Difference between revisions of "The Mark Has Been Made"
Nympholept (talk | contribs) |
|||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
Backed by watery and flaming visuals, the live version is more in-your-face. After shortened intro and a guitar breakdown by [[Robin Finck]], Trent wails ''waa-ooh'' over the climax and the performance ends on that high note without the extended outro in the studio version. | Backed by watery and flaming visuals, the live version is more in-your-face. After shortened intro and a guitar breakdown by [[Robin Finck]], Trent wails ''waa-ooh'' over the climax and the performance ends on that high note without the extended outro in the studio version. | ||
− | ==In popular culture== | + | ==In [[Nine Inch Nails in popular culture|popular culture]]== |
* ''Unbreakable'' (2000): Played during trailer. | * ''Unbreakable'' (2000): Played during trailer. | ||
* ''Man On Fire'' (2004): Used in scenes to showcase Denzel Washington as a contemplative badass. | * ''Man On Fire'' (2004): Used in scenes to showcase Denzel Washington as a contemplative badass. |
Revision as of 23:04, 15 March 2007
Album:The Fragile (Right)
Length:5:15
Tempo:{{{BPM}}} BPM
Versions:The Mark Has Been Made (live, AATCHB)
Live:Fragility v2.0
"The Mark Has Been Made" is the fourth track on the Right disc of The Fragile. It is an instrumental track.
Contents
Appearances
- The Fragile
- And All That Could Have Been
Versions
"The Mark Has Been Made"
On the CD and presumably cassette versions of The Fragile, "The Mark Has Been Made" ends with a different melody and these whispers:
i'm getting closer i'm getting closer i'm getting closer all the time
This is a short fragment of the song "10 Miles High", a Fragile track only included on the vinyl (and later on Things Falling Apart).
"The Mark Has Been Made" (And All That Could Have Been)
Backed by watery and flaming visuals, the live version is more in-your-face. After shortened intro and a guitar breakdown by Robin Finck, Trent wails waa-ooh over the climax and the performance ends on that high note without the extended outro in the studio version.
In popular culture
- Unbreakable (2000): Played during trailer.
- Man On Fire (2004): Used in scenes to showcase Denzel Washington as a contemplative badass.
- CSI: Crime Scene Investigation: Abra Cadaver (Season 3 Episode 5, 2002-10-31)[1]