Korn III: Remember Who You Are
| KornKorn III: Remember Who You Are
Korn III: Remember Who You Are is the ninth studio album by the American nu metal band Korn, released on July 13, 2010.- Wikipedia
Critic Reviews
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COS
I have the utmost respect for Munky and Fieldy (Shaffer and Arvizu to their kin) as a genuine collaborative duo on record, as they both have strong skill with their instruments of choice when it is fully realized in studio or beyond.
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BBC
A band not so much rediscovering their past as recycling it.
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Slant Magazine
The band’s ninth album, Korn III: Remember Who You Are, is boring, melodramatic, self-righteous, dim-witted, and chock full of clichés—just like most everything else Korn has released over the past two decades.
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Sputnikmusic
A definite return to their roots, but it still doesn’t change the fact that they are running out of ideas. Fast.
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Rolling Stone
Korn have intellectualized their splenic new-metal as they've declined commercially. But their ninth disc jettisons layered samples and pointy-headed craft for a live-band blitz, mutating the bleakest aspects of rap, rock, funk and industrial into a molten attack.
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Teeth of the Divine
You can accurately point out that Davis still sounds like a miserable stuck pig here and there and there would be no arguing it. But given all the positive roles Korn have played in the real and greater metal world, and despite how irritating as they can be, and now as good as they can be, its time to finally accept them as one of us. Remember Who You Are indeed.
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Ultimate-Guitar
Overall, Korn 3 is a welcome return to grace for the trio and newly appointed Ray.
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Rock Sound Magazine
Track for track ‘…Remember Who You Are’ is easily the equal of any of their fi rst three classic albums and sees these freaks back off the leash again.
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Pop Dose
To me, though, this feels like their best record, 16 years after their debut. Good for them, I suppose. Now I need to pinch myself to make sure I’m still alive.
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Loud
Neither scales any true heights or sinks to any appreciable lows
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NZ Herald
Return to roots for nu metal mainstays.
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