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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/korn-the-paradigm-shift-2013_4593.jpg]][[caption-width-right:300:From left to right: Reginald "Fieldy" Arvizu, Ray Luzier, Jonathan Davis, James "Munky" Shaffer, and Brian "Head" Welch]]
2[floatboxright:
3Influences:
4+Music/FaithNoMore, Music/RageAgainstTheMachine, Music/AliceInChains, Music/RedHotChiliPeppers, Music/{{Primus}}, Music/MrBungle, Music/{{Ministry}}, Music/{{Sepultura}}, Music/{{Pantera}}, Music/{{Godflesh}}, Music/NineInchNails, Music/{{Deftones}}, Music/JohnZorn, Music/FearFactory, Music/{{Helmet}}, Music/{{NWA}}, Music/{{Bauhaus}}, Music/GetoBoys, Music/CypressHill, Biohazard, Music/SuicidalTendencies, Music/MorbidAngel, Music/JanesAddiction, Music/LivingColour, Music/{{Soundgarden}}
5]
6->''Something takes a part of me,\
7Something lost and never seen.\
8Every time I start to believe,\
9Something's raped and taken from me, from me.\
10Life's gotta always be messing with me. (You wanna see the light?)\
11Can't they chill and let me be free? (So do I.)\
12Can't I take away all this pain? (You wanna see the light?)\
13I try to every night all in vain, in vain.''
14-->-- "Freak on a Leash"
15
16Korn (often stylized as [=KoRn=] or KoЯn) are a metal band who formed in 1993 from Bakersfield, UsefulNotes/{{California}}. While they now experiment with genres like {{electronic music}}, they're known for their distinct form of {{alternative metal}} which blends funk-influenced bass playing, downtuned guitars with little to no soloing, and angsty lyrics, [[TropeMaker pioneering]] and [[GenrePopularizer popularizing]] a sound you may know today as {{nu metal}}.
17
18Along with Music/RageAgainstTheMachine and Music/FaithNoMore, Korn were instrumental in bringing [[FunkMetal funk]]- and [[RapMetal rap]]-inspired metal to the mainstream in the mid-to-late [[TheNineties '90s]]. However, their independent nu metal style would blow up in popularity in the late '90s and [[TurnOfTheMillennium early 2000s]] thanks to bands like Music/LimpBizkit and Music/LinkinPark [[FollowTheLeader borrowing heavily from their style]] and achieving widespread commercial success. (Korn themselves would {{lampshade|Hanging}} this by titling their third album ''Music/FollowTheLeader''.)
19
20Despite (or rather because of) this influence on an entire genre of music, Korn have often rejected the nu metal label not only for the negative stereotypes associated with it (such as its [[StrictlyFormula formulaic]] sound, "[[{{Wangst}} whiny]]" lyrics and [[MisaimedFandom unintentional popularity with the kind of toxically macho young men the songs are meant to demonize]]) but out of a personal preference to simply let their music speak for itself. It's gotten to the point that they don't even like being classified as metal; in their own words, "Korn is Korn."
21
22As for their own presence in mainstream pop culture, though not averse to commercialism, Korn more or less live by their own principles. On the one hand, they were a staple on mid- to late-90s MTV with hits like "Freak on a Leash," "Falling Away From Me" and "Here to Stay" being shown in semi-regular rotation, as well as a reasonably successful ''Unplugged'' special. They've also released a number of remix [=EPs=] and, at the height of {{dubstep}}'s popularity in 2011, recorded an entire [[GenreMashup dubstep metal]] album, ''The Path of Totality''. On the other, they've never chased success and have used their early popularity to maintain a healthy "under the radar" reputation as they continue to tour and record albums (the one attempt at their record label asking them to write a single resulted in [[WriterRevolt the deliberately angry and sarcastic "Y'All Want A Single"]]), and while they reject both labels, they remain a popular act in the heavy metal scene as one of the few truly good nu metal bands.
23----
24!!Lineup:
25[[AC:Current members]]
26* James "Munky" Shaffer - rhythm guitar, backing vocals
27* Reginald "Fieldy" Arizvu - bass
28* Jonathan Davis - lead vocals, [[EverythingsLouderWithBagpipes bagpipes]]
29* Ray Luzier - drums (2007-present)
30* Brian "Head" Welch - lead guitar, backing vocals (1993–2005, rejoined in 2013)
31
32[[AC:Former members]]
33* David Silveria - drums (1993–2006)
34
35!!Discography:
36[[AC:Studio albums]]
37* ''[[Music/KornAlbum Korn]]'' (1994)
38* ''Life is Peachy'' (1996)
39* ''[[Music/FollowtheLeader Follow the Leader]]'' (1998)
40* ''Issues'' (1999)
41* ''Untouchables'' (2002)
42* ''Take a Look in the Mirror'' (2003)
43* ''See You on the Other Side'' (2005)
44* ''[[NoTitle Untitled]]'' (2007)
45* ''Korn III - Remember Who You Are'' (2010)
46* ''[[NewSoundAlbum The Path of Totality]]'' (2011)
47* ''The Paradigm Shift'' (2013)
48* ''The Serenity of Suffering'' (2016)
49* ''The Nothing'' (2019)
50* ''Requiem'' (2022)
51
52[[AC:Live albums]]
53* ''[[LighterAndSofter MTV Unplugged]]'' (2007)
54
55----
56!![[JustForFun/TVTropesWillRuinYourLife ALL DAY I DREAM ABOUT TROPES!]]
57
58[[foldercontrol]]
59
60[[folder:Song tropes]]
61* ActorAllusion: On "Earache My Eye", [[Creator/CheechAndChong Cheech Marin]] sings "gonna tie my pecker to a tree, to a tree" at one point, a reference to another Cheech & Chong character, Red Neck.
62* AlbumTitleDrop:
63** "Trapped Underneath the Stairs", a bonus track for ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are'', does this in the chorus (without the "Korn III").
64** Debatably "Shoots and Ladders", which includes a faintly whispered "Jimmy cracked '''corn'''" somewhere in the bridge.
65* AlternativeMetal
66* AtomicFBomb: In "Y'All Want a Single", which is ''loooooong.''
67* AudienceParticipationSong: "Y'All Want a Single". Before singing it, Jonathan calls out the name of the city they're in, thanks the audience for being fans and coming out to see them, and asks them to hold their middle fingers in the air and shout "Fuck that!" before singing.
68* BigShutUp: "Right Now".
69-->You open your mouth again, I swear I'm gonna break it\
70You open your mouth again, my god, I cannot take it\
71Shut up, shut up, shut up, I'll fuck you up\
72Shut up, shut up, shut up, I'll fuck you up\
73'''''SHUT UP! SHUT UP! SHUT UP, I'LL FUCK YOU UP!'''''\
74'''''SHUT UP! SHUT UP! SHUT UP, I'LL FUCK YOU UP!'''''\
75'''''SHUT UP! SHUT UP! SHUT UP, I'LL FUCK YOU UP!'''''
76* {{Bowdlerise}}:
77** "A.D.I.D.A.S" had two edits, one in which every use of "fucking" is replaced with "humpin'", and another in which it was changed to Jonathan making creepy orgasmic noises.
78** The radio edit of "Y'All Want a Single" replaces every use of "fuck" with "suck," as well as changing "Fuck! That! Shit!" to "Suck! On! It!", ironically turning a profane song that just curses out the listener into an outright ''vulgar'' song where Jonathan repeatedly tells the listener to give him oral sex.
79* CallingTheOldManOut: "Daddy", from the first album, which is about how Jonathan's father didn't believe him when Jonathan told him that his babysitter was molesting him.
80* CountryMatters: In the chorus of "Cameltosis", and the aptly titled "K@#Ø%!(Kunts!)"
81* CoverVersion: [[Music/{{Metallica}} "One"]], [[Music/{{War|Band}} "Low Rider"]], [[Music/IceCube "Wicked"]], [[Creator/CheechAndChong "Earache My Eye"]], [[Music/PinkFloyd "Another Brick]] [[Music/TheWall in the Wall]]", [[Music/{{Radiohead}} "Creep"]], [[Music/{{Cameo}} "Word Up!"]], [[WesternAnimation/TheNightmareBeforeChristmas "Kidnap the Sandy Claws"]], "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," [[Music/PublicEnemy "Fight the Power"]], and [[Music/AliceInChains "Would?"]].
82* ClusterFBomb: In "Y'All Want a Single", the F word appears ''89 times!'' Many other songs, mostly on older albums, do this to lesser degrees, most notably "K@#%!" from ''Life Is Peachy'', which uses pretty much every swear in the book. Swearing has been mostly scaled back since the untitled album, though clusters have still turned up from time to time, such as at the end of "The Darkness Is Revealing" on ''The Nothing''.
83* DeadpanSnarker: Jonathan, of all people, gets his moments on "All in the Family." [[Music/LimpBizkit Fred Durst]] mostly responds to Jon's insults with "Say what, say what?", or "Oh, yeah?", or other phrases that really just exist so Fred can keep time. Jon, however, comments on many of Fred's lines. For instance:
84-->'''Fred:''' Nappy, hairy chest / Look, it's Film/AustinPowers!\
85'''Jon:''' [[SarcasmMode Aw, yeah, baby!]]
86* DeathByMusicVideo: The band is killed in a car accident before the "A.D.I.D.A.S." video starts.
87** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3GA2d-J2_A "Alone I Break"]] the lead singer murders the rest of the band [[DisproportionateRetribution after a disagreement]].
88%%* DrowningMySorrows: "Chi".
89* EverythingsLouderWithBagpipes: Jonathan played bagpipes in high school and transferred his talent to Korn. Now at least [[OncePerEpisode one track per album]] (except in ''Untouchables'', which has no bagpipe parts), there's gonna be bagpipes somewhere in the songs, and somewhere in the live shows.
90* EvilLaugh: There's a few that pop up in "Never Around". And what sounds like one also appears in "Insane", but it's hard to tell.
91* ForcedCreativity: "Y'all Want a Single" was written and recorded in response to their record label asking for a new single for an upcoming album. The resulting single contained 65 uses of the word "fuck" alone, in addition to other expletives, and would require significant edits in order to get radio or television airplay.
92-->"Y'all want a single, say 'Fuck that!' -- Fuck that, fuck that!"
93* FunWithAcronyms: "A.D.I.D.A.S.": All Day I Dream About Sex.
94** "B.B.K.": "Big black [[XtremeKoolLetterz cock]]", though not as in [[BlackIsBiggerInBed the usual sense]] - [[http://www.msopr.com/press-releases/a-cut-by-cut-look-at-korns-follow-the-leader-with-jonathan/ it's Jonathan Davis' nickname for Jack and Coke]].
95* HiddenTrack: “When Will This End” on 'Take A Look In The Mirror' is followed after a few minutes of silence (“When Will This End” lasts until 3:38, and the hidden track starts at 9:52) by a concert recording of the band performing a cover of [[Music/{{Metallica}} “One”]].
96* InTheStyleOf
97* InelegantBlubbering: The sobbing at the end of "Daddy".
98* IntercourseWithYou: "Beat It Upright", which is about S and M. It's so bad that the edited version of the album it's on (''Untouchables'') didn't even include the track.
99** Then there's their album ''See You On the Other Side'', which is practically full of sex songs like "Getting Off", "Inside Out", "10 or a 2-Way", "It's Me Again" and "Last Legal Drug (Le Petit Mort)". The latter song even uses ''a French euphemism for "orgasm" as part of the title!''
100** Along with that, "A.D.I.D.A.S.", which stands for "[[FunWithAcronyms All Day I Dream About Sex]]".
101* IronicNurseryTune: "Shoots and Ladders." Never has "Ring around the Rosie" sounded more disturbing.
102* LastNoteNightmare: The bonus track at the end of their debut, after “Daddy” and a long silence. A grainy recording of unknown origin, which consists of a couple arguing over a Dodge Dart. A bit funny considering how they argue, but the fact that it was a random tape found in a shed is a bit creepy.
103* LongestSongGoesLast:
104** [[NoNameGiven The untitled album]] ends with "I Will Protect You" (5:29).
105** ''The Path of Totality'' ends with "Bleeding Out" (4:49).
106** A special mention to how much the band screws with this trope must be mentioned: several albums feature long songs at the end, but there are {{hidden track}}s containing even more songs embedded within the finishing track, which don't qualify for the trope[[note]]"Daddy" from ''Korn'' lasts 9:32, but there's 4:32 minutes of silence before the hidden track, "Michael and Geri" (3:26); "My Gift to You" from ''Follow the Leader'' lasts 9:12, but the hidden track [[Music/CheechAndChong "Earache My Eye"]] lasts 6:28[[/note]].
107%%* MetalScream: Often a Type 2 metal scream with occasional type 1s.
108* MinisculeRocking: "Twist" clocks in at just 49 seconds.
109* MoodDissonance: The lullaby at the end of "Daddy."
110%%* PrecisionFStrike: Most of their songs.
111* PunctuatedForEmphasis: From "Y'all Want A Single," "FUCK! THAT! SHIT!" (or, in the radio edit, "SUCK! ON! IT!").
112** The end of "Let the Dark Do the Rest" has Jon growl "YOU! MAKE! ME! SICK!"
113* RapeAsDrama: "Daddy," which was unfortunately based on a true story (it's about how Davis was sexually abused by his babysitter but nobody believed him when he called her out on it).
114* RapMetal: Despite pioneering nu-metal, their music rarely features actual rapping outside of [[WolverinePublicity collaborations]] with Music/{{Nas}}, Music/IceCube, [[Music/TheNotoriousBIG Biggie]], [[Music/ATribeCalledQuest Q-Tip]], Music/{{Xzibit}} and [[Music/ThePharcyde Slimkid3]].
115* RearrangeTheSong: The band's first demo tape ''Neidermeyer's Mind'' had the song "Alive" on it. The band reused the music as "Need To" on their first album, and "Alive" remained exclusive to the demo tape for 10 years, inspiring great interest from fans. "Alive" was eventually re-recorded for ''Take a Look in the Mirror'' to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the tape. The re-recording is in a different key and the music has been changed somewhat from the "Need To" arrangement, though the lyrics and chorus remain the same.
116* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: "Good God" is one towards a former friend of Davis.
117-->"It's about a guy I knew in school who I thought was my friend, but who fucked me. He came into my life with nothing, hung out at my house, lived off me, and made me do shit I didn't really wanna do. I was into new romantic music and he was a mod, and he'd tell me if I didn't dress like a mod he wouldn't be my friend anymore. Whenever I had plans to go on a date with a chick he'd sabotage it, because he didn't have a date or nothing. He was a gutless fucking nothing. I haven't talked to him for years."
118* {{Scatting}}: Davis' demented mixture of beatboxing, grunting and babbling. Curiously, there are ''lyrics'' to some of the scatting. The most extreme example, though, has to be "Twist": The ''entirety'' of the song is basically Jonathan scatting and spouting the word "twist" a few times.
119* StudioChatter: The album version of "Clown", on the self-titled album, starts with about a minute of the band goofing around after a couple of false starts, as well as David Silveria complaining that he'd rather be playing "Twist," a song that wouldn't be recorded until the next album.
120* TakeThat: Despite the lyrics being very ambiguous, "[[ClusterFBomb Y'All Want a Single]]" (especially its music video) is a song against the music business.
121
122* TropeMakers and UrExample: Of NuMetal, for better or worse (they side with the latter).
123* TheUnintelligible: Sometimes crosses into this territory.
124* TheUnpronounceable: Jonathan often dives into this whenever he's {{Scatting}}.
125* WellDoneSonGuy: "Dead Bodies Everywhere" is about Jon criticizing his parents for not wanting him to be a musician.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Video tropes]]
129* AnimatedMusicVideo:
130** "Freak on a Leash", directed by Todd [=McFarlane=].
131** "Right Now" recycles some DerangedAnimation taken from the ''Lloyd's Lunchbox'' shorts, which played at the Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Animation Festival.
132** "Everything I've Known", directed by Gregory Ecklund.
133* BrickJoke: "Falling Away from Me" starts where "Freak on a Leash" left off (with a security guard holding a bullet while several animated kids run past him) before the scene changes to live-action.
134* BulletCatch: The aforementioned "Freak on a Leash" video.
135* BulletDodgesYou: Before [[Film/TheMatrix Neo could evade bullets by hacking into the Matrix with his mind]], Jonathan Davis in the video to "Freak on a Leash" could stop, alter the trajectory and ''repel'' a bullet. Mostly by beatboxing and shouting "'''GO!!'''" at it.
136* BulletTime: Most of the "Freak on a Leash" video, as well as the damage the bullet causes.
137* CoverDrop: The "Freak on a Leash" music video starts with the cover of its album, ''Follow the Leader'' (a girl playing hopscotch on a cliff).
138* DeathByMusicVideo:
139** The band is killed in a car accident before the "A.D.I.D.A.S." video starts.
140** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3GA2d-J2_A "Alone I Break"]] the lead singer murders the rest of the band [[DisproportionateRetribution after a disagreement]]
141* HypocriticalHumor: The video for "Y'All Want a Single".
142* LadyLooksLikeADude: The music video for "Falling Away from Me" shows a teenaged girl with BoyishShortHair being beaten by her [[AbusiveParents Abusive Father]] because of who she is. Feeling like a DamselInDistress, she opens the magic box to evoke Korn's help. Just then, a group of kids arrive to help her, and she escapes through the window, never to be beaten by her father again.
143* LouisCypher: The music video for "Thoughtless" has a bullied protagonist who goes by the name of "Frank Louis Cifer" (played by then 22-year-old Creator/AaronPaul).
144* MonsterClown: Their video for "Clown" contains several. And a few {{Creepy Doll}}s.
145* MusicVideoOvershadowing: "Freak on a Leash".
146* SelfDeprecation: The video for "Alone I Break," to the band as a whole; it depicts Jonathan [[spoiler:killing the other members of the band. And then the cameraman, possibly]].
147* TakeThat: In the video for "Y'All Want a Single", some of the captions say that Music/BritneySpears' music video for "Toxic" cost $1,000,000 to make, while their video only costs less ($150,000).
148* VorpalPillow: How Jonathan kills David in the "Alone I Break" video.
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder:Misc. tropes]]
152* AddledAddict: Brian Welch, which led to him leaving the band and converting to Christianity. By the end of his original run, he was a raging alcoholic, borderline methhead, and also had a problem with benzodiazepines, and the road warrior lifestyle was enabling all of it and was going to lead to a spectacular crash if he didn't leave of his own accord.
153* AerithAndBob: Jonathan Davis and both drummers (David Silveria and Ray Luzier) alongside Fieldy, Munky and Head.
154* AvantGardeMetal: If you don't consider them NuMetal...
155* TheBackwardsR: Put to good use in their logo.
156* BandToon:
157** The HalloweenEpisode of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery", a WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo {{Homage}}. They at one point pull a [[ThePowerOfRock Power of Rock]]-esque OneWingedAngel moment. The band also debuted its single "Falling Away from Me" after solving the ScoobyDooHoax. The song's content and heaviness rather surprises the townspeople gathered, as it heavily contrasts the band's sunny disposition throughout the episode.
158** Also, Jon makes an appearance as Succulentus in WesternAnimation/OKKOLetsBeHeroes, where everything he says consists of parodies on lyrics by Korn and similar bands.
159* TheBusCameBack: As of 2013, Head is a full-time member again. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d by an album titled ''The Paradigm Shift'' released that very year.
160* TheCameo: They can be seen on the Music/InExtremo DVD "Live 2002"
161* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: Korn's 2009 tour was called the "Escape from the Studio" tour as a break from recording ''Korn III''. The tour name was ripped off from a previous Music/{{Metallica}} tour.
162* GenreBusting: How they view themselves, which is why they hate being classified in any genre.
163* GenreShift: To {{Dubstep}} on ''The Path of Totality''.
164** Then back to NuMetal on ''The Paradigm Shift'', although a few electro-ish elements stuck around from ''Totality''.
165%%* GreatBallsOfFire
166* IconicItem: Davis' creepy mic stand, designed by Creator/HRGiger.
167* TheInvisibleBand
168* LeadBassist: Fieldy qualifies as a Type A (For his distinct 808-influenced bass tone), and Type D, as his rhythms are at times emphasized more than the guitars are.
169* LongRunnerLineUp: The band was the same for 12 years before Head got religious and left. David Silveria left several years later and was replaced by Ray Luzier. Head returned to the band in 2013, and their lineup has been consistent since.
170* ManOfAThousandVoices: Jonathan Davis has made an art form out of his voice, doing operatic cleans, gravelly baritones, death growls, shrieks, rapping, beatboxing, thrashy grunts, and scatting.
171** Because of this amazing vocal versatility, fans have compared him favorably with the likes of Music/MikePatton, Music/DevinTownsend, [[Music/ScarSymmetry Christian Alvestam]], [[Music/DirEnGrey Tooru "Kyo" Nishimura]], [[Music/CattleDecapitation Travis Ryan]], [[Music/SystemOfADown Serj Tankian]], and [[Music/EnterShikari Roughton Reynolds]], all of which are some of the best examples of this trope from the heavy metal scene.
172* NuMetal: [[TropeMakers The first band]] of the genre. [[DefiedTrope They deny it]], saying "[[ShapedLikeItself Korn is Korn.]]"
173* OddlyNamedSequel2ElectricBoogaloo: {{Averted|Trope}}; the title of their ninth album, ''Korn III: Remember Who You Are.''
174* OutOfGenreExperience: While much of their music from ''Untouchables'' on already had some electronic influences, the entirety of ''The Path of Totality'' was a very distinct GenreMashup of metal and {{dubstep}}. The dubstep influences would carry over into a few songs on their more traditional follow-up, ''The Paradigm Shift'', though they've yet to do another experimental album like this.
175* ProductPlacement: They had an endorsement deal with Puma in the late 90s.
176* PutOnABus: Head, followed by David. The first returned, though.
177* RandomlyReversedLetters: Their logo is "KoЯn", though it's to look childish, not [[TheBackwardsR Russian]].
178* TheRival:
179** Music/BenFolds. Korn mocked him as an opening act as a lame ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' performer. Folds responded with the savage mocking song "Rockin' the Suburbs" (aka "Korn Sucks"), with such lyrics as "I'm rocking the suburbs / I take the checks and face the facts / That some producer with computers / Fixes all my shitty tracks".
180** Music/{{Eels}}. The two bands didn't get along ''at all'' during Lollapalooza 1997.
181%%* TheRockumentary
182* SelfDeprecation: Fieldy jokes occasionally that he's not that good as a regular bassist, and that the band should hire a normal-sounding bassist to mesh with his clicky slap bass style.
183* SoloSideProject: Jonathan released his debut solo album, ''Black Labyrinth'', between the releases of ''The Serenity of Suffering'' and ''The Nothing''.
184* StageNames: Head (after his big head), Munky (given he could [[HandyFeet catch things with his feet]] like a monkey) and Fieldy (his big cheeks led to the nickname "Gopher", then 'Comicstrip/{{Garfield}}', which became the current one, which he claims is short for [[{{Pun}} "Fieldy Snuts"]]).
185* WeUsedToBeFriends:
186** Jonathan and Head were close friends until the latter left in 2004 due to his disillusionment with the band, and ultimately converted to Christianity as he denounced his time in the band. Ultimately, head made amends with Jonathan in 2011, resulting in his return to the band in 2013.
187** David Silveria and the rest of the band. While he wasn't necessarily close friends with them, Silveria left the band in 2006 out of anger from disagreements with the other members, and since then, he has made some critical comments towards them except for Munky, whom he said he has no hard feelings for.
188[[/folder]]

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