KORN Singer Is 'Really Proud' Of His Solo Album

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KORN frontman Jonathan Davis spoke to Two Doods Reviews about his forthcoming solo album, which is expected later in the year via Sumerian. You can now watch the chat below. Davis quietly compiled ideas for what would become this solo effort beginning back in 2007. Writing and recording on the road, he personally contributed guitar, keys, and anything else he could get his hands on to the record. Moreover, the music was primarily recorded live, a departure from KORN's heavily calculated, meticulous, studio approach to creation. Asked how much of the album brings him back 10 years ago when he first started working on it, Davis said: "When I listen to it, I think back 10 years [ago], but I consciously tried to make this record timeless. I didn't know I was doing it at the time, but I can listen to it now and it sounds current now. And I did it 10 years ago. And I think it's the mixture, this hybrid of all kind of world music and taking what I've learned with KORN, and using new stuff, new-school layering with my son and his partner; they did the layering, all the layering on the record. So there's all kinds of new-school techniques. It's all over the place. When I listen to it, it does take me back, but it's also… I've changed a lot of it to make it more current. And I don't know… I'm really proud of it. I listen to it and go, 'That doesn't sound like 2007 to me,' or whatever. It's just a good song." Davis added that the lyrical themes covered on his solo album have nothing to do with the current political climate in the U.S. "Absolutely zero," he said. "It's not a political message. You can never win a political argument. I don't wanna go there. And I think my music for us to forget about all that shit. So, no — no politics. I stay out of it. Everyone asks me, what do I think about Trump? I'm, like, I don't have any comment. I'm just living on making my music. "Cause our nation is so divided right now, you don't have a right answer. And I don't wanna open that can of worms." According to Davis, his KORN bandmates have been very supportive of his decision to release a solo album and tour behind it this year. "They're all happy for me," he said. "They all say they're happy for me. We're like a family. There's no egos or weird stuff in my band. They've all each put something else [out]. Head's [guitar] got his band, Munky [guitar] put out something, Fieldy's [bass] put out his bass solo record, and Ray [Luzier, drums] does his KXM thing. So we're so happy, we all support each other." Davis will embark on a solo tour in early April. The trek, which will run through the end of June, will include a number of European festival appearances. Davis will be promoting his new solo single, titled "What It Is". The song is included on the soundtrack to a new film called "American Satan", which came out on January 26. Davis has recorded and toured on his own intermittently over the years. He has composed music for soundtracks, most notably "Queen Of The Damned", and has toured and DJed frequently over the years as his alter ego JDevil. KORN's last album, "The Serenity Of Suffering", came out in 2016.

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