Other than providing fuel for your art, what other residual effects has the bullying you suffered as a child left you with?
"I have a lot of hatred and aggression that builds up in my body when I see anyone being picked on for being different. It doesn’t make me any better if I see someone getting picked on, and then go and pick on that other person – that’s not going to solve anything. It’s about having the facility to take a deep breath and try to teach that person how what they’re doing can hurt another person. It’s about restraint and teaching kids that that’s not how to treat people. No-one is born racist or homophobic – that behaviour is taught."
What did being an embalmer and working at a coroner’s teach you? What makes a teenager want to do that?
"I got into it because I liked horror movies and all kinds of dark shit. I went on this regional occupation programme where they taught you skills, and of course I wanted to learn how to do autopsies, because I thought it would be fucking cool. But lo and behold, little did I know that that shit would fuck me up for a long time. I saw some really fucked-up shit, which at the time made me a really hard, no-emotions motherfucker. I had post-traumatic stress from seeing dead babies, and young kids that had died after finding a parent’s stash of drugs – shit that I shouldn’t have been seeing at 16 or 17 years old. I had to have a lot of therapy to make the nightmares go away, but I got through it and it made me appreciate life a lot more."
What do you appreciate now about Sexart, your pre-Korn band?
"I liked jamming with them, but those guys would tell me what to sing, and would write the lyrics – well, the drummer [Dennis Shinn] did. I was insecure with my singing to begin with, so he took advantage of that. Once I got into Korn, I had no-one doing that shit, so I got to do what I wanted to do. I opened up and became a vocalist – I wasn’t trying to do what these other fools wanted to do. That was other people in the band – I’m not talking about Ryan [Shuck, Sexart guitarist] or [Dave] DeRoo [bassist]."
Was there a pivotal moment that made you realise you were on the crest of a very big wave with Korn?
"The moment I got in the fucking band. Seriously, the minute I sang the first song with them, we all looked around at each other and they said, ‘You’re in the band.’ When I heard the demos with Ross [Robinson], I knew in my heart of hearts that we had something different. When we’d play shows we’d go out there and hit the first chord and everyone’s jaw would drop – they’d never heard anything like that before. Now everyone tunes to fucking A (laughs)."