Beside You in Time
Beside You in Time is the third video album and live concert film by the American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, directed by Rob Sheridan and released on February 27, 2007, that captures high-definition footage from two shows on their 2006 tours supporting the album With Teeth.[1][2] The film, running 93 minutes, features performances by frontman Trent Reznor alongside band members Alessandro Cortini, Josh Freese, Aaron North, and Jeordie White, blending intense renditions of tracks from With Teeth—such as "Love Is Not Enough," "The Hand That Feeds," and "Every Day Is Exactly the Same"—with classics like "Closer," "Terrible Lie," and "Head Like a Hole."[1][3] The production was filmed at a concert on March 28 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and on March 29 in El Paso, Texas, highlighting the band's elaborate stage visuals, including LED screens and pyrotechnics that enhanced the industrial rock aesthetic.[1] Released initially on DVD through Interscope Records, Beside You in Time was later made available in Blu-ray and HD DVD formats, offering surround sound options like DTS and Dolby for an immersive experience.[2][4] Bonus materials include additional live footage, music videos for "The Hand That Feeds" and "Only", a live studio performance of "Every Day Is Exactly the Same", and behind-the-scenes content from the With Teeth era.[1] The release received acclaim for its technical quality and energy, earning an 8.9/10 rating on IMDb from over 10,000 users, underscoring its status as a definitive document of Nine Inch Nails' mid-2000s live prowess.[1]Background and production
Concept and development
Beside You in Time originated as a live concert film documenting Nine Inch Nails' 2005–2006 Live: With Teeth Tour, serving as the band's third major video release after Closure (1997) and And All That Could Have Been (2002).[5] The project was announced on December 11, 2006, highlighting footage from the tour supporting the 2005 album With Teeth, with an emphasis on capturing the group's revitalized stage presence.[5] Trent Reznor, the creative force behind Nine Inch Nails, envisioned the release as a showcase of the band's enhanced cohesion following significant lineup changes and his personal milestone of achieving sobriety in 2005.[6] The touring ensemble for the 2006 winter leg featured Aaron North on guitar, Jeordie White on bass, Alessandro Cortini on keyboards and guitar, and Josh Freese on drums, marking a fresh dynamic after previous members departed post-The Fragile era, with Jerome Dillon having left in late 2005 due to health issues and been temporarily replaced by Alex Carapetis before Freese joined.[6] [7] Reznor described this period as a turning point, stating, "I’ve truly reached the point where I never, ever wanna be that guy again," reflecting on his recovery from addiction and its impact on the music's authenticity.[6] Midway through the tour in late 2005, Dillon exited due to health issues and was replaced by Alex Carapetis, further evolving the group's live energy, with Freese taking over for the subsequent legs.[7] The title draws directly from the song "Beside You in Time," the twelfth track on With Teeth, which Reznor composed amid his recovery, exploring themes of isolation and tentative human connection against a backdrop of emotional desolation.[8] In a 2005 interview, Reznor elaborated on the album's introspective nature, noting, "I didn’t know if I’d destroyed my brain. I didn’t know if I had anything to say," underscoring how sobriety unlocked creative clarity after years of substance-fueled turmoil.[9] This track and the broader With Teeth material symbolized Reznor's shift toward confronting personal demons, with the tour providing a platform to demonstrate the band's sharpened production values and intensified performances.[10] The film's production emphasized high-fidelity visuals to match this evolution, aligning with Reznor's goal of delivering a raw yet polished representation of Nine Inch Nails' post-recovery vitality. Filming for the main concert footage occurred during two specific dates on the winter leg of the tour: March 28, 2006, at the Ford Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and March 30, 2006, at the El Paso County Coliseum in El Paso, Texas.[11] These shows were selected to encapsulate the tour's progression, blending arena-scale intensity with intimate close-ups of the performers. Director Rob Sheridan, who also served as Nine Inch Nails' longtime art director, led the conceptualization, pioneering a multi-format approach—including standard DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray—to advance high-definition presentation standards for live music releases.[12] This innovative distribution pushed technological boundaries, ensuring the film's immersive quality reflected the band's renewed artistic focus.[13]Filming and recording process
The filming of Beside You in Time took place during the Live: With Teeth tour, capturing performances on March 28, 2006, at The Ford Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and March 30, 2006, at the El Paso County Coliseum in El Paso, Texas.[14] A multi-camera high-definition setup was employed to document the band's elaborate stage production, including large LED screens, pyrotechnics, and custom lighting effects that emphasized the industrial rock aesthetic.[12] This approach allowed for dynamic visuals tailored to the home video formats, such as Blu-ray and HD DVD, ensuring high-quality capture of the tour's visual intensity.[15] Audio was recorded using a multi-track configuration during the live shows to preserve the band's dense sonic layers, including electronic elements and live instrumentation.[14] The stereo mix was handled by Trent Reznor and Chris Vrenna at Nothing Studios in Los Angeles, while the 5.1 surround mix occurred at The Eyeball, with stereo mastering completed at Precision Mastering in Hollywood.[16] These efforts focused on balancing the raw energy of the performances with clarity for home playback.[14] Filming presented logistical challenges due to the tour's complex production, designed by lighting director Martin Phillips, which featured over 200 automated moving lights, stroboscopic effects, and integrated video projections synchronized with the music.[17] Coordinating the camera crew with these elements required precise timing to avoid interference from pyrotechnics and rapid lighting shifts, ensuring the footage highlighted the band's immersive stage presence without compromising safety or performance flow.[17] In post-production, director and editor Rob Sheridan intercut the best takes from the two nights to create a cohesive 93-minute main concert program, streamlining the full setlist into a focused narrative of the tour's highlights.[1] Produced by Bart Lipton, the editing process emphasized seamless transitions between songs and visual motifs, such as the translucent gauze screen used for projected imagery during select tracks.[16] The release also incorporates bonus footage of 2005 studio rehearsals at Reznor's Los Angeles home studio, showcasing early iterations of songs like "Every Day Is Exactly the Same," "The Hand That Feeds," and "Love Is Not Enough" to illustrate their evolution from studio to stage.[18]Release and formats
Edition differences
Beside You in Time was released across several physical and digital formats, each offering distinct audio and video specifications to cater to different home theater setups and consumer preferences. The DVD edition provides standard definition video at 480p resolution paired with Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound, encompassing the primary concert performance along with supplementary music videos and rehearsal footage; it launched in North America on February 27, 2007.[19][20] The HD DVD version marked Nine Inch Nails' inaugural foray into this now-obsolete high-definition format, delivering 1080p video and uncompressed Dolby TrueHD 5.1 audio for superior clarity and dynamic range, while incorporating exclusive interactive Easter eggs such as hidden menus accessible via specific remote commands.[12][21] In parallel, the Blu-ray edition offers 1080p high-definition video with DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround sound, retaining all content from the DVD alongside added interactive elements like multi-angle viewing and audio/image optimization tests, though it faced initial compatibility challenges on early players.[15][22] Regional variations included an earlier European rollout on February 26, 2007, with some territories offering limited edition packaging that incorporated tour booklets and enhanced artwork for collectors.[23] Digital re-releases became available on platforms like iTunes starting in 2012, with full video access on streaming services such as Apple TV.[24] These formats aligned with Nine Inch Nails' strategy to extend promotion of the Live: With Teeth tour through diverse media accessibility.[20]Compatibility issues
Upon its release in 2007, the Blu-ray edition of Beside You in Time encountered playback issues on first-generation Sony PlayStation 3 consoles and certain standalone players, primarily due to its non-standard encoding at 1080p30, which was not fully supported by the Blu-ray specification or early firmware versions. Users reported the disc outputting at 1080i instead of the intended 1080p on PS3 systems, resulting in suboptimal video quality despite correct display settings, as the initial PS3 firmware prioritized 1080p24 compatibility over progressive 30fps content.[25] These problems stemmed from broader AACS copy protection challenges in early 2007, where decryption bugs prevented smooth playback on hardware without updated keys, affecting multiple titles including this release.[26] The HD DVD version faced similar hurdles on Microsoft Xbox 360 add-on drives, with reports of freezing during high-bitrate scenes, such as intense concert footage, attributed to audio sync discrepancies and processing limitations in the initial drive firmware.[27] Early adopters noted intermittent halts around chapters with elevated data rates, exacerbating the format's reputation for instability on console-based players during the 2007 rollout.[28] HDMI handshake failures also contributed, causing black screens or audio dropouts on some setups.[29] Interscope Records addressed these complaints through advisories on Nine Inch Nails' official website, recommending firmware updates for affected players to resolve AACS and encoding incompatibilities, while offering guidance on compatibility checks.[30] Although no widespread free disc replacement program was documented specifically for this title, updates from manufacturers like Sony and Toshiba fixed most playback failures by mid-2007, enabling full 1080p30 support on updated hardware. These early technical glitches contributed to hesitancy in adopting high-definition formats for Nine Inch Nails releases, delaying broader integration until hardware stabilizations in 2008.[28] By 2025, virtually all reported issues have been mitigated through cumulative player firmware evolutions and disc remastering discussions, though the episode underscores the fragility of nascent HD media ecosystems.[31]Content and features
Main concert footage
The main concert footage in Beside You in Time presents an edited 19-song performance drawn primarily from Nine Inch Nails' North American winter tour dates in March 2006, intercut with select summer tour elements to enhance visual and energetic flow.[12] The setlist balances tracks from the 2005 album With Teeth, such as "The Hand That Feeds," "Beside You in Time," and "Only," with earlier classics including "Head Like a Hole," "Hurt," and "Closer," creating a dynamic progression from high-energy industrial rock to introspective closers.[32] This curation highlights the tour's emphasis on blending new material with fan favorites, bookended by the opener "Love Is Not Enough" and encores like "The Hand That Feeds" and "Head Like a Hole."[19] The 94-minute runtime captures the essence of the 2005-2006 Live: With Teeth tour's structure, starting with intense openers and building to a climactic acoustic rendition of "Hurt" before explosive encores, underscoring the performance's emotional arc and band cohesion.[1] Staging features a minimalist setup dominated by a massive custom LED wall that displays abstract, impressionistic visuals—such as swirling artistic forms and dynamic light patterns—synchronized to the music's intensity and Trent Reznor's lyrics for immersive effect.[12] Intercutting footage from winter arena shows in Oklahoma City and El Paso with summer tour clips optimizes pacing, incorporating varied angles and atmospheric elements like smoke and lighting to maintain high energy across the edit.[33] Audio is rendered in a 5.1 surround mix, emphasizing spatial instrument separation, thunderous bass, and integrated crowd interaction to replicate the live arena experience, with options for Dolby TrueHD and DTS formats on Blu-ray.[12] Filming employed high-definition cameras for multi-angle coverage, including rear-hall perspectives during key tracks like "Eraser" and "Right Where It Belongs."[19]Bonus materials
The bonus materials in Beside You in Time expand on the release's focus on the With Teeth tour era by including promotional music videos, early rehearsal footage, and additional live performances from various legs of the 2006 tour.[18] The two included music videos are the standard-definition clips for "The Hand That Feeds" and "Only," both directed by the respective filmmakers for the With Teeth album promotion, providing context for the songs' visual interpretations during the tour period.[12][19] Rehearsal footage captures the developmental stages of select tracks in informal settings, offering insight into the band's preparation process. This includes three clips from 2005: a full-band studio rehearsal of "Love Is Not Enough" featuring Trent Reznor on vocals and guitar; a stripped-down guitar jam between Reznor and Aaron North for "The Collector," highlighting raw arrangement experimentation; and another full-band rehearsal for "Every Day Is Exactly the Same."[19][18] These segments, shot in lower video quality, emphasize the iterative nature of the tour setlist's evolution without polished production.[19] Additional live content consists of a six-song mini-set from the winter 2006 tour leg, comprising "Love Is Not Enough," "You Know What You Are?," "Terrible Lie," "The Line Begins to Blur," "March of the Pigs," and "Something I Can Never Have," presented in multi-camera format similar to the main concert but with shorter runtimes.[18][19] Further bonus performances draw from the summer 2006 amphitheater tour, including single-camera audience-shot clips of "Somewhat Damaged," "Closer," "Help Me I Am in Hell," "Non-Entity," and "Only," which showcase variations in the live delivery across tour phases.[34][18] Interactive elements enhance the high-definition formats (Blu-ray and HD DVD), featuring a photo gallery of approximately 50 tour images, a discography overview of Nine Inch Nails' releases up to that point, and menu options for lyrics display during playback.[12][19] These extras, exclusive to the optical disc versions, contribute to the release's archival depth without extending into full-length documentaries.[12]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in February 2007, Beside You in Time received generally positive reviews from music and home video publications, which commended the raw energy of Nine Inch Nails' live performances during the With Teeth tour and the high production values of the concert film. Critics often highlighted Trent Reznor's commanding stage presence and the band's tight musicianship, noting how the release captured a revitalized NIN following Reznor's recovery from addiction. The release's technical aspects were frequently praised for elevating the viewing experience beyond typical concert recordings.[12][18] PopMatters awarded the release 9 out of 10, lauding its meticulous attention to detail in both visuals and sound, with standout performances of tracks like "Right Where It Belongs" and "Beside You in Time" demonstrating Reznor's matured vocal delivery. The review emphasized the bonus materials, such as unreleased track "Non-Entity" and alternate angles, as enhancing the overall spectacle without overshadowing the main concert footage. Similarly, High Def Digest deemed it "highly recommended," calling it one of the best-looking concert videos available at the time due to its dynamic LED screen effects, vivid lighting, and precise audio mix that captured the intensity of hits like "Closer" and "Hurt." The HD formats offered sharp 1080p video and immersive Dolby TrueHD 5.1 audio.[18][12] Sputnikmusic rated it 4 out of 5, describing the performance as "powerful and energetic" with Reznor's angst-filled vocals pouring emotion into every song, making it a superb document of the band's live prowess despite some electronic elements losing impact in the arena setting. DVD Talk recommended the release for fans, praising the blistering energy of the 19-song setlist and the band's chaotic stage antics during tracks like "Terrible Lie," though it noted the dark visuals sometimes created a distant feel. These critiques collectively underscored the film's success in conveying the tour's visceral thrill, with the HD formats influencing praise for their immersive quality in recreating the concert atmosphere at home.[35][36] Fan reactions on NIN enthusiast forums in early 2007 were mixed regarding the format exclusivity—particularly the limited availability of HD DVD and Blu-ray options amid competing standards—but overwhelmingly positive about the concert's authenticity and the band's post-recovery vitality on display. Users on sites like Audioholics hailed it as a "must-have" for its stellar picture and surround sound, with many expressing enthusiasm for the raw, unpolished live feel that outshone previous NIN video releases.[22]Retrospective assessments
In the 2010s, following Nine Inch Nails' transition to self-releasing music after departing Interscope Records in 2008, Beside You in Time was integrated into the band's official catalog on nin.com, making the concert film more accessible to fans through direct digital and physical sales.[37][38] The release has been viewed as a pivotal artifact in Nine Inch Nails' live legacy, documenting the high-energy arena performances of the 2005–2006 With Teeth tour and showcasing the band's evolution toward polished, high-definition production standards that influenced later concert documentation.[12] In the 2020s, amid the 25th anniversary of The Fragile in 2024, Beside You in Time stands out for capturing the raw intensity of Nine Inch Nails' mid-2000s era, serving as a benchmark for the band's approach to archiving live shows.[39] As of 2025, with the announcement of the "Peel It Back" world tour, Beside You in Time is frequently referenced in discussions as the gold standard for Nine Inch Nails' official live video releases, emphasizing comprehensive footage and innovative visuals from the pre-streaming era.[40]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Beside You in Time debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Music Videos chart in the United States in March 2007.[41] It ranked number 25 on the year-end US Music Video chart for 2007.[42] In the United Kingdom, it peaked at number one on the Official Music Video Chart (one week at number one, total 12 weeks on chart).[43] The release reached number one on the Australian ARIA Music DVD Chart.[44]| Country | Chart Name | Peak Position | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Billboard Top Music Videos | 1 | 2007 |
| United Kingdom | Official Music Video Chart | 1 | 2007 |
| Australia | ARIA Music DVD | 1 | 2007 |
Sales certifications
No sales certifications were issued for Beside You in Time by RIAA, Music Canada, ARIA, or IFPI Europe.Personnel and credits
Touring band members
The touring lineup for the performances featured in Beside You in Time was captured during the spring 2006 arena leg of Nine Inch Nails' Live: With Teeth Tour, specifically from shows on March 28 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and March 30 in El Paso, Texas. This configuration marked a period of relative stability for the band following lineup adjustments earlier in the tour cycle, influenced in part by frontman Trent Reznor's recent achievement of sobriety, which helped foster a more consistent live ensemble.[45] The core band consisted of five members, each contributing to the multi-instrumental, industrial rock sound central to the tour's high-energy delivery.| Member | Role(s) |
|---|---|
| Trent Reznor | Vocals, guitar, keyboards, tambourine |
| Alessandro Cortini | Keyboards, programming, guitar, backing vocals |
| Aaron North | Guitar, backing vocals |
| Jeordie White | Bass, guitar, keyboards, backing vocals |
| Josh Freese | Drums |