Korn Follow The Leader May 2026

Two years earlier, the five Bakersfield misfits — Jonathan Davis (vocals), James “Munky” Shaffer (guitar), Brian “Head” Welch (guitar), Reginald “Fieldy” Arvizu (bass), and David Silveria (drums) — had released Life Is Peachy , a raw, claustrophobic follow-up to their game-changing 1994 debut. But they were still outsiders. Metal was still dominated by Pantera’s groove-metal swagger, the fading grunge of Stone Temple Pilots, and the rap-rock novelty of Limp Bizkit (whose frontman, Fred Durst, was about to become their unlikely hype man).

Twenty-five years later, the leader is gone. But the followers? They never left. korn follow the leader

Yes. Still. Always. Would you like a track-by-track breakdown, a deeper dive on the recording sessions, or an analysis of its influence on modern metal? Two years earlier, the five Bakersfield misfits —

The “Family Values Tour” that followed — featuring Korn, Limp Bizkit, Ice Cube, and Rammstein — became the traveling circus of the disaffected. Mosh pits grew into armies. Jocks and goths stood side by side, united by down-tuned rage. Follow the Leader codified nu-metal : hip-hop rhythms, metal aggression, and raw confessionals. It inspired countless imitators (Staind, P.O.D., Adema) and future icons (Slipknot’s Corey Taylor cites it as a turning point). But it also trapped Korn. For years, they chased that commercial peak, suffering through addiction, lineup changes, and creative stagnation. Twenty-five years later, the leader is gone