit (EPK)". [[Island Records]].
  19. (13 Mar 2009). "Nine Inch Nails: Down In It (1989)". Nine Inch Nails.
  20. (30 September 1989). "Single Reviews: Dance: Recommended". P-MRC.
  21. [{{Allmusic
  22. Coleman, Bill. (28 October 1989). "Dance Trax: Video Reviews". P-MRC.
  23. Coleman, Bill. (25 November 1989). "Dance Trax: New Music On Alternative Tip Sparks The Scene". P-MRC.
  24. Carey, Jean. (19 January 1990). "Sound Bites". [[Times Publishing Company.
  25. (September 1991). "Nine Inch Nails performance from {{ill". [[VPRO]].
  26. Berger, Joshua and Lengvenis, Eric. ''[http://nothing.nin.net/int10.html NINE INCH NAILS: AN INTERVIEW WITH TRENT REZNOR]''. ''[[Plasm (magazine). Plasm]]'' (1994). Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  27. "Canada's Top 200 Singles of 2001".

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1989-debut-singlesnine-inch-nails-songssong-recordings-produced-by-keith-leblancsong-recordings-produced-by-adrian-sherwoodsongs-written-by-trent-reznortvt-records-singlesfiction-about-snuff-films1989-songsamerican-hip-hop-songsrap-rock-songs