Jerome Dillon (born July 16, 1969) is a film composer and former drummer for Nine Inch Nails. He played for NIN somewhat on The Fragile, during the Fragility tour and the beginning of the Live: With Teeth tour. Dillon auditioned for and joined NIN in 1999 after leaving his previous band, Howlin' Maggie.[1] He left NIN on October 1, 2005, after health problems forced the band to postpone or cancel three concerts in a time period of less than two weeks. He appears in the NIN music videos for "Into The Void" and "The Hand That Feeds".
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Cancelled shows
Midway through the band's first Live: With_Teeth arena show in San Diego, California on September 16, 2005, as the band was finishing "Gave Up," there were noticeable problems with Dillon's drumming (losing the tempo and other issues). As "Eraser" was supposed to start, he collapsed and was hospitalized. This and a subsequent show were postponed, and another gig was outright cancelled.[2] The cardiac disorder was later diagnosed as a non-life threatening consequence of his thyroid medication.[3]
Dillon would play his last show with NIN at the Hollywood Bowl on October 1, 2005.
Fallout with NIN
Months later, Dillon remarked that when he was healthy and ready to return, he encountered "complete apathy and no sympathy" from Trent Reznor and NIN management. In return, Reznor wrote that Dillon's "recollection of the events leading to his departure from the band is once again inaccurate."
Recently, however, Dillon remarked in the nearLY message boards that there was currently no (at least on his part) animosity between himself and "any member of the NIN camp". He also joked that he especially meant Aaron North, since he "tattooed my name on his ass..." [sic] (Referring of course to the statement by North in the "access" section of nin.com [4] [5])
nearLY
nearLY was a side project of Dillon's throughout his tenure with NIN. Beginning with a reccuring bad dream, he created a sonic adventure, very much like Fragile-era NIN. The album, entitled Reminder, features Dillon in a Reznor role, contributing much of the instrumentation himself. Dillon abstained from singing on the record, instead opting for vocals by Nothing Records veteran, Claudia Sarne. He worked on a follow-up to Reminder featuring singer/actress Persia White on vocals, but the full project has not been released.
Jerome and Aaron
During the same Q&A that produced the "tattoo" statement, North responded to a question regarding Dillon's relationship status with an emphatic, "Back off bitch, he's mine!" This has been a very large portion of much of the NIN satire out there, including Anne Tai's "Squires Of Dimness" and Diaboli's Clay NIN's. Although the remarks were most likely in fun, the result has stuck. It should also be noted that North was the only member of NIN to be seen at a nearLY show.
Body Of Work
1987
- Nevermore
1996
- Honeysuckle Strange, Howlin' Maggie
- EdgeFest 96 Live
1999
- The Fragile, Nine Inch Nails (Live drums, "We're In This Together")
- We're In This Together, Nine Inch Nails (Live drums, "We're In This Together")
2000
- Things Falling Apart, Nine Inch Nails (Drums)
- Cecil B. Demented
2002
- And All That Could Have Been, Nine Inch Nails (Drums)
- Still, Nine Inch Nails (Drums, acoustic guitar)
2004
- arhythmiA: Drums & Drones (with Keith Hillebrandt)
2005
- With Teeth, Nine Inch Nails (Drums)
- reminder, nearLY
- Amber Headlights, Greg Dulli
2006
- Jagged, Gary Numan
- reminder Live, nearLY
2007
- Beside You In Time, Nine Inch Nails (Drums, rehearsal footage only)
2008
- Vacancy 2: The First Cut soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
2009
- The Collector soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
2011
- For the Love of Money soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
2013
- No One Lives soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
- Officer Down soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
2016
- Bleed soundtrack, Jerome Dillon
- The Green Fairy soundtrack, Jerome Dillon