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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Consequence Of Sound
Remember Who You Are was highly anticipated to be a return of Life Is Peachy‘s original roots–low-fi, down-tuned analog recording with some heavy crunching.
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BBC
To be fair, Remember Who You Are – the group’s ninth album – is pitched as a back-to-basics effort, reuniting the band with Robinson and stripping away Pro Tools production for a raw, deliberately gloss-free feel.
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Slant Magazine
The album is bad in a predictable, sluggish way, with no hint of better work on the horizon.
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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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Rocksound
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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Popdose
To me, though, this feels like their best record, 16 years after their debut.
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Loud
Neither scales any true heights or sinks to any appreciable lows
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Rukus Magazine
They somewhat successfully re-bottled their original lightning, as it were, but perhaps they’ve found that old sound to be past its expiration date.
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Billboard
But "Korn III" (a reference to this lineup as the third incarnation of the band) moves forward more than it retrenches, referencing some stylistic trademarks while introducing some fresh dynamic sensibilities.
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