Korn
The Path of Totality


0.5

Review

by Deviant. STAFF
November 30th, 2011 | 975 replies


Release Date: 2011 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Korn IV: Forgetting who you are

So... (ahem)

Are you ready??

Perhaps I’m being just a little bit too cynical here, but I’m a little bit flummoxed that this ended up being the album to follow what was so obviously designed as a “return to roots” release as Korn’s third self-titled album. And I can honestly look back on that album and at least acknowledge that Korn were trying to do something extraordinary with that one; and while the end result was nothing more than a muddied and stale affair, at least they seemed to be trying. Where they locked themselves in a room devoid of any studio trickery (read: pro tools) and attempted to kick-start the old engine by producing a stripped-down-to-the-bone rehash of their debut LP, you could tell that they really wanted to be that band again, and not the one now more commonly associated as desperately trying to cling on to their 90’s nu-metal successes. And as if to reinforce that point more than the St. Anger-like production, they even named it Remember Who You Are, as if it was as much of a reminder for us as it was for them. So, if that was Korn remembering who they were, then what is The Path Of Totality if not a response to the failed attempt at a walk down memory lane?

We’re beyond taking cheap shots at the whole American fascination with “brostep” now, but it’s in that fascination that this motley crew of middle-aged alt metallers has potentially found their much needed salvation. Because it’s that slightly disturbing love with this jockstrap-addled brand of dubstep that will ultimately ensure this album’s success, to the point where creating it would have been akin to shooting ducks in a barrel, there’s simply no challenge. And so when you realize that The Path Of Totality is really nothing more than a slam dunk in the gambling stakes, we’re left with the rather obvious question as to why do this in the first place? Sure, Korn have played around with electronic music before (and they’re by no means the first “metal” group to embrace dance culture) but a whole album of new material indebted to a bastard strain of music that bears no resemblance whatsoever to its roots? A localized style of music that traded in garage for garbage?

If it was a question of relevancy, the act, more than the product itself, will surely be the group’s undoing if they had to turn to other stars to ensure their survival a little longer. Had their entire fan base turned on them to the point where seeking a new audience proved to be easier than potentially winning back the formerly devout? But if you ask Jonathan Davis he’ll be quick to inform you of the fact that Korn were, in fact, “dubstep before there was dubstep (!)”. Which begs the question as to why they actually needed to bring in any other artists to work on this album, but that’s a whole different story. And the supporting roster here reads (for the most part) as a who’s who of jockstep luminaries: the poster boy Skrillex was an obvious inclusion, as is Excision, Datsik & Downlink (the Rottun three). But then things get a little interesting: there’s 12th Planet, an artist who decided that after interviewing enough of the genre’s stars that he could pull it off just as well as them (he was wrong); and then there’s Feed Me, who seems to be doing everything in his power to destroy the credibility he built under his Spor moniker. But the biggest surprise is easily Noisia’s inclusion into the fray; a group who have only recently begun exploring the possibilities of dubstep after making critical waves within the world of drum & bass seems a little out of the ordinary given that they don’t need to make a name for themselves, so to see them so willing to jump aboard this sinking ship is more than a touch peculiar.

Now I know I’ve taken the long route to getting to the point here, because in listening to this album I’m unable to truly understand its existence (aside from the assured success this will have amongst the rowdy dubstep folk anyway) because The Path Of Totality is a truly horrible album, built on a foundation of tired and overwrought stereotypes put together not by just a clueless band, but a bunch of equally confused artists who truly have no proper understanding of the genre they claim to be a part of.

It’s an album where each song tries to out-do each other like a terrible pissing contest, and whatever potential writing in the snow this album hoped to achieve, it simply ends up being bogged down by failing to truly explore the concept of experimentation, despite being purported as such. Every song follows the exact same pattern to an absolute tee, to the point where any potential character is meticulously stripped back until all we’re left with is a bunch of lifeless, quasi-industrial hybrid pieces, completely unrecognizable from the next. And you can tell that this album ached to be another gutter-soaked head-banger, but nothing on here smacks with the kind of “brutality” these producers are normally associated with. Again, these aren’t remixes, but two alternating components working side by side, and the end result is an awkward collision that fails to be heavy and yet is still too insistent to be mere background music.

So what we get is an album that ends up being about as revolutionary as a backwards R, where the only true contribution by the guest performers is an un-surprising amount of tedious bass wobbles that really only work as nothing more of a crutch for this “metal” band who have ended up in that most curious of time periods for a musical act, where they’re too young to retire but too old to continue playing the stuff that made them famous in the first place. And all judgmental bias aside regarding the state of affairs that is the dubstep scene in America, The Path Of Totality is an album that doesn’t work because it tries to be something it’s not; no, it fails because of not just its terrible premise but its truly dreadful execution, to the point where you forget that this was put together by experts and start to compare it to the musical output of any idiot with a laptop. But I take solace in the fact that, with a little bit of luck, this might just be the final nail in the coffin for the crucified remains of “brostep”, and that after hearing this people might finally wise up and start to look at the unique history of a genre that is now being brought to its knees, only now by the most unlikeliest of suspects.



Recent reviews by this author
Burial Tunes 2011 to 2019Flying Lotus You're Dead!
Aphex Twin SyroBanks Goddess
Burial Rival DealerDeadmau5 >album title goes here<
user ratings (1444)
2
poor
other reviews of this album
1 of
  • anarchistfish (3)
    The definition of "guilty pleasure", ultimately undermined by lazy songwriting...

    Cheesewireism (2.5)
    Korn has come to a fork in the road, and a difficult decision had to be made. I guess Korn...

    DatsNotDaMetulz (4)
    An early indicator of what to expect in the coming years, although likely to polarise fans...

    pizzamachine (2.5)
    against all odds, Kornstep prevails - sort of....

  • slimdaddy (2.5)
    An unbiased review of Korn's 10th studio album...

    TheMoonchild (1)
    In 1998, Jonathan Davis infamously sang the line, "they never see me fall from Grace&...

    Alex561 (2.5)
    It's more machine now than man....

    smiders (4.5)
    With “The Path Of Totality”, Jonathon Davies has his middle finger up, and for anyone ...

  • Abhishek1411 (4)
    Jonathan Davis is good in trying (successfully) something 'new' every time. And "The Path ...



Comments:Add a Comment 
Deviant.
Staff Reviewer
November 30th 2011


32289 Comments


Ya'll wanna single, say fuck that
fuck that
fuck that

Adash
November 30th 2011


1355 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

Garage for garbage.



Beautifully put, I'm fleeing to take shelter in Empyrean's arms

BigBlob
November 30th 2011


5858 Comments


0.5 rating? This must be Яubbish!

anarchistfish
November 30th 2011


30298 Comments


Cool

Sanders
November 30th 2011


2416 Comments


To be honest, for a 0.5 review, I was expecting something a little more scathing. Still, agree with everything you say. This is fairly unforgivable.

Deviant.
Staff Reviewer
November 30th 2011


32289 Comments


You should have seen the draft of this review then!

anarchistfish
November 30th 2011


30298 Comments


I'm guessing you've been allowed to publish now due to being staff?

swallowtales
November 30th 2011


583 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Good review but I think it sounds not negative enough for a 0.5.

Haven't listened to this album and I don't think I will because it sounds terrible. But I will always like their older stuff because they were a gateway band for me.

TMobotron
November 30th 2011


7253 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

"jockstrap-addled brand of dubstep"



Lmfao I loved this. Good to see this review in place already. I'll probably have to listen to this at some point just so I can tell people who like it what's really up with this.

TMobotron
November 30th 2011


7253 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

"Good review but I think it sounds not negative enough for a 0.5"



I'd imagine some of the reasoning behind rating this a 0.5 should exist clearly outside of the review.

As in, Korn made a fucking dubstep album. If the entire review is negative but really never pins down

exactly why it's a 0.5 as opposed to a 1.5, it should be pretty clear just based on what this album

is... And in that same regard I'm excited to see if a fanboy will come along and give a high review of

this. I'd love to hear that side of it.

Irving
Emeritus
November 30th 2011


7496 Comments


In which Korn decides to fuck around with Deviant's favourite genres (and gets their ass ripped to tatters for it).

anarchistfish
November 30th 2011


30298 Comments


the user rating chart reminds me of gold cobra's

AsoTamaki
November 30th 2011


2524 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I love how all the run-on sentences successfully the convey the image of the out-of-breath hero desperately trying beyond all hope to defend the sanctity of true dubstep.

Sanders
November 30th 2011


2416 Comments


"You should have seen the draft of this review then!"

I imagine it was just:

"FFFFFFFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU"

Over and over again?


swallowtales
November 30th 2011


583 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

@TMobotron



I know, I edited out of that comment a couple of times a line about how awful an idea it is and I

don't mean that this doesn't show it to be worthy of a 0.5. I just meant that I expected it to be a

more immediately negative review. Not sure if that quite gets my meaning across but oh well.

TMobotron
November 30th 2011


7253 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

No I get your point completely. It's just that I started reading this review without the need to be

swayed towards a 0.5. It's a bad enough concept from a bad enough group of artists that I didn't

really need it to be spelled out for me why this should be a 0.5. And most people on this site know

Dev well enough to know why he's giving this album a 0.5, and even if they don't, they should know the

genres and how we got to this point with Skrillex hooking up with Korn for an album well enough to

understand why people would think this sucks. And if they don't, then the album itself shouldn't

relaly be of much concern to them.

DocSportello
November 30th 2011


3364 Comments


shiiiiiit

perfect review

Deviant.
Staff Reviewer
November 30th 2011


32289 Comments


I know, I edited out of that comment a couple of times a line about how awful an idea it is and I
don't mean that this doesn't show it to be worthy of a 0.5. I just meant that I expected it to be a
more immediately negative review. Not sure if that quite gets my meaning across but oh well.


I see what you're saying, but you can give an album the lowest possible rating you can without resorting to childish name calling etc. There's a fine line between ranting and negatively reviewing something. And like I said a few comments back the draft for this was really scathing, to the point where it bordered on the immature. Everyone on this site knows I like dubstep and am generally spiteful against brostep, so it would have been too easy to have just sat back and said "this album is a pile of shit".

Also, a) I'm genuinely surprised that Big Chocolate isn't on this and b) I wonder if the reason why most of the guest artists here appear on multiple tracks is because Korn planned for a 11-12 track album and had a whole bunch of people in mind who subsequently turned them down


Adash
November 30th 2011


1355 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

Heard a rumour Will Bevan would be on here somewhere...

swallowtales
November 30th 2011


583 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

@Dev



Its still a good review it was just different from what I was expecting thats all. I also didn't have

too much to base what I was expecting off so its probably mostly that. And also when I was

writing my first comment your comment about your draft hadn't appeared yet so if I had seen it it

would have been different.







You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy