Released less than a year after the first installment of a proposed trilogy of EPs,
Add Violence builds upon the intrigue and mystique of
Not the Actual Events, providing sonic allusions to various
nine inch nails eras while injecting new life to the band's catalog. The second official
NIN effort with
Atticus Ross as an official member with
Trent Reznor,
Add Violence benefits from the duo's film score experiences, with deeply layered production creating evocative scenery and atmospherics. "The Lovers" pulses through claustrophobic burrows as
Reznor whispers "I can hear you breathing," while "Not Anymore" clangs and cracks along a martial beat that recalls the paranoia of
Year Zero colliding with the tension and fury of
The Fragile. Those albums receive plenty of callbacks here, whether it's through the twang of organic
Fragile guitar strums or
Reznor's vulnerable vocal delivery on the swelling meditation, "This Isn't the Place," which merges the mood and lyrical content of "The Great Below" with
Zero's apocalyptic despair. Highlights include the synthwave-y lead single "Less Than," one of
NIN's stronger pop anthems, which joins the pack of late-era danceable gems like "The Hand That Feeds," "Discipline," and "Copy of A." However, it's closing track "The Background World" that provides the biggest reward. A nearly-12-minute exercise in patience and payoff, it's not only the longest song in the
NIN catalog to date, but also one of its most surprising. The first half fits nicely into the focused niche occupied by the late-era albums and
Reznor's work with
How to Destroy Angels (
Mariqueen Maandig even joins on backing vocals), while the latter portion boldly goes off the rails in a seven-minute descent of slow degradation. As the track dissolves into static oblivion, it deteriorates an otherwise polished effort into messy, uncomfortable decay. Provoking anxiety, "The Background World" is just one piece of an unfolding puzzle that should be engrossing for longtime fans willing to get lost in the maze of clues and references to periods like
Year Zero,
The Fragile, the mythical Bleedthrough, and even this EP's sibling,
Not the Actual Events. With
Ross as a foil,
Reznor's usual indulgences become focused and refined, making
Add Violence a satisfying addition to
NIN's less-essential, non-album output. ~ Neil Z. Yeung