New Korn video addresses privacy, cult of celebrity
By Peter Lindblad
Korn - The Paradigm Shift |
Orwellian paranoia runs rampant in Korn’s new video for “Spike
in My Veins,” which premiered this week at rollingstone.com. And the Nu Metal
revolutionaries attempt to make the case that privacy is being eroded in this
age of the 24-hour news cycle and Internet overstimulation with their own version
of the Ludovico technique, that horrifying aversion therapy that Malcolm
McDowell’s character undergoes in “A Clockwork Orange.” Korn’s treatment is far
less violent, but almost as disturbing.
Rather than setting out to make its audience impotent, there’s
a sense that Korn is sounding an alarm with a bombardment of images that haven’t
yet exceeded their expiration dates in the public’s ever-shrinking consciousness. There’s
Seahawks’ cornerback Richard Sherman yelling into the camera after the Super
Bowl. There’s Justin Bieber and then there’s Justin Bieber again, with his
smiling mug shot and a scene of him in tough-guy mode wanting to fight all comers while being pushed into a limo.
Tongue stuck out in full twerk, Miley Cyrus, like Bieber, is everywhere, as are
egomaniacal rapper Kanye West and disgraced Toronto mayor and noted party guy Rob Ford, dancing without a care in the world and caught by a
surreptitious camera making insane threats to do somebody bodily harm.
There are a lot of puzzle pieces that beg for context in "Spike in My Veins," but it's not long before it starts to make sense. All those
scenes of cops in riot gear beating people up and press conferences of government
officials shamelessly trying to counter the very serious accusations of NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden suggest totalitarianism isn’t just a Russian or a
Third World problem. Although it's not the wildly creative game-changer "Freak on a Leash" was, it’s a fairly effective statement put forth by Korn and
director David Dinetz, as well as his creative team at Culprit Creative – the
idea being that our obsession with celebrity and scandalous media firestorms are preventing
us from confronting very immediate and devastating attacks on privacy in this
country, just as junkies avoid reality by shooting up.
Quick cutaways lend the thought-provoking video a sense of urgency,
hammering home the sense that it is well past time for action and that apathy
is more dangerous than ever. What is being spiked in our veins is not heroin. It’s the constant stream of salacious garbage the media spews like vomit that's dulling our senses. Of course, this sort of thing has been done before. Public Enemy, U2, Ministry … the list of
artists who have made similar socio-political indictments through the medium of video is lengthy to say the least. But, if nothing else, at least Korn is
staying up on current events.
And they are growing more adept at building tension in tracks
like “Spike in My Veins,” as the verses simmer to a roiling boil here, thankfully lacking the momentum-killing down-tuned silliness and irritating vocal histrionics of Korn's past. With its explosive,
shattering chorus, strong grooves and thick riffs, “Spike in My Veins,” off the
critically acclaimed album The Paradigm
Shift, crashes into your living room with the kind of raw emotion and
intensity that children of the Korn feed off. Still, as far as the video goes, it's mostly just Korn performing in front of a wall of TVs, even if the parade of familiar cable news touchstones is smartly arranged and edited to both incite and excite. And for those wanting some
stunning visual effects to go with their sensory overload, the “Matrix”-like
effects that make an octopus of Jonathan Davis’s wheeling arms are pretty
bitchin’. Keanu Reeves thinks so, too.