With Teeth
With Teeth is the fourth studio album by the American industrial rock project Nine Inch Nails, released on May 3, 2005, by Interscope Records.[1] The album was produced by Nine Inch Nails founder Trent Reznor and longtime collaborator Alan Moulder, with additional drum contributions from Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl on several tracks.[2] Written and recorded in 2004 at Reznor's Nothing Studios in Los Angeles, it marked his return following a period of personal struggles with substance addiction and a five-year gap since the previous album, The Fragile.[3] The record debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, selling over 269,000 copies in its first week, and spawned three singles: "The Hand That Feeds," "Only," and "Every Day Is Exactly the Same."[4] The album's introspective lyrics reflect Reznor's recent sobriety and themes of recovery, compulsion, and self-examination, delivered through a more streamlined industrial rock sound compared to the expansive double album The Fragile.[3] Despite positive initial reception for revitalizing Nine Inch Nails' commercial presence after the hiatus, With Teeth drew mixed critical responses, with some praising its focused energy and others critiquing it as formulaic or less innovative than prior works.[5] It was leaked online weeks before its official release, highlighting early 2000s challenges with digital piracy for major artists.[6]Background and Context
Trent Reznor's Addiction and Recovery
Following the September 1999 release of The Fragile, Trent Reznor's longstanding issues with heroin and alcohol dependency intensified during the ensuing Fragility Tour, resulting in profound physical and mental health declines driven by sustained self-destructive substance abuse.[7][8] In 2000, amid this escalation, Reznor suffered a near-fatal overdose in London after mistaking China white heroin for cocaine, an incident that underscored the perilous trajectory of his addiction and prompted recognition of its mortal risks.[7] Around 2001, Reznor entered rehabilitation in New Orleans, committing to cold-turkey withdrawal and comprehensive treatment including 12-step programs and psychiatric intervention, marking a deliberate exercise of personal agency to arrest the cycle of dependency.[9][10] This recovery process yielded sobriety that Reznor maintained thereafter, enabling a period of enforced mental clarity absent during prior years of impairment; he later reflected that prolonged drug use had instilled uncertainty about irreversible neurological damage, which sobriety allowed him to overcome and resume productive creative output culminating in With Teeth.[10][11] Reznor has attributed the stagnation in his artistic progress during peak addiction to the substances' corrosive effects on discipline and insight, contrasting sharply with the accountability and confrontation of past failures that sobriety facilitated for the album's development.[11][12]Hiatus Following The Fragile
Following the release of The Fragile on September 21, 1999, which debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 despite slower long-term sales compared to prior albums, Nine Inch Nails experienced a five-year creative hiatus marked by profound internal disarray.[13] The period from 2000 to 2004 saw no new studio releases, with activity limited to the remix album Things Falling Apart in 2000 and archival live material, as Trent Reznor withdrew from touring and public engagements after the Fragile tour concluded in mid-2000. This lull stemmed from structural overload in Nothing Records' operations, where Reznor shouldered the burdens of label management alongside music production, leading to operational deficits and creative paralysis.[3] Compounding these issues were escalating disputes with Interscope Records, where Reznor felt increasingly abandoned amid unmet expectations for support, alongside financial strains from Nothing Records' unprofitable roster commitments. These tensions peaked in 2004 with mutual lawsuits between Reznor and his manager of over a decade, John Malm Jr., involving claims of multimillion-dollar deferred commissions, embezzlement, and mismanagement that drained resources and eroded trust. Such conflicts underscored the pitfalls of overextension in a vanity label model dependent on major distributor goodwill, fostering isolation as Reznor retreated to New Orleans, halting collaborative efforts and exacerbating burnout without yielding viable projects.[13][14] By 2003, Reznor's professional reassessment—facilitated by sobriety and severance of burdensome ties—paved the way for renewed focus, enabling initial conceptualization of the successor album during a deliberate break from prior chaos. This transition culminated in early 2004 with relocation to Los Angeles and the commencement of structured production, marking a return to streamlined operations unencumbered by label distractions.[9][3]Composition and Production
Songwriting Process
Reznor began the songwriting process for With Teeth by composing outside a formal studio setting, relying on lyrics and piano to develop complete song structures prior to any production, as a deliberate measure to curb tendencies toward over-elaboration seen in prior works.[3] This method emphasized full performances over looped riffs or basslines, preserving raw imperfections and fostering a shift toward concise, riff-driven forms reminiscent of Pretty Hate Machine (1989) and Broken (1992), rather than the dense, experimental sprawl of The Fragile (1999).[3][15] Sobriety, achieved after years of addiction culminating in intervention around 2001, profoundly shaped this disciplined approach, granting Reznor enhanced mental clarity and the ability to pursue ideas to completion without distraction.[16] He described the period as empowering, stating, "It was so empowering to feel I could think again," which enabled organic ideation after a hiatus of self-doubt and recovery.[16] This sobriety-induced focus yielded more accessible, anthemic compositions blending melodic hooks with inherent aggression, as Reznor noted writing "pretty catchy" songs while grappling with post-recovery humility.[3] Pre-production and initial demos commenced in 2003, with Reznor handling core writing solo before sharing rough tracks externally.[17] By January 2004, sustained creative flow had solidified key material, prioritizing brevity and direct emotional impact over expansive narratives.[16] Reznor later reflected on emerging from this phase as akin to "woken up from a coma," underscoring how sobriety redirected his process toward undiluted, first-principles songcraft unswayed by external trends.[3]Recording at Nothing Studios
Recording sessions for With Teeth primarily occurred at Nothing Studios, Trent Reznor's facility in a converted funeral home in New Orleans, Louisiana, from February 2003 to December 2004.[18] Co-produced by Reznor and longtime collaborator Alan Moulder, the process utilized Pro Tools HD systems for multitrack recording, enabling precise layering of industrial elements with live instrumentation to achieve a textured, polished sound.[19] Moulder's role emphasized structural efficiency, drawing on his experience with dense rock productions to refine the album's aggressive yet controlled aesthetic, avoiding the sprawling experimentation of prior works.[20] A key production choice involved incorporating live band dynamics, notably Dave Grohl's drumming on most tracks, including "The Hand That Feeds," which provided hard-hitting, organic propulsion over programmed rhythms.[21] This shift introduced greater rhythmic variance and emotional intensity, with mixing focused on punchy transients and balanced aggression rather than unrelenting sonic saturation.[3] Plugins like iZotope Trash were employed selectively for targeted distortion on elements such as guitars and synths, preserving clarity and impact across the record.[19] Reznor maintained sobriety throughout the sessions—achieved in the months prior to writing, starting around January 2004—overcoming relapse temptations via disciplined personal routines, which fostered focused decision-making and contributed to the album's tight cohesion.[9] This stability allowed for iterative refinements without the interruptions that plagued earlier projects, enabling a streamlined workflow that aligned creative intent with executable production.[3]Musical and Lyrical Analysis
Sound and Instrumentation
With Teeth employs a streamlined industrial rock aesthetic, characterized by dense layers of distorted guitars, electronic beats, and manipulated vocals that convey a sense of restrained intensity, marking a departure from the expansive, atmospheric experimentation of The Fragile.[21] The production, handled by Trent Reznor with contributions from Atticus Ross and Alan Moulder, integrates analog hardware such as pre-amps (e.g., Avalon, Neve, SSL) and synthesizers with digital tools like Pro Tools HD systems equipped with Accel cards for multi-channel processing.[18][19] This setup facilitated the album's core sonic palette: aggressive, riff-driven guitar tones achieved through distortion pedals and fuzz effects, balanced against programmed and live percussion for dynamic propulsion.[18] Live drums, performed by Dave Grohl on all but six tracks, provide a raw, high-impact foundation that enhances the album's rhythmic drive, particularly on rock-oriented songs where they underscore heavy riffing and transient attacks.[21][22] Electronic elements, including synth leads and percussion loops, add textural variety; for instance, "Every Day Is Exactly the Same" relies on analog synth recordings routed through high-end channels for its pulsating, repetitive motifs, evoking mechanical precision amid broader chaos.[18] Vocal processing—featuring layering, distortion, and effects chains—further amplifies this controlled disorder, with Reznor's delivery often doubled or filtered to heighten emotional immediacy without veering into overt ambience.[19] Spanning 13 tracks on its standard edition, the album clocks in at a total runtime of 55:59, allowing for concise track structures that alternate between high-energy assaults and mid-tempo grooves while maintaining instrumental cohesion through Reznor's multi-instrumental oversight on guitars, bass, keyboards, and programming.[23] Specific techniques, such as routing a Moog Voyager synthesizer through guitar distortion pedals, exemplify the hybrid approach that fuses organic aggression with synthetic precision across the record.[18]Themes of Addiction, Control, and Societal Critique
The lyrics of With Teeth recurrently explore addiction not as an external imposition but as a manifestation of failed personal agency, where individuals perpetuate their own entrapment through denial and repeated indulgence. Trent Reznor, drawing from his own heroin addiction and subsequent sobriety achieved in 2001, frames these cycles in tracks like the title song "With Teeth," which uses the metaphor of teeth biting into flesh to depict the addictive substance turning against the user after initial euphoria, symbolizing self-inflicted sabotage born of unchecked impulses.[24] In "Sunspots," the narrator's fixation on an illusory ideal devolves into masochistic pursuit, illustrating how rational self-preservation erodes under obsessive compulsion, a pattern Reznor attributed to his pre-sobriety mindset of rationalizing destructive behaviors as controllable.[3] This emphasis on causal self-responsibility contrasts with narratives that externalize addiction, positioning recovery as an act of reclaiming volition rather than passive redemption. Reznor's post-recovery perspective infuses songs with a resolve against dependency, evident in "The Hand That Feeds," where lyrics challenge the listener to reject sustenance from manipulative sources—be they substances or authority figures—by questioning, "Will you bite the hand that feeds?" This extends personal agency to broader defiance, critiquing how individuals surrender autonomy to systems promising security but delivering subjugation.[25] Reznor described the track's genesis as confronting fears of conformity, informed by his therapeutic songwriting process, which served as an "exorcism" of internalized demons from addiction's chaos, allowing unfiltered expression without excusing prior lapses.[16] The album's alienation motifs, shaped by post-9/11 societal fractures like heightened government overreach and media-driven fear, amplify this into a societal indictment of passive acceptance, where everyday uniformity ("Every Day Is Exactly the Same") breeds disconnection from authentic self-determination.[26] Critics have praised these themes for their raw honesty in depicting addiction's mechanics without romanticization, marking a maturation from earlier Nine Inch Nails works' more nihilistic despair to accountable introspection.[27] However, detractors argue the persistent angst risks repetition, echoing prior albums' immaturity in fixating on internal turmoil over novel resolution, potentially limiting interpretive depth to Reznor's personal catharsis rather than universal causality.[28] Reznor countered such views by noting the album's lyrics emerged from sobriety's clarity, prioritizing causal confrontation over contrived uplift, though he later reflected on early career immaturity in handling similar motifs.[29] This duality underscores the work's strength in unvarnished realism, even if it invites charges of solipsism amid broader post-9/11 disaffection.[30]Artwork, Title, and Packaging
Conceptual Choices
The title With Teeth originates from the album's lead track, which uses the metaphor of an alluring but corrosive entity—likened to a dysfunctional relationship—to portray the grip of addiction. Trent Reznor has explained the phrase as evoking a return to "bite" or assertive edge, symbolizing recovery of personal agency and aggression after a phase of debilitation and detachment stemming from substance abuse.[3] In a 2005 interview, he connected this to his sobriety, describing the creative process as awakening from a "coma" where ideas flowed freely from a cleared mind, marking a shift from self-destructive inertia to tempered resolve.[10] Early conceptual work tied the album more explicitly to addiction's bleed-through effects, with the provisional title Bleedthrough referencing audio leakage as a stand-in for intrusive personal demons.[31] This was ultimately discarded in favor of With Teeth to encompass wider themes of anti-apathy and societal critique, allowing broader resonance beyond Reznor's individual struggles.[3] The packaging adopted a minimalist approach under designer Rob Sheridan, prioritizing stark, sterile visuals to mirror the album's industrial roots while eschewing the graphic intensity of predecessors like The Downward Spiral, in line with Reznor's post-recovery emphasis on clarity over excess provocation.[32] This restraint underscored a conceptual maturity, focusing on substantive "teeth" rather than superficial shock.[33]Design Elements and Symbolism
The cover art for With Teeth consists of a light blue background overlaid with black, organic-looking protrusions and a distorted rendition of the Nine Inch Nails logo, crafted using digital glitch effects to simulate data corruption. Art director Rob Sheridan, who helmed the full visual package for the first time, introduced this glitch art style, which brought a novel aesthetic of digital disintegration into mainstream music visuals.[34][35] Internally, the packaging features a digitally glitched portrait of Trent Reznor, the first such personal image on a Nine Inch Nails album since the 1989 debut Pretty Hate Machine. This photograph was intentionally designed to provoke and confront the viewer, drawing from influences in glitch and scientific imagery to underscore themes of personal turmoil and recovery.[35] The abstract, blurred distortions across the artwork evoke an underlying tension and aggression, mirroring the album's lyrical exploration of suppressed rage and control amid suburban normalcy.[36] With Teeth was released in a six-panel digipak format, offering a fold-out structure that emphasized artistic presentation over conventional jewel cases.[37] A DualDisc edition combined CD audio on one side with DVD content on the reverse, including 5.1 surround mixes and supplementary materials.[31] Limited variants, such as the Tour Edition, further catered to collectors, enhancing the tactile and immersive quality of the physical release.[38] These design choices reinforced the album's industrial roots through durable, non-plastic packaging that invited closer interaction with its symbolic visuals.Release and Promotion
Singles and Music Videos
The lead single, "The Hand That Feeds", was released on March 28, 2005, ahead of the album's launch, reaching number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart for five weeks and peaking at number 31 on the Billboard Hot 100.[39][40] Its music video, directed by Rob Sheridan with input from Trent Reznor, featured stark black-and-white footage of the band performing amid flashing lights and abstract visuals, amplifying the song's aggressive industrial rock sound.[41] The track's lyrics critiqued authority and complacency, interpreted in the context of opposition to the George W. Bush administration's policies, including the Iraq War; Reznor noted MTV's reluctance to air a performance backdrop featuring Bush's unaltered image, highlighting tensions in promotional broadcasting.[42] This controversy, coupled with radio airplay, enhanced visibility and positioned the single as a provocative entry point for the album's themes of resistance.[43] "Only", issued on July 26, 2005, followed as the second single, topping the Modern Rock Tracks chart for seven weeks and aiding the album's sustained radio presence.[39] The accompanying video, directed by David Fincher, employed extensive CGI to depict office objects animating chaotically—such as a desk lamp and golf ball—while Reznor's face materializes on a bobblehead doll, visually echoing the song's motifs of delusion and loss of control.[44][45] Its polished, surreal aesthetic contributed to crossover appeal on MTV and alternative outlets, though some fans viewed the singles' relative accessibility as a commercialization shift from Nine Inch Nails' earlier experimental edge, sparking debates on artistic dilution versus broader reach.[46] "Every Day Is Exactly the Same" served primarily as a radio and promotional single in early 2006, later released as an EP on April 4, achieving number one on the Modern Rock Tracks chart and bolstering post-album momentum through heavy alternative airplay.[39] Unlike the prior singles, it lacked an official music video, relying instead on radio rotation and integration into live sets for exposure, which sustained fan engagement amid critiques that the era's output prioritized chart viability over raw intensity.[47] Collectively, these releases marked Nine Inch Nails' strongest sequential performance on alternative charts, facilitating mainstream penetration while exposing divides between commercial gains and purist expectations.[48]Marketing and Commercial Rollout
The marketing campaign for With Teeth emphasized controlled digital teasers on the official Nine Inch Nails website to generate anticipation without full leaks, a strategy informed by prior experiences with album piracy during the The Fragile era.[49] Fans accessed short snippets of tracks such as "The Warning" and "Message to No One" via nin.com/with_teeth, alongside abstract video teasers directed by Rob Sheridan that hinted at the album's themes without revealing complete songs.[50] This approach balanced online engagement with protection against unauthorized distribution, reflecting broader industry debates on digital piracy in 2005, though Nine Inch Nails maintained a traditional physical release model through Interscope Records.[51] Interscope coordinated pre-release listening events in 13 U.S. cities, where attendees could hear the full album ahead of its May 3, 2005, street date, often at venues like New York's Avalon nightclub.[52] These parties included incentives such as exclusive 7-inch vinyl singles of "The Hand That Feeds" for pre-orders, fostering direct fan interaction and word-of-mouth promotion.[53] Concurrent media outreach featured interviews with Trent Reznor, who framed the album's creation within his recent achievement of sobriety after years of addiction, positioning With Teeth as a testament to personal reclamation rather than mere commercial product.[3] Reznor described the shift from addiction to sobriety as enabling clearer creative output, a narrative that humanized the project and differentiated it from predecessors amid fan concerns over his health.[54] The rollout prioritized targeted advertising through promo materials like posters and pre-release cards distributed to retailers and media, avoiding broad hype tactics in favor of leveraging the Nine Inch Nails fanbase's loyalty.[55] This contributed to first-week U.S. sales of 272,000 units, a strong debut that topped the Billboard 200 without relying on inflated pre-order bundling or extensive radio priming.[4] Interscope's strategy aligned the "recovery" storyline—both Reznor's sobriety and the band's post-Fragile hiatus—with empirical commercial metrics, underscoring effective niche targeting over mass-market spectacle in an era of fragmenting music consumption.[56]Touring and Live Performances
With Teeth Tour Overview
The Live: With Teeth tour, supporting Nine Inch Nails' 2005 album With Teeth, began in spring 2005 with a club and theater leg across North America and Europe, comprising approximately 30 performances that sold out rapidly and demonstrated sustained fan interest after a multi-year hiatus.[57] This initial phase transitioned into the summer international tour from June to August 2005, featuring dates in Europe—such as July 5 at London's Brixton Academy—followed by shows in Japan and Australia, totaling 28 concerts.[58] The tour marked Trent Reznor's first major live outing following his achievement of sobriety, which enabled a focused intensity in performances unmarred by the substance-related disruptions of prior efforts.[3] Escalating in scale, the fall arena leg launched on September 16, 2005, in North America, playing major markets in arenas with support from Queens of the Stone Age, and extended through December, including additional dates in Canada and a brief South American extension.[59] A spring arena tour followed from February to April 2006, targeting smaller U.S. markets, before concluding with a summer amphitheater run in North America featuring acts like Bauhaus and TV on the Radio.[60] Across its legs from 2005 to 2006, the tour encompassed 164 shows, reestablishing Nine Inch Nails' prominence in live settings through larger venue capacities.[61] Logistical challenges arose from Reznor's health management amid the demanding schedule, resulting in incidents such as the San Diego show on September 15, 2005, being abbreviated due to exhaustion, and cancellations including Tucson on September 16.[62] Despite these, the sobriety-sustained rigor allowed for consistent execution, shifting from intimate clubs to arena dominance and emphasizing controlled, high-energy presentations aligned with the album's themes of recovery and restraint.[15]Setlists, Arrangements, and Fan Experiences
During the Live: With Teeth tour in 2005–2006, Nine Inch Nails' setlists typically featured 7–8 songs from the With Teeth album, forming a core segment amid selections from earlier works like The Downward Spiral and Pretty Hate Machine.[63] Common inclusions were "The Hand That Feeds," "Only," "Beside You in Time," "Love Is Not Enough," "You Know What You Are?," "The Collector," and "Right Where It Belongs," often positioned in the mid-set to showcase new material after high-energy openers.[64] Nine With Teeth tracks received their live debuts during the initial club leg in spring 2005, including "The Hand That Feeds," "Love Is Not Enough," and "Every Day Is Exactly the Same," allowing Reznor to test audience responses in intimate venues before arena expansions.[57] Live arrangements diverged from studio versions through intensified instrumentation and improvisational extensions, particularly in bridging older tracks like "Wish" with With Teeth elements for seamless transitions.[63] For instance, "Wish" often incorporated grinding riffs echoing the album's industrial aggression, while "Only" featured elongated electronic breakdowns amplified by live synthesizers and Alessandro Cortini's key manipulations.[65] Visuals played a pivotal role, with LED screens displaying fractured, glitchy imagery reminiscent of early video game aesthetics—such as distorted, Quake-inspired digital landscapes—that synced with the music to heighten themes of fragmentation and control, creating an immersive, assaultive environment.[57] Fan reports from the era highlight a cathartic intensity, with audiences describing the performances as visceral releases after NIN's five-year hiatus, marked by mosh pits and collective fervor during tracks like "March of the Pigs" integrated with new material.[66] Recordings and attendee accounts note technical glitches in early shows, like the May 6, 2005, Chicago performance, yet praise the raw energy and Reznor's commanding stage presence as redeeming factors.[67] However, some fans critiqued the sets for occasional formulaic repetition, with predictable sequencing of hits leading to lulls despite the visual spectacle, though this was offset by the tour's role in revitalizing the band's live dynamism post-sobriety for Reznor.[68] The November 3, 2005, Madison Square Garden show, often cited as a tour peak, exemplified this balance through tight execution and crowd responsiveness.[69]Critical and Public Reception
Initial Reviews and Achievements
With Teeth garnered generally favorable reviews upon its release on May 3, 2005, with critics highlighting Trent Reznor's sharpened focus and the album's disciplined production after his period of personal struggles and the sprawling scope of The Fragile (1999). The aggregate Metacritic score stood at 78 out of 100, derived from 28 reviews, reflecting broad acclaim for its return to concise, aggressive industrial rock structures.[70] Publications such as Rolling Stone praised the record's visceral energy and Reznor's sobriety-fueled intensity, awarding it 3.5 out of 5 stars and describing it as a "bracing comeback" that recaptured the band's early ferocity without excess.[71] Reviewers noted a consensus on the album's role in revitalizing Nine Inch Nails' trajectory, with lyrics demonstrating greater maturity—shifting from raw nihilism toward introspective critiques of conformity and recovery, as evidenced by thematic analyses in tracks like "Every Day Is Exactly the Same."[72] However, some critiques pointed to a trade-off in accessibility, arguing the polished sound diluted the raw edge of prior works, resulting in mid-tempo grooves that prioritized radio-friendliness over experimental abrasion.[73] Achievements included a Grammy nomination for Best Hard Rock Performance for the lead single "The Hand That Feeds," recognizing its driving riff and confrontational lyrics at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards in 2006.[74][75]Criticisms and Retrospective Evaluations
Critics noted that the lyrics on With Teeth often revisited familiar themes of self-loathing, addiction, and rage in a manner perceived as immature or underdeveloped, with Pitchfork describing them as "juvenile" and repetitive, lacking the nuance of prior works like The Fragile.[76] This critique extended to tracks like "Every Day Is Exactly the Same," where simplistic rhyme schemes and predictable structures were seen as diminishing artistic depth.[76] The album's production, handled by Reznor alongside Alan Moulder and others, was faulted for a polished, radio-friendly sheen that prioritized accessibility over raw intensity, resulting in a "safer" sonic palette compared to the abrasive experimentation of earlier releases.[77] Reviewers and fans alike observed an emphasis on mainstream appeal, with guitar riffs and arrangements echoing mid-1990s NIN formulas without significant evolution, potentially reflecting creative compromises amid Reznor's recovery from substance abuse.[77] [78] In a 2007 interview, Reznor himself acknowledged errors in the album's approach, stating he had done things he later avoided, suggesting external pressures or transitional uncertainties influenced decisions like tighter song structures over expansive ambiguity.[78] Retrospective assessments around the album's 20th anniversary in 2025 have credited With Teeth with stabilizing Reznor's career through sobriety, enabling subsequent output like Year Zero, yet highlighted its over-familiarity as a limitation, portraying it less as a triumphant return than a cautious recalibration.[79] Stereogum described it as a "retreat" marked by maturity's trade-offs, where sobriety curbed excesses but also tempered risk-taking, leading to competent but unadventurous tracks that recycled prior motifs without transcending them.[79] This view aligns with causal observations that while addiction's cessation restored productivity—Reznor has maintained sobriety since—it did not fully resolve underlying patterns of introspection or industry adaptation, as evidenced by his later disavowal of certain choices, underscoring persistent personal and artistic constraints beyond mere abstinence.[3] [78]Commercial Performance
Chart Achievements
With Teeth debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, selling 272,000 copies in its first week as reported by Nielsen SoundScan.[4] This marked Nine Inch Nails' second album to reach the summit of the chart, following The Fragile in 1999. The album also topped the Billboard Top Internet Albums chart during its debut week.[80] The lead single "The Hand That Feeds," released in March 2005, ascended to number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, where it held the position for five consecutive weeks.[81] This achievement represented Nine Inch Nails' first number-one hit on the Modern Rock Tracks chart since "Closer" in 1994.[82] Follow-up singles "Only" and "Every Day Is Exactly the Same" both entered the top ten on the same chart, contributing to sustained airplay and extending the album's chart longevity despite its initial drop from the Billboard 200 summit after one week.[83] Internationally, With Teeth entered the top ten on multiple album charts, reflecting strong initial demand in key markets. Sustained performance from radio-friendly singles like "The Hand That Feeds" supported ongoing visibility on alternative rock formats.[84]Sales Figures and Certifications
With Teeth achieved gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on July 6, 2005, for shipments exceeding 500,000 units in the United States.[85] The album's U.S. shipments surpassed 1 million units by late 2005, reflecting strong initial demand following a six-year gap since The Fragile.[86] This outperformed The Fragile's total U.S. sales of approximately 898,000 copies, attributable in part to With Teeth's more concise single-disc format compared to the predecessor's double album length.[1] Internationally, the album received platinum certification in Canada for 200,000 units (later upgraded to double platinum) and gold status in the United Kingdom for 100,000 shipments.[52] Global sales estimates place With Teeth at around 1.3 million units, bolstered by first-week U.S. sales of 272,000 copies.[87] Subsequent physical sales declined in line with broader industry trends, including the rise of digital piracy and streaming platforms in the mid-2000s, rather than diminished artistic merit.[4] Digital equivalents and streams in the 2010s contributed to its enduring catalog value, though specific streaming metrics remain unquantified in official reports.[88]Track Listing and Credits
Standard Edition Tracks
The standard edition of With Teeth, released on CD in the United States, comprises 13 tracks written by Trent Reznor, with a total runtime of 56:05.[89][38] The sequencing begins with the subdued opener "All the Love in the World" and concludes with "Right Where It Belongs," presented in the following order:| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "All the Love in the World" | Trent Reznor | 5:15 |
| 2 | "You Know What You Are?" | Trent Reznor | 3:41 |
| 3 | "The Collector" | Trent Reznor | 3:06 |
| 4 | "The Hand That Feeds" | Trent Reznor | 3:32 |
| 5 | "Love Is Not Enough" | Trent Reznor | 3:41 |
| 6 | "Every Day Is Exactly the Same" | Trent Reznor | 4:54 |
| 7 | "Carried" | Trent Reznor | 1:33 |
| 8 | "Sunspots" | Trent Reznor | 4:03 |
| 9 | "Only" | Trent Reznor | 4:23 |
| 10 | "Getting Smaller" | Trent Reznor | 3:35 |
| 11 | "The Line Begins to Blur" | Trent Reznor | 4:24 |
| 12 | "Beside You in Time" | Trent Reznor | 5:13 |
| 13 | "Right Where It Belongs" | Trent Reznor | 5:02 |
Personnel and Production Roles
Trent Reznor served as the primary creative force behind With Teeth, handling writing, arrangement, performance of all instruments and vocals, as well as co-production and engineering duties, which underscored the album's status as a solo project rather than a band effort.[90] [91] Alan Moulder, a longtime collaborator, co-produced the album alongside Reznor and contributed to engineering and mixing, providing external input that marked a shift from Reznor's more isolated solo productions on prior releases like The Fragile.[92] [52] This partnership addressed Reznor's need for collaborative refinement following personal struggles and creative blocks.[21] Dave Grohl contributed live drums and percussion across multiple tracks, replacing programmed elements to infuse a raw, organic energy absent in earlier drum-machine-heavy NIN work.[93] [91] Atticus Ross provided additional production, programming, and sound design, later becoming a core collaborator with Reznor.[92] [94] Additional drum programming came from Jerome Dillon, a former live NIN member.[95] Engineering support included Rich Costey and Leo Herrera, with assistants such as Andrew Alekel, Andy Brohard, and Jeremy Berman handling technical tasks at studios like The Pass and Nothing Studios.[89] [91] The album was mastered by Tom Baker at Future Disc.[92] Rob Sheridan managed design elements, while Leo Herrera coordinated the project.[95]| Role | Key Personnel |
|---|---|
| Producer | Trent Reznor, Alan Moulder |
| Additional Producer | Atticus Ross |
| Performer (Instruments/Vocals) | Trent Reznor (all) |
| Drums/Percussion | Dave Grohl (select tracks), Jerome Dillon (additional programming) |
| Engineer | Alan Moulder, Trent Reznor, Rich Costey, Leo Herrera |
| Assistant Engineer | Andrew Alekel, Andy Brohard, Jeremy Berman |
| Mastering | Tom Baker |
| Programming/Sound Design | Atticus Ross |
| Project Coordination | Leo Herrera |
| Design | Rob Sheridan |