Yes. Still. Always. Would you like a track-by-track breakdown, a deeper dive on the recording sessions, or an analysis of its influence on modern metal?
Today, listening to Follow the Leader is a time capsule. The CD hidden in a backpack. The lyric sheet full of curse words blacked out with Sharpie. The feeling of hitting “play” on a stolen walkman and realizing — for the first time — that your pain was not a weakness. It was a rhythm. korn follow the leader
Two years earlier, the five Bakersfield misfits — Jonathan Davis (vocals), James “Munky” Shaffer (guitar), Brian “Head” Welch (guitar), Reginald “Fieldy” Arvizu (bass), and David Silveria (drums) — had released Life Is Peachy , a raw, claustrophobic follow-up to their game-changing 1994 debut. But they were still outsiders. Metal was still dominated by Pantera’s groove-metal swagger, the fading grunge of Stone Temple Pilots, and the rap-rock novelty of Limp Bizkit (whose frontman, Fred Durst, was about to become their unlikely hype man). Would you like a track-by-track breakdown, a deeper
was something else entirely. A haunting bass intro. Davis’s whispered verse. Then the explosive chorus: “Something takes a part of me.” The middle eight broke all rules — Davis scat-singing nonsense syllables, then a guitar break that sounded like a helicopter crash. The animated video (by Todd McFarlane, creator of Spawn ) featured a silver bullet ripping through walls, a metaphor for frustration, abuse, and release. It won a Grammy (Best Short Form Music Video) and became the band’s signature song. The Bite: Why It Mattered Follow the Leader debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, selling over 268,000 copies in its first week — unheard of for a band who once played to 50 people in a Bakersfield VFW hall. It went on to sell 5 million copies in the U.S. alone. The lyric sheet full of curse words blacked out with Sharpie
The sessions were chaotic — pranks, late-night parties, and one infamous incident where a naked, paint-covered Davis chased a producer through the halls. But out of the mess came . Every staccato riff, every Davis scat-scream (“twist! twist!”), every Fieldy “clank” was intentional. The Singles That Broke the Mold Follow the Leader spawned two seismic singles.
Korn’s third album, Follow the Leader , wasn’t just a record. It was a coronation.