Trent Reznor has opened up about his time at Apple Music, saying he quit his job at the company because he felt “guilty”.

Back in 2014, music fans might have been surprised to hear that Trent Reznor had taken up a new role at Apple. Having worked as the chief creative officer at Beats Music before Apple’s acquisition of the service, Reznor was given a new role, and appeared to be quite happy about everything.

However, the Nine Inch Nails frontman has now revealed that it was his feelings of guilt that made him turn his back on the company.

Speaking to Stereogum recently, Reznor opened up about his time at the company, noting how he realised the work was not conducive to who he was as an artist.

“I have a mixed set of feelings about the whole thing,” he began. “From my own perspective, I got obsessed with trying to crack that code. Being stuck on a record label, watching fans get pissed off — watching myself get pissed off at fans and wondering why am I pissed off? ‘Cause they’re listening to my fuckin’ album! A week before a plastic disc shows up in the store that no one wants to buy!”

“They’re not bootlegging t-shirts or something they’re listening to shit I did and they’re excited about it and I’m doing it too to other bands that I am excited about and I thought, ‘This is broken. The whole idea is broken and there’s got to be a better way.’”

“Apple had been one of those companies that I really looked forward to what they were going to present. It’s like Willy Wonka. I thought Steve Jobs was a genius and he brought things to the world that I think made significant changes and I looked forward to what was ahead.”

“Steve wasn’t there anymore but this was an opportunity that if I didn’t do it, would I feel like I would’ve wondered what would have happened if I did do it.”

“We were in-between record cycles and after much soul-searching I just thought, ‘I’ll jump into this and see what I can do,’” he continued. “And it was an eye-opening, incredible amount of work to be dropped into the world of engineers who didn’t want you there.”

“I would like my sons to be able to think, ‘Hey maybe there’s a career I could have as an artist and I don’t have to do that on the side while I do something else.’ That there’s a possible chance of a livelihood being made. I think after two real years of doing that full-time and another two years of doing it part-time some inroads were made that mattered.”

“I think my awareness that most of that job comes down to product design and marketing and thinking about what the consumer wants felt at odds with the artist in me.”

“I’d find myself speaking the language of the marketing guy because I’d been in a room with 40 people that were talking about brand identities and shit like that. I felt like, guilty that I wasn’t being an artist and a part of that’s my own madness but it made me realize I’m not that interested in that.”

“I’ve seen it, I’ve been under the hood, I’ve sat at the table with these guys, I got to know them, I’m in awe of what they do. It’s not what I think I was put on Earth to do. And I know that now.”

“There was a part of me that always thought, ‘What if I would’ve gone the computer engineering route? Would I be happier?’ I don’t know,” Reznor explained. “The grass is greener on the other side. I had a chance to kind of deep-dive into working at a corporation.”

“Seeing the nuts and bolts of how that works, there’s a lot of fascinating shit in there that I never would’ve seen or experienced and I’m appreciative of the opportunity but it also made me cherish what I’ve made on the other side, as an artist.”

“This is what’s good about having Atticus [Ross] around,” he concluded. “Sometimes, in his dry sense of humor he can cut right to the heart of the matter. Like one time, we were talking about something and he goes, ‘You know what I want in life?’ ‘What’s that Atticus?’ ‘Just not to feel bad.’ I thought, ‘Yeah, me too! I don’t want to feel bad.’”

“That’s the core of it. Everything just kind of stems from not feeling bad; physically but also spiritually and emotionally.”

While Trent Reznor has hit back at the music industry and its methods in the past, we definitely have to admire to stand up for his beliefs as an artist and a person.

Check out Nine Inch Nails’ ‘The Hand That Feeds’: