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Nine Inch Nails All The Love In The World Bass Tab

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All the Love in the World





8x Verse

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ---------------1111----------------------- |

A| --3333331343---------1111----------------- |

E| ------------------------------------------ |



4x Chorus

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ----------1333---------------------------- |

A| ------------------------------------------ |

E| --13333333-------------------------------- |



4x Verse

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ---------------1111----------------------- |

A| --3333331343---------1111----------------- |

E| ------------------------------------------ |



4x Chorus

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ----------1333---------------------------- |

A| ------------------------------------------ |

E| --13333333-------------------------------- |



4x Chorus Part 2

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ------------------------------------------ |

A| ---------------1-1------------------------ |

E| -------6///133--3------------------------- |



2x Verse

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ---------------1111----------------------- |

A| --3333331343---------1111----------------- |

E| ------------------------------------------ |



4x Chorus

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ----------1333---------------------------- |

A| ------------------------------------------ |

E| --13333333-------------------------------- |



4x Chorus Part 2

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| ------------------------------------------ |

A| ---------------1-1------------------------ |

E| -------6///133--3------------------------- |



(Break) No bass from 3:11 to 4:15



New Part (til end)

G| ------------------------------------------ |

D| -----------------------111-333------------ |

A| --------111------3133--------------------- |

E| ---3133-----11---------------------------- |

Taken from the BassMasta ~ http://www.bassmasta.net

Source: http://www.bassmasta.net/n/nine_inch_nails/133843.html

Tab Discussion, Comments, and Critiques
 
 
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Randy
Professional
#1 by Randy McKagan at Aug 23, 2005 at 6:03 AM EST
It\'s hard for me to interpret the meaning too. At first I thought he\'s expressing anger for someone who he doesn\'t like, but gets more recognition/attention than him. Then I noticed a few allusions. One to \"Hurt\", with the line... \"I\'ve become a million miles away\" which might be hinting at the fact that he\'s over his addiction. But really I\'m not sure on that. It could very well mean something entirely different because the lines before are describing a neglected person. The other allusion I noticed was to Elvis\'s song \"Heartbreak Hotel\" with the line... \"Sometimes I get so lonely I could...(die)\" Which lead me to believe the person that the one-line chorus is about is someone he used to be with. Regardless, it\'s a great opening to the album, and it took a few listens before I really started liking it. I love how it really picks up at the 3:00 mark or so. Gets louder etc.
 
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Cliff
Rhythm Player
#2 by Cliff Burton at Feb 10, 2006 at 8:32 PM EST
I think I need to really hear and understand the album as a whole before I can interpret the meaning of this... as is the case with a lot of NIN albums, each song tells a part of the story.
 
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Darth Cato
Wanna Be
#3 by Darth Cato at Mar 15, 2006 at 9:37 AM EST
Glad to see you're coming out of the negativity a bit, Fluid. You were really dogging on THTF. But I guess that's understandable because it doesn't seem to fit with the rest of the album (at least in my opinion). THTF gets old quick, unlike the other songs on this album. This album wasn't what I was expecting either, mainly because part of what I've loved about NIN in the past is the dark guitar riffs. In this album they seem a bit flat, and sometimes non-existent. However, I'm still impressed with the album as a whole, about 7 of the songs I really enjoy. I really try not to expect too much out of musicians, although I, like many people hold Trent to high standards, probably too high. I wish I could let it go. What makes me grateful of Trent though is the fact that music in general seems to have gone to shit lately, and Trent realizes this and wants to put out what HE thinks is good music. I wished other musicians would do the same instead of putting out what they think the average idiot wants to hear. Or maybe they're not smart enough to know what they're putting out is dry, mindless bullshit. I'm referring to rap and hip-hop here.
 
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danielle
Lead Player
#4 by danielle woodley at Apr 15, 2006 at 9:07 AM EST
This song to me is about a person who is so lonely and doesn't do anything to change it. They dwell on it and when they go to say what's on their mind it doesn't come out right (No one's heard a single word I've said They don't sound as good outside my head) And they wonder why some people get all the love in the world while they are on the outs.
 
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Hellspawn
Average
#5 by Hellspawn at May 15, 2006 at 5:43 PM EST
fucking wow, i have no clue why it did that, i apologize.
 
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Mark
Average
#6 by Mark McL at May 16, 2006 at 1:42 PM EST
We all have to understand the fact that in order for music to stay alive it must evolve. Oh i can only imagine the horrible things said if Trent continued to write music like The Downward Spiral. "What's this old man doing writing so angry and gritty, he shouldn't be trying to stay 'cool' and do his own thing"... which is exactly what he's doing. He turned forty this month. What can you expect. Pretty Hate Machine- He was 26. Focus'd on relationship depression and all that typically hormonal young adult stuff. Broken- Age 29. Angry rock music. Typical of early 90's. The Downward Spiral- Age 31. Maturing. Angry about the world. Raunchy, dark, heavy music. The Fragile. Age 36. Not quite so angry. Discussing issues more apparent to someone who is more worried about something other than themselves. Mature music. With Teeth- Age 40. The type of music you'd expect to hear from someone who's been doing this for so long. You can definately hear very educated messages in these songs. Showing wisdom and maturity. Anyway, enough about that. My point is, his work is progressing. The kind of music that sucks is the kind that gets old and stale because they never change. (eg. Alexis On Fire... i guaruntee their next album will flop). (eg. Metallica... their last album did flop. actually it's fucking terrible) So would you really wanna hear some middle aged man yelling and crying about his terrible drug-fucked life? Or would you rather hear him say something wise and profound?
 
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kieron
Wanna Be
#7 by kieron prosser at Jan 20, 2007 at 4:35 PM EST
i loved it right away also and um basically i think its about being alone, and not loved or understood lol pretty obvious
 
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Adam
Average
#8 by Adam Baine at Feb 3, 2007 at 2:34 PM EST
nin rocks so much...
 
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Jess
Wanna Be
#9 by Jess at Mar 31, 2007 at 4:42 AM EST
Great song, but very different in comparison to The Fragile and TDS. I loved it immediately, but i'm sure a lot of people won't take to it so quickly.