Slipknot - Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses)
By Ahmad Zaki • UrbanWire
Email Reporter • Email Story • printer friendly version
Late last year, Slipknot fans worldwide were dismayed to hear
rumours that the groundbreaking band would possibly break up. With their drummer
Joey Jordison being wildly successful with the Murderdolls, lead vocalist Corey
Taylor and guitarist Jim Root having a disappointing time with Stone Sour and
percussionist Shawn ‘The Clown’ Crahan working on his side project
To My Surprise, it looked unlikely that Slipknot would ever put on their masks
and coveralls and return to the recording studio again.
But despite the adversity they faced from their management and the American
public, their second album Iowa was released only days before
9/11 and its gloomy, destructive lyrics hit hard on all the wrong buttons, Slipknot
returned to create the 3rd album no one thought they could make.
With this offering, the boys from Iowa have brandished new masks and new uniforms.
Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses) brings forth a new sound and
mentality for Slipknot. More mature, older, and perhaps, wiser, Slipknot has
maintained the aggression and rage of their first 2 albums and focussed it into
a thought-provoking, and sometimes eerie, package of musical excellence.
Gone are the railings and wild fist-shaking at the world for being unable to
accept them for who they are. Gone too are the puerile bouts of depression and
the misplaced sense of superiority. What have remained, however, are the crisp
rhythm and shout-along choruses that are Slipknot’s trademarks. Jim Root
and Mick Thompson wield their guitars with precision, their chugging riffs blending
perfectly with Jordison’s machine-gun drumbeats. Taylor has dropped the
incoherent growling of the past and actually sings on the album, although his
vocals are predominated by screaming – typical of any heavy metal band.
And Slipknot are heavy this time around; heavy on the music, heavy on the emotion
and heavy on the depth of meaning. Taylor’s anguished voice screams out
for relief and freedom from the ostracism and oppression that he comes under
by simply being a member of Slipknot.
Vol. 3 is an album of breaking out of the shackles of society,
of rising from adversity and, ultimately, of growing. The first track, ‘Prelude
3.0’, is a tense, burning song that sets the mood for the rest of the
album. In ‘Duality’, Taylor’s screams through clenched teeth,
“I’m not gonna make it!”, and on ‘Pulse of the Maggots’,
he proclaims, “We won’t die!”’. It is an album of contrasts,
of conflicting emotions, of things that you never expected Slipknot to ever
sing about. ‘Vermillion’ and ‘Vermillion Pt.2’ are songs
of unrequited desire, while ‘The Nameless’ is a disturbing, rapid-fire
song of a destructive, sadomasochistic relationship.
Technically and melodically, Slipknot have improved – and changed –
greatly in this album. The angsty ‘Circle’ has Taylor singing along
to a background of violins and cello, while the acoustic guitars and piano of
‘Vermillion Pt. 2’ makes it the gentlest Slipknot song to ever hit
the airwaves (the refrain of “I won’t let this build up inside of
me.” is almost heartbreaking).
But most of all, ‘Before I Forget’ would be the song that characterises
the growth of Slipknot in these few years, from their near downfall after the
release of Iowa to their almost godlike status after the release
of Vol. 3, with its chorus, “I am a world before I am
a man/ I was a creature before I could stand/ I will remember before I forget.”
All in all, Vol. 3 is an album worth buying, whether you’re new to Slipknot
or a veteran fan.
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars.
Track Listing:
01. Prelude 3.0
02. The Blister Exists
03. Three Nil
04. Duality
05. The Opium of the People
06. Vermillion
07. Pulse of the Maggots
08. Welcome
09. Circle
10. Before I Forget
11. The Nameless
12. Vermillion Pt. 2
13. The Virus of Life
14. Danger, Keep Away