Nine Inch Nails - Nine Inch Noize (2026)

Artist: Nine Inch Nails, Boys Noize
Title: Nine Inch Noize
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: The Null Corporation - Interscope Records
Genre: Industrial Rock, Electronic
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-48kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 46:41
Total Size: 107 / 324 / 602 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Nine Inch Noize
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: The Null Corporation - Interscope Records
Genre: Industrial Rock, Electronic
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-48kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 46:41
Total Size: 107 / 324 / 602 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Intro (01:17)
2. Vessel (04:16)
3. She’s Gone Away (03:32)
4. Heresy (03:57)
5. Parasite (04:30)
6. Copy of a (04:07)
7. Me, I’m Not (04:22)
8. Closer (05:44)
9. The Warning (03:38)
10. Memorabilia (03:25)
11. Came Back Haunted (03:39)
12. As Alive As You Need Me To Be (04:14)
"Nine Inch Noize" marks a daring new chapter in the Nine Inch Nails chronology. Released as Halo 38, this project is a sonic collision between the dark, visceral industrial rock Trent Reznor pioneered in the 90s and the fractured, high-velocity aesthetics of 2020s experimental noise and hyper-digital production.
Moving away from the cinematic scores of recent years, Reznor returns to the "machine-gun" rhythms and distorted synth landscapes that defined The Downward Spiral, but processed through a modern, maximalist lens. The album features unexpected collaborations with cutting-edge electronic artists, resulting in a sound that is both claustrophobic and strangely euphoric. It is an exploration of "digital decay"—how beauty persists even when the signal is completely shattered.
Moving away from the cinematic scores of recent years, Reznor returns to the "machine-gun" rhythms and distorted synth landscapes that defined The Downward Spiral, but processed through a modern, maximalist lens. The album features unexpected collaborations with cutting-edge electronic artists, resulting in a sound that is both claustrophobic and strangely euphoric. It is an exploration of "digital decay"—how beauty persists even when the signal is completely shattered.