Korn Multitracks ((install)) 〈SIMPLE〉
Official Korn multitracks have historically been released through the band's premium fan memberships, including lossless tracks for albums like See You On the Other Side, Korn III: Remember Who You Are, and The Path of Totality. Multitracks are used by mixing engineers and producers to create new mixes or stems. Available Multitracks & Remixes
If you're looking for a piece of music or a "stems" style breakdown for a Korn-inspired multitrack korn multitracks
What a multitrack reveals about Korn’s sound
- Bass as focal instrument: Fieldy’s five-string bass is often captured with multiple sources—DI tracks for clarity and amp/mic tracks for grit—letting producers blend a percussive, clicky attack with deep, saturated low end. In multitracks you can hear how the bass often sits forward and forms the foundation for the rest of the mix rather than merely following the guitar.
- Guitar layering and tone shaping: James “Munky” Shaffer and Brian “Head” Welch employed layered rhythm guitars, dissonant chord voicings, and heavy palm-muted figures. Multitracks show the interplay of down-tuned power chords, octave-scooped leads, and ambient textural parts—sometimes a single riff is built from several takes with different amp settings and mic placements to achieve both weight and sheen.
- Percussion and production: David Silveria (and later drummers) often recorded with tight, punchy drums. Drum multitracks reveal close-mic’d snares and kicks combined with room mics and gated ambience; producers used compression and transient shaping to create the aggressive snap that drives many Korn tracks.
- Vocal intimacy and experimentation: Jonathan Davis’s vocals are often recorded with a dry close mic plus additional takes for screams, whispers, and spoken interludes. Isolated vocal tracks highlight his dynamic range and the nuanced processing—harmonizers, subtle pitch work, saturation—that turn vulnerability into menace.
- Atmosphere and unconventional sounds: Korn’s production frequently includes sampled noises, industrial textures, and nontraditional percussion. Multitracks uncover hidden layers—ambient pads, reversed guitar swells, or tiny FX elements—whose absence would make the mix feel much thinner.
Historically, Korn released high-quality stems for premium members on their official website for several albums: See You On The Other Side Korn III: Remember Who You Are Bass as focal instrument: Fieldy’s five-string bass is
Elias sat in the swivel chair of the subterranean mixing studio, the hum of the server racks the only sound in the room. He wasn’t supposed to have this. The band’s management had been digitally scrubbing leaked stems from the internet for years, protecting the sanctity of their raw, anguished sound. But Elias knew a guy who knew a guy who had found a discarded hard drive in a Burbank storage locker. protecting the sanctity of their raw
If you are looking to improve your mixing skills, you can find multitracks for practice at:
The Anatomy of a Korn Multitrack: Case Studies
Let’s look at what you actually learn when you solo these tracks.
4. Educational Study
If you are an aspiring metal producer, load the Issues multitracks into your DAW. Look at the frequency spectrum.