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WELCOME TO MY MUSIC SITE, I HOPE YOUR ENJOYING YOURSELVES. I HAVE GREAT BANDS ON THIS SITE THE LIKES OF ADEMA, LINKIN PARK, DROWNING POOL, TAPROOT, INME, HOOBASTANK AND MANY MORE. THEY ALL HAVE LINKS TO THEIR OFFICIAL SITES, BIOS, LATEST ALBUMS AND MANY OTHER PERCS. SO ENJOY YOURSELVES!!!

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CLICK HERE TO VISIT KORN OFFICIAL SITE
"Are you ready?!" Well, commercial radio sure wasn't. And neither was MTV. Not yet, anyway. So KORN took their grisly show on the road someplace they knew it'd get noticed: back to the tour circuit, and a stint on Ozzfest. The band's unique sound may have been unfamiliar, but the kids knew it rocked mightily-and many of them could directly relate to Davis' grim lyrical obsessions. At that point in time, there was quite simply no band on earth like KORN. And so they began to amass a following that would send their next album, 1996's brutal yet cheekily titled Life is Peachy, into platinum sales. And this time at least the press was ready. "...Perverts, psychopaths and paranoiacs" gushed the Chicago Tribune. "An ingeniously twisted piece of personal hell" raved Cleveland's Plain Dealer. And while Peachy served more to reinforce the band's core sound rather than innovate in the manner of the debut, it did introduce to the world to a side of the band no one ever suspected existed: humor. The bagpipe-driven cover version of War's "Lowrider" was just one example. An A-Z dictionary of vulgarity called "K@#%!" was another-though some critics and self-appointed moral guardians were put off by the language. One Zeeland, Michigan high school administrator told the press that KORN was "indecent, vulgar, and obscene" shortly after suspending a student for wearing a T-shirt that merely said "KORN." After the band filed a cease-and-desist order against the school on behalf of the student, he was reinstated. But the episode marks yet another milestone for the band: it was the first of many times the band would go to bat for its fans.