- Daddy (Korn song)
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"Daddy" Song by Korn from the album Korn Released October 11, 1994 (album release) Recorded 1994 Genre Nu metal, alternative metal Length 17:31 Label Immortal/Epic Producer Ross Robinson Korn track listing "Helmet in the Bush"
(11)"Daddy"
(12)Hidden track (begins at 14:05)
(13)"Daddy" is a song written and recorded by American nu metal band Korn for their self-titled debut album. It is the album's 12th and final track.
Contents
Concept
The band's singer, Jonathan Davis, has stated that the song is about his painful experience of being molested as a child and not being believed.[1] However, he denied it was about physical or sexual abuse at the hands of his father, and the title and some concepts within the song stem from his parents not believing him. The song caused many to assume Rick Davis (Jonathan's father) had molested his son. It is a source of embarrassment for him, though his son has gone on the record in many interviews saying it was written about a family friend who sexually abused him. When a 12-year-old Jonathan tried to turn to his family, he said, they ignored him. Neither Jonathan nor Rick will say who the person was, though both say it was a woman.[2]
In an early Kerrang! magazine interview, Jonathan was asked about the song, responding:
"When I was a kid, I was being abused by somebody else and I went to my parents and told them about it, and they thought I was lying and joking around. They never did shit about it. They didn't believe it was happening to their son.... I don't really like to talk about that song. This is as much as I've ever talked about it...." - Jonathan Davis[3]Music and structure
The song eventually leads to Davis acting-out being stranded in a room, and shouting hostile things to whom it is not clarified which then leads to Davis weeping for a long period of time as a lullaby by vocalist Judith Kiener is heard and the band continues on playing an instrumental track until eventually a door is heard shutting. The rest of the band did not know that the song was about his childhood prior to recording.
After five minutes of silence at the end of the song, a discussion can be heard; a random audio clip that producer Ross Robinson found in an abandoned house. The argument revolves around a man named Michael and a woman named Geri conversing about the installation of a car part (apparently an exhaust manifold on a Dodge Dart). Michael can be heard yelling at Geri (profanity-laden) over the merits of the installation.
Live performance
The song is notable for, despite its popularity amongst fans, never being played live after the album version was recorded; an earlier version of the song was performed at each of their first three shows. Jonathan Davis says that the song is simply too personal for him to perform live.
Occasionally, an instrumental excerpt of the song would be used as an introduction to "Shoots and Ladders" during early live performances.
In a recent interview, Davis discussed how prior to Korn's Back 2 Basics Tour with Limp Bizkit, the band allowed fans to vote on which songs would be in the setlist. "Daddy" topped the list, but he declined to sing it because of its emotional atmosphere.
"I don't play that song live because it's just magic,” Davis said. “If I play that song over and over every night, it'd lose its meaning. I don't want people to expect me to freak out like I did on that. That was what happened in that point in time, and that magic was captured, and I don't want to fuck with it."[5]
Demo version
The demo version of the song, which is found on Neidermeyer's Mind, is shorter than the album version. While the album version is 9:32 in length, the demo version is 4:29 in length. The demo does not feature the a cappella intro; it starts immediately with Fieldy's bass riff. It also has a different chorus. After the instrumental bridge, there is an extra part to the song with Jonathan Davis singing: "Mommy! Why did Daddy touch me there?" which leads into "I didn't touch you there."
See also
References
- ^ Barry Walters (December 1999). "Jonathan Davis, Public Freak on a Leash, Lashes Back". The Village Voice. http://www.villagevoice.com/music/9948,walters,10504,22.html. Retrieved 2007-01-28.
- ^ Chris Page (November 2002). "The Evolution of Korn (Hope on the Horizon)". Californian staff writer. Archived from the original on 2008-02-03. http://web.archive.org/web/20080203183126/http://ww2.bakersfield.com/2002/korn/main6.asp. Retrieved 2008-02-25.
- ^ Steffan Chirazi (October 1996). "Heart Of Darkness". Kerrang! interviewer. http://www.kerrang.com. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ^ Tim Keneally. "Masters of disaster James Shaffer and Brian Welch divulge the secrets behind Korn's brooding style of twisted metal". Guitar World. Archived from the original on 2007-12-23. http://web.archive.org/web/20071223031718/http://www.thedrumer.narod.ru/korn/articles/masters_of_disaster.html. Retrieved 2007-09-28.
- ^ http://www.kornunderground.nl/news/interviews/
Korn Studio albums Korn · Life Is Peachy · Follow the Leader · Issues · Untouchables · Take a Look in the Mirror · See You on the Other Side · Untitled album · Korn III: Remember Who You Are · The Path of TotalityLive albums Live & Rare · MTV Unplugged: KornCompilation albums Extended plays Singles "Christmas Song" · "Blind" · "Need To" · "Shoots and Ladders" · "Clown" · "No Place to Hide" · "A.D.I.D.A.S." · "Good God" · "All in the Family" · "Got the Life" · "Children of the Korn" · "B.B.K." · "Freak on a Leash" · "Falling Away from Me" · "Make Me Bad" · "Somebody Someone" · "Here to Stay" · "Thoughtless" · "Alone I Break" · "Did My Time" · "Right Now" · "Y'All Want a Single" · "Everything I've Known" · "Word Up!" · "Another Brick in the Wall" · "Twisted Transistor" · "Coming Undone" · "Coming Undone wit It" · "Politics" · "Freak on a Leash (MTV Unplugged version)" · "Evolution" · "Hold On" · "Kiss" · "Haze" · "Oildale (Leave Me Alone)" · "Let the Guilt Go" · "Get Up!" · "Narcissistic Cannibal"Notable songs Video albums Who Then Now? · Deuce · Live · Live on the Other Side · Chopped, Screwed, Live and Unglued · Live at Montreux 2004 · Korn Live: The EncounterConcert tours Family Values Tour · Sick and Twisted Tour · Untouchables Tour · See You On the Other Side World Tour · Bitch We Have a Problem Tour · Escape from the Studio Tour · Ballroom Blitz Tour · Mayhem Festival 2010 · Music as a Weapon V Tour · The Path of Totality TourSignature instruments Related ArticlesBandsBooksAlbumsCategories:- Korn songs
- 1994 songs
- Songs about child abuse
- Songs based on actual events
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