The Path of Totality
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 6, 2011 (2011-12-06)[1]
RecordedJanuary–September 2011
StudioKorn Studios, Los Angeles
Genre
Length37:45
LabelRoadrunner
Producer
Korn chronology
Korn III: Remember Who You Are
(2010)
The Path of Totality
(2011)
The Paradigm Shift
(2013)
Singles from The Path of Totality
  1. "Get Up!"
    Released: May 6, 2011
  2. "Narcissistic Cannibal"
    Released: October 21, 2011
  3. "Way Too Far"
    Released: March 6, 2012
  4. "Chaos Lives in Everything"
    Released: March 22, 2012

The Path of Totality is the tenth studio album by American nu metal band Korn. It was released on December 2, 2011, in Europe and December 6, 2011, in the US.[1] The album was produced by various electronic music producers such as Skrillex, Noisia, Excision and various other independent producers. "Get Up!", is one of three tracks produced by Skrillex, and was released as a digital download on May 6, 2011. "Narcissistic Cannibal" was released as the second single on October 18, 2011.

Regarding the album, vocalist Jonathan Davis stated: "I want to trail-blaze. I want to change things. I want to do things we're not supposed to do. I want to create art that's different and not conform to what's going on. We didn't make a dubstep album. We made a Korn album."[2] The album was made available for pre-order on Amazon and iTunes on October 21, 2011, as well as special bundle packages available on Korn.com.

Revolver named The Path of Totality album of the year in their 100th issue.[3] Korn was also inducted into the Kerrang! Hall of Fame during the 2011 Kerrang! Awards.[4]

Background

The album features production by Skrillex, Datsik, Feed Me, Excision, 12th Planet, Downlink, Kill the Noise, and Noisia. Monti, and Datsik contributed to the mixing process.[2] The band recorded The Path of Totality with electronic producers back in Davis' home studio in Bakersfield during inspired sessions. It was revealed by Jonathan Davis that vocals were actually tracked in the singer's home theater or in closets and hotels everywhere from Korea to Japan.[2]

Korn collaborated with electronic music producer Skrillex on the album

Music and lyrical themes

The Path of Totality is claimed by the band to be a fusion of their traditional sound with dubstep and drum and bass.[5] Korn collaborated with a number of producers for the album with each producing their own individual tracks. Roadrunner released the following statement:

The Path of Totality is unlike any previous Korn release; it's an experimental record which finds the band shifting gears and exploring new territory. For the record, Korn collaborated with some of the leading dubstep and electronic music producers in the world, including Skrillex, Excision, Datsik, Noisia, Kill the Noise, and 12th Planet. The result is something completely new, yet utterly and definitively Korn.[1]

Korn frontman Jonathan Davis describes the new album as "very well-rounded, with a mix of mellow, upbeat tracks; possibly the most well-proportioned Korn album of all time." In a new biography on Roadrunner Records' official website, Jonathan Davis declares The Path of Totality as "future metal". "We're mixing metal and electro music, and you're not supposed to do that. Since day one, Korn has always been all about going against the grain, experimenting, and trying to take music different places."[2]

Album title and packaging

The album title was revealed as The Path of Totality. "The title The Path of Totality refers to the fact that in order to see the sun in a full solar eclipse, you must be in the exact right place in the exact right time," says Jonathan Davis, explaining the story behind the name. "That's how this album came together. I think all the producers feel the same way. I'm not sure it could ever happen again."[6]

Munky stated; "I wanted to come up with a name that felt otherworldly," Shaffer explained. "A shadow is cast on the earth when a solar eclipse occurs. The moon has to be perfectly aligned with the sun to create this flawless shadow that completely covers the sun from the earth. Similarly, all of the producers and writers had to come together at the perfect time to cast these songs onto tape."[7]

The album is a standard 11-track album, with the deluxe edition featuring extra songs and The Encounter as a bonus DVD. The band's website also offered special pre-order packages that include a Path of Totality T-shirt and signed lithograph as well as the CD/DVD deluxe combo. Hot Topic offered a signed lithograph with pre-orders for a limited time.[8]

Promotion

Korn commenced a world tour to promote the album named The Path of Totality Tour, which offers special VIP packages.[9][10] "Get Up!" was released as a promotional single, becoming a top ten hit on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Songs chart and would be featured in the soundtrack for EA Sports video game Madden NFL 12. The digital single has sold over 200,000 downloads in the US according to Nielsen SoundScan. A lyric video for the single was released on YouTube which accumulated over 3 million views and more than 35,000 likes. The second single, "Narcissistic Cannibal", was released to radio stations and digital music outlets on October 18 and 24, respectively;[11] a music video was filmed in Hollywood by ShadowMachine (Moral Orel, Robot Chicken). A number of new songs have been added to the tour's setlist, including "Kill Mercy Within", "My Wall", and "Way Too Far". "Narcissistic Cannibal" leaked onto YouTube on October 11. It was later released for free download on Korn's official website as a WAV file. A lyric video was also released on both Korn's official YouTube channel and Roadrunner's channel as well. It has since accumulated more than 461,000 views and 6,200 likes. Hot Topic premiered a new track, "Sanctuary", on November 16. Roadrunner Records and Korn started streaming the album in full on December 1, as well as offering lead single "Get Up!" as a free download. "Way Too Far" and "Chaos Lives in Everything" were released as the album's third and fourth singles, respectively.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic58/100[12]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[13]
The A.V. ClubF[14]
IGN7.5/10[15]
The List[16]
NME6/10[17]
PopMatters7/10[18]
Spin7/10[19]
Sputnikmusic[20]

The album received praise in many reviews.[12] Rock Sound gave the album an 8/10 rating, remarking that "It may not be perfect, but Korn have thrown caution to the wind and set out an impressive template for a future sound, for a band doing that nearly 20 years into their career, they deserve your respect". They do note however that the album sounds "a little formulaic" and "monotonous" at times. Spin gave the album a 7/10, saying "Thing is, dubstep's slithering textures actually suit Davis' demented croon".[19] Henry Northmore from The List gave the album a rating of 4/5 saying that "the purists (both metal and dubstep) will probably hate it, but if you are willing to have your brain assaulted from every direction by a new Frankensteinian metal/beats hybrid, you'll find an album packed with pure adrenaline".[16] AllMusic gave the album 4/5 saying that "despite all the electronics, there's no mistaking The Path of Totality as a Korn album...and one of their better ones to boot".[13]

Alistair Lawrence from BBC Music criticized the album saying that "once the novelty of the squelching, space-aged din they've birthed fades, what's apparent is how little Korn have to say for themselves these days".[21] Sputnikmusic strongly criticized the album giving it a score of 0.5/5 stating that "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".[20] No Ripcord gave the album a 1/10 stating that "it is samey, ugly and spectacularly stupid at the same time".[22] Jason Heller from The A.V. Club gave the album an 'F', stating: "To Korn's credit, The Path Of Totality is its most radical reinvention to date. It's also the worst slab of sludge it ever shat."[14]NME gave the album a 6/10 saying that it's "not quite a car crash, but a near miss" and jokingly asking: "What do you do when you're 10 albums into your career, sliding down festival bills and trying to bury the tag of creators of a genre you now despise? If you're Korn, you Google '2011 music' and rope in a bunch of DJs for a 'dubstep' album, of course".[17] On April 11, 2012, The Path of Totality won "Album of the Year" at the 2012 Revolver Golden Gods Awards. This was Korn's first ever win at the Golden Gods Awards.[23]

Track listing

Standard edition[24]
No.TitleProducer(s)Length
1."Chaos Lives in Everything" (featuring Skrillex)
3:47
2."Kill Mercy Within" (featuring Noisia)
3:35
3."My Wall" (featuring Excision)
2:55
4."Narcissistic Cannibal" (featuring Skrillex and Kill the Noise)
3:10
5."Illuminati" (featuring Excision and Downlink)
  • Excision
  • Downlink
  • Jim Monti (co.)
3:16
6."Burn the Obedient" (featuring Noisia)
  • Noisia
  • Jim Monti (co.)
2:38
7."Sanctuary" (featuring Downlink)
  • Downlink
  • J Devil (co.)
  • Jim Monti (co.)
3:24
8."Let's Go" (featuring Noisia)
  • Noisia
  • Jim Monti (co.)
2:40
9."Get Up!" (featuring Skrillex)
  • Skrillex
  • Jim Monti (co.)
3:42
10."Way Too Far" (featuring 12th Planet and Flinch[lower-alpha 1])
3:49
11."Bleeding Out" (featuring Feed Me)
4:49
Total length:37:45
Special edition
No.TitleProducer(s)Length
12."Fuels the Comedy" (featuring Kill the Noise)
  • Kill the Noise
  • Jim Monti (co.)
2:49
13."Tension" (featuring Excision, Datsik, and Downlink)
  • Excision
  • Datsik
  • Downlink
  • J Devil
  • Jim Monti (co.)
3:56
Total length:44:30
  • (co.) denotes co-producer
  • (add.) denotes additional production
  • The special edition DVD features the complete Korn Live: The Encounter performance.
  1. "Way Too Far" is erroneously credited featuring 12th Planet in the CD album. It is officially credited featuring 12th Planet and Flinch as used in the single and most digital versions of the album.

Personnel

Korn

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.