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Tapeworm (band)

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Tapeworm is a now-defunct side-project of Nine Inch Nails which existed in various forms since the mid-1990s. Tapeworm never released any recordings, but were frequently referenced in interviews. Trent Reznor announced that the project was "dead for the foreseeable future" in 2004.

Contents

[edit] History

Tapeworm's genesis occurred during Nine Inch Nails recording sessions following The Downward Spiral tours (c. 1996). While working on Nine Inch Nails material, sidemen Danny Lohner and Charlie Clouser would often come up with ideas which Reznor felt were not right for his vision. Tapeworm developed as an outlet for this material—a democratic band in which Lohner and Clouser could act as equals with Reznor, as opposed to Reznor's sole leadership of Nine Inch Nails.

As time went on, Tapeworm evolved into a supergroup, with guest musicians such as Maynard James Keenan, Page Hamilton, and Phil Anselmo recording material ostensibly to be used by the group [1]. Tommy Victor recorded material as well, and later told Rolling Stone that the continued delays on Tapeworm contributed to his decision to take a hiatus from music [2].

By 2002, Clouser had left Nine Inch Nails and was no longer associated with Tapeworm. The group, which now consisted of Reznor, Lohner, Keenan, and Atticus Ross, booked time in a recording studio in hopes of producing an album. An official website, tapeworm.net (now offline), was created with pictures from various recording sessions. In September, 2003, Lohner told Kerrang! that the album was "ready to mix" but was held up by legal issues stemming from label conflicts between Reznor and Keenan [3].

On May 8, 2004, Reznor announced that Tapeworm was "dead for the foreseeable future," citing label conflicts, A Perfect Circle obligations and lack of enthusiasm [4]. Lohner, by that time, had also left Nine Inch Nails, and the final status of the Tapeworm recordings is unknown.

[edit] Contributors

Musicians who have been cited as recording material for Tapeworm, in alphabetical order.

[edit] "Vacant"

"Vacant" is the only publicly-performed song to be attributed to the Tapeworm project, as of 2006. It was initially written by Lohner and re-arranged by Clouser, with lyrics by Keenan and chorus by Reznor [7]. The song was first performed live by A Perfect Circle at the Keller Auditorium (Portland, Oregon) on January 31, 2001, and was subsequently played throughout their 2001 tour. Trent Reznor was apparently displeased at this public performance of music he felt still wasn't ready, and the track ended up in a revised form on A Perfect Circle’s eMOTIVe album under the title “Passive”.

[edit] Puscifer

During a later interview Lohner stated that much of the work that was done on the Tapeworm project appeared on the Underworld soundtrack (which he composed). It is rumored that the songs of the band Puscifer are actually Tapeworm songs released under a different name.

Nine Inch Nails
Trent Reznor
Aaron North | Jeordie White | Alessandro Cortini | Josh Freese
Richard Patrick | Jeff Ward | Chris Vrenna | James Woolley | Robin Finck | Danny Lohner | Charlie Clouser | Jerome Dillon | Alex Carapetis
Discography
Major Releases: Pretty Hate Machine | Broken | Fixed | The Downward Spiral | Further Down the Spiral | Closure | The Fragile | Things Falling Apart | And All that Could Have Been | With Teeth | Beside You in Time
Singles: "Down in It" | "Head Like a Hole" | "Sin" | "Happiness in Slavery" | "Wish" | "March of the Pigs" | "Closer" | "Burn" | "Hurt" | "The Perfect Drug" | "The Day the World Went Away" | "We're in This Together" | "Into the Void" | "Starfuckers, Inc." | "Deep" | "The Hand that Feeds" | "Only" | "Every Day Is Exactly the Same"
Halo index: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 
Related articles
Industrial rock | Broken Movie | Nothing Records | Option 30 | Exotic Birds | Tapeworm

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