Coordinates | 56°51′45″N35°55′27″N |
---|---|
name | Korn |
alt | Four men (one in a jacket, one in a basketball jersey, one in an dress shirt, and one in a t-shirt) in a large room. |
landscape | Yes |
background | group_or_band |
origin | Bakersfield, California, USA |
genre | Nu metal, alternative metal |
years active | 1993–present |
label | Roadrunner, EMI/Virgin, Epic/Immortal |
associated acts | Jonathan Davis and the SFA, Brian "Head" Welch, Fieldy's Dreams, StillWell, Fear and the Nervous System |
website | |
current members | Jonathan DavisJames Shaffer Reginald ArvizuRay Luzier |
past members | Brian WelchDavid Silveria }} |
Korn is an American nu metal band from Bakersfield, California, formed in 1993. The current band line up includes four members: Jonathan Davis, James "Munky" Shaffer, Reginald "Fieldy" Arvizu, and Ray Luzier. The band was formed as an expansion of L.A.P.D.
The band released their first demo album, ''Neidermeyer's Mind'', in 1993. Their debut album, ''Korn'' was released in 1994, where they featured the same musicians that had performed on ''Neidermeyer's Mind''. The band began recording ''Life Is Peachy'' in April 1996, and released it on October 15, 1996. ''Follow the Leader'' is recognized as Korn's mainstream breakthrough, peaking at number one on the ''Billboard'' 200 in 1998, along with the following album, ''Issues'' in 1999. The band released ''Untouchables'' on June 11, 2002, and later released ''Take a Look in the Mirror'' on November 21, 2003. Their first compilation album, ''Greatest Hits Vol. 1'', was released on October 5, 2004. ''See You on the Other Side'' was released on December 6, 2005, and Korn's untitled album was released nearly two years later on July 31, 2007. ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are'', the band's ninth studio album, was released July 13, 2010 via Roadrunner Records.
Korn has sold 16 million albums in the US and over 50 million worldwide. Ten of the band's official releases have peaked in the top ten of the ''Billboard'' 200, eight of which have peaked in the top five. Eight of those releases are certified Platinum or Multi-Platinum by the RIAA, and one is certified Gold. Korn have released six video albums and 36 music videos. They currently have 38 singles, 26 of which have charted. Korn have earned two Grammy Awards out of seven nominations, for "Freak on a Leash" and "Here to Stay".
They have collaborated with musicians such as Dust Brothers, Corey Taylor, Chino Moreno from Deftones, Fred Durst from Limp Bizkit, Ice Cube, Tre Hardson from The Pharcyde, Nas, and Dem Franchise Boyz. Korn have recently collaborated with Skrillex, 12th Planet, Excision, Datsik, Downlink, Kill the Noise, Noisia, and Feed Me for their upcoming tenth studio album.
Korn achieved its name after a fan suggested the name "Corn". At first, the group rejected the idea, but later, with no alternate names, the group selected the name "Corn". Later, Shaffer suggested spelling their name with a "K" instead of a "C", and Shaffer came up with the idea to reverse the "R", so the band's name would appear as "KoЯn". The logo was designed by lead vocalist Jonathan Davis. Silveria explained, "the music makes the name, because Korn's a dumb name. But once we get established, it makes the name cool."
Korn rented a studio from Jeff Creath, called "Underground Chicken Sound," in Huntington Beach, California. While they were recording at Underground Chicken Sound, a crowd had been loitering outside the studio. The band began playing a prelude to a later song, "Clown", resulting in a larger crowd gathering. Arvizu said the crowd gathered because it sounded so "different." Korn started performing at gigs in the summer of 1993, with members saying that touring was a "pain-in-the-ass." While in Huntington Beach, the band was spotted by Epic/Immortal Records A&R; employee Paul Pontius. Pontius would describe Korn's sound as "the new genre of rock." In 1993, Korn released their first demo album, ''Neidermeyer's Mind''. Their album had very limited printing, and was never well received by critics or fans. It was released to record companies and to people who filled out a flyer given out at gigs they played for free with Biohazard and House of Pain.
After Korn finished recording the album, they began touring with House of Pain and Biohazard. Their record company gave them enough money for their own tour bus. Korn's first gig was in Atlanta, Georgia. About half way through the tour, the tour bus that their record company gave them stopped working, and Korn had to find a new one. Their first tour was not very successful in promoting the album. Korn started the Sick of It All Tour in January 1995. Aside from touring, Korn released four singles. "Blind" was released on August 1, 1994, and "Shoots and Ladders" was released on October 31, 1995. The latter received a Grammy nomination in 1997 for Best Metal Performance. "Need To" was also released in 1995, on April 8. The fourth and final single, "Clown", was released on February 2, 1996. "Blind" was the only single to chart, peaking at number fifteen on the Canadian ''RPM'' Alternative 30.
The first single, "No Place to Hide", spawned a Grammy nomination for Best Metal Performance. "A.D.I.D.A.S." was the second single and only music video from the album, which also did well, and earned the band the most airplay until their next album's singles. The third single, "Good God", was released on July 14, 1997. The band gained more popularity after co-headlining the Lollapalooza music festival in 1997 with Tool. However, Korn was forced to stop touring after Shaffer was diagnosed with viral meningitis. A promotional disc was released in 1997 to promote both the band and the ''Life Is Peachy'' Tour featuring Incubus and The Urge and included three live tracks.
Korn launched a political campaign-style tour to promote the release of ''Follow the Leader''. The tour took the group, on a chartered jet, all over North America to help promote ''Follow the Leader''. They talked to fans and answered questions during special "fan conferences", which were organized at every stop along the tour route, and signed autographs. Jim Rose hosted the entire "Kampaign" tour.
The album was considered by band members a complete success, debuting at number one on the ''Billboard'' 200 with 268,000 copies sold, and, among other singles, spawning two of their biggest singles: "Got the Life" and "Freak on a Leash". They both exposed Korn to a wider, mainstream audience, with the music videos being mainstays on MTV's ''Total Request Live''. "Got the Life" was the show's very first "retired" video, with "Freak on a Leash" also reaching retirement several months later.
"Freak on a Leash" won a Grammy for Best Music Video, Short Form, and received a nomination for Best Hard Rock Performance. The video also earned nine MTV Video Music Awards nominations for Video of the Year, Best Rock Video, Breakthrough Video, Best Direction, Best Special Effects, Best Art Direction, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Viewer's Choice. It eventually won two awards, one being for Best Rock Video and the other for Best Editing. "Freak on a Leash" remains one of Korn's biggest singles on ''Billboard'', having reached number six on Alternative Songs and number ten on Mainstream Rock Songs. ''Follow the Leader'' is considered by members of Korn to be the band's most commercially–successful album, being certified five-times Platinum by the RIAA, and having sold almost ten million copies worldwide.
To celebrate the album's release, the band performed the record in its entirety in front of a live audience at New York's historic Apollo Theater and broadcast the concert simultaneously across many radio stations. This performance marked the first performance by a rock band since Buddy Holly in the late 1950s. This special event featured the New York Police Department marching drum and bagpipe band conducted by Richard Gibbs as well as a group of back-up singers to enhance the more melodic choruses Davis used on the album. A snippet of "Falling Away from Me" was featured on RealVideo with a brief interpretive dance by bassist Reginald Arvizu, and also featured on their official website as an MP3 file, although its release was against the advice of its attorneys and corporate establishment. The album was also promoted by the band's highly successful Sick and Twisted Tour.
Earlier that year, Korn had appeared on an episode of South Park, titled "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery", in which the first single from ''Issues'', "Falling Away from Me", was premiered. Korn released two more singles from ''Issues'', "Make Me Bad" and "Somebody Someone", both of which fared well on ''Billboard''. Music videos were filmed for all three singles, with long time friend Fred Durst directing "Falling Away from Me", and Martin Weisz directing a concept video for "Make Me Bad", as well as a performance video for "Somebody Someone", which featured the use of CGI effects. Every video was a staple on ''Total Request Live'', two of which made it to retirement. ''Issues'' is considered by some critics to be less hip hop-influenced and closer to alternative metal than nu metal. It was certified three-times Platinum, following up the success of ''Follow the Leader''.
On June 10, 2002, Korn re-emerged into the media with their fifth album, ''Untouchables''. It debuted at number two on the ''Billboard'' 200 with 434,000 in sales. The band has blamed Internet piracy for the drop in sales, as an unmastered version of the album had leaked three months prior to its official release date. On April 2, 2002, the Shock Jocks, an American radio program, began airing songs from ''Untouchables''. After playing a few songs, the broadcasters retrieved a cease-and-desist letter from Sony Music Entertainment. One broadcaster said "The reason for the premature premiere was to infuriate a rival New York station, which disallows their in-studio guests to appear on 'The Opie and Anthony Show.'" The release of this album was preceded by a show at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York, a day prior to the album's release, broadcast digitally throughout movie theatres in the United States.
The album contained experiments and styles never previously attempted by Korn. ''Allmusic'' related: "The band is far more experimental this time out, delivering Helmet-like ringing guitars that melt and morph into each other, a mix of Metallica-esque blastbeats and tight funk drumming from the constantly improving David Silveria, and memorable riffs that take the shape of dark sound structures and offer more than just a collection of chords." The first two videos from ''Untouchables'', "Here to Stay" and "Thoughtless", were directed by the Hughes Brothers. "Here to Stay" earned Korn a Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance. "Here to Stay" peaked at number four on both the Alternative Songs and Mainstream Rock Songs charts.
Korn released their greatest hits album, ''Greatest Hits Vol. 1'', on October 5, 2004. The album debuted at number four on ''Billboard'', selling more than 129,000 copies. This album assembles choice tracks from six Korn studio albums between 1994 and 2003. The first single was a cover of the song "Word Up!", which was originally composed by the group Cameo. Special editions of the album included a DVD titled ''Korn: Live at CBGB'' featuring seven select songs from their November 24, 2003 show at CBGB.
In early 2005, Brian Welch announced that he would be quitting the band. In front of a crowd of 10,000, in three services at Valley Bible Fellowship in Bakersfield, California, said “I was addicted to methamphetamines and tried everything ... rehab, stuff on the Internet, but nothing helped me kick it. I was trying on my own to quit and couldn’t do it. I wanted to die. No one knew what I was going through. I could not quit. Church was my last shot. I would sit in church high [on drugs]. I would wonder why people would go up to the front after the service. But one day it was for me. I said [to God], ‘Show me how to quit.'" Since, Welch has released two autobiographies, and released one solo album.
The band's first album for Virgin, ''See You on the Other Side'', was released on December 6, 2005, and debuted at number three on the ''Billboard'' 200, scanning close to 221,000 copies. The album managed to stay in the top half of the ''Billboard'' 200 for thirty-four consecutive weeks. The first single from the album, "Twisted Transistor", was accompanied by a music video directed by Dave Meyers in which hip hop artists Xzibit, Lil Jon, Snoop Dogg, and David Banner portray Korn. The single itself peaked at number three on ''Billboard''s Mainstream Rock Songs, Korn's highest entry thus far, and number nine on Alternative Songs. The second single, "Coming Undone", had its performance-based video directed by Little X, who previously helmed hip hop and R&B; videos. ''See You on the Other Side'' was certified Platinum, and by mid-2007 had sold over 1.2 million copies worldwide.
Korn held a press conference at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery on January 13, 2006, announcing the ''See You on the Other Side'' Tour. 10 Years and Mudvayne were selected to open all dates of the trek, which kicked off in their hometown of Bakersfield, on what Mayor Harvey Hall officially declared as "Korn Day", February 24. The resurrection of their Family Values Tour was announced on April 18, 2006, which featured co-headliners Deftones, Stone Sour, Flyleaf, and the Japanese metal group, Dir En Grey on the main stage. Korn and Evanescence co-headlined the 2007 edition, with Atreyu, 2006 alumni Flyleaf, Hellyeah, and Trivium rounding out the main stage.
While promoting ''See You on the Other Side'' in Europe, Jonathan Davis was diagnosed with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, a blood platelet disorder that hospitalized him for the weekend and prevented him from performing at the renowned Download Festival. Despite the illness, the band still performed, with guest singers including Corey Taylor of Slipknot and Stone Sour fame, Skindred's Benji Webbe and Avenged Sevenfold's M. Shadows. This led to Korn canceling the rest of their European bill for 2006, including the Hellfest Summer Open Air. It was originally unknown to the public what his ailment was, but the singer revealed in a letter to fans that he was "dangerously low on blood platelets and at a high risk of death from a hemorrhage if the problem was not treated".
Korn's untitled album was released on July 31, 2007, debuting at number two on ''Billboard'' with 123,000 copies sold in its first week. It concluded Korn's deal with Virgin Records, and features touring keyboardist Zac Baird, giving the tracks a deeper, atmospheric sound. Drumming duties were left up to Terry Bozzio, and Bad Religion's Brooks Wackerman, as David Silveria went on a hiatus. Joey Jordison from Slipknot played drums during Korn's live shows until the permanent addition of Ray Luzier (Army of Anyone, David Lee Roth). This confirmed David's departure. "Evolution" and "Hold On" were released as singles to promote the untitled album. They each charted on ''Billboard''s Mainstream Rock Songs chart at number four and number nine, respectively. A third single, "Kiss", had a limited release in April 2008. Korn covered the song "Kidnap the Sandy Claws" in 2008, which was originally performed by Paul Reubens, Catherine O'Hara, and Danny Elfman. It was released on ''Nightmare Revisited''.
In a YouTube video, bassist Fieldy affirmed that the "Chi Song" project he was putting together (released as "A Song for Chi") which was released recently to raise money for Deftones bassist Chi Cheng who was in a car crash in late 2008, which resulted in him falling into a coma. Fieldy revealed that Slipknot guitarist Jim Root, Clint Lowery of Sevendust, drummer Dave McClain of Machine Head and former Korn guitarist Brian "Head" Welch, would be some of the many musicians playing on the song.
Along with the announcement of the Ballroom Blitz Tour on March 15, 2010, the title for the new album was revealed as ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are''. Later that month, Munky announced that Korn has officially signed to Roadrunner Records. Jonathan Davis related: "We're going to go to Roadrunner. [It is] real exciting for us, too, because they're one of the last record companies to let you do what you want to do and, um, all the great bands around are on that label and everything seems to just work out right and it seems like a good home for us right now." Korn announced the track listing on April 24, 2010, and May 5, 2010, Roadrunner Records released a promotional single titled "Oildale (Leave Me Alone)", for streaming. The single was simultaneously released for radio airplay, peaking at number ten on ''Billboard''s Mainstream Rock Songs and number twenty-nine on Alternative Songs. Korn released the music video for "Oildale (Leave Me Alone)" on May 31, 2010, and on July 1, 2010, Korn played "Oildale (Leave Me Alone)" and premiered a follow-up single, "Let the Guilt Go," on ''Jimmy Kimmel Live!''. The band released ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are'' in the US on July 13, 2010. It debuted at its peak of number two on the ''Billboard'' 200 with 63,000 purchases reported. Korn performed "Let the Guilt Go" on the late-night television talk show ''Lopez Tonight'' on August 24, 2010. The song's music video premiered on September 2, 2010. Korn will be co-headlining the Music as a Weapon V tour with Disturbed during winter 2011. The tour will also feature supporting acts Sevendust and In This Moment. "Pop a Pill" was scheduled to be the third single from ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are'', but plans were scrapped by record label Roadrunner Records due to unsatisfactory results with previous singles.
Jonathan Davis released a 14-second sample on SoundCloud in late March, of a new song entitled "Get Up!", featuring dubstep artist Skrillex. "Get Up!" is slated to appear on an as-yet untitled album featuring other dubstep musicians. Korn premiered the full version of "Get Up!" on April 14 via ''Spin''. Additionally, it is available on Korn.com (Modlife) as a free 192 kbit/s CBR download. Modlife's server crashed because of the traffic, which extended the download's availability through Friday, April 22. Roadrunner Records' official website allowed fans to download the track for free on April 18. The track was also premiered on several radio stations throughout the United States, most notably Sirius Octane, and has received generally positive reviews amongst critics and fans alike. "Get Up!" was made available for download on iTunes, Amazon MP3, and other digital music outlets in the United States and Canada, on May 10, 2011. It was released in the UK five days later. The promotional single has received enough airplay to peak at number ten on ''Billboard'''s Mainstream Rock Songs chart, and number twenty-six on Alternative Songs. 138,000 digital copies of "Get Up!" have been purchased in the United States according to Nielsen SoundScan.
Korn made their first Pointfest appearance on May 15, 2011, at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Maryland Heights, Missouri, and their second Rock on the Range appearance on May 21, 2011, at Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. Korn performed at the Nova Rock Festival 2011 in Austria on June 12, 2011, alongside Volbeat, Cavalera Conspiracy and other bands. They performed overseas at the Download Festival with Linkin Park and System of a Down, and during Japan's Summer Sonic Festival on August 13 with Avril Lavigne, The Mars Volta, Ne-Yo, and the Strokes.
It was announced on June 8, 2011 that Korn will be composing the theme song for ''Silent Hill: Downpour''.
Dubstep artist Datsik announced on July 21, 2011 through Facebook that a collaboration with Korn has been wrapped up.
KoRn's tenth studio album will be named ''The Path to Totality'' with a November 15 release date. While the original release date was October 11, it was pushed back to relieve time for videos, promo shoots, and other promotion.
They are the first band to be labeled as nu metal, starting the New Wave of American Heavy Metal. Alongside this genre, the band has also been labeled as rap metal, thrash rap, and pimp rock. Their debut album mixed metal, rock, hip-hop, groove, and dissonance. Alongside nu metal, the band is often labeled as heavy metal, alternative metal, post grunge, and rap metal. Their lyrics focus on pain and personal alienation rather than traditional heavy metal themes. In ''Nu-metal: The Next Generation of Rock & Punk'', Korn was marked as the third biggest nu metal band in the world.
The band's debut album warranted a Parental Advisory label solely because of the album's lyrics. Many of Korn's first works are based on early experiences. The song "Daddy" was described by lead singer Jonathan Davis "When I was a kid, I was being abused by somebody else and I went to my parents and told them about it, and they thought I was lying and joking around. They never did shit about it. They didn't believe it was happening to their son.... I don't really like to talk about that song. This is as much as I've ever talked about it..." "Kill You" was written in spite of Davis's experiences as a child with his step mother. ''Follow the Leader'' marked the first album where the majority of the lyrics did not have origins relating to early occurrences, with songs like "Justin" and "Pretty" written about incidents occurring during adulthood.
Many of Korn's songs do not include a guitar solo. Bassist Reginald Arvizu plays his instrument using both the techniques of fingerstyle and slapping. Jonathan Davis was said by Doug Small to be "the eye of the storm around which the music of Korn rages." Small described the band as "a basket-case full of contradictions." Although the band virtually had no support by television or by radio broadcasting in its first four years, Korn would go on to influence Adema, Limp Bizkit, Linkin Park, Evanescence, Cold, Staind, Seether, Machine Head, One Minute Silence, Kittie, Endo, Taproot, Crazy Town, Otep, Hoobastank, Slipknot, Suicide Silence, Emmure, Impending Doom, Five Pointe O, Lacuna Coil, Chris Volz, Videodrone, Theory of a Deadman, Thousand Foot Krutch, Avenged Sevenfold, Breaking Benjamin, Disturbed, Bleed the Sky, Papa Roach, Coal Chamber, Three Days Grace, Trapt and other bands. Korn also created a fan-base described by both Doug Small and Eaton Entertainment as extremely loyal.
|- | || "Shoots and Ladders" || Best Metal Performance || |- | || "No Place to Hide" || Best Metal Performance || |- |rowspan="2"| ||rowspan="2"| "Freak on a Leash" || Best Hard Rock Performance || |- | Best Short Form Music Video || |- | || "Here to Stay" || Best Metal Performance || |- | || "Did My Time" || Best Metal Performance || |- | || "Let the Guilt Go" || Best Metal Performance ||
;MTV Asia Awards The MTV Asia Awards is an annual Asian awards ceremony established in 2002 by the MTV television network. Korn has received one award.
|- | 2006 || "Twisted Transistor" || Favorite Video ||
;MTV Europe Music Awards The MTV Europe Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony established in 1994 by MTV Europe. Korn has received one nomination.
|- | 2006 || Korn || Best Alternative Act ||
;MTV Video Music Awards The MTV Video Music Awards were established in 1984 by MTV to celebrate the top music videos of the year. Korn has received two awards from eleven nominations.
|- |rowspan="9"| ||rowspan="9"| "Freak on a Leash" || Best Rock Video || |- | Breakthrough Video || |- | Best Direction || |- | Best Special Effects || |- | Best Art Direction || |- | Best Editing || |- | Best Cinematography || |- | Viewer's Choice || |- | Video of the Year || |- | || "Falling Away from Me" || Best Rock Video || |- | || "Here to Stay" || Best Rock Video ||
;MuchMusic Video Awards The MuchMusic Video Awards is an annual awards ceremony presented by the Canadian music video channel MuchMusic. Korn has received one award from two nominations.
|- | 1999 || "Freak on a Leash" || Best International Video || |- | 2002 || "Here to Stay" || Best International Video (Group) ||
;Kerrang! Awards
|- | 2011 ||Korn || Hall of Fame ||
;Former Brian "Head" Welch – guitars, backing vocals (1993–2005) David Silveria – drums, percussion (1993–2006)
;Touring Wes Geer – guitar (2010–present) Zac Baird – keyboard, piano, backing vocals (2006–present)
Category:Korn Category:Rock music groups from California Category:American nu metal musical groups Category:American alternative metal musical groups Category:Grammy Award winners Category:Musical groups established in 1993 Category:Musical quintets
ar:كورن an:KoЯn be:Korn be-x-old:Korn bar:Korn bs:Korn br:Korn (strollad) bg:Корн ca:Korn cs:Korn da:KoЯn de:Korn (Band) et:Korn es:Korn eu:Korn fa:کورن fr:Korn gl:KoЯn gu:કોર્ન ko:콘 (밴드) hi:कॉर्न hr:Korn id:KoЯn is:Korn (hljómsveit) it:Korn he:קורן (להקה) kn:ಕಾರ್ನ್ ka:კორნი (ამერიკული ჯგუფი) lv:Korn lt:Korn hu:Korn mk:Korn nl:KoRn ja:コーン (バンド) no:Korn (band) uz:KoRn pl:Korn pt:Korn ro:Korn (formație muzicală) ru:Korn sq:Korn simple:Korn sk:Korn (metalová skupina) sl:Korn sr:Korn sh:Korn fi:Korn sv:Korn (musikgrupp) ta:கோர்ன் te:కార్న్ th:คอร์น tr:Korn uk:Korn yi:קארן (טרופע) zh:KornThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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