It’s now a whole 20 years since the world received and embraced Follow The Leader, Korn’s five-time-platinum third album, and one of the seminal texts of nu-metal. To commemorate that, here’s a damn near second-by-second breakdown of the most iconic video from it, the magnificent, transcendental, epoch-defining Freak On A Leash.
0.01
Whuut, it’s a cartoon? A cartoon of a pleasant-looking suburban street? Seems… surprising, right? Seems unKorn-like?
0.05
As quick, monstrous flashes come in, we get the first hint that this isn’t Merrie Melodies. Something is rotten in wherever this is. It’s also clear from the get-go that the animation is real top-end stuff. The video was directed by Todd McFarlane, a powerhouse within the comics industry. MacFarlane was the creator of Spawn, co-creator of Venom, arguably the most influential figure in ‘90s comics and the artist behind the Follow The Leader album artwork.
0.18
Eighteen seconds in, there have been about a hundred cuts. Animation is incredibly time-consuming and this video was reportedly released a whole year after it was intended to be. This guitar intro, by the way, was recorded through a fan – not someone that liked Korn, a rotating room-cooling machine. Engineer Toby Wright fed the amp through a spinning fan as it was recorded to get that wobbly sound.
0.23
The vocals come in, as a security guard listens to Jonathan Davis doing his more strained voice – you know the one he does, where it sounds like he’s trying not to ejaculate.
0.36
Honestly, it’s hard to get across just how much work we’re looking at. Bear in mind this was 1998. This is incredibly ambitious, insanely difficult, ridiculously time-consuming, intricately-edited, multi-layered animation, made in an era where the most powerful computers available probably couldn’t handle WhatsApp today...