David Bowie / Nine Inch Nails / Prick

Sep 22, 1995 (29 years ago)

BB&T Pavilion     Camden, New Jersey, United States

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Concert Details


Date:
Friday, September 22, 1995
Venue:
BB&T Pavilion
Location:
Camden, New Jersey, United States

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Rock 3 bands

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Photos


David Bowie / Nine Inch Nails / Prick on Sep 22, 1995 [910-small]

  Uploaded by Dominic Bucci

Photo from Rolling Stone 11/2/1995 - Ke.Mazur/WireImage, David Bowie / Nine Inch Nails / Prick on Sep 22, 1995 [547-small]

Photo from Rolling Stone 11/2/1995 - Ke.Mazur/WireImage


  Uploaded by Tehiv

David Bowie / Nine Inch Nails / Prick on Sep 22, 1995 [182-small]

  Uploaded by Tehiv

 Tehiv
 Kspencer81
 Michele Angelo
 Dominic Bucci
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 Jac040705

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Tehiv Apr 10, 2021

Absolutely pouring rain through the entire show.


Tehiv Apr 10, 2021

Nine Inch Nails and David Bowie Team Up in Jersey
The titans of weird duet, while Bowie skirts the hits

By AL WEISEL

Nine Inch Nails/David Bowie
Camden, N.J.
Blockbuster-Sony Music Entertainment Center
Sept. 22, 1995

Forget the theory that artists are locked in an Oedipal struggle to kill their creative fathers. Nirvana played with the Meat Puppets, Pearl Jam backed up Neil Young, and now Nine Inch Nails have teamed up with David Bowie. It’s apparent that this collaboration has reinvigorated both artists.

Nine Inch Nails opened to a crowd dominated by their young fans. If Reznor was weary, of touring, he didn’t show it. The introspective studio Wunderkind who once stalked the stage like a caged animal has evolved into a confident band leader, taking NIN through a relentless, exhilarating survey of his career. The group has been reimagined as a stripped-down post-punk ensemble, supplanting drum machines with two drummers and de-emphasizing synthesizers for guitars. After barreling through a set that included a ferocious version of “Terrible Lie” and a funky, cut-up take on “Closer,” the band drifted into an atmospheric instrumental as Reznor picked up a saxophone to play a surprisingly accomplished solo.

They were soon joined by Bowie for a collaboration that was the high point of the show. Bowie’s Martian lounge-singer croon vied with Reznor’s blood-curdling caterwaul as Bowie’s “Scary Monsters” segued into NIN’s “Reptile.” A blistering version of “Hallo Spaceboy” (from Bowie’s new album, Outside) followed, with three drummers pounding away furiously. Reznor and Bowie continued to trade lines on the haunting “Hurt” before NIN left the stage.

Bowie then launched into an extended set of songs from Outside. Although these dark, difficult songs are arguably his best work since the ’70s, they were unfamiliar to the audience and not immediately accessible. Moreover, in a bid to put the eager-to-please Let’s Dance era behind him, Bowie studiously avoided playing his hits in favor of more obscure songs like “Andy Warhol,” “Joe the Lion” and “Breaking Glass.” Even though “The Man Who Sold the World” was familiar because of Nirvana’s cover, Bowie’s reinterpretation of it as an elegiac tribute rendered it barely recognizable. Yet while probably few knew Jacques Brel’s “My Death,” Bowie sang the song (which he used to perform during his Ziggy Stardust days) with such gut-wrenching emotion that he had the audience cheering in spite of himself.

This story is from the November 2nd, 1995 issue of Rolling Stone.

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