Korn Untitled
  full reviewuser ratings (326) 
Tracklist:
1. Intro – 1:57
2. Starting Over - 4:02
3. Bitch We Got a Problem - 3:22
4. Evolution – 3:37
5. Hold On - 3:05
6. Kiss - 4:09
7. Do What They Say - 4:17
8. Ever Be - 4:48
9. Love and Luxury - 3:00
10. Innocent Bystander - 3:28
11. Killing - 3:36
12. Hushabye - 3:52
13. I Will Protect You – 5:29

Ranking: #174 for 2007

user rating
2.5
average
Chart.
other reviews
Porter W. Richards (4.5)
The album was actually a radical departure for Korn; it experiments with various elements of industr...
David James Young (4.5)
Band loses 2 members. Band realizes they aren’t getting any younger. Band throws everything at the...
mudvaynegodsmackacdc (4)
Why did Korn suck so much with five members after Issues, start coming back with four members, then ...
R7 (3)
The album is not a masterpiece but it's also not, by any means, terrible. It's just an average album...
Mike Stagno STAFF (2.5)
Korn releases an album that, while not necessarily poor, is about as interesting and creative as its...
Andrew Hartwig STAFF (2)
Untitled hammers yet another nail into Korn's coffin. Bland, trite, uninspired and boring....
Josh Bowers (1)
Korn's newest album is uninspired, trite, and has as much life as AVA's I-Empire or any Moby album. ...

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  On 9 Lists

4.0
excellent
angelfyre USER (15 Reviews)

2007-08-21 | 11 comments | 1,472 views

Summary: It's a Pandora's box of pleasant (rather than evil) surprises. Well worth the money to buy it and multiple listens.

3 of 3 thought this review was well written

Eight may be the lucky number for nu-metal pioneer Korn. Two years after its seventh release and minus two band members, the group burst back into the rock spotlight with its eighth studio album. The record was released July 31 and made its debut at No. 2 on the Billboard charts. The follow-up to 2005’s See You On the Other Side carries no title, but lead singer Jonathan Davis made it clear he doesn’t want everyone labeling it blandly as “Untitled.”

“It’s not called ‘Untitled,’ but that’s what everyone’s calling it. We didn’t want to put a title on the record. We wanted the press and fans to come up with a name,” Davis said in an interview with Real Detroit Weekly.

Korn II, 8, Korn 2007, Untitled, Crap - whatever the listener’s designation, it’s absolutely Korn’s best album in years. It’s like the band took the best parts of each of its previous albums, added a few new dancehall twists, and turned the musical blender on frappe. Perhaps the absence of a title, as with the self-titled debut, is symbolic of a band’s journey come full-circle – one also signified by the end of Korn’s contract with Virgin Records.

Davis told Real Detroit Weekly that the main inspiration for the latest effort came from a near death experience last year.

“When I was in Europe I came down with a blood disorder called ITP, and thinking I was going to die, made me rearrange my priorities in life, and think about what’s really important. It kept going through my head, me dying and my sons not being able to have a dad to grow up with, s*** drove me crazy. I really pooled from that experience to write a lot of the lyrics.”

This can be heard on second track “Starting Over,” a head nod to his battles with the blood disease and alcohol and drug addiction. The song features distortion galore and Davis’ trademark wail and sounds like it could have been taken straight from his contribution to the “Queen of the Damned” soundtrack. Personnel losses resulting from guitarist Brian “Head” Welch’s departure after a “spiritual awakening” and drummer David Silveria’s hiatus to spend time with family have taken the band down to three of its original members: Davis, bassist Reginald “Fieldy” Arvizu and guitarist James “Munky” Shaffer.

It happens to every decade-old band that has multiple albums. Over the span of years and albums, the sound either or stays relatively the same throughout the course of the records (like with Sevendust’s consistent pounding metal aggression from its self-titled debut to most recent release Alpha) or evolves exponentially (as with Incubus’ spastic messy Cali-punk/funk in Fungus Amongus to the settled-down rhythmic alterna-pop of Light Grenades). Korn’s case has obviously been the latter – a case of spectrum-spanning sound change.

Korn fans who have followed the band from the start would probably argue that each consecutive effort gets less noteworthy, with the debut self-titled album and follow-up Life is Peachy being the best from the group. However, you can label the group’s music nu-metal, you can label it rap-rock…whatever genre you stick it with, it’s evident that Davis’ heart and soul went into this project. At this point, the commercialization of band can’t help but leak into the music, but this time around, the end result is…well, delightful, for a change.

Virtually every song on the album has a distinctly different sound. Now, whether this is a bad thing or a good thing is somewhat hard to determine. Some songs speak volumes lyrically and instrumentally (“Do What They Say,” “Hold On” and “Love and Luxury”), while a couple seem to fall through the cracks (“Ever Be” and “Innocent Bystander”). However, the more one listens to it, the more the album grows on the persistent peruser. With each subsequent listen, new and complicated musical layers are revealed.

Korn returns to the experimental electronica roots first heard on Issues and Untouchables, mostly a result of the contributions of keyboardist Zac Baird and Zappa drummer Terry Bozzio. However, the effects are played in less of an overkill than they have been in songs on past records. Arguably, it takes some degree of genius to fuse gloom-and-doom metal overtones with industrial dance beats without losing the credibility of the music. With some help from producer Atticus Ross, best known for working on projects with Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor, the band manages to do just that on this release.

The album’s first single, “Evolution,” is Davis’ wailing rant on the politically- and socially-charged subjects of war and global warming.

"It's about how us as human beings haven't evolved in the thousands of years we've been around," Davis told Billboard.com. "We're no different than monkeys. We're territorial and we fight, and we're destroying our planet. Why haven't we evolved? True human beings wouldn't be destroying each other and blowing s*** up. They'd be compassionate and they'd love one another and there'd be no violence."

The album intro sounds like the haunting opening (or end-credit closing, for that matter) to a carnival-like “abandon hope, all ye who enter here” horror film. Davis lets his humorous side shine through (and he does have one – after all, this is the guy who named two of his children Pirate and Zeppelin), on the ninth track, “Love and Luxury” maniacally laughing amid lyrics “you need a reason to believe, a reason to deceive, a reason for the song you’re singing/when everything you do makes perfect sense to you/so why is your alarm bell ringing?”. “Bitch We Got a Problem” is this album’s sister song to “Y’all Want a Single” from sixth album Take a Look in the Mirror. Despite a misleading, almost thuggish title, “Bitch” is actually an ode to schizophrenia (“Which one, which one of you is into me? Which one, which one of me is into you? We’re all schizophrenic, I fear/say how many voices you hear”). Heavy, slow and melancholy “Kiss” has Davis wondering “why you always push me away” and sounds almost like it could have been influenced by his half brother Mark Chavez’s former band, Adema. Punchy, coordinated guitar riffs and drum beats on “Killing” pause just long enough for Davis to indulge his death metal side with an incoherent, babbling scat interlude set against ominous, heavier-than-heavy guitars. Conversely, the following track and the best song on the album, “Hushabye” tones the tempo and mood down with a melancholy-but-clippy heart-on-sleeve lost love confession. As for the days of lead singer Jon Davis’ famed bagpipe interludes – well, they’re pretty much kilt-covered history. Well, almost - last song “I Will Protect You” features a minimal subdued electronic bagpipe intro.

This is a band whose originality has sparked either outright love or blind hatred in the minds and ears of reviewers and music lovers everywhere, and the mixed reviews for this latest album substantiate nothing less. Entertainment Weekly praised this album as being the band’s best release since 1999’s Issues, while a reviewer for Rolling Stone asserted that Korn sounds “wounded and diminished” and that this album “sounds like the final aria - the death scene.” However, Korn’s new effort sounds more like a blissful awakening to me – one marked by a band’s triumphant attempt to slip into its comfort zone without worrying what everyone else thinks

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Comments:Add a Comment 
Meatplow


Comments: 2425
08.21.07


Good review, it makes me understand what you currently see in Korn.

Unfortunately i don't like this album much or the band much. There's something purely adolescent about their sound i don't like, I find them difficult to take serious even when they are trying to express some kind of sincere emotion.

Shattered_Future


Comments: 1502
08.21.07


Very well written. I don't like this album at all, but this is a great review.

Brain Dead


Comments: 1151
08.21.07


This was a truly excellent review.

kalkal50


Comments: 2380
08.21.07


woah awesome review, it sounds like you plagiarized though

Digging: Radiohead - OK Computer

robin2220


Comments: 569
08.21.07


Plagiarizim is bad. Good review if you didn't though.

I don't think I'll ever be into Korn again though.

angelfyre


Comments: 24
08.21.07

Album Rating: 4

No plagiarizing. I did take the quotes from Davis from other sources, but other than that, the review is all my words. It ran in my school paper (cut down a lot for shortage of space).

angelfyre


Comments: 24
08.21.07

Album Rating: 4

I'll take the thoughts that I did as a compliment, though. :-)

tribestros


Comments: 918
08.21.07


Wonderful review.

Untitled really is a good album, btw.

dudeinthepassinglane


Comments: 192
09.07.07


Excellent review, very well-written; although I do find it hard to believe that Korn has released a good album. Untouchables was okay, but I hated the last two. My fave was Issues though, so I'm not only interested the first two albums. If Davis stuck to concept albums (like Issues) I think Korn could've been more solid in the years since that album.

So is it true? A new excellent Korn album? I'll check it out, good job.

dudeinthepassinglane


Comments: 192
09.07.07


Thought the user rating distribution chart for this albm was interesting too. Who can tell?

songwriter67


Comments: 48
04.15.08

Album Rating: 1.5

Thank you for noticing "Ever Be" as one of the faults of the album!



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