( cd cover of UNTOUCHABLES)
Musical revolutions can foment in the oddest places:
Athens, Georgia. Aberdeen, Washington. Bakersfield, California.
That's right, Bakersfield; a bleak, arid little town
just west of Death Valley that could double as a David Lynch movie set-if there were anything going on, that is. As a kid
Fieldy Arvizu spent much of his adolescence "standing around in dirt fields, drinking beer, watching other kids fight." At
some point, Fieldy and some friends decided their time would be better spent taking out their frustrations on musical instruments
instead.
And rock music would never be the same.
So Fieldy, James "Munky" Shaffer, David Silveria, Brian "Head"
Welch, and eventually, an assistant coroner with a troubled past named Jonathan Davis left Bakersfield for Los Angeles and
collectively became known as KORN. It helped that they all had common influences--the angry, urban stylings of hip-hop, the
heavy, riff-driven angst of death metal. But the sounds emanating from this band's Huntington Beach rehearsal space would
soon set an entirely fresh musical precedent--and set off a wave of imitators that eventually threatened to engulf the band
itself.
After touring for nearly two years, KORN was signed by Immortal and released their now-classic eponymous 1994
debut. KORN opened with the prophetic, gravel-throated challenge "Are you ready?!" before kicking into the heaviest guitar
sound yet heard in rock thanks to the team of Shaffer and Welch, who tuned their already-low 7-string guitars even lower and
played with no regard for traditional harmonic consonance. The sound was metallic sludge, but tempered oddly by bassist Fieldy
and drummer Silveria, who added a mix of porn-soundtrack funk and hip-hop rhythms that was puzzlingly aggressive and chill.
Next, nursery-rhyme-like melodies were woven into the dark mix, helping make KORN the creepiest, heaviest debut since Black
Sabbath. But Davis had no desire to sing about devils and witches; he was busy exorcising real-life demons. Songs such as
"Faget" and "Shoots and Ladders" were discomfortingly personal confessionals of shattered childhood, and by album's end Davis
was literally in tears in the harrowing "Daddy."
"Are you ready?!" Well, commercial radio sure wasn't. And neither
was MTV. Not yet, anyway.
So KORN took their grisly show on the road someplace they knew it'd get noticed: back to
the tour circuit, and a stint on Ozzfest. The band's unique sound may have been unfamiliar, but the kids knew it rocked mightily-and
many of them could directly relate to Davis' grim lyrical obsessions. At that point in time, there was quite simply no band
on earth like KORN.
And so they began to amass a following that would send their next album, 1996's brutal yet cheekily
titled Life is Peachy, into platinum sales. And this time at least the press was ready. "...Perverts, psychopaths and paranoiacs"
gushed the Chicago Tribune. "An ingeniously twisted piece of personal hell" raved Cleveland's Plain Dealer.
And while
Peachy served more to reinforce the band's core sound rather than innovate in the manner of the debut, it did introduce to
the world to a side of the band no one ever suspected existed: humor. The bagpipe-driven cover version of War's "Lowrider"
was just one example. An A-Z dictionary of vulgarity called "K@#%!" was another-though some critics and self-appointed moral
guardians were put off by the language. One Zeeland, Michigan high school administrator told the press that KORN was "indecent,
vulgar, and obscene" shortly after suspending a student for wearing a T-shirt that merely said "KORN." After the band filed
a cease-and-desist order against the school on behalf of the student, he was reinstated. But the episode marks yet another
milestone for the band: it was the first of many times the band would go to bat for its fans.
Years of touring followed
again as the band fortified its fan-base to the degree that their next album, 1998's Follow the Leader, would debut at No.
1 on Billboard's Top 200. The band charted two bona fide singles with "Got the Life" and "Freak on a Leash," while the album's
actual "rap-metal" tracks ("Children of the KORN" with guest rapper Ice Cube, and "All in the Family" with guest abuser Fred
Durst) were some of the band's hardest-hitting to date, and reaffirmed their status as the band by which others would be judged
in this genre.
Others seemed to agree. Rolling Stone christened Follow the Leader one of the best alternative albums
of the '90s, praising KORN's ability to channel "their disgust with the state of the nation--and the generation doomed to
inherit it--into booming, articulate violence."
Booming, articulate violence aside, Follow the Leader exposed yet another
side of KORN.
When a 14-year-old boy suffering from terminal intestinal cancer requested to meet the band for a few
minutes through the Make-A-Wish foundation, the band was stunned. And nervous. But they hit it off, and the few minutes turned
into a day, and that turned into a few more days, and then a song-"Justin."
Reaffirming KORN's populist roots were
their weekly live Internet video broadcasts from the studio during the album's making. These "after school specials" kept
fans up on the progress of the record, offered them live, call-in Q&A sessions with the band themselves, and introduced
them to guests running the gamut from members of 311, the Deftones, and Limp Bizkit to porn stars like Ron Jeremy and Randi
Rage.
In yet another populist move, the band launched "KORN Kampaign '98," a political campaign-style American tour
to promote their album that featured "fan conferences" in major cities throughout the country. KORN also put together a heavy-rock-and-rap
arena circus, mockingly called the Family Values Tour, which featured everyone from Ice Cube to Limp Bizkit to Rammstein,
and proved to be one of 1998's most successful tours. A live compilation CD, The Family Values Tour '98, was certified gold
the following summer, when KORN performed an explosive set at Woodstock '99.
Meanwhile, KORN's record label Elementree
was up and running just fine as its first signed act, Orgy, scored a platinum record for them with Candyass.
By now,
almost every heavy band on the planet was playing down-tuned 7-string guitars (which were virtually extinct before KORN).
The proliferation of sound-alike bands ironically placed the band in a tenuous position: Not only was KORN in danger of seeming
"played out" in the very genre they spearheaded, the beginnings of a backlash to "rap-metal" chart domination were cropping
up in the media. KORN knew that another Peachy or Leader, however great, however welcome by fans, and however commercially
successful, would not do. It was time to reinvent themselves and break from the pack-a risky move given the band's traditionally
loyal following. KORN took some time off to work on what would be one of the most important records of their career.
"We
knew when we wrote this album that we were going to have to do something really great," Shaffer said at the time. "...We had
to move forward, push the boundaries, and create something very personal."
In yet another nod to their audience, KORN
allowed the fans to design the cover. Fans submitted their work, and one fan painting was chosen for the record's striking
cover art. Several runners-up got limited-edition album covers of their own work.
Musically, Issues turned out to be
the best album since the group's debut release, and eclipsed even that record in strength of songwriting. When Issues was
finally released, all the band's efforts paid off wildly. For the second time in their career, they debuted at No. 1. They
had yet another high-charting single with the eerie, crushing "Falling Away From Me." And the record went quadruple platinum.
This was followed by yet another massively successful tour, which kicked off on Halloween 1999 at Harlem's historic Apollo
Theater.
If Issues represented an artistic, critical, and commercial triumph at a crucial moment for the band, how
would KORN respond to the inevitable pressure of its follow-up?
By making a better one: Untouchables. Using a 24-BIT
sampling rate--twice the highest rate normally used for recording--KORN and producer Michael Beinhorn have created a rich
sonic panorama. Unfathomably heavy, uncompromisingly introspective, and startlingly unique, Untouchables catapults KORN to
yet another level.
But what should we expect? After all, this is a band marked by an insatiable desire to push the
rock envelope. It's what makes them KORN.
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