Late-1990s industrial studio with Yamaha AN1x synth and Roland SP-808 sampler on a cluttered desk
Album

Nine Inch Nails — The Fragile

The Gear Behind One of the Most Obsessive Records Ever Made

When Trent Reznor released the Fragility Tour program in 1999, it included something almost unheard of for a major-label artist: a published partial gear list. Not a vague studio credit — an actual inventory of the machines behind the madness. The Fragile was a double album born from years of creative collapse and obsessive perfectionism, recorded across studios in New Orleans and Los Angeles. The gear list reads like a catalog of late-'90s electronic production at its most unhinged.

The Yamaha AN1x is a virtual analog synthesizer that gave Reznor access to warm, evolving pads and aggressive leads without the tuning instability of actual analog hardware. The Roland SP-808 GrooveSampler was a self-contained production workstation — sampler, effects processor, and sequencer in one box, aimed at the bedroom-producer market but capable of far more. On the floor, the Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi provided the crushing fuzz distortion that defines tracks like "The Day the World Went Away," while the Moog Moogerfooger MF-101 lowpass filter added analog warmth to synth and guitar signals alike. Rounding out the documented rig was the Boss DR-202 Dr. Groove, a drum machine and bass synth combo that contributed rhythmic textures throughout the sessions.

Trent Reznor published the Fragile-era gear list in the Fragility Tour program — one of the few times a major artist has documented a complete studio inventory for fans.— nin.wiki, archived Fragility Tour program

Why It Matters

The Fragile is rare in music history: an album where the artist not only used the gear but documented it publicly. That published list has become a reference for producers and collectors trying to reverse-engineer Reznor's sound. The Yamaha AN1x, once a budget synth, has climbed to $400–$900 on the secondary market. The Roland SP-808, a machine most studios discarded years ago, now fetches $300–$600 from collectors who want the exact sampler that fed into one of the most layered records of the '90s.

Find the Gear

Yamaha AN1x Synthesizer

$400 – $900

Virtual analog synth with knob-per-function interface. Warm pads, aggressive leads, real-time control.

Roland SP-808 GrooveSampler

$300 – $600

All-in-one sampler, effects unit, and sequencer. Zip-disk storage, built-in effects, and a lo-fi character beloved by producers.

Modern Alternatives & Related Gear

Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi

The iconic fuzz/distortion pedal. Still in production, still crushing.

Search Amazon

Moog Moogerfooger MF-101

Analog lowpass filter pedal. Discontinued and climbing in value — the ultimate tone-shaping tool.

Search Amazon

Boss DR-202 Dr. Groove

Drum machine and bass synth combo. Affordable, portable, and a documented part of the NIN rig.

Search Amazon

Affiliate Disclosure: Stereos For Sale is reader-supported. When you buy through links on this page, we may earn an affiliate commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we'd want in our own collection.