You think this is good, wait till you get a load of one of the most underrated bands of all time… Sevendust. The harmonies and guitar chords will take you on an exquisite ride of awesomeness. Also… Puscifer (Maynard James Keenan) song, Agostina, is one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard! The lyrics alone are worth a listen even if you don’t review it.
@@AlfaRiy12 you cannot honestly say that grunge was anything like what Jonathan Davis brought. They were both mind blowing in their own right, but Korn definitely brought something new to the table, hence them pioneering the term, 'nu-metal'
Yes, I agree. It's because she realizes what most people don't, and that's the fact that metal vocals aren't just screaming into the mic like people assume. It's very technical. So much vocal chord control and diaphragm control and air flow control. Just normally screaming can damage your vocals for the rest of your entire life.
Musicians appreciate anything that is done well, and it’s super cool for a musician to find new genres never heard before. She’s digging being in a room she’s never been in.
Not sure life would have been the same back then without this band. Mind you I'm not the biggest fab of their newer stuff, but until the day there has never been a band quite as unique as Korn
Split the three voices into three tracks overlay them onto the eloquim track you will be able to understand it. You spoke it before you came to this classroom
Jonathan Davis. The only man to combine screaming/distortion with jazz-scatting in the bridge of a metal song while wearing a kilt 😂 I absolutely love the innovation and how unafraid they were to just experiment and create such expressive music
That's what the 90's were about. Baby boomers didn't take us seriously, so we could be left to try stuff they didn't in their youth. The evolution of metal in the 90's was incredible.
@Alpha Momentum Yes it was awesome. My best and favorite heavy rock, metal and other forms of hybrid music were the collabs between the rap artists and the Heavy metal artists. They normally did those for movie soundtracks: Judgement Night, Spawn, the Matrix, End of Days. There might be some other good ones I missed.
That part when Davis starts growling gets the most amazing reaction out of her. You can see her trying to understand what's happening and then she just starts giggling in joy and gets really excited about it. It's phenomenal.
it's moments like that where i get to reexpereince listening to the song for the first time and it brings me such great joy on this long series of metal discovery
This isn't a vocal analysis. This is actual video footage of someone falling in love with Jonathan Davis's voice in real time. The facial expressions, slowed blinking... so cool, cause so relatable!
I think the thing that really drew so many of us to Korn and more specifically Jonathan Davis is that he really encompassed a sound that embodied the angst and pent up rage that a lot of us experienced in the the height of our teenage years and watching some of the things unfold that we did in the time. It really just has this tension into release feeling that hits SO strongly.
I grew up in a situation that normalized traumatic events until I finally got out at 19. Korn gave me an escape as a child will always be close to my heart.
@@ryanhighberg4662lol, i agree with these guys but then you coming in saying don’t underestimate the kilt puts in perspective how silly our teenage angst really was.
For real. Looking back, we were so enormously fortunate to be able to experience this all in real time. I wonder if people who were young in the 60's, 70's, 80's would say the same thing about their time? I guess they would, there is so much awesome music in those decades, too, although I prefer the 90's and early 2000's. However, I wonder even more if people that are young now are also going to say this in a decade or two, because current music....well....
Falling Away From Me is a must if you go on to explore KoRn more. And while it is true that Jon is far from what many would consider a classically “perfect” singer, his voice and his use of it is just absolutely generational. His beatbox/scat is so goddamn cool. And the band as a whole is just something else. The way they can create such catchy melodies and choruses in such a distorted sound is astounding (great example is Make Me Bad, which is stuck in my head to this day).
Agree 100%!! His voice spectrum is out of this world! I remember showing a friend "Do what they say", "Hushabye" and "Killing". He didn't believe me that its the same guy singing. And yeah "untitled" was my first KoRn album and I was hyped to no end back then. Boy, I'd kill to hear it for the first time again. I Didn't even understand english back then.
His technical singing improved so much over the years though. Certainly Issues going into Untouchable his voice got a lot more refined and there’s a of good singing there on in.
Boy oh boy are in for a ride on this one. Korn was revolutionary at the time. In such that they were the next iteration of metal, hard rock, and industrial music. Late 90's rap/rock was huge. And Korn helped pave the way for many others.
I dunno, man. Watch the video for "Soul Craft" by Bad Brains (released 1990_ You'l see where half of Korn's schtick came from, and they won't seem that revolutionary. Hell, you could even go back to "I Against I" (1986) at around 1:40 and hear it a bit.
@@Fish-nt5wb the difference is pretty much everyone's heard of KoRn. Besides that they didn't really get their "schtick" from anyone as JD started his vocal journey in school and just started singing the way he liked.
Look how far we’ve regressed, music today has no feeling imo. Korn, Alice In Chains, Deftones etc…. It was so powerful and full of angst and melodramatic. It was a great decade for music before the woke political B.S. started creeping in. I want to hear real life, struggle happiness fear not regurgitated cr*p
Something I like about how Davis sings, and maybe this is me looking a bit too into it, but with the stuffiness/nasality, distortion, and breathy noises, he sings like someone who was crying recently, and I think that works really well for the kind of angsty music Korn makes.
TLDR Jon Davis was getting the fuck abused out of him, as a child and in the booth for this album. wiki sample below January 1998, Korn returned to the studio to record Follow the Leader. Even though Korn was impressed by the work Ross Robinson had done on their previous albums, they decided to work with producer Steve Thompson and engineer Toby Wright. Robinson did, however, work with singer Jonathan Davis as a vocal coach for the album. According to Wright, Robinson went to extreme lengths to agitate Davis in the vocal booth, including punching him in the back repeatedly.
I loved it when after hearing the first chorus she said, 'His voice has some nice surprises in it." I thought to myself, 'You haven't heard anything yet!"
She called Voice D the distorted tube vibrato voice, which is just a voice going through either an generic FX plugin on PC they mixed on or they recorded it through an guitar vah+vibrato pedal effect of sorts, which was a common thing back in a day. So that voice from breakdown is more like VE or VF, VG ... by this point. Covers lots of ranges and is being weird on purpose at this point. Also that barking she called in that breakdown beatboxing was also human in origin, it was a moan like they ripped off Michael Jackson XD paa bam AH AH ta di dam ... the AH AH high pitch parts if this makes sense XD Reminds me how Fred Durst also often parodied Michael Jackson and if this is some sort of numetal fad that I am not aware of ... They all one way or another parody or strait up mention MJ for some reason in a weird way. To the point it's hard to figure out if they are mocking the man or doing it out of respect ...
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy their petal set-up wasn't aboard it was a semicircle. Hed and Monkeys, and fealdy on 5 string bass ...D is not for distortion it really should be D is for DROPPED D!
That 'grating' aspect that you immediately picked up on is exactly what all us edgy teens were responding to back in the 90s. It sounded 'wrong', somehow, and that gave it such power to a kid who didn't feel like they belonged. Great reaction.
I always felt the way he didn't and doesn't always hit the "right" or "perfect" notes represents the deep emotions attached to every word or sound he makes. When you're very angry/sad/upset or reliving trauma - most people don't have complete control of how their voice sounds even when just talking. This is how he makes you feel the lyrics, his voice and the way he sings, talks, "scats"and breathes is telling you how he feels just as much if not more than the lyrics themselves.
So fascinating to see an actual opera singer be this intrigued, respectful and analytical towards some truly bizarre singing that could be construed as both the exact opposite of opera, but also similar in spirit. Love to see this crossover
Fun fact about Korn: Both guitarists played identical 7 string (rare at the time) guitars, both with identical strings, pedals, amps and settings and both tuned down (rare at the time). This allowed them to double up on parts while synchronizing with the 6 string bass which was also tuned down (both the strings size and tuning being rare at the time). Thus making them sound incredibly heavy only to split off to create a wonderful sense of space and creativity. First time I heard Korn…mind…BLOWN. ❤
Am I the only one who loves to hear her analysis of the song and singers but also hate the constant stopping of the song, because it's an awesome song lol
I recently discovered this channel and I get where you're coming from. I wouldn't say I hate it (yet) but the constant stopping is a bit much at times. I'd like to see her try and give a song a complete listen and then go through bit by bit afterward.
korn’s sound is so unique and special that they were able to dethrone the boy bands who ruled mtv’s TRL. their video for “got the life” actually had to be retired from the show because nothing could knock it out of first place. it held the spot daily for over 2 months. not bad for a show geared towards teen pop fans 🤘🏻
Its not because it's "special", it was just the antithesis of the fad that was beforehand and as such became the new fad. It happens time, time, and time again, and will continue to happen until the end of time. Fads die and are replaced by accessible new fads that are in the ballpark of the opposite.
I’ve always felt Jonathan’s voice and Korn’s whole sound just oozes pain like even the instruments are feeling the pain in the lyrics everything feels like a release of emotion to me
Because it was pain… Korns first 3 albums were all of that pain manifested into a catapult of unique music/art and shaped my personal favorite form of metal!
@TheEtherealPancake must have auto corrected but I fixed it since you're sensitive about it. I've literally seen the band 15 times and met all of them in person. Some of the most humble musicians I've ever met
He is an amazing singer. I saw him live in Detroit and he was dealing with Covid. He had to sit in a throne most of the show but he was spot on for the whole show!
Love, love JD & KoRn. I'm ashamed to admit that I wasn't truIy a fan until I saw them Iive in 2014 at Mayhem Fest. They co-headlined with A7X and I Iove Avenged, but KoRn bIew them away. I have been a huge fan ever since. JD had such an awfuI childhood, I truIy think he exorcizes his demons on stage. He aIso has bad asthma, he keeps an oxygen tank and mask behind a speaker on stage that he uses between songs if needed. I can never get enough live KoRn. They are one of the best Iive bands I've ever seen. And my friends, I've seen hundreds of bands Iive. When he starts with the bagpipes, its just an experience. Any KoRn fan has to see them live. My neighbor AshIey Ioves Untouchables, I had tickets a few years ago to see them with my son, but he couldn't get Ieave time from the Army. I had told her I WOULD drag her along to a KoRn concert some day so I asked did she want to go and she said yes. Turns out it was the 20th anniversary of Untouchables, she loved it !! Chevelle opened and they were good too. A few days later she was messaging me about other shows coming up, she couldnt wait to go again 😂
@@metalmamasue3680 100% the best band I've ever seen live. I was lucky to see them in 98' with White Zombie. They were so dang good. Or when they showed up Metallica in 99-00. Amazing talent and live presence that cannot be replicated.
@vikingconquest77 used to have something called EdgeFest that turned into Xfest here. Shaped my me growing up. 2003 line up was... 3 Doors Down Cold Eve 6 Mudvayne Powerman 5000 Seether Shinedown Sloth Smile Empty Soul Three Days Grace V Shape Mind
I knew she was going to lose her mind at the beatboxing. 😍 They were pioneers, so far ahead of their time. Musical catharsis. A mood. A feeling. Forever deserving of the accolades.
Spiritedthought I would suggest Mr Bungle… “Travolta” aka “Quote Unquote” if you want to talk about pioneers of Nu Metal. The songs Wikipedia has an excerpt about the meaning of the lyrics in context.
if you look in history of beatboxin then you will find that first beatboxing was used in tribal music centuries ago, something that we call "old school" beatboxing was in 70'
Fun Fact: The the video and album art was done by Todd McFarlane and the team that did the Spawn Animated series on HBO back in the 90's. Also there is a duet of this song with him and Amy Lee and its remixed a little and so good.
Jonathan Davis is well-known for his use of breath (actual breathing) in his music (somewhat like Corey Taylor, though Davis uses this throughout his songs, rather than just during bridges or to gain a sense of build-up). He also cries a lot onstage and even leaves that in on his records. He's one of the most unique vocalists in metal. You can't mistake him for another person.
I always thought he transitioned from fearful, to desperate, to anger, then to a sort of evil satisfaction in the end. He really always reminded me of an actor with his voice. Like how he conveys emotion
When she stops it at 20:39 just as he is about to release, I nearly cried. LOL. It's like your parents just turned off the music at the best part. Love her analyses. This was awesome.
Korn songs have such a flow and build to them it's frustrating to have them analyzed the way she does. I almost feel like she should listen to the whole song, then go back and analyze the pieces.
The CGI in this music video was quite advanced for it's time and was widely accalimed when it came out, the bullet flying around everyones head and from scene to scene. Very unique and original. It won Best Editing and Best Rock Video at the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards, and later received the Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video in 2000.
I highly recommend you listen to their track Twist, an entire song comprised of Jonathan's vocal gymnastics. There's even a vocals-only version if you really want to pick it apart.
Twist is by far the first thing I thought of you checking out when I started watching this channel. From what I understand it used to be his warm up. All I suggest is that you listen to the actual vocal track* hidden track at the end of the Life is Peachy Cds. Chi is another great example, and the cover they do of Kidnap the Sandy Claws.
Ha. Welcome to the fold. I discovered her when she broke down a Jinjer video, which unfolded from a colab with a friend's band. Since then, she's been going deeper and deeper into metal... I just noticed her #spoiledbymetal shirt. It's awesome to see her fall in love with metal, and others fall in love with metal alongside her...
Puuurfect, except something makes me want to go WROAHR at her, get my nails n then my teeth on her neck using a quick lunge... not sure why🤣 yes she's a decent feline😋
The Joy on your face as you discover something new has made me a new subscriber I love your vocal analysis. I think the expression you're trying to come up with concerning the vocals is it has a lived in quality much like the entire video has the same lived in quality. Great songs like this one allows the listener to be totally immersed in the song from it's very beginnings
We all knew the BOOM beatboxing part was coming and knew she’d be super surprised by it haha. And yes, this is one of my favorite songs to karaoke because all of it is really challenging and fun to sing and mimic!
I think the most interesting thing about KoRn’s music is how the band, despite not knowing music theory, and all independently writing their own parts, make their own unique “harmony” that has resonated with a huge audience.
I'm pretty sure Jonathan knows music theory. His dad even had a music shop or studio or whatever. Don't know about the others though but there's always a guitar playing some kind of harmony.
I think it was David Silveira, their OG drummer, that knew some music theory iirc tho. He sure had some great interesting grooves for the band to build upon
She finally hit the nail on the head. I don't think there will be too many rock and metal fans that are overly worried about being pitch perfect. It's about the lyrics, and how the music makes you feel, not just the vocalist, but the entire band.
100% I don't know who needs to read this but Soul Glo are fucking huge in terms of a band inovating many ideas like rap / trap / thrash / deathcore / numetal today
Korn is definitely one of those bands that is an acquired taste. When I first listened to them, I didn't like them at all, but as I went thru their discography, I started to get into the vocals and instrumentals.
Perhaps this is my i dont like metal with great poppy poppy singers with good mainstream voices. Like the whole point of metal was to have a place for people who dont fit in with the mainstream to do their own thing and express themselves and connect with others.
16:50 the reaction I was most curious about. You did not disappoint. KoRn resonated so well because we were the generation that got dealt a shit hand that we had to deal with. The masses could relate to the pain, anger, hate , the feeling of never being enough, and the aggression that he has in his music. Nothing like getting it all out in the pit. KoRn got me through so much...
I listen to metal because it allows me a release internally so I don't take things out externally. As someone once said and I will now butcher because I don't remember the exact quote "Nobody who listens to metal has everything going right in their lives."
@@chuckhoyle1211 Truth. Quite funny: in my childhood, my older brother told me that science had proven that people who listen to metal have a lower than average iq. Many years later I found out that it's actually the opposite. (Bruce Dickinson as an example?) But yeah, metal often is a fantastic way to cope with your emotions. For me it was a life-saver and step by step by step it guided me to spirituality (with gothic metal) which settled my most extreme emotions over time.
@@MarcelNL When I was in college getting my Chemical Engineering degree, most of the guys in my major that were from the USA listened to metal. Honestly, I don't think the type of music you listen to has a strong correlation to intelligence. I know plenty of smart and dumb people that listen to all types of music. The smartest person I know listens to Weird Al Yankovic almost exclusively.
The release is intentional as well because it plays back into the idea of a leash. A leash is sometimes slack, sometimes taut, and sometimes choking, just like the vocals and instrumentals in the song. I love when the music reinforces the themes and lyrics of a song. That's just great composition.
‘Twisted Transistor’ is a great experience when you break down Jonathan’s vocals. The instrumental side of Korn really enhances the “wEiRd” they give off. Such a perfect choice of tones from every member.
Whoa whoa whoa if you're going to do Twisted Transistor then you also have to do the acoustic version cuz holy shit does that hit at a different level to that song it always gives me chills when I listen to the acoustic version
Witnessing a visceral reaction to the genius that is JD/Korn from someone who doesn't have a metal/rock background validates the rest of us who love it. 🤘🖤
Mid to late 90's was great for metal, and a slight evolution. Korn, Deftones, Linkin Park, Slipknot, Mudvayne, Ill Nino, SoaD, Static X, Coal Chamber, P.O.D., Adema, Mushroomhead, Sepulutura, Nonpoint. Plus many more. I still listen to many of these bands and records from years ago.
Some cool new styles came out but the loss of killer solos sucked as a lot of NU METAL skimped in that regard. I was a 1980's metal teenager so the 1990's NU METAL was not my main thing. Luckily solos have since come back in full force since the 2000's 👍
If you enjoyed the skat beat box thing, J.D. does , you should listen to the song "Twist" by Korn. Also, he does this in their live concerts, he can transition seamlessly between the skat growl and his singing voice. Very cool.
Yes! I was shocked when he started doing it in concert cuz I thought it was added in or something. No, he just does that. It's so cool to see and hear live.
What's fascinating is seeing your excitement with different elements of the video and song. After 25 years of listening to and watching this, you kind of just develop your own experience to it. Somehow, watching you break it down just made it new again. It gave me chills.
Amazingly refreshing to watch someone who's been hidden from metal, take the time to listen and realise the artistry and "hidden" talent of metal artists👌 plus, i love the way you are totally engrosed and appreciative of the vocal range and differential extremes compared to mainstream artists. 🤘
So I learned he actually doesn't sing on the soundtrack he wrote most of the songs and that album was his baby. There was a problem with his record label Sonys contract that didnt allow his vocals on the record.5 additional tracks were written and sung by him but they didnt make the original release of the record. It did make the bonus material with the movie. When he toured for his solo album a few years ago was the first time he actually got to preform the queen of the damned soundtrack live. He said it on stage that it took 10 years to be able to come back to it and finally perform it live. I couldnt believe my ears. I never thought i would get a chance to hear that live. So special. Man Johnathans voice gets better with age too. Fine Wine
Wow! Korn really gave us songs with a whole minute or more of scatting. Don't think I realized how daring and incredible that musical choice was for them. It's such a gift to watch someone experience Korn for the first time. Especially someone who can articulate their brilliance so well.
@@MsAllthenamesaretakeman, my dad had me listening to korn, slipknot, and system of a down when I was a toddler. I’m so glad too, I love the nostalgia that comes with my favorite bands now.
Probably one of the most unique bands to ever exist. People can say what they want but they were a massive part of my childhood and really spoke about darkness and life struggles that many of us live through. It wasnt forced "look at me I'm cool" but rather "I'm damaged and calling out the b.s."
@@KarklinPumpkin Dident even knew there was such a thing as censord album. Always thought the censored versions was made only for public use. Luckily here in Denmark we dont censor, guess it must have been great when you were old enough to buy the normal versions your self 😊
I can't decide what's better, your excitement or everyone else reliving their first time through yours! Killer song loaded with memories! Tension/suspension!
I just discovered your channel recently and find your journey from classical and opera to metal so fascinating. Even though you've done quite a few metal songs I was still surprised to see Korn come up. If you were a late 90s kid into heavy music, Korn was THE band. Even if I find their music hasn't aged well, they always hold a special place in my heart because of that.
What people don’t realize what was really popular at the time was an over saturation of boy bands and you had the rise of pop stars like Britney Spears. So yeah alternative music had all this great music fighting back the bubble gum pop noise. Perhaps that’s what fueled those bands to be even more aggressive. Also I think hip hop was also at its peak.
John's beatbox/scatting is really weird and awesome but is best showcased on Twist where he just rips into it. Still blows me away how good this band sounds all these years later, Fieldy's bass is something else!
I've never seen anyone just feel the music to its core like her. it is great to know there are people like this that appreciate the music for all it is. HUGE fan. I can't stop watching!
There are a lot of us that listen to music like this, especially professional musicians, or those with trained ears. Being able to break down music in our minds as we actively listen to it. It. Is. Amazing.
It's why I watch her!! I'm autistic and music is my special interest and none of my friends get excited the way I do when I listen to music, especially metal. I get so fuzzy and start stimming and giggling because I *feel* the music. Watching her, it looks like she's experiencing the music similarly to me
@@ioxzys678I agree, but I think OP meant the excitement she gets from it all as well! Other reaction channels that are like vocal coaches and vocalists, they don't get so visibly excited as she does!
I understand you both completely. I show my friends who are also metal fans certain songs and try to explain how I feel and they just don't get it. My emotions literally take over and I have no control but I don't care. It's better than any other thing in the world.
Love your videos! Watching you dissect music is like listening to an astrophysicist explain the inner workings of the universe. It helps me understand WHY I love the music that I love and gives me a whole new perspective on it.
Wasn’t only him Chester from linkin park did a little bit of it same as Wayne static from static x and I think the singer from disturbed all the songs are on Spotify from the movie
It's so cool that someone else can appreciate it... Because us that grew up with it... Can't just ask people to listen to it. And expect them to like it... NO ONE likes it. Unless they experienced it first hand. So it's more than cool to see someone from a little before that era, appreciate it
Yeah it's a weird one! There's a lot of music I love but if i objectively look at it, had I discovered it now i'd dislike it. I'm not an angsty teenager anymore, so new angsty music doesn't vibe with me, but it's like the old songs from my childhood bring me back to that place, you keep a link with how you felt when you first started listening to the songs, so can still relate to them. That and I have a 14 year old brother who's super into K-pop...which has made me dislike music in general lately
Yeah when I started getting into Nu Metal I like deeply disliked Korn scatting and that's part of what kept me away from Korn for a while, and idk what changed over time but now I love it and although I dislike most of freak on a leash, I've listened to that Korn scatting breakdown on repeat dozens of times
actually i'm fifteen and just started listening to nu metal about a year ago with only deftones and a bit of other iconic nu metal songs from other bands. (not many tho, cause i didnt use to listen nu metal on a daily basis). But as soon as i listened to Korn's issues, I completely fell in love with their music and Jonathan's voice. probably most people my age would think im weird if they ever see me listening to this but idc, i just think it is really something amazing and well put together.
It takes a lot of talent to have that degree of control over his voice. He sounds so out of control and he has complete mastery over it the whole time.
It"s not talent, it's practice. Lots and lots of practice and hard work. Tens of thousands of hours of practice and experimentation and injuring yourself and finding where you can and can't put your voice.
The year was 1999, I was 8 years old. My mom and stepdad took me to my first concert, it was the Family Values tour with KoRn and Limp Bizkit. Good times.
Sometimes worth watching for how excited she gets and the expressions. Someone said in a previous video she has the facial expressions of a Disney princess.
It does not take much to see why the community as a whole loves our resident music coach. Her joi-de-vivre is not to be missed. Her embracing of what she hears and the patrons knowing her well enough to give her something that will make an impact is wonderful to experience. All this and being a wife and new mother as well to the newest member of the shoal, is impressive. And appreciated! Thank you @The Charasmatic Voice , @Kirby S who mods and of course @Kirk McCune for being so awesome a husband, father, guide and mod here as well. You all make this community feel like a home. Much gratitude and keep rocking! ✌🤘😎🐙🦑🐙🦑
I just want to thank for you for being open to more than, as you put it, traditionally "good" singing and your willingness to see the intent behind vocal choices/presentations. Much love, A Metal and Punk Fan
It's pretty much impossible to say Davis is a bad singer here anyways. He's just operating under a nonstandard definition of "good singing" and he does an extremely good job at it.
There are singers who are great for their bands, but they could probably not doing anywhere else, and that's Jonathan. I adore Korn, have seen them several times. Someone said in another chat that Maynard was the greatest rock singer ever and I said he's a great singer for what he does, there's better singers, but sometimes only one person can interpret a bands songs and sounds. I do love the 90s, it was a good time in life and music for me.
Jonathan is one of those massively iconic nu metal voices (along with Serj Tankian or Maynard) that can you can pick out from anywhere and that people are constantly trying to replicate. And his scatting sections are legendary (Twist is amazing for that). My favourite songs that really showcase his vocals are Falling Away From Me and Coming Undone. You also can’t go anywhere as a Korn fan without being asked if you’ve seen them play Blind at Woodstock, so absolutely try get on that.
Korn embodies such a particular moment in time, mid late 90's, they were exactly where they were supposed to be. it brings back so many memories, lost friends, endless summers, everything was posible even if everything was already lost. thanks
He does these wild switches in concert. His accuracy and control is WILD. It's not synthesized or added in, which is what I thought at first. Listening to it does feel like playing hopscotch. Jumping from change to change. It's so cool.
It's so amazing watching someone get so excited listening to a song you know by heart for the last 2 decades, seeing her eyes light up brings me back to my 1st time
Absolutely... It's sad she didn't know of the band earlier and that she's pulling it apart instead of understanding the band and the music and the lyrical message throughout not just this song, but most of his creations... I feel like she's missing the heart and soul of the song with what she's doing
"He doesn't want us to care about the pitch at times" - the best comment on Jonatan's singing I have ever heard, and I've heard a lot of them, being a huge fan since '92. Well done, spot on!👍
Jon and the rest of Korn changed my life forever when I was a teen. The music inspired me to be different, to be myself, and not worry about being perfect. So I really love that you said being pitch prefect isn't always the best way to determine a perfect voice. I would definitely recommend Shoots and Ladders, All in the Family, falling away from me, twisted transistor and Alone I break .
Jonathon Davis' voice always sounds pained in every word to me, especially in the earlier stuff which is why I like it more. He was the perfect voice of an angry/frustrated generation - we need more of this today. His solo stuff is super cool and different too :-)
I was nervous at first that she was just going to trash on it the whole time, but seeing her expressions and genuine excitement made me happy. I was especially excited to see her react to the beatboxing bit
I used to work for capitol records with a Geffen contract so I’ve talked to Jonathan Davis as well as the producer in this album. They recorded the breakdown vocals in 4 bar sections with no overlapping and a very small touch of reverb for filling. No distortion
Shoots and Ladders is definitely a great one to delve into next. It really highlights what he can do with his voice to provoke emotion using the simplest of lyrics. I'm so glad you finally had the chance to explore Korn. Knowing how the song builds and watching your journey through it bit by bit gave me the feeling of experiencing it new all over again. Jonathan is the founder and reigning champ of scat/box humming in my opinion and I'm happy his music is still reaching new audiences to this day, 20+ years later, thanks to you and your peers making content like this!
The anticipation of you getting to the scatting part had me just crawling out of my skin... and I was not disappointed! I rewound that part like 10 times!
You've just tapped into the sound of an entire generation of angsty teens. Cheers. This song, and KoRn's entire catalog, really, was the soundtrack of the rebellion of growing up for so many of us.
Jonathan Davis is amazing at conveying emotion when singing. Probably not a song you’d like to react to on camera due to the song’s content, but “Daddy” is a song unrivalled in pain & emotion.
Exactly, and I feel like in all of his songs he conveys emotion in a way that nobody else really can because not many people have the balls to scat the way he does in Freak on A Leash haha
It was many, many years before he was able to perform that song live because of the events that inspired the song. It was VERY personal and he could not physically perform it live. In the recording at the end when he breaks down that was a real reaction/expression. His release of emotion was intense for sure.
When you talk about Jonathan Davis' ability to flip the switch between the different voices, it's far more of a treat to bear witness to him do this live on stage. It's an experience like no other, and it's addicting. You can't see Korn live just once.
We just released merchandise! Check out the full line-up here: thecharismaticmerch.com
Just placed my order
Shit she talks to much
Korn are masters of discordant sound!
I was there… Korn was phenomenal when they came out fr❤️💯🤟🏽
You think this is good, wait till you get a load of one of the most underrated bands of all time… Sevendust. The harmonies and guitar chords will take you on an exquisite ride of awesomeness. Also… Puscifer (Maynard James Keenan) song, Agostina, is one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard! The lyrics alone are worth a listen even if you don’t review it.
Now imagine being a teenager in the 90s and seeing and hearing this for the first time. It blew our freak'n minds!
This was one of those reviews where I kept thinking "just wait til you hear the next part" over and over again. A vocal onion, if you will lol
If you already heard grunge? Nope.
@@AlfaRiy12 you cannot honestly say that grunge was anything like what Jonathan Davis brought. They were both mind blowing in their own right, but Korn definitely brought something new to the table, hence them pioneering the term, 'nu-metal'
@@nxcess9046 Yep. Nu-metal is a Grunge with drum-machine and without talent.
My mind still hasnt recovered hahahaha
The "go" and the ascending riff is still amazing 20 years later.
A certified neck breaker to this day 🤙
gave me goosebumps instantly
I'll never forget the anticipation of Follow the Leader
best part of that song and will always make my kids jump in the car when it hits
always forever
Seeing her progressively
become more of a metalhead over time is honestly awesomene
Yes, I agree. It's because she realizes what most people don't, and that's the fact that metal vocals aren't just screaming into the mic like people assume. It's very technical. So much vocal chord control and diaphragm control and air flow control. Just normally screaming can damage your vocals for the rest of your entire life.
Did ya notice the writing on her shirt
Musicians appreciate anything that is done well, and it’s super cool for a musician to find new genres never heard before. She’s digging being in a room she’s never been in.
@@MetalMikeML even screaming into a mic is more complicated than they know!
Dude, she have a Lilith statue from Diablo. She is a certified metalhead.
I smiled from ear to ear when Jon did his thing that we all have known and loved him for and her reaction to it, lol.
It blows my mind people hearing this for the first time. Korn literally shaped my youth. I still get goosebumps listening to them 20 years later
Not sure life would have been the same back then without this band. Mind you I'm not the biggest fab of their newer stuff, but until the day there has never been a band quite as unique as Korn
I feel that. I got this album for my 13th birthday. I can’t imagine going through high school without this music.
What do you mean shaped your youth? In what way?
Wdym. There's a lot of people who never listen or heard of them. Same can be said with any band or artist
it is my first time too xd. Im more of a psychodelic rock , 70s , 80s heavy metal kind of guy
We were all waiting for her to hit THAT moment. I know you were too! Korn is brilliant. ❤🔥
GO! DUUUUM DUM DUM DUM DUUUM! 😎🤟
Boom-da-da-mmm-dum-na-ee-ma
Da-boom-da-da-mmm-dum-na-ee-ma
I haven't gotten there yet but I am eagerly anticipating seeing her mind blown in real time!
😂😂😂I would have paid money for that moment!
@@angelabardoe3752dont give youtube ideas lol
I'm 11 minutes into this video with my breath baited just dying to see her reaction to John Davis scatting
same here. I was just waiting for that section
Same, I was so ready 😂🤌 and to see and hear it live is amazing.
Same lol I always love people's reaction to hearing this for the first time 😂🙂
same
Jonathan Davis can do anything
I love your facial expressions when you lock in on something intresting. I am anticpating the moment when JD starts his scatting.
Split the three voices into three tracks overlay them onto the eloquim track you will be able to understand it. You spoke it before you came to this classroom
Jonathan Davis. The only man to combine screaming/distortion with jazz-scatting in the bridge of a metal song while wearing a kilt 😂 I absolutely love the innovation and how unafraid they were to just experiment and create such expressive music
@Tim Siemssen Yeah that too!
That's what the 90's were about. Baby boomers didn't take us seriously, so we could be left to try stuff they didn't in their youth. The evolution of metal in the 90's was incredible.
Adema isn't too bad either.. you can tell it runs in the family
@Alpha Momentum Yes it was awesome. My best and favorite heavy rock, metal and other forms of hybrid music were the collabs between the rap artists and the Heavy metal artists. They normally did those for movie soundtracks: Judgement Night, Spawn, the Matrix, End of Days. There might be some other good ones I missed.
@Alpha Momentum They had two. Both were good. Real Thing, and I love you Marie Jane if I remember correctly. The fusion metal rap were the days.
That part when Davis starts growling gets the most amazing reaction out of her. You can see her trying to understand what's happening and then she just starts giggling in joy and gets really excited about it. It's phenomenal.
That's what I was waiting for 😂
it's moments like that where i get to reexpereince listening to the song for the first time and it brings me such great joy on this long series of metal discovery
Yes 😂 that the was the best part
I was trying to patiently wait for that part to see her expression.
Dude that part took us all by surprise 16 years ago , imagine this poor girl in this dayz lmao
This isn't a vocal analysis. This is actual video footage of someone falling in love with Jonathan Davis's voice in real time. The facial expressions, slowed blinking... so cool, cause so relatable!
Have you seen her tti..tshirts ?!
Dude is truly a goat vocalist
He makes her giggle like a little girl at 17:04
@@MrJedimedic yep....yep...but don't she make it cute enough to cut.
That's the secret of react channels, 99% of people watch to have someone else squeal at the thing they squealed at the first time.
I think the thing that really drew so many of us to Korn and more specifically Jonathan Davis is that he really encompassed a sound that embodied the angst and pent up rage that a lot of us experienced in the the height of our teenage years and watching some of the things unfold that we did in the time. It really just has this tension into release feeling that hits SO strongly.
I grew up in a situation that normalized traumatic events until I finally got out at 19. Korn gave me an escape as a child will always be close to my heart.
Don't underestimate the power of the kilt
@@ryanhighberg4662lol, i agree with these guys but then you coming in saying don’t underestimate the kilt puts in perspective how silly our teenage angst really was.
Music like this releasing weekly in the 90's was just the norm. We kinda took it for granted how good it was.
I would sit there and record video after video on my vcr because everyone was my favorite.
I mean I liked a lot of almost all of it at the time.
But not all survive revisiting.
Best music ever
For real. Looking back, we were so enormously fortunate to be able to experience this all in real time. I wonder if people who were young in the 60's, 70's, 80's would say the same thing about their time? I guess they would, there is so much awesome music in those decades, too, although I prefer the 90's and early 2000's. However, I wonder even more if people that are young now are also going to say this in a decade or two, because current music....well....
@@BinaryBlueBull Mainstream rock is all but dead. Hiphop put a fork in it. But yeah, modern music now is very forgetable.
16:51 I waited nearly 17 minutes to see Elizabeth's reaction to Johnathan Davis' scatting and it's glorious
his WHAT?!
i know. me too)))
@@TheHaggard82jazz term for the random vocalization section she said sounded like beatboxing
@@TheHaggard82😂 that's what it's called "scat" or "scatting" and yes we know what scat also refers to
@@FizzledDreams11 😂😂😂
The 'Go!' drop. One of the most dynamic moments in rock history.
Literally gives me goosebumps every time
The drop in Faget is also incredible…
Fucking legendary
yeah Im not sure if it its the first, but it's the first time I ever heard a drop A in contemporary music.
Yeah I don’t even love Korn and I got hyped, lol
Growing up in a turbulent home, this song absolutely gave me the release of emotions I needed. This song is still one of my absolute favorites!
haha turbulent. such a nice word for times i enjoy not remembering
Falling Away From Me is a must if you go on to explore KoRn more. And while it is true that Jon is far from what many would consider a classically “perfect” singer, his voice and his use of it is just absolutely generational. His beatbox/scat is so goddamn cool. And the band as a whole is just something else. The way they can create such catchy melodies and choruses in such a distorted sound is astounding (great example is Make Me Bad, which is stuck in my head to this day).
Agree 100%!! His voice spectrum is out of this world! I remember showing a friend "Do what they say", "Hushabye" and "Killing". He didn't believe me that its the same guy singing. And yeah "untitled" was my first KoRn album and I was hyped to no end back then. Boy, I'd kill to hear it for the first time again. I Didn't even understand english back then.
He'a a vocalist. I don't think he's ever tried to be a 'singer' - imagine someone trying to properly sing on this 🤣
His technical singing improved so much over the years though. Certainly Issues going into Untouchable his voice got a lot more refined and there’s a of good singing there on in.
PLUS, Falling away from Me is Part 2 to Freak on a Lease, so that would be a prefect next song for her.
Absolutely
Boy oh boy are in for a ride on this one. Korn was revolutionary at the time. In such that they were the next iteration of metal, hard rock, and industrial music. Late 90's rap/rock was huge. And Korn helped pave the way for many others.
I dunno, man. Watch the video for "Soul Craft" by Bad Brains (released 1990_ You'l see where half of Korn's schtick came from, and they won't seem that revolutionary. Hell, you could even go back to "I Against I" (1986) at around 1:40 and hear it a bit.
@@Fish-nt5wb the difference is pretty much everyone's heard of KoRn. Besides that they didn't really get their "schtick" from anyone as JD started his vocal journey in school and just started singing the way he liked.
And I learned about Skrillex and dubstep from them
we work in the dark to serve to light
She put a really positive spin on how bad she says he can't hold a note or stay in tune. Even her criticism sounds like praise
The 90's sure was one hell of a time to be alive
Halla 🙌🏾
Look how far we’ve regressed, music today has no feeling imo. Korn, Alice In Chains, Deftones etc…. It was so powerful and full of angst and melodramatic. It was a great decade for music before the woke political B.S. started creeping in. I want to hear real life, struggle happiness fear not regurgitated cr*p
@@scuba1788 couldn't say it better myself! And I think this kind of applies to every aspect of today's World!
I always thought it was the last great era in music..Maybe the last great era in American culture
Agreed! The 90s were the shit!
Something I like about how Davis sings, and maybe this is me looking a bit too into it, but with the stuffiness/nasality, distortion, and breathy noises, he sings like someone who was crying recently, and I think that works really well for the kind of angsty music Korn makes.
Yes!!!! It’s all emotion which is why we feel it all so deeply.
I LOVE music that feels desperate or frustrated its so good
TLDR Jon Davis was getting the fuck abused out of him, as a child and in the booth for this album. wiki sample below
January 1998, Korn returned to the studio to record Follow the Leader. Even though Korn was impressed by the work Ross Robinson had done on their previous albums, they decided to work with producer Steve Thompson and engineer Toby Wright. Robinson did, however, work with singer Jonathan Davis as a vocal coach for the album. According to Wright, Robinson went to extreme lengths to agitate Davis in the vocal booth, including punching him in the back repeatedly.
I loved it when after hearing the first chorus she said, 'His voice has some nice surprises in it." I thought to myself, 'You haven't heard anything yet!"
I thought the same thing.
soooo doooo I ....
I was just smiling at that. 'You're going to want a seatbelt here in about a minute'
I like when she says "It's kind of Jazzy" lol I was like just wait for the Scat part
@@aphex101M Ik,r?? I was thinking that she's only on 'voice no 3' and we've not reached the scat yet!
She’s so impressed with voices A, B and C halfway through the song and I’m just like, wait until she hears voice D after the breakdown lol
She called Voice D the distorted tube vibrato voice, which is just a voice going through either an generic FX plugin on PC they mixed on or they recorded it through an guitar vah+vibrato pedal effect of sorts, which was a common thing back in a day.
So that voice from breakdown is more like VE or VF, VG ... by this point. Covers lots of ranges and is being weird on purpose at this point.
Also that barking she called in that breakdown beatboxing was also human in origin, it was a moan like they ripped off Michael Jackson XD
paa bam AH AH ta di dam ... the AH AH high pitch parts if this makes sense XD
Reminds me how Fred Durst also often parodied Michael Jackson and if this is some sort of numetal fad that I am not aware of ... They all one way or another parody or strait up mention MJ for some reason in a weird way. To the point it's hard to figure out if they are mocking the man or doing it out of respect ...
Ditto
Just wait until she listens to twist
OMG 😂 YES THE WHOLE VIDEO IM LIKE OH!!! THIS YOUNG ASS GIRL DONT EVEN KNOW WHATS COMING. Neither did we 😮 Now I feel old.
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy their petal set-up wasn't aboard it was a semicircle. Hed and Monkeys, and fealdy on 5 string bass ...D is not for distortion it really should be D is for DROPPED D!
That 'grating' aspect that you immediately picked up on is exactly what all us edgy teens were responding to back in the 90s. It sounded 'wrong', somehow, and that gave it such power to a kid who didn't feel like they belonged. Great reaction.
It’s also the completely unique bass sound that we gravitated to. These dudes were one of a kind back then. Love it.
I always felt the way he didn't and doesn't always hit the "right" or "perfect" notes represents the deep emotions attached to every word or sound he makes.
When you're very angry/sad/upset or reliving trauma - most people don't have complete control of how their voice sounds even when just talking.
This is how he makes you feel the lyrics, his voice and the way he sings, talks, "scats"and breathes is telling you how he feels just as much if not more than the lyrics themselves.
I was the "perfect" girl. I loved Korn bc I knew how twisted I was inside from expectations and they made "wrong" AWESOME!!! If that makes sense. 😂🤘
its honestly my voice when im trying not to cry lolol
@@PhoenixRising-hf5xhsame… I look like I listen to country but I’m a metalhead through and through. Korn was my gateway.
the first base drop, is so amazing. still hits everytime
So fascinating to see an actual opera singer be this intrigued, respectful and analytical towards some truly bizarre singing that could be construed as both the exact opposite of opera, but also similar in spirit. Love to see this crossover
I mean she reached the point where she gets mindblown and giddy about deathcore also good friends with Will Ramos, so nothing surprises me anymore
It is said that real musicians can appreciate all types of music. Therefore, I will ever remain a hack guitarist, mediocre at best.
I don't think anyone can resist that scat section bro. It just too unique. Even less if you're a singer.
💚
True artists find inspiration and commonality everywhere.
Fun fact about Korn:
Both guitarists played identical 7 string (rare at the time) guitars, both with identical strings, pedals, amps and settings and both tuned down (rare at the time).
This allowed them to double up on parts while synchronizing with the 6 string bass which was also tuned down (both the strings size and tuning being rare at the time). Thus making them sound incredibly heavy only to split off to create a wonderful sense of space and creativity.
First time I heard Korn…mind…BLOWN. ❤
Thank you for this knowledge! That is brilliant! They played tuned to themselves and not individually tuned. That's a whole perspective shift!
You sir are the reason youtube is awesome.
@@jukeofearl hey! Thanks! 💜
El bajo tenia 8 cuerdas
This explains a lot. We used to tune down in our metal band and I wasn't sure why
The way she breaks down and analyses every sound of the song just makes you appreciate it even more
That's the point
Am I the only one who loves to hear her analysis of the song and singers but also hate the constant stopping of the song, because it's an awesome song lol
I recently discovered this channel and I get where you're coming from. I wouldn't say I hate it (yet) but the constant stopping is a bit much at times. I'd like to see her try and give a song a complete listen and then go through bit by bit afterward.
Okay but same... I just go listen to the sings in full afterwards
She’s annoying
Omfg, right.
@@gavin2126 I like to imagine the "GO!" at the end of the drop, is him shouting at her to PLAY THE FUCKING VIDEO!!
korn’s sound is so unique and special that they were able to dethrone the boy bands who ruled mtv’s TRL. their video for “got the life” actually had to be retired from the show because nothing could knock it out of first place. it held the spot daily for over 2 months. not bad for a show geared towards teen pop fans 🤘🏻
Didn't know this. Very not surprised, as it should be. Lol.
Its not because it's "special", it was just the antithesis of the fad that was beforehand and as such became the new fad.
It happens time, time, and time again, and will continue to happen until the end of time. Fads die and are replaced by accessible new fads that are in the ballpark of the opposite.
well, yes and no, the boy and thing was just getting huge right around the same time and it remained huge through the earlier days of Nu Metal
Damn, I forgot about that. Yeah, that video was ever present back in the day.
The good ole days of coming home from
9th grade to watch Korn kick butt on TRL.
I’ve always felt Jonathan’s voice and Korn’s whole sound just oozes pain like even the instruments are feeling the pain in the lyrics everything feels like a release of emotion to me
Probably because he was a seriously damaged individual and the drug addiction doesn't help. But it made for an interesting artform
Because it was pain… Korns first 3 albums were all of that pain manifested into a catapult of unique music/art and shaped my personal favorite form of metal!
It *is* an expression of pain.
I dont care what anyone says. Jon is one of the best metal singers ever. His vocal control and range is amazing.
Jon* You're not a fan...
@TheEtherealPancake must have auto corrected but I fixed it since you're sensitive about it. I've literally seen the band 15 times and met all of them in person. Some of the most humble musicians I've ever met
Not to mention unique, I've never heard anyone who sound like him
@@TheEtherealPancakeKeep flying the rainbow coloured flag MATE 🏳️🌈
He is an amazing singer. I saw him live in Detroit and he was dealing with Covid. He had to sit in a throne most of the show but he was spot on for the whole show!
Her doing a half hour on a 3 min song just shows the talent of Davis
He's so underrated. It took me years to figure out how to do that part at the end.
Love, love JD & KoRn. I'm ashamed to admit that I wasn't truIy a fan until I saw them Iive in 2014 at Mayhem Fest.
They co-headlined with A7X and I Iove Avenged, but KoRn bIew them away.
I have been a huge fan ever since.
JD had such an awfuI childhood, I truIy think he exorcizes his demons on stage. He aIso has bad asthma, he keeps an oxygen tank and mask behind a speaker on stage that he uses between songs if needed.
I can never get enough live KoRn. They are one of the best Iive bands I've ever seen. And my friends, I've seen hundreds of bands Iive.
When he starts with the bagpipes, its just an experience. Any KoRn fan has to see them live.
My neighbor AshIey Ioves Untouchables, I had tickets a few years ago to see them with my son, but he couldn't get Ieave time from the Army. I had told her I WOULD drag her along to a KoRn concert some day so I asked did she want to go and she said yes.
Turns out it was the 20th anniversary of Untouchables, she loved it !! Chevelle opened and they were good too.
A few days later she was messaging me about other shows coming up, she couldnt wait to go again 😂
@@metalmamasue3680 100% the best band I've ever seen live. I was lucky to see them in 98' with White Zombie. They were so dang good. Or when they showed up Metallica in 99-00. Amazing talent and live presence that cannot be replicated.
@vikingconquest77 used to have something called EdgeFest that turned into Xfest here. Shaped my me growing up. 2003 line up was...
3 Doors Down
Cold
Eve 6
Mudvayne
Powerman 5000
Seether
Shinedown
Sloth
Smile Empty Soul
Three Days Grace
V Shape Mind
I knew she was going to lose her mind at the beatboxing. 😍 They were pioneers, so far ahead of their time. Musical catharsis. A mood. A feeling. Forever deserving of the accolades.
Totally! I kept thinking "she's in for a treat" haha!
Spiritedthought I would suggest Mr Bungle… “Travolta” aka “Quote Unquote” if you want to talk about pioneers of Nu Metal. The songs Wikipedia has an excerpt about the meaning of the lyrics in context.
if you look in history of beatboxin then you will find that first beatboxing was used in tribal music centuries ago, something that we call "old school" beatboxing was in 70'
That's more scat singing than beatboxing, to be honest.
I always felt like it was more skat than beatboxing
Fun Fact: The the video and album art was done by Todd McFarlane and the team that did the Spawn Animated series on HBO back in the 90's.
Also there is a duet of this song with him and Amy Lee and its remixed a little and so good.
He co-created Image Comics, which was the first comic book company that was owned by all self-published comic artist.
Nice
i didn’t even know there was a video! nice to see after so so much time
@@onemorechris They managed to grt this on MTV right around the time they have up on music all together. I was in college, good times.
well, that really was a fun fact, thanx.
I'd like to go back to 99 and hear this masterpiece again for the first time.
Jonathan Davis is well-known for his use of breath (actual breathing) in his music (somewhat like Corey Taylor, though Davis uses this throughout his songs, rather than just during bridges or to gain a sense of build-up). He also cries a lot onstage and even leaves that in on his records. He's one of the most unique vocalists in metal. You can't mistake him for another person.
I always thought he transitioned from fearful, to desperate, to anger, then to a sort of evil satisfaction in the end. He really always reminded me of an actor with his voice. Like how he conveys emotion
^this^
When she stops it at 20:39 just as he is about to release, I nearly cried. LOL. It's like your parents just turned off the music at the best part. Love her analyses. This was awesome.
OMG i'm at 18:55 and feeling soo teased that she keep pausing before the big drop... does that mean she does it again??? lol This is brutal.
@@amac3000 It was interesting and painful at the same time.
@@mathewhunter7826 100% i've share the video with several others who have equally gotten joy/frustration out of it lol.
No kidding, eh?
*Self censoring a crude metaphor here...
Korn songs have such a flow and build to them it's frustrating to have them analyzed the way she does. I almost feel like she should listen to the whole song, then go back and analyze the pieces.
That song will always hit hard.
One of the best songs ever!
The CGI in this music video was quite advanced for it's time and was widely accalimed when it came out, the bullet flying around everyones head and from scene to scene. Very unique and original. It won Best Editing and Best Rock Video at the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards, and later received the Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video in 2000.
This is what I think of when I hear 'mtv'.
The good ole days when I was 8 years old and nothing mattered lol
@@timmykephart right? 106 and park was on and it was actually about MUSIC
Based on when it was released, it looks like the animation was done by the same people who worked on the Spawn animated series from HBO
Todd McFarlane (Spawn creator)did do the album cover art and the animation for this video.
Won a Grammy for the video 🫡
I highly recommend you listen to their track Twist, an entire song comprised of Jonathan's vocal gymnastics. There's even a vocals-only version if you really want to pick it apart.
This, absolutely.
Good call
Yess!!!
This was my immediate thought, Twist/Chi is a great display of Davis' vocals
Twist is by far the first thing I thought of you checking out when I started watching this channel. From what I understand it used to be his warm up. All I suggest is that you listen to the actual vocal track* hidden track at the end of the Life is Peachy Cds. Chi is another great example, and the cover they do of Kidnap the Sandy Claws.
I don't think anyone has ever described Korn's music as 'delightful'. Absolutely awesome review 👏
One of the best vocalist of the last 30 years for sure
I never knew that I wanted to watch and listen to a Disney princess deconstruct a Korn song, but here we are and I'm obSESSED. 🥰
Ha. Welcome to the fold. I discovered her when she broke down a Jinjer video, which unfolded from a colab with a friend's band. Since then, she's been going deeper and deeper into metal... I just noticed her #spoiledbymetal shirt. It's awesome to see her fall in love with metal, and others fall in love with metal alongside her...
Puuurfect, except something makes me want to go WROAHR at her, get my nails n then my teeth on her neck using a quick lunge... not sure why🤣 yes she's a decent feline😋
Which princess?
@@coryhafer7285 Snow White or Giselle from Enchanted lol
Snow White..
That's her... 😁
Never judgemental but always curious and appreciative of a new voice. This is why I love this channel ❤
“He embraces weird sounds and I love it!” The succinct reason for why I love Korn.
I'll never not love KoRn.
What does it say about my brain where all those weird sounds are more comforting than anything? So good!
The Joy on your face as you discover something new has made me a new subscriber I love your vocal analysis. I think the expression you're trying to come up with concerning the vocals is it has a lived in quality much like the entire video has the same lived in quality. Great songs like this one allows the listener to be totally immersed in the song from it's very beginnings
We all knew the BOOM beatboxing part was coming and knew she’d be super surprised by it haha. And yes, this is one of my favorite songs to karaoke because all of it is really challenging and fun to sing and mimic!
I was definitely waiting for the Korn Babble reaction haha
Yes! The whole song I was just waiting for that part to see the reaction!!!!
I clicked as soon as I saw this, just because of that!
...and every rewind she did that delayed it was killing me.
I think the most interesting thing about KoRn’s music is how the band, despite not knowing music theory, and all independently writing their own parts, make their own unique “harmony” that has resonated with a huge audience.
I'm pretty sure Jonathan knows music theory. His dad even had a music shop or studio or whatever.
Don't know about the others though but there's always a guitar playing some kind of harmony.
I think it was David Silveira, their OG drummer, that knew some music theory iirc tho. He sure had some great interesting grooves for the band to build upon
She finally hit the nail on the head. I don't think there will be too many rock and metal fans that are overly worried about being pitch perfect. It's about the lyrics, and how the music makes you feel, not just the vocalist, but the entire band.
100% I don't know who needs to read this but Soul Glo are fucking huge in terms of a band inovating many ideas like rap / trap / thrash / deathcore / numetal today
Korn is definitely one of those bands that is an acquired taste. When I first listened to them, I didn't like them at all, but as I went thru their discography, I started to get into the vocals and instrumentals.
Perhaps this is my i dont like metal with great poppy poppy singers with good mainstream voices. Like the whole point of metal was to have a place for people who dont fit in with the mainstream to do their own thing and express themselves and connect with others.
16:50 the reaction I was most curious about. You did not disappoint.
KoRn resonated so well because we were the generation that got dealt a shit hand that we had to deal with. The masses could relate to the pain, anger, hate , the feeling of never being enough, and the aggression that he has in his music. Nothing like getting it all out in the pit. KoRn got me through so much...
“This is a very strange sound for me to hear” girl it was strange for us the first time too. 😂
"There's a feeling of release there, even though it becomes more agressive." A great quote for a tribute to metal
I listen to metal because it allows me a release internally so I don't take things out externally. As someone once said and I will now butcher because I don't remember the exact quote "Nobody who listens to metal has everything going right in their lives."
@@chuckhoyle1211 Truth.
Quite funny: in my childhood, my older brother told me that science had proven that people who listen to metal have a lower than average iq.
Many years later I found out that it's actually the opposite. (Bruce Dickinson as an example?)
But yeah, metal often is a fantastic way to cope with your emotions. For me it was a life-saver and step by step by step it guided me to spirituality (with gothic metal) which settled my most extreme emotions over time.
@@MarcelNL When I was in college getting my Chemical Engineering degree, most of the guys in my major that were from the USA listened to metal. Honestly, I don't think the type of music you listen to has a strong correlation to intelligence. I know plenty of smart and dumb people that listen to all types of music. The smartest person I know listens to Weird Al Yankovic almost exclusively.
Couldn't have put it better myself \m/
The release is intentional as well because it plays back into the idea of a leash. A leash is sometimes slack, sometimes taut, and sometimes choking, just like the vocals and instrumentals in the song. I love when the music reinforces the themes and lyrics of a song. That's just great composition.
‘Twisted Transistor’ is a great experience when you break down Jonathan’s vocals. The instrumental side of Korn really enhances the “wEiRd” they give off. Such a perfect choice of tones from every member.
and let's not forget the legendary video clip
@@_adonisk Definitely!!!
Twisted Transistor also has a REALLY fun music video.
"This song ain't about no booty shakin'! It's about transistors!"
Whoa whoa whoa if you're going to do Twisted Transistor then you also have to do the acoustic version cuz holy shit does that hit at a different level to that song it always gives me chills when I listen to the acoustic version
Twisted Transistor and Coming Undone might be my favorite Korn songs... hard to choose, but they are definitely in my Top 10! 🖤🖤🖤
Watching your reactions was so delightful!
Witnessing a visceral reaction to the genius that is JD/Korn from someone who doesn't have a metal/rock background validates the rest of us who love it. 🤘🖤
Mid to late 90's was great for metal, and a slight evolution. Korn, Deftones, Linkin Park, Slipknot, Mudvayne, Ill Nino, SoaD, Static X, Coal Chamber, P.O.D., Adema, Mushroomhead, Sepulutura, Nonpoint. Plus many more. I still listen to many of these bands and records from years ago.
You just named everything from my CD collection in high school...
I loved all of them
dont forget Prong also.
yo drop setlist haha loved your sepapultuotonenaia just kinding mate
Some cool new styles came out but the loss of killer solos sucked as a lot of NU METAL skimped in that regard.
I was a 1980's metal teenager so the 1990's NU METAL was not my main thing.
Luckily solos have since come back in full force since the 2000's 👍
If you enjoyed the skat beat box thing, J.D. does , you should listen to the song "Twist" by Korn.
Also, he does this in their live concerts, he can transition seamlessly between the skat growl and his singing voice. Very cool.
Oh yes! One of the most gorgeous songs...just ever. 🙂
Yes! I was shocked when he started doing it in concert cuz I thought it was added in or something. No, he just does that. It's so cool to see and hear live.
My favorite KoRn song is Dead Bodies everywhere .. I just love the Bass in the beginning ..
Love me some Twist.
“I wish we could put ‘Twist’ on the, on the fuckin tape”
What's fascinating is seeing your excitement with different elements of the video and song. After 25 years of listening to and watching this, you kind of just develop your own experience to it. Somehow, watching you break it down just made it new again. It gave me chills.
Amazingly refreshing to watch someone who's been hidden from metal, take the time to listen and realise the artistry and "hidden" talent of metal artists👌 plus, i love the way you are totally engrosed and appreciative of the vocal range and differential extremes compared to mainstream artists. 🤘
underrated comment
Hence her shirt
As are we all
@@lumsdelj 🤘
@@ManBearPig-jm8hf 🤘
Jon Davis's voice on The Queen of the Damned soundtrack.. adds haunting to all the voices showcased here.. A master of his craft
Absolutely 💯
Literally it’s so good
That was my favorite album to listen to for a very long time just because of his brilliance.
The soundtrack is so freaking awesome!
So I learned he actually doesn't sing on the soundtrack he wrote most of the songs and that album was his baby. There was a problem with his record label Sonys contract that didnt allow his vocals on the record.5 additional tracks were written and sung by him but they didnt make the original release of the record. It did make the bonus material with the movie. When he toured for his solo album a few years ago was the first time he actually got to preform the queen of the damned soundtrack live. He said it on stage that it took 10 years to be able to come back to it and finally perform it live. I couldnt believe my ears. I never thought i would get a chance to hear that live. So special. Man Johnathans voice gets better with age too. Fine Wine
Wow! Korn really gave us songs with a whole minute or more of scatting. Don't think I realized how daring and incredible that musical choice was for them. It's such a gift to watch someone experience Korn for the first time. Especially someone who can articulate their brilliance so well.
You should check out their song Twist then.
@@TheHitchboy more of an intro but good
I applaud you for so eloquently and extensively putting in words everything we've all felt the first time we heard this masterpiece.
The nostalgia and the tension of knowing what shes about to hit next just had near tears in my eyes man. How powerful that music was.
I was laughcrying the whole way through...
I was so waiting for her to hit the scat part. I was not disappointed
Since my kids are too young to share this kind of music with, her reviews are the next best thing 😅
@@MsAllthenamesaretakeman, my dad had me listening to korn, slipknot, and system of a down when I was a toddler. I’m so glad too, I love the nostalgia that comes with my favorite bands now.
Probably one of the most unique bands to ever exist. People can say what they want but they were a massive part of my childhood and really spoke about darkness and life struggles that many of us live through. It wasnt forced "look at me I'm cool" but rather "I'm damaged and calling out the b.s."
Still remember the place I were, the friends I were with and the person who threw Korn on, the first time I Heard them
Same.
@@frankhermansen243 My parents made me buy the first few albums censored, lol. It was lame, but not as lame as my censored Limp Bizkit albums
@@KarklinPumpkin Dident even knew there was such a thing as censord album. Always thought the censored versions was made only for public use. Luckily here in Denmark we dont censor, guess it must have been great when you were old enough to buy the normal versions your self 😊
I can't decide what's better, your excitement or everyone else reliving their first time through yours! Killer song loaded with memories! Tension/suspension!
I just discovered your channel recently and find your journey from classical and opera to metal so fascinating. Even though you've done quite a few metal songs I was still surprised to see Korn come up. If you were a late 90s kid into heavy music, Korn was THE band. Even if I find their music hasn't aged well, they always hold a special place in my heart because of that.
I know each gen is partial to their own music but the 90s was something else to live through musically.
Oh yeah. I had my first son in '93 and we go headbanging together. We have a bIast and KoRn is one of our favorites to see Iive.
What people don’t realize what was really popular at the time was an over saturation of boy bands and you had the rise of pop stars like Britney Spears. So yeah alternative music had all this great music fighting back the bubble gum pop noise. Perhaps that’s what fueled those bands to be even more aggressive. Also I think hip hop was also at its peak.
No, it was definitely the best.
@@sharinglungs3226 YES. also we were rebelling against the materialism and superficiality of the 80s
70s? 😅
John's beatbox/scatting is really weird and awesome but is best showcased on Twist where he just rips into it. Still blows me away how good this band sounds all these years later, Fieldy's bass is something else!
Came here just to make a comment about Twist. It amazes me that he can do it live.
rt of the song sounded jazzy. how did she get beatbox when it is clearly heavey metal jazz scatting and yes i agree twist kills it
Their new stuff is so much heavier than I expected
YEESSS!! I want to see her react to Twist!!
Fieldy is the only one I ever say plays the "slap bass" lol
I've never seen anyone just feel the music to its core like her. it is great to know there are people like this that appreciate the music for all it is. HUGE fan. I can't stop watching!
There are a lot of us that listen to music like this, especially professional musicians, or those with trained ears. Being able to break down music in our minds as we actively listen to it. It. Is. Amazing.
It's why I watch her!! I'm autistic and music is my special interest and none of my friends get excited the way I do when I listen to music, especially metal. I get so fuzzy and start stimming and giggling because I *feel* the music. Watching her, it looks like she's experiencing the music similarly to me
@@ioxzys678I agree, but I think OP meant the excitement she gets from it all as well! Other reaction channels that are like vocal coaches and vocalists, they don't get so visibly excited as she does!
I understand you both completely. I show my friends who are also metal fans certain songs and try to explain how I feel and they just don't get it. My emotions literally take over and I have no control but I don't care. It's better than any other thing in the world.
@@lunnyarts7799and she's Pisces. Natural giggly genius. I'm the dry Capricorn like Davis.
Love your videos! Watching you dissect music is like listening to an astrophysicist explain the inner workings of the universe. It helps me understand WHY I love the music that I love and gives me a whole new perspective on it.
He was also the singing voice of the vampire lestat in queen of the damned and as absolutely amazing.
Wasn’t only him Chester from linkin park did a little bit of it same as Wayne static from static x and I think the singer from disturbed all the songs are on Spotify from the movie
Has a cameo role in the movie also selling tickets out the front of the concert
He also wrote all the songs and music for the movie as well.
@@Krooked_garage that is for the album only. In the actual movie it was just JD.
queen of the damned was SO GOOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! did you know jonathan was in the movie too!??! he was selling tickets!
It's so cool that someone else can appreciate it... Because us that grew up with it... Can't just ask people to listen to it. And expect them to like it... NO ONE likes it. Unless they experienced it first hand.
So it's more than cool to see someone from a little before that era, appreciate it
Shes our same age Broskie
Hah, my kids like things like Bowie and Aerosmith, but I wouldn't ever expect them to like this, even though it was huuuuuuge when I was a teenager.
Yeah it's a weird one! There's a lot of music I love but if i objectively look at it, had I discovered it now i'd dislike it. I'm not an angsty teenager anymore, so new angsty music doesn't vibe with me, but it's like the old songs from my childhood bring me back to that place, you keep a link with how you felt when you first started listening to the songs, so can still relate to them. That and I have a 14 year old brother who's super into K-pop...which has made me dislike music in general lately
Yeah when I started getting into Nu Metal I like deeply disliked Korn scatting and that's part of what kept me away from Korn for a while, and idk what changed over time but now I love it and although I dislike most of freak on a leash, I've listened to that Korn scatting breakdown on repeat dozens of times
actually i'm fifteen and just started listening to nu metal about a year ago with only deftones and a bit of other iconic nu metal songs from other bands. (not many tho, cause i didnt use to listen nu metal on a daily basis). But as soon as i listened to Korn's issues, I completely fell in love with their music and Jonathan's voice. probably most people my age would think im weird if they ever see me listening to this but idc, i just think it is really something amazing and well put together.
It takes a lot of talent to have that degree of control over his voice. He sounds so out of control and he has complete mastery over it the whole time.
nah. a kid could do it... ua-cam.com/video/dJgs3lLUGII/v-deo.html
xD
It"s not talent, it's practice. Lots and lots of practice and hard work. Tens of thousands of hours of practice and experimentation and injuring yourself and finding where you can and can't put your voice.
love the range of your reactions, metal to pop, to dare I say folk, love it, keep it up
The year was 1999, I was 8 years old. My mom and stepdad took me to my first concert, it was the Family Values tour with KoRn and Limp Bizkit. Good times.
Your parents are awesome! Although I would never take my 8 year old to that haha
Wow! I remember the family values tour! What a nostalgia trip
The limp bee eye zee kay eye teeeee
Just discovered this channel. Her enthusiasm, emotion, and all around pleasant personality seems so genuine. She makes me smile.
100%
Sometimes worth watching for how excited she gets and the expressions. Someone said in a previous video she has the facial expressions of a Disney princess.
I especially love her reaction video to Disturbed’s cover of Sound of Silence.
It does not take much to see why the community as a whole loves our resident music coach. Her joi-de-vivre is not to be missed. Her embracing of what she hears and the patrons knowing her well enough to give her something that will make an impact is wonderful to experience. All this and being a wife and new mother as well to the newest member of the shoal, is impressive. And appreciated! Thank you @The Charasmatic Voice , @Kirby S who mods and of course @Kirk McCune for being so awesome a husband, father, guide and mod here as well. You all make this community feel like a home. Much gratitude and keep rocking! ✌🤘😎🐙🦑🐙🦑
I just want to thank for you for being open to more than, as you put it, traditionally "good" singing and your willingness to see the intent behind vocal choices/presentations.
Much love,
A Metal and Punk Fan
It's pretty much impossible to say Davis is a bad singer here anyways. He's just operating under a nonstandard definition of "good singing" and he does an extremely good job at it.
There are singers who are great for their bands, but they could probably not doing anywhere else, and that's Jonathan. I adore Korn, have seen them several times. Someone said in another chat that Maynard was the greatest rock singer ever and I said he's a great singer for what he does, there's better singers, but sometimes only one person can interpret a bands songs and sounds. I do love the 90s, it was a good time in life and music for me.
Wow, ive been listening to this on and off for 25 years and i feel like youve given me a whole new appreciation for it, thank you, instant subscribe.
Jonathan is one of those massively iconic nu metal voices (along with Serj Tankian or Maynard) that can you can pick out from anywhere and that people are constantly trying to replicate. And his scatting sections are legendary (Twist is amazing for that).
My favourite songs that really showcase his vocals are Falling Away From Me and Coming Undone.
You also can’t go anywhere as a Korn fan without being asked if you’ve seen them play Blind at Woodstock, so absolutely try get on that.
i was gonna say, twist would blow her mind lol
I cannot believe you said serj and maynard are nu-metal lol
@@Mesotheliomasettlements yeah, Maynard is shit.
@@Mesotheliomasettlements**nasally nerd voice** ACTUALY **pause for laughter** **regular voice** System is TECHNICALLY Nu-metal so... there.
I would also love to see a reaction to Twist
Korn embodies such a particular moment in time, mid late 90's, they were exactly where they were supposed to be. it brings back so many memories, lost friends, endless summers, everything was posible even if everything was already lost. thanks
Couldn't agree more :-)
they were good music times.
KoRn 4 life!!!
@@axeSyntax man I loved the 90s... To me they were perfect and it all went worse from there...
Yeah dude
He does these wild switches in concert. His accuracy and control is WILD. It's not synthesized or added in, which is what I thought at first. Listening to it does feel like playing hopscotch. Jumping from change to change. It's so cool.
This take me back 25 years. Love it.
It's so amazing watching someone get so excited listening to a song you know by heart for the last 2 decades, seeing her eyes light up brings me back to my 1st time
Lol, I was feeling so anxious she wouldn't like it. Pretty funny how vulnerable and validating it is.
Absolutely... It's sad she didn't know of the band earlier and that she's pulling it apart instead of understanding the band and the music and the lyrical message throughout not just this song, but most of his creations... I feel like she's missing the heart and soul of the song with what she's doing
"He doesn't want us to care about the pitch at times" - the best comment on Jonatan's singing I have ever heard, and I've heard a lot of them, being a huge fan since '92. Well done, spot on!👍
Jon and the rest of Korn changed my life forever when I was a teen. The music inspired me to be different, to be myself, and not worry about being perfect. So I really love that you said being pitch prefect isn't always the best way to determine a perfect voice. I would definitely recommend Shoots and Ladders, All in the Family, falling away from me, twisted transistor and Alone I break .
I thoroughly enjoyed every second of this review!!!!
Jonathon Davis' voice always sounds pained in every word to me, especially in the earlier stuff which is why I like it more. He was the perfect voice of an angry/frustrated generation - we need more of this today. His solo stuff is super cool and different too :-)
Solo and unplugged he is incredible, you can really hear how naturally and profoundly talented he is.
I was nervous at first that she was just going to trash on it the whole time, but seeing her expressions and genuine excitement made me happy. I was especially excited to see her react to the beatboxing bit
It's his scatting, not beatboxing. And same. I was concerned I shouldn't watch it because I didn't want to get upset.
I used to work for capitol records with a Geffen contract so I’ve talked to Jonathan Davis as well as the producer in this album. They recorded the breakdown vocals in 4 bar sections with no overlapping and a very small touch of reverb for filling. No distortion
Understand that this detail is fully appreciated by me. I'm 40 and remember in HS when this album came out. Thank you.
Agreed
The "distortion" she's referring to in her analysis here is something Jon is doing vocally, not the kind of distortion added as a post effect.
Hearing a professional microanalyze JD was a real treat. Thanks much!
Shoots and Ladders is definitely a great one to delve into next. It really highlights what he can do with his voice to provoke emotion using the simplest of lyrics. I'm so glad you finally had the chance to explore Korn. Knowing how the song builds and watching your journey through it bit by bit gave me the feeling of experiencing it new all over again. Jonathan is the founder and reigning champ of scat/box humming in my opinion and I'm happy his music is still reaching new audiences to this day, 20+ years later, thanks to you and your peers making content like this!
Came here to say this! Such an underrated song
PLEASE!!!! let the next KoRn reaction be this one!
No one but KoRn could put nursery rhymes into metal and make it work as good as KoRn does. ❤🤘
I love how over time we've turned her from being almost completely uninitiated in heavy music to practically being a metalhead
Everyone is a metal head. They just don't all know it yet.
Lamb of god would be a good addition, pretty much anything from ashes of the wake album
Right! Well, except you couldn't take her to a concert 'cause she'd be insisting they stop they song for her to analyze every 3 seconds.
This is the way
@@jklmn101 lol. Seriously though you would be able to see when she took notes in her eyes and she would be gushing the whole way back
The anticipation of you getting to the scatting part had me just crawling out of my skin... and I was not disappointed! I rewound that part like 10 times!
Your initial reaction when it gets to the “beatboxing” part is so wholesome and exactly how it always makes me feel. It’s gives me so much joy!
You've just tapped into the sound of an entire generation of angsty teens. Cheers. This song, and KoRn's entire catalog, really, was the soundtrack of the rebellion of growing up for so many of us.
Got them tattooed on the bottom of my neck between my shoulder blades with the doll from Issues
@UCY8vCShUKhp6iP-zny16vow that's certainly a lukewarm take
I was a Marilyn Manson kid but I still pop Korn's first album on from time to time. Even saw them live a few times in the late 90's.
there are some pretty rough ones on that first album too, not ones you'd have in your daily playlist...😐
I am 40 and Korn completely changed my musical life from the first "ARE YOU READY!!!"
Jonathan Davis is amazing at conveying emotion when singing. Probably not a song you’d like to react to on camera due to the song’s content, but “Daddy” is a song unrivalled in pain & emotion.
Exactly, and I feel like in all of his songs he conveys emotion in a way that nobody else really can because not many people have the balls to scat the way he does in Freak on A Leash haha
Mate, I hate hearing Daddy so much because it gives me disgust every time it plays. Really tells you how talented the singer is.
It was many, many years before he was able to perform that song live because of the events that inspired the song. It was VERY personal and he could not physically perform it live. In the recording at the end when he breaks down that was a real reaction/expression. His release of emotion was intense for sure.
IMO the most raw performance ever caught on tape.
When you talk about Jonathan Davis' ability to flip the switch between the different voices, it's far more of a treat to bear witness to him do this live on stage. It's an experience like no other, and it's addicting. You can't see Korn live just once.
Nope, we've seen them 4x now and I can't wait to see them next time. ❤
Same man, saw them in Columbus in 2021 and that was it...made me appreciate KoRn more than ever..will be seeing again in May 2025