Michael Trent Reznor was born on May 17, 1965, in Mercer, Pennsylvania. His parents divorced when he was five, and he was raised largely by his maternal grandparents in Mercer — a small, quiet town that he has described as truly isolating and that fueled the inner life of a musically gifted child who felt fundamentally out of place in his environment. He studied piano from age five, became proficient in multiple instruments, and attended Allegheny College before dropping out to pursue music. He moved to Cleveland, worked as a studio assistant at Right Track Studios, and formed Nine Inch Nails in 1988 as a studio project — with himself as the sole permanent member.
Nine Inch Nails's debut album Pretty Hate Machine (1989) established the industrial rock genre's commercial viability, reaching gold status through word of mouth without radio support. But it was The Downward Spiral (1994) — recorded in the house where the Manson family murdered Sharon Tate — that announced Reznor as a genuinely significant artist: a concept album about the progressive dismantling of a personality through self-destruction, sonic in its approach to psychological extremity, literary in its precision, and produced with a technical mastery that remains definitive in its genre. It has sold over four million copies and is consistently ranked among the greatest albums of the 1990s.
Reznor's INFJ character is visible throughout his career in the combination of the intensely private interior life and the artistic ambition to make that interior life universally communicable. He is a perfectionist of the first order: every Nine Inch Nails release represents months or years of meticulous studio work, and his live productions have consistently raised the standard for what rock concert production can accomplish technically and artistically. His sobriety, achieved in 2009, produced a marked change in both his personal presentation and his artistic direction: the anger and despair of the Nine Inch Nails catalogue gave way to more collaborative, textured, and emotionally careful work.
Reznor's film scoring career — launched with his Academy Award-winning score for The Social Network (2010) alongside longtime collaborator Atticus Ross — represents the INFJ's capacity to translate interior sonic worlds into service of other artistic visions without losing the distinctive character that makes the collaboration worthwhile. His scores for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Gone Girl, Soul, Mank, and Bones and All have established him and Ross as among the most significant film composers of the contemporary period. He continues to release music under both the Nine Inch Nails name and the How to Destroy Angels project with his wife Mariqueen.