Slipknot were brought together by Paul and Shawn along with Anders Colsefni (ex-singer) in Des Moines,
Iowa in 1995. The band has been through many changes since then to reach the current 9 member status it has now. Slipknot
consider themselves as a family unit and each of the nine members are assigned a number between 0-8. The group mascarade the
rock scene in their individual masks, each representing a personality, and there draping jumpsuits. Rather than hiding themselves,
Slipknot feel they are showing their true personalities and inner selves with the masks which also add to the flavour and
intensity of the music due to the sheer awkwardness of the masks. The band consists of 3 percussionists, 2 guitarists, 1 bassist,
1 DJ, 1 sampler and 1 lead singer, the complex heavy metal sound, mixed with riffs of rap, hip hop and in the good old days
funk, jazz and disco has been matched by no other and following the release of MFKR. Slipknot has been climbing and climbing,
gaining new fans and support with the release of the self-titled album which soon stormed to platinum status. Nine guys? That
cant work? In fact it works perfectly! And now Iowa has been placed back onto the map.
For a full and very detailed description of events that made Slipknot go here: Slipknot Story
Bio from Slipknot1:
Iowa is probably best known as "the middle of nowhere." Most non-residents consider the corn-and-pig-state
a geographical black hole. Since rock'n'roll's dawning in the early '50's, Iowa has had no singular voice to put on the musical
map. Naming a significant musical identity from the state is inarguably a fruitless task; it simply can't be done. However,
nine freaks from Des Moines--draped in industrial coveralls, surrealistic self-made masks, and an attack that combines violently
regurgitated "L.A. neo-metal," death metal, hip-hop, and downtuned screeching horror--are about to leap upon the unsuspecting
world like a musical of Clockwork Orange. Have you ever thought about what a messed-up hardcore metal band from "the middle
of nowhere" would sound like? "Ultra-violence" only begins to describe it...
Meet 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and
8. (In human terms that's DJ Sid Wilson, drummer Joey Jordison, bassist Paul Gray, percussionist Chris Fehn, guitarist James
Root, sampler Craig Jones, percussionist Shawn Crahan, guitarist Mick Thomson, and vocalist Corey Taylor, respectively.) Each
comes equipped with not only a frightening visual persona and number assignment, but a talent on his particular instrument
that combines and collides to form the nine-headed savior/destructor of modern heavy music dubbed Slipknot. Now, with the
tools and talents (not to mention complex-yet-infectiously-catchy songs) that this band holds in its grasp, the world has
no choice: Slipknot has arrived, and you must now decide how to deal with it. Formed during the latter half of 1995, the
band went through necessary line-up changes to arrive at what they now describe as "a family unit." All native Iowans, their
rather unassuming, un-happening locale gave the members plenty of space and time to perfect their unusual take on heaviosity.
The band recorded and distributed the self-released debut Mate. Feed. Kill. Repeat. In 1996, and the ball hasn't stopped rolling
since. Attracting the attention of a number of labels, Slipknot finally signed to Roadrunner through noted producer Ross Robinson's
I AM RECORDS imprint in 1997 and entered Indigo Ranch Studios in L.A. with Robinson to record Slipknot. From the pummelling
Sic and the unforgiving bludgeon of Surfacing to the sublime melodies within Wait And Bleed and the hypnotising rhythmic drive
of Prosthetics, Slipknot's vast array of influences comes seamlessly wrapped up in a 13-song love/hate letter to the outside
world. The touring that will follow is promised to be "unlike anything else that's going on out there. Seeing is believing."
So says Shawn Crahan. And it's a gross understatement of what actually transpires when it all comes together on stage.
Until
you hear the sound they create, having nine members in the band might seem ludicrous. Shawn claims it couldn't work any other
way: "We've maintained an excellent practice schedule for the last three years. Everybody's on time, everybody's always there,
and we always practice as a unit. Our music is so reliant on each other that if one guy, even the DJ, is gone, it just wouldn't
be our songs without him. Without one person, something is really, really missing. Everybody has to be present. Even the littlest
things make the songs magical."
Just as striking visually as they are musically, Slipknot stresses that the visuals
do not take precedence over the music. "We never put on the shit we wear to try and get people into us," says Joey Jordison.
"We did it because, after being degraded constantly for trying to play music or do something in Des Moines, it just came to
be like we were an anonymous entity. No one gave a fuck, no one cared, so we were never about our names or our faces; we're
just about music. So we just put it on and it started gettin' people, and it just started to turn into this big thing. The
music's the most important, though. The coveralls and masks happened, and for some reason it worked, therefore we had to kind
of continue with it. We got stuck with it." Now that they're stuck with it, they hardly feel like themselves without it.
Shawn feels that "...the masks are extensions of our personalities. Everybody's got sort of a tweaked, demented way about
themselves, and we just alter the masks over time. It feels really, really good when we wear our masks for an hour, and then
afterwards we take it off, and the first thing we do is go, 'God, what a relief!', but we always seem to put 'em back on after
a show and walk around the place." And the visual presentation will change over time, just as the music certainly will. "I
think things will always be changing with Slipknot. Everybody grows older every year, and with that you change, and that's
somethin' Slipknot is always going to do." As for the number assignments they wear on their coverall sleeves, they're
lucky numbers, significant and vitally important to each member. When choosing them, "Everybody fell into a number," says
Shawn. "There was not one person in the band arguing over a number. It was really weird."
Thanks to a hefty Ross
Robinson production job on Slipknot, Slipknot's vision, part one, has been successfully realised. Shawn feels that Robinson
was as highly motivated to work on the record as the band were to work with him. "We're a highly, highly aggressive band,
and very seldom do we meet people who are in the realm of our aggressiveness when we play as a unit, and Ross took us into
the recording room and was throwing punches at us. He was into it. Ross got up every day and went and worked out so he could
be in shape to do our album."
When label reps and Robinson himself came to Des Moines to check out Slipknot at
their best (on stage), the members were left with little to do for after-show entertainment than go to local strip clubs.
After hosting guest after guest, the band were completely burnt out. Now, nobody in Slipknot ever wants to step inside a strip
club again (it's Des Moines's leading form of entertainment, incidentally). Shawn grunts in disgust: "Fuck the strip bars.
Fuck taking anybody to strip joints. We got shit to do."
The "shit" is wrapped up in a pretty little package called
Slipknot. It's the discordant sound of the middle of nowhere, a terrain where Slipknot is jester and king...
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