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Hurt (Nine Inch Nails song)

"Hurt" is a song by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails from its second studio album, The Downward Spiral (1994), written by Trent Reznor. It was released on April 17, 1995, as a promotional single from the album.[a] The song received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Rock Song in 1996. In 2020, Kerrang and Billboard ranked the song number two and number three, respectively, on their lists of the greatest Nine Inch Nails songs.[4][5]

"Hurt"

April 17, 1995 (1995-04-17)

6:12

Trent Reznor

In 2002, Johnny Cash covered "Hurt" to commercial and critical acclaim. The related music video is considered one of the greatest of all time by publications such as NME. Reznor praised Cash's interpretation of the song for its "sincerity and meaning", going so far as to say "that song isn't mine anymore".[6]

Meaning[edit]

The song includes references to self-harm and heroin addiction, though the overall meaning of the song is disputed. Some listeners contend that the song acts as a suicide note written by the song's protagonist, as a result of his depression, while others claim that it describes the difficult process of finding a reason to live in spite of depression and pain and does not have much to do with the storyline of The Downward Spiral.[7]

Music video[edit]

The music video for Nine Inch Nails' original version of "Hurt" is a live performance that was recorded before the show in Omaha, Nebraska, on February 13, 1995, and can be found on Closure and the DualDisc re-release of The Downward Spiral. The audio portion appears on the UK version of Further Down the Spiral. The version released on Closure differs slightly from the video originally aired on MTV. In addition to using an uncensored audio track, the Closure edit shows alternate views of the audience and performance at several points during the video.


To film the video, a scrim was dropped in front of the band on stage, projected onto which were various images to add visual symbolism to fit the song's subject matter, such as war atrocities, a nuclear bomb test, survivors of the Battle of Stalingrad, a snake staring at the camera, and a time-lapse film of a fox decomposing in reverse. A spotlight was cast on Reznor so that he can be seen through the images. Compared to the live renditions performed on future tours, this version most resembles the studio recording with its use of the song's original samples.


There are also official live recordings on the later releases And All that Could Have Been and Beside You in Time. Each version features distinct instrumentation by the varying members of the band in the respective eras.

Live performances[edit]

During the Dissonance Tour in 1995, when Nine Inch Nails opened for David Bowie during his Outside Tour, Bowie sang "Hurt" in a duet with Reznor, backed by an original melody and beat. This served as the conclusion to the dual act that began each Bowie set.


During the Fragility Tour, the progression was performed by Robin Finck on acoustic guitar rather than on piano.


Since the 2005–06 Live: With Teeth Tour, Nine Inch Nails has been playing "Hurt" in a more toned-down style, featuring only Reznor on vocals until the final chorus, when the rest of the band joins in.


The song was brought back to its original form during the Lights In The Sky Tour in 2008, before returning to the toned down style on the 2009 Wave Goodbye tour.

US promotional CD single

[8]

vocals, guitar, bass guitar, piano, synthesizers

Trent Reznor

drums

Chris Vrenna

The song was featured in the of the adult animated science fiction program Rick and Morty, overlaying the series of events in which Rick surrenders to the intergalactic authorities, allowing his family to return to Earth while simultaneously abandoning them.[12]

season two finale

The Johnny Cash cover was given the award for "Single of the Year" in 2003. It ranked as CMT's top video for 2003, No. 1 on CMT's 100 Greatest Country Music Videos the following year (and again in 2008), and No. 1 on the Top 40 Most Memorable Music Videos on MuchMoreMusic's Listed in October 2007. As of March 2016, the single occupies the number nine spot on Rate Your Music's Top Singles of the 2000s.[32] The song is also Cash's sole chart entry on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, where it hit No. 33 in 2003.[33] In June 2009, the song was voted No. 1 in UpVenue's Top 10 Best Music Covers.[34]

Country Music Association

"Hurt" was nominated for six awards at the , winning for Best Cinematography. With the video, Johnny Cash became the oldest artist ever nominated for an MTV Video Music Award.[35] Justin Timberlake, who won Best Male Video that year for "Cry Me a River", said in his acceptance speech that the MTV Video Music Award for Best Male Video should have gone to Cash.[36]

2003 MTV Video Music Awards

The music video won the 2004 .

Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video

In May 2010, 'Hurt' was voted the fifth most influential video of all time by .[37]

MySpace

In October 2011, placed it at number 35 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years".[38]

NME

In a 2014 survey conducted by the the UK public voted the Johnny Cash version the second greatest cover version (of any song) of all time.[39]

BBC

covered the song in 2011, featured on her extended play Hurt: The EP.

Leona Lewis

's live cover of the song was featured on their 2004 live album, Southside Double-Wide: Acoustic Live. AllMusic said it was similar to Staind's version, but "tinged with a bittersweet melancholia instead of glowering melodrama."[67]

Sevendust

The cello duo released a "sparse" rendition of the song on its self-titled 2011 album, based on Johnny Cash's version.[68]

2Cellos

In 2019 performed a cover version as a ballad in their show at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, Trent Reznor's origin city.[69]

Mumford & Sons

performed the song in an Arabic translation in 2022, featured on her album Sequana.

Souad Massi

The song has been used in the 140-second advertisement "This is Why" created for the SickKids Foundation by Cossette in 2019 as part of the "SickKids Vs." campaign to support fundraising for The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.[66]


Cover versions of the song include:

. KDKA-TV. April 18, 2007. Archived from the original on December 22, 2007.

"Digital Tributes Honor Virginia Tech Victims"

(June 7, 2005). "In Other Words: Trent Reznor". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on May 21, 2006.

Anthony DeCurtis

on YouTube

NiN 1995 live concert video

on YouTube

Johnny Cash - Hurt 2003 official music video

at Discogs

Hurt