Emerging from the darkness after their confrontational Iowa album was overshadowed by national tragedy, Slipknot unexpectedly stepped into the mainstream with their follow-up album, 2004’s Vol.3: (The Subliminal Verses). Spurred on by frontman Corey Taylor’s new-found sobriety, the alt-metal icons expanded their sound into more melodic and experimental territories. Not only did the album capture the cathartic rage and existential turmoil of its era, but it would also lead to commercial success beyond even the band’s wildest expectations.
Here, then, is the full story behind Vol.3: (The Subliminal Verses), a career-defining album that re-established Slipknot as one of the biggest bands of the nu-metal era.
Listen to ‘Vol.3 (The Subliminal Verses)’ here.
The backstory: “When we come back to Slipknot, we’ll once again discover why we love it”
With the US in a state of collective mourning in the aftermath of 9/11, the future was looking particularly bleak for Slipknot fans in 2001. Prior to the terrorist attacks in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania, the group’s pitch-black and misanthropic brand of nu-metal had been resonating strongly with the angst of a generation, but the grief-stricken mood of the nation had seen the tide turn.
Despite receiving favourable reviews upon its release, Slipknot’s second album, Iowa – arguably their darkest and heaviest offering yet – had been released just a few weeks prior to the plane hijackings that led to tragedy. As the band began promoting the record, they quickly found that the nihilistic noise-mongering of songs such as People = Shit didn’t exactly chime with public sentiment. “We had to pass on a lot of tours because of fear,” Corey Taylor later said. “It wasn’t a good time for the country, but it wasn’t a good time for us, either. We got banned at a lot of radio stations and MTV wouldn’t touch us.”